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Baseball in Japan

Baseball was introduced to Japan in 1872 and is Japan's most popular participatory and spectator sport.[1][2] The first professional competitions emerged in the 1920s. The highest level of baseball in Japan is Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB), which consists of two leagues, the Central League and the Pacific League, with six teams in each league.[3] High school baseball enjoys a particularly strong public profile and fan base, much like college football and college basketball in the United States; the Japanese High School Baseball Championship ("Summer Kōshien"), which takes place each August, is nationally televised and includes regional champions from each of Japan's 47 prefectures.

In Japanese, baseball is commonly called yakyū (野球), combining the characters for field and ball. According to the Japan National Tourism Organization (JNTO), the atmosphere of Japanese baseball games is less relaxed than in the United States, with fans regularly singing and dancing to team songs.[4] In addition, as American writer Robert Whiting wrote in his 1977 book The Chrysanthemum and the Bat, "the Japanese view of life, stressing group identity, cooperation, hard work, respect for age, seniority and 'face' has permeated almost every aspect of the sport. Americans who come to play in Japan quickly realize that Baseball Samurai Style is different."[5]

Game night at Yokohama Stadium, 2023

In Japan, Nippon Professional Baseball players such as Shohei Ohtani, Ichiro Suzuki, Hideki Matsui, Shigeo Nagashima and Sadaharu Oh are regarded as national stars, and their exceptional performances have boosted baseball's popularity in Japan. All of them received or were approached for the People's Honour Award (国民栄誉賞, Kokumin Eiyoshō) for their achievements and popularity.[6][7]

History edit

Baseball was first introduced to Japan as a school sport in 1872 by American Horace Wilson,[8] an English professor at the Kaisei Academy in Tokyo. The first organized adult baseball team, called the Shimbashi Athletic Club, was established in 1878.[9]

The Japanese government appointed American oyatoi in order to start a state-inspired modernization process. This involved the education ministry, who made baseball accessible to children by integrating the sport into the physical education curriculum. Japanese students, who returned from studying in the United States captivated by the sport, took government positions. Clubs and private teams such as the Shinbashi Athletic Club, along with high school and college teams, commenced the baseball infrastructure.[10]

At a match played in Yokohama in 1896, a team from Tokyo's Ichikō high school convincingly defeated a team of resident foreigners from the Yokohama Country & Athletic Club. The contemporary Japanese language press lauded the team as national heroes and news of this match greatly contributed to the popularity of baseball as a school sport.[11] Tsuneo Matsudaira in his "Sports and Physical Training in Modern Japan" address to The Japan Society of the UK in London in 1907 related that after the victory, "the game spread, like a fire in a dry field, in summer, all over the country, and some months afterwards, even in children in primary schools in the country far away from Tōkyō were to be seen playing with bats and balls."[12]

Professional baseball edit

Professional baseball in Japan first started in the 1920s, but it was not until the Greater Japan Tokyo Baseball Club (大日本東京野球クラブ, Dai-nippon Tōkyō Yakyū Kurabu), a team of all-stars established in 1934 by media mogul Matsutarō Shōriki, that the modern professional game found continued success—especially after Shōriki's club matched up against an American All-Star team that included Babe Ruth, Jimmie Foxx, Lou Gehrig, and Charlie Gehringer. While prior Japanese all-star contingents had disbanded, Shōriki went pro with this group, playing in an independent league.

The first Japanese professional league was formed in 1936, and by 1950 had grown big enough to divide into two leagues, the Central League and the Pacific League, together known as Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). It is called Puro Yakyū (プロ野球), meaning professional baseball. The pro baseball season is eight months long, with games beginning in April. Teams play 144 games (as compared to the 162 games of the American major league teams), followed by a playoff system, culminating in a championship held in October, known as the Japan Series.[13]

Corporations with interests outside baseball own most of the teams. Historically, teams have been identified with their owners, not where the team is based. However, in recent years, many owners have chosen to include a place name in the names of their teams; the majority of the 12 NPB teams are currently named with both corporate and geographical place names.

