#7 in career appearances with 756 (304 starts 452 in relief) from 1956 to 1969
#1 (shared) in single season appearances with 78 in 1961 (30 starts, 48 relief)
#18 in career complete games with 179 (out of 304 starts)
#14 (shared) in career shutouts with 43
#12 in most complete games without giving up a walk with 34
#8 in most career wins with 276 (vs. 137 losses)
#1 (shared) in single season wins with 42
#1 in most consecutive wins with 20 (July 18 to October 1, 1957)
[Avoids the top 30 list of most losses - significant considering how many games he played in.]
#2 in best winning percentage (with at least 2,000 innings pitched) at .668 (276 wins, 137 losses)
#19 in best single season winning percentage with a .854 winnning percentage in 1957 (35 and 6 in 68 games)
#10 in most career innings pitched with 3599 in 756 games
#18 and #19 in most innings pitched in a season with 404 in 1961 and 402 1/3rd in 1959
And I'm sure I can find his name a few more times, but it's time for bed - and this thread has gotten a bit off topic. Nonetheless, it strikes me that Inao-san might make a very interesting research topic for someone with some time on their hands. I'd much rather read about him than a comparison of NPB and MLB, which is what most Japanese baseball research topics seem to be about.
When I redo the rankings, this may change a little, especially if I find errors (as I have with a few hitters).
I wouldn't agree with Sugiura, but he's hardly a bad choice, and Noguchi just misses my list. Higashio at 251-247 and only 22 games above his team is one I'd take serious exception to.
Sawamura is a legend, and was a great pitcher. However, it was for a short time (1934-1937 or so), after which it appears his arm was shot. I could see him among the top 10 if you're looking at peak performance, not career, though that would have to take into account 1934 and 1935, which predates NPB. My selections are limited to NPB and focus more on career than that, and on that basis, I couldn't go with Sawamura.
The biggest omission from your list in my mind is Keishi Suzuki. I'd take him over Higashio without a doubt. The other disagreements are minor, really, particularly if you're not as focused on career level marks as I am.
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