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Victor Starffin

Viktor Starukhin (Russian: Виктор Константинович Старухин, tr. Viktor Konstantinovich Starukhin,[1] 1 May 1916 – 12 January 1957), nicknamed "the blue-eyed Japanese" (青い目の日本人, aoi-me no Nihonjin), was a Japanese baseball player. While playing in Japan, he became the first professional pitcher in Japan to win 300 games.[2][3] With 83 career shutouts, he ranks number one all-time in Japanese professional baseball.[4]

Victor Starffin
Pitcher
Born: (1916-05-01)1 May 1916
Nizhny Tagil, Verkhotursky Uyezd, Perm Governorate, Russian Empire
Died: 12 January 1957(1957-01-12) (aged 40)
Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
JBL debut
1936, for the Tokyo Kyojingun
Last NPB appearance
July 12, 1955, for the Takahashi Unions
JBL/NPB statistics
Win–loss record303-176
Earned run average2.09
Strikeouts1960
Shutouts83
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Japanese record

  • 83 career shutouts
Member of the Japanese
Baseball Hall of Fame
Induction1960

Biography edit

Early years edit

Viktor Starukhin (also known as Victor Starffin) was born in 1916 in Nizhny Tagil, in the Urals region of what was then the Russian Empire, but after the Russian Revolution he moved with his family to northern Hokkaidō, where he attended Asahikawa Higashi High School.[5]

Starukhin wanted to get into Waseda University, but he was scouted by Matsutaro Shoriki in the autumn of 1934 as a member of the national baseball team for an exhibition game against the United States. At that time, the Ministry of Education had a regulation stating that high school baseball players who played professionally forfeited their eligibility to enter higher education, so Starukhin was reluctant to turn pro. However, he and his family had entered Japan on transit visas, and his father, Konstantin Starukhin, was in jail awaiting trial on charges of involuntary manslaughter, both of which put the family at risk of deportation. Shoriki effectively blackmailed Starukhin, stating that if Starukhin refused to play professionally, Shoriki would use his connections with the Yomiuri Shimbun to publicise the details of Konstantin Starukhin's case.[3]

Tōkyō Kyojingun/Yomiuri Giants edit

Starukhin was signed by the Tōkyō Kyojingun (now the Yomiuri Giants), outside the draft, in 1936, and played for them until 1944. He was one of the premier pitchers in the Japanese baseball "dead-ball era" (pre-1945), when many of Japan's best players were serving in the Imperial Japanese Army.[3] He won two MVP awards and a Best Nine award, and won at least 26 games in six different years, winning a league record 42 games in 1939. He followed his record-setting 1939 performance with another 38 wins in 1940. He also became the first foreign player in NPB history to throw a no-hitter, doing so against the Korakuen Eagles on July 3, 1937.

World War II edit

In 1940, as xenophobia increased in Japan, Starukhin was forced to change his name to Suda Hiroshi. Later, during World War II, wartime paranoia resulted in Starukhin being placed in a detention camp[6] at Karuizawa with diplomats and other foreign residents.

Post-war career edit

 
Starffin was the first pitcher to win 300 games in Japanese baseball

After a brief period working as an interpreter for the U.S. Occupation authorities (SCAP), Starukhin returned to professional baseball in 1946, but chose not to return to the Giants, instead signing a contract with a new team, the Pacific Baseball Club, owned by Komajiro Tamura. Pacific's contracts with several famous players, including Starukhin, led to a serious conflict, and Pacific was forced to forfeit four games. However, this decision ultimately resulted in Starukhin's old team the Giants losing the first Japanese championship after World War II, as one of Pacific's forfeited games had been a loss to Great Ring (now the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks): the change from a loss to a win gave Great Ring the title over the Giants.