Minor leagues edit

Much like Minor League Baseball in the United States, Japan has a farm system through two minor leagues, each affiliated with Nippon Professional Baseball. The Eastern League consists of seven teams and is owned by the Central League. The Western League consists of five teams and is owned by the Pacific League. Both minor leagues play 80-game seasons.[14]

Differences from Major League Baseball edit

The rules are essentially those of Major League Baseball (MLB), but technical elements are slightly different: The Nippon league uses a smaller baseball, strike zone, and playing field. Five Nippon league teams have fields whose small dimensions would violate the American Official Baseball Rules.[15]

Also unlike MLB, game length is limited and tie games are allowed. In the regular season, the limit is twelve innings, while in the playoffs, there is a fifteen-inning limit (games in Major League Baseball, by comparison, continue until there is a winner). Additionally, due to power limits imposed because of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, the 2011 NPB regular season further limited game length by adding a restriction that no inning could begin more than three hours and thirty minutes after the first pitch.

NPB teams have active rosters of 28 players, as opposed to 26 in MLB (27 on days of doubleheaders). However, the game roster has a 25-player limit. Before each game, NPB teams must designate three players from the active roster who will not appear in that contest.[16] A team cannot have more than four foreign players on a 25-man game roster, although there is no limit on the number of foreign players that it may sign. If there are four, they cannot all be pitchers nor all be position players.[17] This limits the cost and competition for expensive players of other nationalities, and is similar to rules in many European sports leagues' roster limits on non-European players.

In each of the two Nippon Professional Baseball leagues, teams with the best winning percentage go on to a stepladder-format playoff (3 vs. 2, winner vs. 1). Occasionally, a team with more total wins has been seeded below a team that had more ties and fewer losses and, therefore, had a better winning percentage. The winners of each league compete in the Japan Series.

Strike of 2004 edit

On 18 September 2004, professional baseball players went on a two-day strike, the first strike in the history of the league, to protest the proposed merger between the Orix BlueWave and the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes and the failure of the owners to agree to create a new team to fill the void resulting from the merger. The strike was settled on 23 September 2004, when the owners agreed to grant a new franchise in the Pacific League and to continue the two-league, 12-team system. The new team, the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles, began play in the 2005 season.

High school baseball edit

 
Hanshin Kōshien Stadium during the 1992 Kōshien tournament

In Japan, high school baseball (高校野球, kōkō yakyū) generally refers to the two annual baseball tournaments played by high schools nationwide culminating in a final showdown at Hanshin Kōshien Stadium in Nishinomiya. They are organized by the Japan High School Baseball Federation in association with Mainichi Shimbun for the National High School Baseball Invitational Tournament in the spring (also known as "Spring Kōshien") and Asahi Shimbun for the National High School Baseball Championship in the summer (also known as "Summer Kōshien").

These nationwide tournaments enjoy widespread popularity, arguably equal to or greater than professional baseball. Qualifying tournaments are often televised locally and each game of the final stage at Kōshien is televised nationally on NHK. The tournaments have become a national tradition, and large numbers of students and parents travel from hometowns to cheer for their local team. The popularity of these tournaments has been compared to the popularity of March Madness in the United States.[18]

Amateur baseball edit

Amateur baseball leagues exist all over Japan, with many teams sponsored by companies. Amateur baseball is governed by the Japan Amateur Baseball Association (JABA). Players on these teams are employed by their sponsoring companies and receive salaries as company employees, not as baseball players. The best teams in these circuits are determined via the intercity baseball tournament and the Industrial League national tournament.[19]

The level of play in these leagues is very competitive; Industrial League players are often selected to represent Japan in international tournaments[19] and Major League Baseball players such as Hideo Nomo (Shin-Nitetsu Sakai),[20] Junichi Tazawa (Nippon Oil)[21] and Kosuke Fukudome (Nihon Seimei),[22] have been discovered by professional clubs while playing industrial baseball.

