Give a lot of credit to manager Akihiko Ohya, who was surprisingly let go as the team's skipper following the 1997 season, when he led the BayStars to a second-place finish and seemingly had them poised to be pennant contenders the next year.Why did the BayStars let Ohya-kantoku go at the time? Well, he refused to re-sign with them due to friction between the way he wanted to run the team and the way the front office (owned by Maruha at the time) wanted to. The same thing occurred after Gondoh-kantoku's two years were up. There seems to be a long tradition of Yokohama's front office wanting one style of play and the manager wanting another. That was what led to Mori-kantoku being signed, a manager known for the style they wanted, and that flopped. But I digress.
Yokohama went on to win its only Japan Series title in 1998, under manager Hiroshi Gondoh, Ohya's replacement, but it was really Ohya who had put the club together during his two-year stint as field boss in 1996-97. So says one ex-BayStar.
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