Starukhin stayed with Pacific in 1947, which became known as the Taiyo Robins. In 1948 he moved to Tamura's other team, the Kinsei/Daiei Stars, staying with that franchise through 1953 (although Tamura sold the team to Daiei Film after the 1948 season). Starukhin finally signed with the Takahashi/Tombow Unions (a forerunner of the Chiba Lotte Marines) in 1954–55. In 1955, his last season, he became the first career 300-game winner in Japanese professional baseball. Originally, it was thought that Starukhin recorded his 300th win against the Kintetsu Pearls at Kawasaki Stadium on July 28, 1955. However, due to NPB rules on pitcher wins pre-war, it was only considered his 298th. He would get his actual 300th win on the 9th of September against his former Daiei Stars team at Nishinokyogoku Stadium in Kyoto City. When asked what he wanted to do next, Starukhin stated he wanted to get 2,000 career strikeouts and 100 shutouts before ending his baseball career. He never got to do so, due to him being forced to retire as after a 7-21 record in 1955, he was cut from the Unions and no other team wanted to sign him, despite him stating he was willing to also pitch for free.[7] He retired in 1955 with a career record of 303 wins and 176 losses.[3]

Retirement edit

After retirement, he became an actor and presenter of radio programs.

Death edit

In 1957, Starukhin was killed in a traffic accident when the car he was driving was hit by a tram[6] on the Tōkyū Tamagawa Line (now replaced by the Tōkyū Den-en-toshi Line) in Setagaya, Tokyo on is way to a high school reunion in Hokkaido Asahikawa Higashi High School. The exact circumstances of the incident are debated to this day,[by whom?] with speculation ranging from a simple accident to suicide or drunk driving.[citation needed]

Starukhin is buried in Tama Cemetery in Tokyo.[8] He was the first player to be honored in a funeral where former teammates of his shared stories of his time playing with them.

Tributes edit

In 1960, he became the first foreigner elected to the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame.

Asahikawa City has nicknamed its municipal baseball stadium, as Asahikawa Starffin Stadium, since 1984.[3]

Personal life edit

Starukhin spoke fluent Japanese and was said to be "more Japanese than Japanese" with respect for his in-laws, but he was worried that his friends would never cross the line with the labels "foreigner" and "exile". It was said to be the case. Therefore, he went to the Orthodox church "Nikolai-do" in Ochanomizu (neighborhood in Tokyo) where other Russians emigrants gathered. He searched for friends and even found a bride.[9]

Family edit

In 1939 Starukhin married a Russian emigrant, Elena. In 1941, their first-born son was born.[10] After staying in the Karuizawa camp, Elena filed for divorce and left with Bolovyov for the United States, leaving her seven-year-old son Starukhina.[clarification needed]

The second wife was a Japanese woman Kunie[10] in 1950, whom they met on Christmas at the Russian Club in Tokyo in 1948. She took care of his son, and they had two daughters.[11] After the death of her husband, Kunie worked several jobs to support her family.[citation needed]

Professional Statistics edit

Year Team G W L IP K BB HR ERA
1936 Summer Kyojin 1 0 0 3.0 4 1 0 0.00
1936 Autumn 3 1 2 21.0 19 7 0 3.00
1937 Summer 25 13 4 147.1 92 58 1 1.53
1937 Autumn 26 15 7 164.2 95 51 0 1.86
1938 Summer 24 14 3 158.2 76 57 5 2.04
1938 Autumn 24 19 2 197.2 146 59 0 1.05
1939 68 42 15 458.1 282 156 4 1.73
1940 55 38 12 436.0 245 145 3 0.97
1941 20 15 3 150.0 58 45 3 1.20
1942 40 26 8 306.1 110 119 3 1.12
1943 18 10 5 136.0 71 57 2 1.19
1944 7 6 0 66.0 27 23 0 0.68
1946 Pacific 5 1 1 31.2 11 16 1 1.99
1947 Taiyo 20 8 10 162.1 77 48 3 2.05
1948 Kinsei 37 17 13 298.1 138 80 6 2.17
1949 Daiei 52 27 17 376.0 163 69 24 2.61
1950 35 11 15 234.1 86 48 21 3.96
1951 14 6 6 100.2 47 22 5 2.68
1952 24 8 10 150.1 44 43 9 3.05
1953 26 11 9 201.2 61 42 11 2.68
1954 Takahashi 29 8 13 178.1 52 45 12 3.73
1955 Tombow 33 7 21 196.2 56 30 9 3.89
Total 586 303 176 4175.1 1960 1221 122 2.09

*Bold = lead league

Awards
Preceded by
Haruyasu Nakajima (fall)
N.A. (self)
Japanese Baseball League MVP
1939
1940
Succeeded by