International play edit

Japan has won the World Baseball Classic three times since the tournament was created. In the 2006 World Baseball Classic, they defeated Cuba in the finals[23] and in the 2009 World Baseball Classic, Japan defeated its arch-rival of South Korea in 10 innings to defend their title.[24] In the 2023 World Baseball Classic, they reclaimed their title by defeating the United States 3–2 in the Championship game. The national team is consistently ranked one of the best in the world by the World Baseball Softball Confederation.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gillette, Gary; Palmer, Pete, eds. (2006). "Baseball in Japan". The 2006 ESPN Baseball Encyclopedia. New York: Sterling Publishing Company. pp. 1733–1734. ISBN 978-1-4027-3625-4.
  2. ^ "Teams Nippon Professional Baseball". from the original on 2016-01-10.
  3. ^ "Japanese Sports". from the original on 2020-08-13.
  4. ^ Whiting, Robert (1977). Chrysanthemum and the Bat: Baseball Samurai Style. Dodd, Mead.
  5. ^ Robert Whiting (23 October 2018). . Japan Forward. Archived from the original on 28 July 2021. Retrieved 10 December 2022.
  6. ^ . Japan Times. 22 November 2021. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022. Retrieved 10 December 2022.
  7. ^ Staples, Bill (2011). Kenichi Zenimura, Japanese American Baseball Pioneer. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. p. 15. ISBN 9780786485246.
  8. ^ Whiting, Robert. You Gotta Have Wa (Vintage Departures, 1989), p. 27.
  9. ^ Edelman, Robert, ed. (2020). "Baseball's Global Diffusion". The Oxford Handbook of Sports History. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. p. 206. ISBN 9780197520956.
  10. ^ Dunning, Eric (2004). Sport Histories: Figurational Studies in the Development of Modern Sports. London: Routledge. p. 163. ISBN 0-415-28665-4.
  11. ^ Matsudaira, Tsuneo (1907). Sports and Physical Training in Modern Japan.
  12. ^ "Baseball is back... in Japan; here's everything to know about Nippon Professional Baseball". CBSSports.com. 18 June 2020. Retrieved 2021-04-12.
  13. ^ "Farm Leagues". from the original on 2021-04-12.
  14. ^ The note set out at the end of Rule 1.04 specifies minimum dimensions for American ballparks built or renovated after 1958: 325 feet (99 m) down each foul line and 400 feet (120 m) to center field.
  15. ^ Waldstein, David (2014-07-21). "Ace Favors Fewer Starts to Protect Pitchers' Arms: Rangers' Yu Darvish Pushes for a Six-Man Pitching Rotation". The New York Times.
  16. ^ JapaneseBaseball.com: Foreign Player Restrictions, retrieved 2013-12-27
  17. ^ Lefton, Brad (August 16, 2018). "In Japan, 100 Years of Glory Days for High School Baseball". The New York Times.
  18. ^ a b Ryo (2 September 2009). "Inside the Industrial Leagues". NPB Tracker. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  19. ^ Whiting, Robert (10 October 2010). "Contract loophole opened door for Nomo's jump". Japan Times. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  20. ^ Schwarz, Alan; Lefton, Brad (19 November 2008). "Japanese Are Irked by U.S. Interest in Pitcher". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  21. ^ Marantz, Ken (6 June 1996). "MLB, Japanese are headed for a bidding war". USA Today. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  22. ^ , archived from the original on 2013-12-28, retrieved 2013-12-27
  23. ^ , archived from the original on 2013-12-28, retrieved 2013-12-27

