Once again I find myself agreeing to the facts presented, but strongly disagreeing with the conclusion reached.
Yes, from the start pretty much everyone figured the 2005 Asia Series (Konami Cup) would finish in the order:
When everything finished, that's exactly how everything ended - as predicted.
Furthermore, I'm one of those people who thought, "Finally!" - but I'm very pleased at how things turned out for this first ever Asian international championship.
Why would a baseball fan be willing to endure a competition that has to resort to the "mercy rule" to keep things friendly? For the future.
I've written a number of times that I would like to see the Pacific League became a "true" Pacific League, including regular season games against Korean and Taiwanese teams. The reason I would like to see this is to alleviate the problem of playing the same five teams over and over and over again. (I started this vision when I thought that inter-league play would never happen - I was wrong on that count.) As I stated with the proposal, the Japanese teams would probably clean up on wins at the beginning, but the other leagues would gradually become more competitive. And this is the ultimate goal, to improve competitiveness.
Each league, on its own, will only improves in slow increments. Japan's league is the oldest, and therefore has had the most time to improve. Futhermore, having more teams to compete against tends to promote refining of skills to become better. On the other hand, too many teams in any league will lead to a dilution of high quality players (as shown when Taiwan had two leagues). By having inter-league play spanning NPB, KBO, and CPBL organizations, you get the benifits of more competition without the detriment of diluting the talent pool. As the teams play each other more, the strategies and skill sets of the various leagues will start to complement each other and all of the leagues will improve at an accellerated rate.
At least, that's what I believe will happen.
At any rate, the Konami Cup is a good stepping stone to more international competition between teams as opposed to all star teams[*].
PLNara's post about the differences in leagues is very interesting. To further the problem of players from Korea and Taiwan going to MLB, many of their best players are also coming to Japan. In 2006, NPB will be allowing one Asian player on each team to be excluded from the foreign player limits, making it more likely that even more Korean and Taiwanese players will be making their way to Japan, leaving a gap in quality players for the KBO and CPBL.
But, how can the differences that PLNara-san brought up be closed in the future? This is something that would not have even been noticed by many had there not been a Konami Cup. Each baseball organization would continue going on in their own little worlds without thought of rules that other leagues have. For future competitions, though, and possibly for a True Pacific League, these issues are at least being recognized. The Konami Cup has meaning beyond what happened on the playing field. The Konami Cup is anything but a joke.
[* I left out the CBL, which sent an all star team to the Konami Cup and is still far too young a league to include competitively in my proposed True Pacific League. You could point out that they would benifit most from having more high caliber competition. But I do think that there is a certain bar that needs to be crossed first. Competitions like the Konami Cup will help them a great deal, especially in setting goals for themselves. But I wouldn't want them to be part of a larger league until their league has matured a bit more.]
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Michael Westbay
(aka westbaystars)
Founder
Everybody knows that the Marines are going to finish on top followed by the Lions, Bulls and China All-Stars. Nobody's really excited about this Konami Cup. At first the idea seemed novel. Everybody thought, "Finally!" But this is turning out to be a laugher with game ending after a mercy rule.