[新聞] Baseball notes: Can Kuwata succeed with Bucs?
這篇文章雖然是分析桑田,
不過也提到了一個滿有趣的理論,
就是日本人比較容易在米國西岸成功
因為那邊亞裔比較多,Pittsburgh的亞裔少而且幾乎沒有日本餐廳
桑田大叔如何調適呢?
http://www.timesonline.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=
17628477&BRD=2305&PAG=461&dept_id=478568&rfi=6
Baseball notes: Can Kuwata succeed with Bucs?
12/23/2006
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John Perrotto Times Sports Staff Does Musami Kuwata have anything left?
John Perrotto Times Sports Staff
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Does Musami Kuwata have anything left? On the surface, the answer would
appear to be no.
The 38-year-old right-hander signed by the Pittsburgh Pirates this week after
spending the past 21 seasons with the Tokyo Yomiuri Giants of the Japanese
Central League had 173 career wins in his native country but only nine in the
last four injury-plagued years.
There is very recent precedent of a struggling veteran Japanese pitcher
turning his career around with a move to the United State. Takahasi Saito
notched a club-high 24 saves in helping the Los Angeles Dodgers to the
wild-card playoff berth in the National League as a 36-year-old rookie just
two years removed from posting a 7.71 ERA for the Yokohama BayStars.
Notice, however, that Saito’s turnaround came on the West Coast. In fact,
almost all of the Japanese players who have jumped to the major leagues since
Hideo Nomo unlocked that door in 1995 have.
Nomo started the trend by winning National League Rookie of the Year honors
in ’95 by posting the first 13 of his 123 wins in a career than ended last
year. Ichiro Suzuki, Kaz Sasaki, Kenji Johjima and Shiggy Hasegawa all had
successful stints with Seattle, while Akinori Otsuka had a big rookie season
out of San Diego’s bullpen in 2005.
Japanese players who have spent the majority of their careers on the East
Coast, which we will consider the Eastern time zone, have struggled for the
most part.
Pitcher Hideki Irabu and second baseman Kaz Matsui both came to New York
amidst great fanfare but bombed miserably. Irabu went a lackluster 34-35 in
six major-league seasons, three with the Yankees, while Matsui hit just .243
with 11 homers in three seasons with the Mets before being traded to Colorado
late this past season.
Pitchers like Tomo Ohka, Masato Yoshii, Satoru Komiyama, Takashi Kashiwada
have made little impact in the East. In fact, Yankees outfielder Hideki
Matsui has been the only star east of the Mississippi, though his .297
batting average and 78 homers in four seasons hasn’t exactly put him on the
fast track to Cooperstown.
The general consensus among observers of Japanese baseball is that players in
that country are more likely to succeed on the West Coast where there is a
greater Asian-American population and culture. Indeed, it will be most
interesting to see how Kuwata adjusts to Pittsburgh, where the number of
Asians is small and the amount of Japanese restaurants can be counted on one
hand.
Kuwata, though, picked Pittsburgh by his own volition, over potentially more
lucrative offers from Boston and the Los Angeles Dodgers.
“I felt I would be most comfortable with the Pirates,” he told reporters in
Japan after signing.
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http://chordate.blogspot.com/
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