Further reading edit

  • Beach, Jerry. "Godzilla Takes the Bronx". (New York, 2004)
  • Bikel, Ofra; Harris, Gail; Woodruff, Judy, et al., "American Game, Japanese Rules" (Alexandria, Va.: PBS Video, 1990).
  • Crepeau, Richard C. "Pearl Harbor: A Failure of Baseball?" The Journal of Popular Culture xv.4 (1982): 67–74.
  • Cromartie, Warren and Whiting, Robert. Slugging It Out in Japan: An American Major Leaguer in the Tokyo Outfield (New York: Signet, 1992).
  • Dabscheck, Braham (October 2006). "Japanese Baseball Takes a Strike" (subscription required). International Journal of Employment Studies 14.2: pp. 19–34. ISSN 1039-6993.
  • Hayford, Charles W. (4 April 2007), , Japan Focus, archived from the original (PDF) on 18 April 2008
  • Kelly, William. "Blood and Guts in Japanese Professional Baseball," in Sepp Linhard and Sabine Frustuck, ed., The Culture of Japan as Seen through Its Leisure (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1998): 95–111.
  • Kelly, William. "Caught in the Spin Cycle: An Anthropological Observer at the Sites of Japanese Professional Baseball," in Susan O. Long, ed., Moving Targets: Ethnographies of Self and Community in Japan. (Ithaca, 2000)
  • Kelly, William. "The Spirit and Spectacle of School Baseball: Mass Media, Statemaking, and 'Edu-Tainment' in Japan, 1905–1935", in William Kelly Umesao Tadao, and Kubo Masatoshi, ed., Japanese Civilization in the Modern World Xiv: Information and Communication (Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology, 2000): 105–116.
  • Kelly, William. Fanning the Flames: Fans and Consumer Culture in Contemporary Japan (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2004).
  • Kelly, William. "Is Baseball a Global Sport? America's 'National Pastime' as a Global Sport", Global Networks 7.2 (2007):
  • Roden, Donald. "Baseball and the Quest for National Dignity in Meiji Japan," The American Historical Review 85.3 (1980): 534.
  • Terry, Darin. "International Professional Baseball Procurement" 2010
  • Whiting, Robert. The Chrysanthemum and the Bat: Baseball Samurai Style (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1977).
  • Whiting, Robert. You Gotta Have Wa: When Two Cultures Collide on the Baseball Diamond (New York: Vintage Books, Vintage departures, 1990).
  • Whiting, Robert. "The Japanese Way of Baseball and the National Character Debate", Japan Focus (29 September 2006).