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ http://www.sports.ru/tribuna/blogs/insignificance/204537.html (in Russian)
  2. ^ "Victor Starffin". Japan Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Retrieved 2007-05-25.
  3. ^ a b c d e Reaves, Joseph A. (2002). Taking in a Game: A History of Baseball in Asia. University of Nebraska Press. pp. 70–71. ISBN 0-8032-3943-2.
  4. ^ Wilbert, Warren N. The Shutout in Major League Baseball: A History (McFarland, 2013), p. 108.
  5. ^ . search.japantimes.co.jp. Archived from the original on 2010-05-04.
  6. ^ a b Whiting, Robert. You Gotta Have Wa (Vintage Departures, 1989), p. 47.
  7. ^ Victor Starffin - Japanese Baseball's Tragic Hero | NPB Player Profiles, retrieved 2023-05-02
  8. ^ http://www6.plala.or.jp/guti/cemetery/AREA/list_00.html (in Japanese)
  9. ^ ナターシャ・スタルヒン著「ロシアから来たエース」(PHP文庫). "Ace from Russia" by Natasha Starhin (PHP Bunko).
  10. ^ a b Bjarkman, Peter C. Victor Starffin . Baseball Biography Project (eng.) . Society for American Baseball Research . Date of treatment July 25, 2020.
  11. ^ Natalia Vakhonina. "A Hollywood director makes a film about a Tagil citizen " Between the lines news agency (September 17, 2013). Date of treatment July 25, 2020.

Further reading edit

  • Puff, Richard. "The Amazing Story of Victor Starffin". The National Pastime, no. 12 (1992), pp. 17–20. ISBN 0-910137-48-X.

External links edit

  • Nippon Professional Baseball career statistics from JapaneseBaseball.com
  • Jim Albright's analysis of Starffin's candidacy for the American Baseball Hall of Fame
  • Examples of Victor Starffin baseball cards

