This is a site about Pro Yakyu (Japanese Baseball), not about who the next player to go over to MLB is. It's a community of Pro Yakyu fans who have come together to share their knowledge and opinions with the world. It's a place to follow teams and individuals playing baseball in Japan (and Asia), and to learn about Japanese (and Asian) culture through baseball.
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Michael Westbay
(aka westbaystars)
Founder
The first game was a wipeout in Seibu's favour. Iwasada was abysmal but once again due to management inexperience was allowed to go on too long. By the time he was pulled in the sixth he had given up 9 runs. Seibu acted more promptly and pulled their pitcher after only 4. He had given up 3 runs at that point and Tigers were actually competitive with the score 4-3. After the sixth the game was over as a competition and Seibu rubbed it in in the eighth with another three runs taking the score up to 12-3. It wasn't that Seibu were good but that the Tigers were truly bad. Akiyama in relief didn't look confident at all and really one has to say that Tigers are clueless about pitching.
Haraguchi got his rest game and Messenger also managed to get a win. It wasn't a particularly dominant performance 122 pitches over 7 innings shows a struggling pitcher paired with a mediocre catcher. One would like to see anyone but Okazaki in the top team. Gomez managed a sacrifice fly and RBI. Other runs came from the bats Fukudome, Takayama and Imanari. Dollis and Fujikawa held firm in relief and Tigers ran out eventual winners 5-1.
The final game of the series was tight. Seibu opened the scoring in the first with a boring run. Akiyama led off with a single and was bunted to second. Then Mejia doubled him home 1-0. Tigers responded immediately with Takayama driving the tying run past Seibu's pitcher who couldn't hold the ball 1-1. In the third Seibu managed a sacrifice fly 2-1 and Tigers had to wait until the sixth when Haraguchi doubled the tying run home. The belief that Okazaki works better with Fujikawa than Haraguchi meant that Okazaki took over catching duties in the ninth. This actually worked but left Tigers exposed with a catcher who is notoriously poor in tight situations. Still Seibu were held in check until the 12th when Okazaki calling to Andoh made a complete mess of things and introduced an intentional walk into the mix. This completely unsettled his pitcher who gave up a single and an RBI. Tigers still had the bottom to rescue the situation but their three batters were all sub.300 men and they meekly capitulated without getting on base. Of course, by then Fukudome had also been replaced and having him still in the lineup might have made a difference. Just like keeping Haraguchi in would also have been a better idea. Winning games is more important than pandering to Fujikawa's ego and to do this Tigers need batters who are hitting.