External links edit

  • JapaneseBaseball.com

baseball, japan, baseball, introduced, japan, 1872, japan, most, popular, participatory, spectator, sport, first, professional, competitions, emerged, 1920s, highest, level, baseball, japan, nippon, professional, baseball, which, consists, leagues, central, le. Baseball was introduced to Japan in 1872 and is Japan s most popular participatory and spectator sport 1 2 The first professional competitions emerged in the 1920s The highest level of baseball in Japan is Nippon Professional Baseball NPB which consists of two leagues the Central League and the Pacific League with six teams in each league 3 High school baseball enjoys a particularly strong public profile and fan base much like college football and college basketball in the United States the Japanese High School Baseball Championship Summer Kōshien which takes place each August is nationally televised and includes regional champions from each of Japan s 47 prefectures Baseball in Japan 野球 Tokyo Dome during the 2014 MLB Japan All Star SeriesCountryJapanGoverning bodyBFJNational team s JapanFirst played1872National competitionsJapan SeriesClub competitionsNippon Professional BaseballCentral LeaguePacific LeagueEastern LeagueWestern LeagueMiyazaki Phoenix LeagueShikoku Island League PlusBaseball Challenge LeagueInternational competitionsWBSC Premier12World Baseball ClassicSummer Olympics 1992 2008 2020 Asian ChampionshipAsian GamesIn Japanese baseball is commonly called yakyu 野球 combining the characters for field and ball According to the Japan National Tourism Organization JNTO the atmosphere of Japanese baseball games is less relaxed than in the United States with fans regularly singing and dancing to team songs 4 In addition as American writer Robert Whiting wrote in his 1977 book The Chrysanthemum and the Bat the Japanese view of life stressing group identity cooperation hard work respect for age seniority and face has permeated almost every aspect of the sport Americans who come to play in Japan quickly realize that Baseball Samurai Style is different 5 source source source source source source source source source source Game night at Yokohama Stadium 2023In Japan Nippon Professional Baseball players such as Shohei Ohtani Ichiro Suzuki Hideki Matsui Shigeo Nagashima and Sadaharu Oh are regarded as national stars and their exceptional performances have boosted baseball s popularity in Japan All of them received or were approached for the People s Honour Award 国民栄誉賞 Kokumin Eiyoshō for their achievements and popularity 6 7 Contents 1 History 2 Professional baseball 2 1 Minor leagues 2 2 Differences from Major League Baseball 2 3 Strike of 2004 3 High school baseball 4 Amateur baseball 5 International play 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editBaseball was first introduced to Japan as a school sport in 1872 by American Horace Wilson 8 an English professor at the Kaisei Academy in Tokyo The first organized adult baseball team called the Shimbashi Athletic Club was established in 1878 9 The Japanese government appointed American oyatoi in order to start a state inspired modernization process This involved the education ministry who made baseball accessible to children by integrating the sport into the physical education curriculum Japanese students who returned from studying in the United States captivated by the sport took government positions Clubs and private teams such as the Shinbashi Athletic Club along with high school and college teams commenced the baseball infrastructure 10 At a match played in Yokohama in 1896 a team from Tokyo s Ichikō high school convincingly defeated a team of resident foreigners from the Yokohama Country amp Athletic Club The contemporary Japanese language press lauded the team as national heroes and news of this match greatly contributed to the popularity of baseball as a school sport 11 Tsuneo Matsudaira in his Sports and Physical Training in Modern Japan address to The Japan Society of the UK in London in 1907 related that after the victory the game spread like a fire in a dry field in summer all over the country and some months afterwards even in children in primary schools in the country far away from Tōkyō were to be seen playing with bats and balls 12 Professional baseball editMain article Professional baseball in Japan Professional baseball in Japan first started in the 1920s but it was not until the Greater Japan Tokyo Baseball Club 大日本東京野球クラブ Dai nippon Tōkyō Yakyu Kurabu a team of all stars established in 1934 by media mogul Matsutarō Shōriki that the modern professional game found continued success especially after Shōriki s club matched up against an American All Star team that included Babe Ruth Jimmie Foxx Lou Gehrig and Charlie Gehringer While prior Japanese all star contingents had disbanded Shōriki went pro with this group playing in an independent league The first Japanese professional league was formed in 1936 and by 1950 had grown big enough to divide into two leagues the Central League and the Pacific League together known as Nippon Professional Baseball NPB It is called Puro Yakyu プロ野球 meaning professional baseball The pro baseball season is eight months long with games beginning in April Teams play 144 games as compared to the 162 games of the American major league teams followed by a playoff system culminating in a championship held in October known as the Japan Series 13 Corporations with interests