Adjust Font Size: A A       Guest settings   Register

Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?

Discussion in the Open Talk forum
Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
I don't see much difference between batting third and fouth. I don't think that #4 protects #3. The importance of batting 4th is unnecessalily emphasized. What do you think?
Comments
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: John Brooks | Posted: Aug 18, 2004 9:05 AM ]

- I don't think that #4 protects #3. The importance of batting 4th is unnecessalily emphasized.

Well, the third place hitter gets pitches to hit, because many teams don't want to face the cleanup man with runners on base.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: Tigers Baka | Posted: Aug 18, 2004 9:36 PM ]

Do you think its importance is only mentioned in Japan? I believe it to be a valid tactic, employed successfully for decades by every baseball league I've ever watched. What do you suggest as an alternative at #4 if you were putting together a lineup?
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: guest | Posted: Aug 20, 2004 3:17 PM ]

I don't know if it is the same as it is in the States, but in Japan, usually the number 4 hitter is sort of the face of the team.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: btimmer | Posted: Aug 21, 2004 2:54 PM ]

I would concur, the #4 slot is important at all levels of baseball.

Although it's hard to believe, simulations done by sabermetricians (baseball statistics experts for those unfamiliar with the term) show that you can take the 9 regular batters for any team and put them in any order and the number of runs scored by the team overall won't change much at all.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: Tigers Baka | Posted: Aug 22, 2004 12:04 AM ]

"Sabermetricians" - Love it! There's really a term for a baseball statistician?!

I know what you're saying, but taking stats from a game is so subjective. For example, a two out RBI counts much more than a hit when you're leading by half a dozen runs or so. I wonder if these stats are taken into account.

Your cleanup guy is your clutch hitter, he knocks in the runs when it counts, so I don't believe pure statistics alone indicate the true importance of the position. Furthermore I don't believe in the "statistics show that batting order is irrelevant, teams will score the same number of runs" thing. Computers can't calculate clutch hits, pressure moments, etc.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: John Brooks | Posted: Aug 22, 2004 10:09 AM ]

- For example, a two out RBI counts much more than a hit when you're leading by half a dozen runs or so.

Yes, because two-out RBI's come in the clutch, when you're leading by half a dozen runs, the RBI isn't as useful. While, yes the hitter is contributing, but common sense says that if you have a runner in scoring position with two outs, if they can succeed in those RBI opportunities that is more valuable than a hit when leading by six runs.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: btimmer | Posted: Aug 22, 2004 6:06 PM ]

But if you had a randomly generated batting order for each game, it's likely that each player will have an equal number of times to bat with runners in scoring position. So that's why the total numbers of runners isn't going to vary too much.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: Tigers Baka | Posted: Aug 22, 2004 10:25 PM ]

Sorry I cant concur with your assessment. As John Brooks and I were alluding to, these "simulated games" are just that, totally unreal hypothetical situations. They fail to take pressure, emotion, and human limitations into account. This is why your cleanup guy is your bread and butter. While others may disagree, this is where I want a guy who can at least clear the fences.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: westbaystars | Posted: Aug 22, 2004 10:39 PM | YBS Fan ]

I can see that this thread is going to get off on ideologies that have nothing to do with Japanese baseball real soon.

First, one of the factors that is taken into consideration with said statistics is that one is only guaranteed batting fourth the first time around, and even then, chances are the "number four" batter will bat first in the second inning. That's why batting order isn't so important. (An arguement could be made for the lead-off batter getting more chances per game to bat, but that's a different arguement.)

Next, I don't think it's any different than in North America. Think back to middle school and high school. Who was the most popular person in school? He was the captain of all the sports teams, quarterback in football, and the ace pitcher/number four batter in baseball. At least, that's how it was where I grew up. It was prestige.

Perhaps because so many players enter the top teams out of high school in Japan, where such machoism is popular, that the same prestige system is very strong in the professional ranks. Or maybe it's the legend of Babe Ruth that still holds Japan in its spell.

I'm not sure what the reason for it is. But being the number four batter for a team is a prestigious honor, a high title, a recognition of power.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: Flynn | Posted: Aug 23, 2004 2:40 PM ]

Batting order is important. Quite simply, it's much easier to get four at-bats batting third than batting nineth. Simple logic.

Also, when you bat your best hitter third, he is guaranteed to come up in the first inning. If he bats fourth, someone else has to get on.

Clutch hitting doesn't exist, by the way. Just to throw a spanner in the works.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: Flynn | Posted: Aug 23, 2004 3:03 PM ]

Or maybe it's the legend of Babe Ruth that still holds Japan in its spell.

Babe batted third.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: Stoops | Posted: Sep 13, 2004 2:34 PM ]

Time to revive this thread.

Another thought on why it is so important in Japan in particular, is the use of the bunt and the Japanese psychological importance of the first run. In the States, if your leadoff guy gets on, you generally let him try to steal or work on a hit and run. In Japan, you almost never see this. The number two guy lays down a bunt to move the runner to second. This puts your number four guy in play.

Sacrificing in the early part of the game in the States happens only when you or the other team has their ace on the mound.

The real question should be, "Why do the Japanese think the first run is so important in the first inning?"
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: torakichi | Posted: Sep 13, 2004 8:24 PM | HT Fan ]

Isn't gaining the upper hand important in any sport?
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: Jim Albright | Posted: Sep 13, 2004 10:42 PM ]

The early days of NPB may provide a clue: it was deadball baseball to an extreme. If you got ahead by 2 or 3 runs, the game was probably as good as over. If you're up 1-0, you're halfway there. I find that a lot of what seems on further consideration today to be weird thinking (the emphasis on average, the design of official fielding stats, etc.) have roots in sound thinking early in the history of the game but weren't discarded when circumstances made such thinking outmoded.

Jim Albright
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: Tigers Baka | Posted: Sep 13, 2004 10:42 PM ]

Well I remember Tony La Russa saying that something like 63% of teams that score first go on to win. Not sure how far the study went back (a few seasons or all historical results), but I guess that's a good reason to be the first to score!
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: westbaystars | Posted: Sep 14, 2004 8:20 PM | YBS Fan ]

For a good study on bunting in Japan, please see Jim Allen's "1995 Guide to Japanese Baseball" on the subject: "Do Sacrifice Bunts Really Provide an Edge?" [my old site on the Wayback Machine].

What I found most amusing about the article was that it seemed like Allen-san set out to prove that bunts didn't provide an edge, but wound up concluding that they did work for Seibu.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: stoops | Posted: Sep 20, 2004 7:57 PM ]

No offense Torakichi, but a one run upper hand only means something at the end of the ninth inning.
Re: Why is Batting Fouth sooooo Important in Japan?
[ Author: Guest: John Brooks | Posted: Sep 21, 2004 4:32 AM ]

- [...] but a one run upper hand only means something at the end of the ninth inning.

Not exactly. A one run lead is only as good as the pitcher who's protecting the one run lead.
About

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

Search for Pro Yakyu news and information
Copyright (c) 1995-2024 JapaneseBaseball.com.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Some rights reserved.