The Telegraph (Macon)

‘HE LOOKS LIKE BARRY BONDS’

Embarking on rare mission, phenom wallops moonshots

- BY ANDREW BAGGARLY

Rintaro Sasaki is not the typical Stanford University baseball recruit. At home in Japan, he is a national celebrity. Last year, he was the top-rated high school player in a country where high school baseball is an obsession.

A left-handed slugger, he was projected to be the most coveted player in October’s Nippon Profession­al Baseball draft. He mashed 140 home runs, a national record, with twice as many walks as strikeouts, for Hanamaki Higashi High School in Iwate prefecture, the school that produced Shohei Ohtani and Yusei Kikuchi. Sasaki’s father, Hiroshi, coached all of them and is a respected figure in his own right.

When Rintaro Sasaki graduated in March, television stations sent more than 30 camera crews to cover the event. It would be a last glimpse. Sasaki subsequent­ly announced that he would play college baseball in the United States, an uncommon career path that could fast-track him to Major League Baseball as a draft-eligible sophomore in 2026.

In February, Sasaki stunned Stanford coach David Esquer and the program’s recruiting coordinato­r, Thomas Eager, when he requested a video call with them, asked a few logistical questions, then told them that he was selecting the Cardinal over University of California, Berkeley; UCLA; and Vanderbilt University.

Sasaki arrived on campus in April, moved into a dorm room and enrolled in three classes. He can participat­e in all team activities except playing in games. He has gone on road trips to Utah and Oregon State. He has surprised everyone with how much English he understand­s, and he has left them slackjawed with his batting practice shots over the light standards. When he turned 19 in mid-April, his teammates took him out to a dinner that included ice cream, candles and tables of strangers joining in to sing “Happy Birthday.”

He is absolutely loving all of it.

“I made the right choice,”

Sasaki said through Tomoo Yamada, an interprete­r and team trainer. “People are nice to me. Everyone is my friend. I haven’t missed Japan yet. I feel completely settled. I can’t believe it’s been only four weeks. I’m enjoying life.”

Sasaki, broad and powerful, is 6 feet and 250 pounds, and his full-tilt swing puts every ounce behind the baseball.

“He looks like Barry Bonds,” infielder Jimmy Nati said. “That’s how good he’s going to be. When he runs into balls, he hits them over the light tower. It’s crazy.”

If Sasaki had been drafted by a Japanese team, he would have been under club control for nine years. Although Japanese teams often gain a windfall in posting fees by making their players available to MLB before their nine years are up, there are no guarantees. Sasaki might have been pushing 30 by the time he had an opportunit­y to play in the United States.

He made it clear: His goal is to play in the major leagues.

“Ohtani and Kikuchi are already overseas,” Sasaki said. “I always thought one day, hopefully, I can get there. They were big influences for me. Ohtani said: ‘Follow your instinct. That is what you decided. That is a path you need to keep walking.’”

Sasaki’s path – to become MLB draft-eligible by attending an American university – has almost no precedent. Rikuu Nishida, an infielder from Sendai, Japan, was an 11th-round pick of the Chicago White Sox last year after a standout season at Oregon. But Nishida, who played two seasons at an American junior college, was not a pro prospect in Japan.

Although there are no written rules that would prohibit an MLB team from signing a Japanese high school player out of its internatio­nal signing pool, there has been an understand­ing among teams against the practice. (Until 2020, when it rescinded its rule, Japanese baseball enforced a ban of two to three years on Japanese players who opted out of the draft and signed with a foreign league.)

Ohtani came close to setting a groundbrea­king precedent as a high school phenom in 2012, when he advised Japanese teams against drafting him, saying he intended to sign with an MLB franchise. The NipponHam Fighters took him anyway, then persuaded him to sign by promising to let him develop as a two-way player.

Japanese teams had no such hope of signing Sasaki, who ensured that he would be taken off the draft board by attending an American university. Now, he will have two seasons to improve before turning pro.

The chance to develop in less of a fishbowl environmen­t was appealing to Sasaki and his father.

“In Japan, people tend to focus more on shortcomin­gs, but in the U.S., they develop individual­ity,” Hiroshi Sasaki told CNN in March. “I think this is a very good choice for him.”

It involves financial risk and delayed gratificat­ion. As a firstround pick in Japanese baseball, Sasaki would probably have received a signing bonus and incentives worth more than $1 million, plus personal services contracts that could have earned him hundreds of thousands more. At Stanford, of course, he is merely a scholarshi­p athlete. He also cannot participat­e in name, image and likeness opportunit­ies because he is an internatio­nal player on a student visa.

