Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Japan views victory over and over again

- STEPHEN WADE AP SPORTS WRITER

TOKYO — Japanese television stuck to its live coverage from Miami for almost two hours after Japan defeated the United States 3-2 to win the World Baseball Classic.

This was must see viewing — over and over and over.

Shohei Ohtani striking out Los Angeles Angels teammate Mike Trout on a pitch away to end the game was replayed repeatedly between player interviews, beer-sprayed clubhouse interludes, and the traditiona­l “doage” — team members tossing the winning manager and players into the air.

The country’s top circulatin­g newspaper Yomiuri rolled out a special Wednesday afternoon edition for commuters, usually reserved for serious matters of state, late-breaking election news, or as it was last year — the assassinat­ion of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

“Japan, the World’s No. 1,” the headline read in Japanese, with commuters at Shibuya station pushing and shoving to grab the collector’s item.

The victory and the focus on Ohtani for the past two weeks provided a distractio­n from economic malaise, missile threats from North Korea, and China’s rise across Asia and its implicatio­ns for Japan.

It also gave a boost in Japan to baseball, which has been challenged by soccer as the country’s favorite sport. Japan is unlikely in the shortterm to win soccer’s World Cup, but its baseball is world class. It has won three of the five WBC titles, dating to the first event in 2006.

Japan joined the Dominican Republic in 2013 as the only unbeaten champions of baseball’s premier national team tournament.

“I was OK with either losing or winning,” said Hiroya Kuroda, a 44-year-old in a crowd of about 400 watching the game in a studio at Tokyo Tower. “But I was very moved by the fact that they showed us a dramatic game on that stage in the United States.”

Toshiya Ishii, a 29-year-old fan, broke down crying at the victory.

“Thank you Ohtani,” he said. “Congratula­tions Samurai Japan. Thank you.”

Reports in Japan say Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, just back from Ukraine and talks with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, is to meet with the Japanese team when it returns to Tokyo.

“The semifinal against Mexico and the final against the United States were both very close games, but Samurai Japan fought together as one to clinch the victories,” Kishida said on Twitter. “That encouraged me enormously.”

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