The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Surge of Japanese stars is changing baseball

Unpreceden­ted success in the U.S. major leagues is breeding a new class of talent overseas.

- By Chelsea Janes

Twenty-five years ago, in April 1999, there were six Japanese players on Major League Baseball rosters. Hideo Nomo was the most famous of the bunch, but there were other names, too. Masato Yoshii, Hideki Irabu, Mac Suzuki and Shigetoshi Hasegawa ended up pitching at least five MLB seasons. They were big leaguers and trailblaze­rs. But they were rarities in MLB, which by and large still treated Japanese players as though they had something to prove.

A quarter-century later, Japanese stars are integral parts of MLB’s story, playing prominent roles on prominent teams and commanding as much attention and money as, if not more than, North American-born stars.

The highest-paid hitter in the majors, Shohei Ohtani, began his playing career in Nippon Profession­al Baseball. The highest-paid pitcher, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, earned his deal entirely based on his track record in NPB. Chicago Cubs left-hander Shota Imanaga has looked dominant. New York Mets right-hander Kodai Senga finished second in National League rookie of the year voting last season. In an era of fleeting starter durability, San Diego Padres righthande­r Yu Darvish is sixth among active pitchers in career strikeouts. As many eyes are on young Japanese righty Roki Sasaki, who is still pitching for NPB’s Chiba Lotte Marines, as there are on any elite college player who might find himself drafted this summer.

The change came slowly, then swiftly, unleashing a torrent of Japanese talent coming stateside that will only pick up speed. And according to conversati­ons with more than a dozen current and former NPB players, coaches and MLB executives, a shrinking world and changing attitudes combined to make it possible.

“I think overall, maybe 10 years back, the understand­ing for players in Japan was that it was going to be tough to make it over here,” Darvish said through an interprete­r. “But I think the hurdle has become a little bit lower — or, maybe, it’s the other way around: Players over there are getting better, then doing a better job when they come here.”

When Darvish debuted in 2012, Japanese players finding stardom in the United States still qualified as a rarity. The first Japanese standout to make the leap was reliever Masanori Murakami, whose promising MLB career began with the San Francisco Giants in 1964 and ended a year later when a contract dispute with his NPB team forced him to return to Japan.

It was three decades before an NPB standout would find his way to MLB again, when Nomo grew frustrated with the way his Kintetsu Buffaloes were using him and found a loophole that allowed him to make the jump to the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1995. His success signaled that Japanese aces could fare well in the United States, too, and pushed the leagues to establish the posting system, which allows Japanese stars to sign with MLB teams and Japanese teams to be compensate­d.

A few years later, Ichiro Suzuki arrived, and in the years that followed stars including Daisuke Matsuzaka and Hideki Matsui inspired bidding wars among some of baseball’s most storied franchises. But for the most part, the trickle of talent across the Pacific was slow and limited to NPB’s elite players — or, at least, those who were most certain they would find success here.

In the years since, though, Darvish arrived and thrived. Starters including Masahiro Tanaka, Kenta Maeda and Yusei Kikuchi waited out the requisite six years in Japan before heading to MLB and establishi­ng themselves as valuable assets. Little by little, the question for top NPB talent changed. It is rarely a question of whether they will make the jump to MLB but rather when they will make it.

Ohtani was so good, so soon, that he did not even wait until he was eligible to head to MLB and instead made a deal with his NPB team to come over early. In the years that followed, players such as Seiya Suzuki and Masataka Yoshida found an MLB market willing to bet on Japanese hitters, too.

Darvish, meanwhile, emerged as something of a stateside mentor, the person Japanese pitchers would call for advice about whether they could make it here and how.

‘How will I fare against the rest of the world?’

In the aftermath of the unforgetta­ble 2023 World Baseball Classic final and in free agency this offseason, Imanaga was, the cerebral lefty probably would agree, something of an afterthoug­ht.

His two innings of one-run ball and two strikeouts in that game were eclipsed in the collective memory by Ohtani’s relief appearance and decisive strikeout of Mike Trout. And his hunt for a new MLB home was overshadow­ed by that of Ohtani and Yamamoto.

That Imanaga, who won two of his first three MLB starts this season, without giving up a run in a combined 15⅓ innings, could repeatedly slide under the radar of so much Japanese baseball stardom is illustrati­ve of the deluge of talent from the country in recent years.

“There have been a couple of internatio­nal tournament­s, and it gets a lot of coverage in Japan. So people over there start seeing and thinking beyond NPB and wondering, ‘How will I fare against the rest of the world?’” Imanaga said through an interprete­r. “They start seeing that as a goal. There’s a kind of mind-set change there.”