victor, starffin, viktor, starukhin, russian, Виктор, Константинович, Старухин, viktor, konstantinovich, starukhin, 1916, january, 1957, nicknamed, blue, eyed, japanese, 青い目の日本人, nihonjin, japanese, baseball, player, while, playing, japan, became, first, profe. Viktor Starukhin Russian Viktor Konstantinovich Staruhin tr Viktor Konstantinovich Starukhin 1 1 May 1916 12 January 1957 nicknamed the blue eyed Japanese 青い目の日本人 aoi me no Nihonjin was a Japanese baseball player While playing in Japan he became the first professional pitcher in Japan to win 300 games 2 3 With 83 career shutouts he ranks number one all time in Japanese professional baseball 4 Victor StarffinPitcherBorn 1916 05 01 1 May 1916Nizhny Tagil Verkhotursky Uyezd Perm Governorate Russian EmpireDied 12 January 1957 1957 01 12 aged 40 Setagaya Tokyo JapanBatted RightThrew RightJBL debut1936 for the Tokyo KyojingunLast NPB appearanceJuly 12 1955 for the Takahashi UnionsJBL NPB statisticsWin loss record303 176Earned run average2 09Strikeouts1960Shutouts83TeamsTokyo Kyojingun 1934 1944 Pacific Taiyo Robins 1946 1947 Kinsei Stars Daiei Stars 1948 1953 Takahashi Unions Tombow Unions 1954 1955 Career highlights and awardsJapanese Triple Crown 1938 Fall 2 Japanese Baseball League MVP 1939 1940 Best Nine Award winner 1940 Pitched a no hitter on 3 July 1937 6x 20 game winner 1937 1938 1939 1940 1942 1949 3x 30 game winner 1938 1939 1940 40 game winner 1939 All Star selection 1952 Japanese record 83 career shutoutsMember of the JapaneseBaseball Hall of FameInduction1960 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Tōkyō Kyojingun Yomiuri Giants 1 3 World War II 1 4 Post war career 1 5 Retirement 1 6 Death 2 Tributes 3 Personal life 3 1 Family 4 Professional Statistics 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography editEarly years edit Viktor Starukhin also known as Victor Starffin was born in 1916 in Nizhny Tagil in the Urals region of what was then the Russian Empire but after the Russian Revolution he moved with his family to northern Hokkaidō where he attended Asahikawa Higashi High School 5 Starukhin wanted to get into Waseda University but he was scouted by Matsutaro Shoriki in the autumn of 1934 as a member of the national baseball team for an exhibition game against the United States At that time the Ministry of Education had a regulation stating that high school baseball players who played professionally forfeited their eligibility to enter higher education so Starukhin was reluctant to turn pro However he and his family had entered Japan on transit visas and his father Konstantin Starukhin was in jail awaiting trial on charges of involuntary manslaughter both of which put the family at risk of deportation Shoriki effectively blackmailed Starukhin stating that if Starukhin refused to play professionally Shoriki would use his connections with the Yomiuri Shimbun to publicise the details of Konstantin Starukhin s case 3 Tōkyō Kyojingun Yomiuri Giants edit Starukhin was signed by the Tōkyō Kyojingun now the Yomiuri Giants outside the draft in 1936 and played for them until 1944 He was one of the premier pitchers in the Japanese baseball dead ball era pre 1945 when many of Japan s best players were serving in the Imperial Japanese Army 3 He won two MVP awards and a Best Nine award and won at least 26 games in six different years winning a league record 42 games in 1939 He followed his record setting 1939 performance with another 38 wins in 1940 He also became the first foreign player in NPB history to throw a no hitter doing so against the Korakuen Eagles on July 3 1937 World War II edit In 1940 as xenophobia increased in Japan Starukhin was forced to change his name to Suda Hiroshi Later during World War II wartime paranoia resulted in Starukhin being placed in a detention camp 6 at Karuizawa with diplomats and other foreign residents Post war career edit nbsp Starffin was the first pitcher to win 300 games in Japanese baseballAfter a brief period working as an interpreter for the U S Occupation authorities SCAP Starukhin returned to professional baseball in 1946 but chose not to return to the Giants instead signing a contract with a new team the Pacific Baseball Club owned by Komajiro Tamura Pacific s contracts with several famous players including Starukhin led to a serious conflict and Pacific was forced to forfeit four games However this decision ultimately resulted in Starukhin s old team the Giants losing the first Japanese championship after World War II as one of Pacific s forfeited games had been a loss to Great Ring now the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks the change from a loss to a win gave Great Ring the title over the Giants Starukhin stayed with Pacific in 1947 which became known as the Taiyo Robins In 1948 he moved to Tamura s other team the Kinsei Daiei Stars staying with that franchise through 1953 although Tamura sold the team to Daiei Film after the 1948 season Starukhin finally signed with the Takahashi Tombow Unions a forerunner of the Chiba Lotte Marines in 1954 55 In 1955 his last season he became the first career 300 game winner in Japanese professional baseball Originally it was thought that Starukhin recorded his 300th win against the Kintetsu Pearls at Kawasaki Stadium on July 28 1955 However due to NPB rules on pitcher wins