He will earn a multimilli­on bonus if he is a first-round pick in 2026, but that is far from assured. Because he is limited to first base and his defensive skills are unpolished, his bat must be compelling. And although he faced top high school competitio­n in Japan, he mostly hit against pitchers who threw in the upper 80s.

He is betting on himself and on Stanford to help him develop his gifts.

“I had the confidence to come to the States,” Sasaki said. “Right now, I want to settle in here, take classes and do well.

Take one step at a time. And two years from today, we’ll see where I am at. Getting to the major leagues is not everything for my life. Of course I want to get drafted and get to the major leagues. But I want to keep studying and also be a good person.”

Does that make him a pioneer? He shrugged. That’s for others to decide.

“He’s showing a lot of courage to come here spring quarter, practice on a daily basis with a college team and look so comfortabl­e,” Esquer said. “He wants to get an education and maybe become an entreprene­ur, but he’s also told us that he wants to leave a mark and blaze a trail for Japanese players to come here and play college baseball. Eighteen-year-old kids don’t normally think that way.

“He grew up with Ohtani. He’s seen the standard of what it takes to be great.”

If Sasaki becomes a top MLB draft prospect two years from now, he may someday be regarded as the player who upended an entire system, something even Ohtani could not accomplish.

Ohtani, asked about his influence on Sasaki’s decision, said he merely offered support and encouragem­ent.

“I feel like that’s the decision he made from his conviction,” Ohtani said through an interprete­r.

Stanford was a late entrant when the recruitmen­t process began last year. Sasaki took unofficial visits to Vanderbilt, Duke University, UCLA and California, but he did not go to Stanford. At the time, there was not a spot for him. Then two Cardinal players entered the transfer portal and a few others decommitte­d.

His official visit included meet-and-greets with three Stanford alumni who are major leaguers: Chicago Cubs second baseman Nico Hoerner, Kansas City Royals pitcher Kris Bubic and San Francisco Giants pitcher Tristan Beck.

Esquer knew what was at stake. If Sasaki chose Stanford, it would enhance the university’s prestigiou­s internatio­nal brand and perhaps create a pipeline of talent.

“My promise to you is that we’re going to take care of your son,” Esquer told Hiroshi Sasaki. “We’re going to coach him and help him get better, but also we’re going to make sure he’s well looked after.”

Beck laughed when he recalled his recruiting visit more than a decade ago.

“One of the adages I heard before I enrolled was, ‘Don’t worry about being bothered because the most famous people here don’t play sports at all,’” Beck said. “The most interestin­g people here aren’t even athletes, even with people like Andrew Luck walking around campus.”

Sasaki’s goal is to be a hitter like Bonds, he said. For now, he just wants to be a good teammate and fit in. He is taking a language skills class with other internatio­nal students, but his other two courses are in English. He understand­s more than he can speak.

Sasaki declined Esquer’s offer of a full-time interprete­r, saying he would chip away at the language barrier faster with the help of his teammates.

“It fired us up to hear that,” catcher Luke Lavin said. “Because it seems he’s really bought into the team’s culture and being around us. He’s a normal teammate here. You can’t tell from talking to him that he’s superfamou­s. He has not brought it up once, how many people know his name.”

Still, Sasaki is soon likely to draw crowds. Word is beginning to trickle out that he is on campus. For now, his competitio­n is limited to the team’s spirited intrasquad games, in which a couple of his teammates already feel comfortabl­e enough to engage in some sarcastic banter. They have learned Sasaki is comfortabl­e enough to dish it back.

“We were at Oregon State and I’m watching him flick home runs the other way,” Lavin said. “So I said to him, ‘Ah, it’s just the wind.’ Then the wind died down and he started hitting pull-side homers over the stands.

“And he looked at me and said, ‘It’s not the wind.’”

 ?? KYODO NEWS USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Japanese teenage slugger Rintaro Sasaki poses for a photo in front of journalist­s at Hanamaki Higashi High School – which Los Angeles Dodgers two-way star Shohei Ohtani also attended – in Hanamaki, Iwate Prefecture, on Feb. 20, 2024. Stanford University announced a week before that Sasaki, who hit 140 home runs in his high school career, will enroll at the school in April before joining its baseball team for the 2025 season.
KYODO NEWS USA TODAY NETWORK Japanese teenage slugger Rintaro Sasaki poses for a photo in front of journalist­s at Hanamaki Higashi High School – which Los Angeles Dodgers two-way star Shohei Ohtani also attended – in Hanamaki, Iwate Prefecture, on Feb. 20, 2024. Stanford University announced a week before that Sasaki, who hit 140 home runs in his high school career, will enroll at the school in April before joining its baseball team for the 2025 season.

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