outside baseball own most of the teams Historically teams have been identified with their owners not where the team is based However in recent years many owners have chosen to include a place name in the names of their teams the majority of the 12 NPB teams are currently named with both corporate and geographical place names Minor leagues edit Much like Minor League Baseball in the United States Japan has a farm system through two minor leagues each affiliated with Nippon Professional Baseball The Eastern League consists of seven teams and is owned by the Central League The Western League consists of five teams and is owned by the Pacific League Both minor leagues play 80 game seasons 14 Differences from Major League Baseball edit The rules are essentially those of Major League Baseball MLB but technical elements are slightly different The Nippon league uses a smaller baseball strike zone and playing field Five Nippon league teams have fields whose small dimensions would violate the American Official Baseball Rules 15 Also unlike MLB game length is limited and tie games are allowed In the regular season the limit is twelve innings while in the playoffs there is a fifteen inning limit games in Major League Baseball by comparison continue until there is a winner Additionally due to power limits imposed because of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami the 2011 NPB regular season further limited game length by adding a restriction that no inning could begin more than three hours and thirty minutes after the first pitch NPB teams have active rosters of 28 players as opposed to 26 in MLB 27 on days of doubleheaders However the game roster has a 25 player limit Before each game NPB teams must designate three players from the active roster who will not appear in that contest 16 A team cannot have more than four foreign players on a 25 man game roster although there is no limit on the number of foreign players that it may sign If there are four they cannot all be pitchers nor all be position players 17 This limits the cost and competition for expensive players of other nationalities and is similar to rules in many European sports leagues roster limits on non European players In each of the two Nippon Professional Baseball leagues teams with the best winning percentage go on to a stepladder format playoff 3 vs 2 winner vs 1 Occasionally a team with more total wins has been seeded below a team that had more ties and fewer losses and therefore had a better winning percentage The winners of each league compete in the Japan Series Strike of 2004 edit On 18 September 2004 professional baseball players went on a two day strike the first strike in the history of the league to protest the proposed merger between the Orix BlueWave and the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes and the failure of the owners to agree to create a new team to fill the void resulting from the merger The strike was settled on 23 September 2004 when the owners agreed to grant a new franchise in the Pacific League and to continue the two league 12 team system The new team the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles began play in the 2005 season High school baseball editMain article High school baseball in Japan nbsp Hanshin Kōshien Stadium during the 1992 Kōshien tournamentIn Japan high school baseball 高校野球 kōkō yakyu generally refers to the two annual baseball tournaments played by high schools nationwide culminating in a final showdown at Hanshin Kōshien Stadium in Nishinomiya They are organized by the Japan High School Baseball Federation in association with Mainichi Shimbun for the National High School Baseball Invitational Tournament in the spring also known as Spring Kōshien and Asahi Shimbun for the National High School Baseball Championship in the summer also known as Summer Kōshien These nationwide tournaments enjoy widespread popularity arguably equal to or greater than professional baseball Qualifying tournaments are often televised locally and each game of the final stage at Kōshien is televised nationally on NHK The tournaments have become a national tradition and large numbers of students and parents travel from hometowns to cheer for their local team The popularity of these tournaments has been compared to the popularity of March Madness in the United States 18 Amateur baseball editAmateur baseball leagues exist all over Japan with many teams sponsored by companies Amateur baseball is governed by the Japan Amateur Baseball Association JABA Players on these teams are employed by their sponsoring companies and receive salaries as company employees not as baseball players The best teams in these circuits are determined via the intercity baseball tournament and the Industrial League national tournament 19 The level of play in these leagues is very competitive Industrial League players are often selected to represent Japan in international tournaments 19 and Major League Baseball players such as Hideo Nomo Shin Nitetsu Sakai 20 Junichi Tazawa Nippon Oil 21 and Kosuke Fukudome Nihon Seimei 22 have been discovered by professional clubs while playing industrial baseball International play editSee also Baseball Federation of Japan Japan has won the World Baseball Classic three times since the tournament was created In the 2006 World Baseball Classic they defeated Cuba in the finals 23 and in the 2009 World Baseball Classic Japan defeated its arch rival of