You did have one small miss, though. It's been 2 position players and 2 pitchers for a few years now.
And you're right. Even with a lot of the star moving abroad, the real fans will still be around. The loss of Sasaki really hurt my 'Stars, yet I still watch all the games on TV that I can. I'm watching Hiroshima's Gomez hit a game tying home run against Saitoh as I type this. (No shiroari or tabacco smoke around here, but my 2 liter bottle of Aquarius is getting awful warm.)
The reason I think that fans will continue watching is really quite simple. We've gone through this fan decrease before when J-League started up. J-League took a big chunk of the younger fan base, leaving mostly oyaji like me still in need of our baseball fix. And after the fad of J-League wore off, many fans returned to watch baseball, perhaps just not as feverously.
I still like my idea of the Pacific League joining Korea and Taiwan to live up to their name. Since the Central League won't help them out with interleague play, play up the internationalization theme as much as they can. I think it'll have a lot of appeal.
That's a pretty well done piece, except for the
fact that it's KAZUHISA Ishii going over to the
majors next season and not his teammate Hirotoshi,
who has spent a lot of down time during this campaign with an injury.
In any event, to expand on increasing the number of foreign players allowed on a Japanese
team's roster (something the Japanese players
association is against), the Koreans, who are second to none in Asia when it comes to nationalism, has one team with five foreigners JUST ON ITS PITCHING STAFF.
But while being willing to take on more foreign
players is a good thing, it's certainly no panacea. The overwhelming number of non-Japanese
players don't do that well. For example, the Hanshin Tigers were hoping for big things from
Tom Evans after Ivan Cruz and Eduardo Perez went
by the wayside, but Evans, who did fairly solidly in his limited major league experience, has hardly
been anything special for his new club. Yomiuri's Darryl May, who had a fine 2000, is struggling this season. Thus, just what the Japanese players learn from foreign players is questionable at best. And when an ex-big leaguer fails doing things his way it only makes Japanese management more convinced that their method is best. Even when a foreigner is successful, as Bobby Valentine was, they are still so hidebound that variations from the past norms seem inconceivable.
Part of the problem may be cultural since there
is an emphasis on the collective rather than the
individual and an outlook that reveres authority.
Therefore, players are too concerned with fitting into a mold and not making mistakes to maintain harmony and face and owners are preoccupied with keeping their thumbs on the players. This often hampers a player's development and makes the style of play conservative and often like a kabuki play sans the onnagata (men playing women's roles). I'm not saying that what Japanese baseball needs are
Albert Belles (God forbid) or Gary Sheffields,
but some Pete Roses sure would be nice. But if one
tries to emerge the Japanese team management would
find a way to snuff it out. THAT is the perhaps the problem.
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.
It is my sincere hope that once you learn a bit about what we're about here that you will join the community of contributors.
Michael Westbay
(aka westbaystars)
Founder
Yakyu fans, I've just posted an article I wrote about Japanese baseball on my webpage.
In it, I've interviewed a number of Japanese fans and asked their opinions about the future of Japanese baseball with the prospect of more players leaving for the US next year.
The article is supposed to provide the fans' view. This is something that I feel gets overlooked by such media sources as the Japan Times and Watanabe and his cronies.
One word of warning: Since there is a real good chance you have never read one of my articles before, you might want to just read sections 2 and 3 (there are 4 total).
best,
Brett
P.S. great work on this page. I really like it!