Houston Chronicle

The Mariners’ Ichiro Suzuki ends his career with a win in Japan.

- By Stephen Wade

TOKYO — At times, it seemed as if he would go on hitting forever.

But Thursday night, a player who defined baseball at its very best on two continents for a generation, took his final swing.

The great Ichiro said “sayonara.”

Ichiro Suzuki, 45, left the Tokyo Dome field in the eighth inning, waving goodbye to the packed crowd amid hugs from Seattle Mariners teammates in a three-minute walk that signaled to all his monumental run was over.

“I have ended my career and decided to retire,” Ichiro said, speaking in Japanese at a news conference after Seattle’s 5-4 victory over Oakland in 12 innings.

He said his contract was through the two games in Japan and said he decided before arriving last week to step away.

“After the reception I got today, how could I possibly have any regrets?” he said. “I couldn't play well enough in spring training to earn an extension.”

Ichiro went 0-for-4 in his farewell. In his last at-bat, he came up with two outs, a runner on second and a tie score in the eighth. He hit a slow grounder to shortstop and, still hustling the whole way, was barely thrown out at first.

He took his spot in right field in the eighth and then was pulled by manager Scott Servais, and the walk into history began in front of a sellout of 45,000. He strolled in, turned and waved to the crowd with all of the usually reserved Japanese fans on their feet.

To chants of “Ichiro, Ichiro, Ichiro” he was greeted at the dugout — and later in the dugout — by emotional embraces from teammates.

Yusei Kikuchi, the Japanese rookie pitcher who started the game in his big league debut, openly broke down crying when he embraced Ichiro.

Kikuchi later took a full minute to compose himself before responding about Ichiro's impact. And he cried when the two embraced in the dugout after the game.

“Since spring training to this day, Ichiro told us it is a gift for him to play in Tokyo,” Kikuchi said speaking through a translator. “But for me, he gave me the greatest gift that I can play with him.”

Yet when Mariners teammate Dee Gordon bowed, Ichiro broke into a laugh — like, “not necessary, bro.”

Oakland players stood solemnly and watched camera flashes and iPhones catch the historic scene. All over the stadium signs read: “Ichiro we love you” and “Ichiro is Life.” Fans wore his famous No. 51 in all shades, colors and from all eras.

The fans got one more chance to salute when he came back on the field after the game and acknowledg­ed their ovations.

Ichiro was 0-for-5 in the two regular-season games against the A's in Tokyo, leaving him with 3,089 hits in 19 seasons — a sure Hall of Fame résumé. He had 1,278 before that over nine years in Japan, making him baseball's all-time hits leader. Ichiro was a 10-time AllStar, an AL MVP and Rookie of the Year and won 10 Gold Gloves. He set the record with 262 hits in a season and wound up with a .311 batting average.

“I really wanted to play until I was 50, but I couldn't do it,” he said.

 ?? Koji Sasahara / Associated Press ?? Mariners right fielder Ichiro Suzuki announced his retirement Thursday night after 19 MLB seasons and nine in Japan.
Koji Sasahara / Associated Press Mariners right fielder Ichiro Suzuki announced his retirement Thursday night after 19 MLB seasons and nine in Japan.

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