Los Angeles Times

WBC isn’t just a mere exhibition for Japanese

Two-time champions take a much more serious approach than other participan­ts.

- DYLAN HERNANDEZ dylan.hernandez@latimes.com Twitter: @dylanohern­andez

Days before the start of the World Baseball Classic, the players representi­ng Japan spoke to a gathering of about 1,000 in a hotel ballroom in the port city of Fukuoka.

The players were on stage in full uniform. They stood in two rows, most of them with their hands solemnly clasped in front of them.

When Manager Hiroki Kokubo addressed the audience, he promised Japan would win the tournament. He asked the fans for their continued support, removed his cap and bowed. The players bowed, too.

The atmosphere was tense, so much so that after Kokubo and his players marched out of the room in a single file, the event’s emcee exhaled and cracked, “It’s hard to breathe, isn’t it?” The emcee sighed again. “Everyone, let’s roll our shoulders and try to relax,” he said with a forced smile. “Didn’t your shoulders tighten up?”

All this for a tournament that is viewed in the United States as a glorified exhibition, if not something that should be ignored.

So, really, it’s little wonder why Japan’s success in the WBC is unmatched. No other country places as much importance on the tournament.

The Japanese were champions in 2006 and in 2009. They will take on Team USA at Dodger Stadium on Tuesday, marking their fourth semifinal appearance in four WBCs.

This is more than a baseball tournament for the Japanese.The sport has become a vehicle for them to self-affirm and advertise the virtues of their culture, evidenced by the moniker by which the team is known: Samurai Japan. (Similarly, the Japanese women’s national soccer team, which won the 2011 World Cup, is called “Nadeshiko Japan,” nadeshiko being a term used to describe the ideal Japanese woman.)

While the country’s most recent generation­s have produced players who would be considered wellbuilt by any standards, the Japanese have long conceded their athletes can’t physically match up with the best in the world.

They have prided themselves

in making up for their shortcomin­gs with what they consider Japanese characteri­stics, in particular, superior craftsmans­hip, work ethic and what outfielder Norichika Aoki called “the spirit of self-sacrifice.”

Aoki, who is entering his sixth major league season, pointed to how Japanese and American teams respond differentl­y to leadoff

doubles.

“In the majors, it’s also considered a good thing to move the runner over, but they basically tell you to drive him in,” Aoki told Sports Nippon.

“The thinking is superaggre­ssive, like hit a double and get yourself on second base, too. In Japan, you think of creating a one-out, man-on-third situation.”

That is particular­ly important to this team. Aoki is the team’s only major league player. The team also has to deal with the absence of pitcher-outfielder Shohei Otani, the most valuable player of Japan’s Pacific League. Otani, who had a 1.88 earned-run average as a starting pitcher and hit 22 home runs, was forced to withdraw because of an ankle injury.

Preparatio­ns for the WBC started in November, when most major leaguers were on vacation. Samurai Japan gathered for a training camp that included two exhibition­s against Mexico and two against the Netherland­s.

J Sports, a satellite television station, was granted behind-the-scenes access for the contests and the footage illustrate­d the degree of seriousnes­s with which Samurai Japan approached practice.

Kokubo implored his team play fundamenta­lly sound baseball.

“If you fail to do it in these four games, there’s no way you’ll be able to do it in real games,” Kokubo said.

The unveiling of lineups had a ceremonial feel, with players gathered around a room, caps in hand, with Kokubo reading of who would bat where. “First, short, Sakamoto.” “Yes.” “Second, center, Akiyama.” “Yes.” Japan dropped the opening game to Mexico, resulting in a level of self-reproach that would seem strange almost anywhere else.

“Pitiful,” first baseman Sho Nakata said.

Nakata, who batted cleanup, was 0 for 4 with a walk.

“I’m upset I was unable to respond to expectatio­ns,” he said.

A quick reminder: This was an exhibition in November.

Nakata showed up early to the stadium the next day for additional work in the batting cages.

Aoki also made certain he would be ready to play. Major league veterans typically play only a couple of innings at the start of spring training, but Aoki showed up to the Houston Astros camp asking Manager A.J. Hinch to play him as much as possible.

Aoki played seven innings and made four plate appearance­s in the Astros’ exhibition opener.

The Japanese are 6-0 in this WBC. Their baserunnin­g is sharp, their fielding is clean and their relays are efficient.

Then again, it’s not as if the players think they have much of a choice.

The pressure back home is intense. Nearly 30% of television sets in the country showed Samurai Japan’s games in the first two rounds of the tournament.

The other semifinali­sts want to win. Japan has to.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States