pre war it was only considered his 298th He would get his actual 300th win on the 9th of September against his former Daiei Stars team at Nishinokyogoku Stadium in Kyoto City When asked what he wanted to do next Starukhin stated he wanted to get 2 000 career strikeouts and 100 shutouts before ending his baseball career He never got to do so due to him being forced to retire as after a 7 21 record in 1955 he was cut from the Unions and no other team wanted to sign him despite him stating he was willing to also pitch for free 7 He retired in 1955 with a career record of 303 wins and 176 losses 3 Retirement edit After retirement he became an actor and presenter of radio programs Death edit In 1957 Starukhin was killed in a traffic accident when the car he was driving was hit by a tram 6 on the Tōkyu Tamagawa Line now replaced by the Tōkyu Den en toshi Line in Setagaya Tokyo on is way to a high school reunion in Hokkaido Asahikawa Higashi High School The exact circumstances of the incident are debated to this day by whom with speculation ranging from a simple accident to suicide or drunk driving citation needed Starukhin is buried in Tama Cemetery in Tokyo 8 He was the first player to be honored in a funeral where former teammates of his shared stories of his time playing with them Tributes editIn 1960 he became the first foreigner elected to the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Asahikawa City has nicknamed its municipal baseball stadium as Asahikawa Starffin Stadium since 1984 3 Personal life editStarukhin spoke fluent Japanese and was said to be more Japanese than Japanese with respect for his in laws but he was worried that his friends would never cross the line with the labels foreigner and exile It was said to be the case Therefore he went to the Orthodox church Nikolai do in Ochanomizu neighborhood in Tokyo where other Russians emigrants gathered He searched for friends and even found a bride 9 Family edit In 1939 Starukhin married a Russian emigrant Elena In 1941 their first born son was born 10 After staying in the Karuizawa camp Elena filed for divorce and left with Bolovyov for the United States leaving her seven year old son Starukhina clarification needed The second wife was a Japanese woman Kunie 10 in 1950 whom they met on Christmas at the Russian Club in Tokyo in 1948 She took care of his son and they had two daughters 11 After the death of her husband Kunie worked several jobs to support her family citation needed Professional Statistics editYear Team G W L IP K BB HR ERA1936 Summer Kyojin 1 0 0 3 0 4 1 0 0 001936 Autumn 3 1 2 21 0 19 7 0 3 001937 Summer 25 13 4 147 1 92 58 1 1 531937 Autumn 26 15 7 164 2 95 51 0 1 861938 Summer 24 14 3 158 2 76 57 5 2 041938 Autumn 24 19 2 197 2 146 59 0 1 051939 68 42 15 458 1 282 156 4 1 731940 55 38 12 436 0 245 145 3 0 971941 20 15 3 150 0 58 45 3 1 201942 40 26 8 306 1 110 119 3 1 121943 18 10 5 136 0 71 57 2 1 191944 7 6 0 66 0 27 23 0 0 681946 Pacific 5 1 1 31 2 11 16 1 1 991947 Taiyo 20 8 10 162 1 77 48 3 2 051948 Kinsei 37 17 13 298 1 138 80 6 2 171949 Daiei 52 27 17 376 0 163 69 24 2 611950 35 11 15 234 1 86 48 21 3 961951 14 6 6 100 2 47 22 5 2 681952 24 8 10 150 1 44 43 9 3 051953 26 11 9 201 2 61 42 11 2 681954 Takahashi 29 8 13 178 1 52 45 12 3 731955 Tombow 33 7 21 196 2 56 30 9 3 89Total 586 303 176 4175 1 1960 1221 122 2 09 Bold lead league AwardsPreceded byHaruyasu Nakajima fall N A self Japanese Baseball League MVP19391940 Succeeded byN A self Tetsuharu KawakamiSee also editRussians in Japan White Emigre Koji OtaReferences edit http www sports ru tribuna blogs insignificance 204537 html in Russian Victor Starffin Japan Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum Retrieved 2007 05 25 a b c d e Reaves Joseph A 2002 Taking in a Game A History of Baseball in Asia University of Nebraska Press pp 70 71 ISBN 0 8032 3943 2 Wilbert Warren N The Shutout in Major League Baseball A History McFarland 2013 p 108 Writer takes memorable trip to Victor Starfin Stadium in Asahikawa The Japan Times Online search japantimes co jp Archived from the original on 2010 05 04 a b Whiting Robert You Gotta Have Wa Vintage Departures 1989 p 47 Victor Starffin Japanese Baseball s Tragic Hero NPB Player Profiles retrieved 2023 05 02 http www6 plala or jp guti cemetery AREA list 00 html in Japanese ナターシャ スタルヒン著 ロシアから来たエース PHP文庫 Ace from Russia by Natasha Starhin PHP Bunko a b Bjarkman Peter C Victor Starffin Baseball Biography Project eng Society for American Baseball Research Date of treatment July 25 2020 Natalia Vakhonina A Hollywood director makes a film about a Tagil citizen Between the lines news agency September 17 2013 Date of treatment July 25 2020 Further reading editPuff Richard The Amazing Story of Victor Starffin The National Pastime no 12 1992 pp 17 20 ISBN 0 910137 48 X External links editNippon Professional Baseball career statistics from JapaneseBaseball com Jim Albright s analysis of Starffin s candidacy for the American Baseball Hall of Fame Examples of Victor Starffin baseball cardsAwardsPreceded byHaruyasu Nakajima Japanese Baseball League MVP1939 1940 Succeeded byTetsuharu Kawakami Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Victor Starffin amp oldid 1168621125, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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