The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Ichiromani­a comes back to Japan

- By Stephen Wade The Associated Press

TOKYO >> There’s an adage in Japanese that translates easily to English. Deru kugi wa utareru. The nail that sticks up gets hammered down.

Ichiro Suzuki has been the nail in a culture that values formality, caution, and deference to authority. Doing it his way, he’s developed into Japan’s greatest baseball player and arguably its best athlete.

“At such a young age he already had his own mind,” said Keizo Konishi, a reporter with the Japanese news agency Kyodo. “The older generation tells young people what they should do. Particular­ly in the structured baseball world.”

Ichiro has played 2,651 major league games since joining the Seattle Mariners in 2001. Konishi has seen almost every one; from Seattle to New York, then to Miami, and back to Seattle. Add on hundreds before that with the Orix BlueWave.

The odyssey returns him to Japan where Ichiro is expected to play in a twogame series when the Mariners and the Oakland A’s open the season March 2021 at the Tokyo Dome.

Afterward, who knows? Some Japanese want the 45-year-old to finally retire, and the Mariners have said they want to go with youth.

One thing is certain in Tokyo: Ichiromani­a rules.

He’s a source of national pride; the first position player to make it big in the majors, countering the perception that the country produced only pitchers, and players like Ichiro were too small. He’s revered for breaking through, for his fashion sense, and his Zen-like training. He’ll be the first Japanese player inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame, almost surely on the first ballot.

He can also be aloof and arrogant, known to disdain interviews, and often evasive with a habit of turning his back on reporters and disparagin­g questions he doesn’t like. Japanese journalist­s have often been targets, and organizers say just over 1,000 are accredited for the two games.

“On so many occasions he’s given me very interestin­g answers,” Konishi said in an interview with The Associated Press. “But he can give me a hard time. He tries for perfect preparatio­n. So he also requires me to be perfect, which is not easy.”

The baseball editor at Kyodo, Takashi Yamakawa described two Ichiros.

“He’s acting, I think. He’s playing Ichiro,” Yamakawa said. “There are two different aspects. There’s the very normal, polite Japanese man. And there’s maybe the real Ichiro breaking the rules, fighting for himself. He’s always thinking in a different way.”

If Ichiro is the seldombend­ing nail, his father, Nobuyuki, was the hammer who put his son through rigorous, well-documented daily baseball training from age 7.

“It bordered on hazing and I suffered a lot. But I also couldn’t say no to him,” American Robert Whiting quoted Ichiro saying in his book “The Samurai Way of Baseball.” The book was first sold under the title “The Meaning of Ichiro.”

Whiting points out that Ichiro means “most cheerful boy” in Japanese. He writes he “was not always so cheerful about practicing, especially during the harsh winter days of central Japan, when his fingers grew so numb from the frigid air that he could not button his shirt.”

Whiting has spent much of his life in Japan writing about baseball and Japanese culture. He speculated that because of World War II and the American occupation, Japan developed an inferiorit­y complex in relation to the United States.

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