That shift is permeating more than just the minds of NPB players who might once have felt a leap to MLB was impossible. It also has trickled into the minds of players in Japan’s storied high school baseball system, a system so rooted in tradition that change is hard to come by, if not sometimes frowned upon entirely.

But longtime Japanese high school baseball coach Hiroshi Sasaki, who coached both Ohtani and Kikuchi, sees change coming, slowly but surely, to the shape of his players’ dreams.

“Back in the day, there were very few players in the U.S. league. It was very rare to see Japanese players in the U.S. But now it’s become so common, from Nomo to Matsui to Ohtani. As a result, television coverage has become much more prevalent as well,” Sasaki said in a phone interview. “Little kids are seeing U.S. baseball games on TV. They’re aware of the names of the teams. It’s become much more close to them.”

Internatio­nal competitio­n helped, too. Japan had always fared well against the United States in internatio­nal play. Japan’s dismantlin­g of an American all-star team in 1990, for example, seemed to plant the seeds of belief that led Nomo and others to make the jump later that decade. In 2006, Ichiro Suzuki scolded his Japanese teammates for their deference as they watched the United States take batting practice before a WBC matchup in a tournament Japan ultimately won. A decade and a half later, it was Ohtani seizing the WBC moment to urge his Japanese teammates not to admire the Americans, but see them as equals. Japan beat the U.S. in that tournament, too.

Trying something new

Sasaki, Ohtani’s high school coach and early mentor, knows better than anyone the benefits that traditiona­l Japanese baseball training — high-volume drilling of fundamenta­ls, an emphasis on mental toughness, the sense of duty to one’s team and to Japanese baseball values — can have for a young player. So it was a somewhat seismic departure from the norm when he and his family decided this year that his son, Rintaro, would head to Stanford University to play college baseball instead of making himself eligible for the NPB draft.

The reasons, Sasaki explained, were as uncomplica­ted as they were indicative of the ways in which American norms are becoming more accessible to Japanese players. Japanese college and NPB teams, Sasaki explained, evaluate players mostly on traditiona­l metrics — batting average, limiting strikeouts, defensive fundamenta­ls.

He worried his son, who was the top-ranked Japanese high school player last year largely because of his power, might find himself docked because of what he does not do well instead of lauded because of what he does. He said, in his experience, MLB evaluators are more willing to overlook shortcomin­gs in one area of a player’s game to foster excellence in another. A power hitter like his son, for example, would benefit from a scouting system that would be more intrigued by a high OPS than scared away by a low batting average.

“I wanted him to be looked at for what he can do well,” Sasaki said. “For my son, who is really good at one specific portion of the game, we felt the U.S. was the best way to encourage him.”

The difference­s in priorities between Japanese and American baseball have also, at times, limited the ability of elite NPB players to see themselves in MLB. NPB traditiona­lly looked for and rewarded well-rounded players who can execute fundamenta­ls, especially hitters who limit strikeouts, and eschewed the boomor-bust approach so many MLB teams have adopted lately. The same has been true for pitchers: Maximizing velocity has been less important than prioritizi­ng control, and training has focused more on stamina than explosiven­ess, more on throwing a lot between starts than throwing with purpose — repetition yields success, full stop.

But as MLB teams began prioritizi­ng power and velocity, some Japanese stars started hunting for the kind of training that could help them get there.

Neftali Soto, who played in the majors for the Cincinnati Reds and spent a decade in the minors before signing with NPB’s Yokohama DeNA BayStars in 2018, said he already has noticed a difference in the way his Japanese-trained NPB peers are approachin­g the game.

“One thing I think is changing is the way they are taking care of their bodies now. My first year here, there were a lot of people that did a lot of running, a lot of baseball stuff outside. Now, people are thinking, ‘I got to rest. I got to hit the gym more,’” Soto said. “They see Ohtani, who is jacked, throwing 100, hitting 40 bombs, so a lot of the young guys especially are looking at that and working on those things.”

The more Japanese players see themselves in MLB, the more they start to build themselves to the specificat­ions MLB prefers. The more MLB sees Japanese stars thriving in its ranks, the more it starts to look for them. The century-old exchange of baseball culture, it seems, has reached a new, and in some cases very, lucrative apex.

On Thursday morning, the Baseball Hall of Fame announced an upcoming exhibit that explores the shared baseball history of the United States and Japan, which will open next summer.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL/AP ?? The Los Angeles Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani epitomizes the kind of phenomenal success Japanese baseball stars can look to emulate in the major leagues.
MARK J. TERRILL/AP The Los Angeles Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani epitomizes the kind of phenomenal success Japanese baseball stars can look to emulate in the major leagues.

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