South Korea in 10 innings to defend their title 24 In the 2023 World Baseball Classic they reclaimed their title by defeating the United States 3 2 in the Championship game The national team is consistently ranked one of the best in the world by the World Baseball Softball Confederation See also editAsahi baseball team Baseball awards Japan Japan national baseball team List of Japanese baseball players Mr Baseball 1992 film Sport in JapanReferences edit The 8 Most Popular Sports in Japan All About Japan 28 December 2016 Gillette Gary Palmer Pete eds 2006 Baseball in Japan The 2006 ESPN Baseball Encyclopedia New York Sterling Publishing Company pp 1733 1734 ISBN 978 1 4027 3625 4 Teams Nippon Professional Baseball Archived from the original on 2016 01 10 Japanese Sports Archived from the original on 2020 08 13 Whiting Robert 1977 Chrysanthemum and the Bat Baseball Samurai Style Dodd Mead Robert Whiting 23 October 2018 Koshien Players as Japanese Gods Why We re Crazy About High School Baseball Japan Forward Archived from the original on 28 July 2021 Retrieved 10 December 2022 Too early Ohtani turned down Japan national honor after MVP season Japan Times 22 November 2021 Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 10 December 2022 Staples Bill 2011 Kenichi Zenimura Japanese American Baseball Pioneer Jefferson NC McFarland p 15 ISBN 9780786485246 Whiting Robert You Gotta Have Wa Vintage Departures 1989 p 27 Edelman Robert ed 2020 Baseball s Global Diffusion The Oxford Handbook of Sports History New York NY Oxford University Press p 206 ISBN 9780197520956 Dunning Eric 2004 Sport Histories Figurational Studies in the Development of Modern Sports London Routledge p 163 ISBN 0 415 28665 4 Matsudaira Tsuneo 1907 Sports and Physical Training in Modern Japan Baseball is back in Japan here s everything to know about Nippon Professional Baseball CBSSports com 18 June 2020 Retrieved 2021 04 12 Farm Leagues Archived from the original on 2021 04 12 The note set out at the end of Rule 1 04 specifies minimum dimensions for American ballparks built or renovated after 1958 325 feet 99 m down each foul line and 400 feet 120 m to center field Waldstein David 2014 07 21 Ace Favors Fewer Starts to Protect Pitchers Arms Rangers Yu Darvish Pushes for a Six Man Pitching Rotation The New York Times JapaneseBaseball com Foreign Player Restrictions retrieved 2013 12 27 Lefton Brad August 16 2018 In Japan 100 Years of Glory Days for High School Baseball The New York Times a b Ryo 2 September 2009 Inside the Industrial Leagues NPB Tracker Retrieved 2 November 2015 Whiting Robert 10 October 2010 Contract loophole opened door for Nomo s jump Japan Times Retrieved 2 November 2015 Schwarz Alan Lefton Brad 19 November 2008 Japanese Are Irked by U S Interest in Pitcher The New York Times Retrieved 2 November 2015 Marantz Ken 6 June 1996 MLB Japanese are headed for a bidding war USA Today Retrieved 2 November 2015 2006 Results archived from the original on 2013 12 28 retrieved 2013 12 27 2009 Results archived from the original on 2013 12 28 retrieved 2013 12 27Further reading editBeach Jerry Godzilla Takes the Bronx New York 2004 Bikel Ofra Harris Gail Woodruff Judy et al American Game Japanese Rules Alexandria Va PBS Video 1990 Crepeau Richard C Pearl Harbor A Failure of Baseball The Journal of Popular Culture xv 4 1982 67 74 Cromartie Warren and Whiting Robert Slugging It Out in Japan An American Major Leaguer in the Tokyo Outfield New York Signet 1992 Dabscheck Braham October 2006 Japanese Baseball Takes a Strike subscription required International Journal of Employment Studies 14 2 pp 19 34 ISSN 1039 6993 Hayford Charles W 4 April 2007 Japanese Baseball or Baseball in Japan Japan Focus archived from the original PDF on 18 April 2008 Kelly William Blood and Guts in Japanese Professional Baseball in Sepp Linhard and Sabine Frustuck ed The Culture of Japan as Seen through Its Leisure Albany State University of New York Press 1998 95 111 Kelly William Caught in the Spin Cycle An Anthropological Observer at the Sites of Japanese Professional Baseball in Susan O Long ed Moving Targets Ethnographies of Self and Community in Japan Ithaca 2000 Kelly William The Spirit and Spectacle of School Baseball Mass Media Statemaking and Edu Tainment in Japan 1905 1935 in William Kelly Umesao Tadao and Kubo Masatoshi ed Japanese Civilization in the Modern World Xiv Information and Communication Osaka National Museum of Ethnology 2000 105 116 Kelly William Fanning the Flames Fans and Consumer Culture in Contemporary Japan Albany NY State University of New York Press 2004 Kelly William Is Baseball a Global Sport America s National Pastime as a Global Sport Global Networks 7 2 2007 Roden Donald Baseball and the Quest for National Dignity in Meiji Japan The American Historical Review 85 3 1980 534 Terry Darin International Professional Baseball Procurement 2010 Whiting Robert The Chrysanthemum and the Bat Baseball Samurai Style New York Dodd Mead 1977 Whiting Robert You Gotta Have Wa When Two Cultures Collide on the Baseball Diamond New York Vintage Books Vintage departures 1990 Whiting Robert The Japanese Way of Baseball and the National Character Debate Japan Focus 29 September 2006 External links editJapaneseBaseball com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baseball in Japan amp oldid 1196854494, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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