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Manny's 4
rbi's belie his demise
Photo by
Koichi Kamoshida-Getty
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Hideki Okajima-wins
at "home"
Photo by Issei Kato - Reuters |
No matter what country to which MLB
may send its
season-opener, it'll still be a great game. As if to solidify
that
truism, the World Champion Boston Red Sox came from behind to beat the
upstart
Oakland A's 6-5 this morning in Japan to serve notice that they will
have to be
reckoned with once again in 2008.
Whether
baseball will remain "America's
game" seems open to question. With both hero and goat
candidates from the home country of Japan and with the biggest
slugging
exhibition coming from a man who hails from Latin America, that
particular
moniker would seem to be highly problematical.
But
does it really matter? Would the World Series be a true "World
Series" if the players all hailed from the 50 states? I don't
think
so. That game popularity has been exported along with player
development
efforts is ultimately good for the game, although American fans may
suffer a
little along the way.
The
game started at 6AM ET and, despite consuming a few cups of coffee
(another
wonderful product from Latin America),
this
fan could not keep his eyes open another moment, but did have the
wherewithal
to hit the "record" button on his VCR before submitting to the
Sandman.
Awakened
about three hours later though, I was treated to a great ending.
I
managed to see Huston
Street
of the A's blow the save for Joe Blanton in the 9th and watch the A's
blow
their opportunity to recapture the win against Boston's Jonathan Papelbon. I
got to
see another Japanese product, Oakland's
Kurt Suzuki, ground out weakly to second base with the tying and
winning runs
on base.
What
I did miss, however, was Boston’s Dice K, Daisuke Matsuzaka, give up
two
Oakland runs in the first inning, this despite the honor of getting the
start
in the season opener in his home country. I
also missed Manny Ramirez’s clutch 2-rbi double in
the 6th. But Manny hadn’t
finished yet, driving in two
more in the 10th with still another double to clinch the win.
As
good as was the game though, it had to be somewhat drowned out by the
enormity
of the cultural event. Although it was
not the first MLB game played overseas, it was the first one played on
the
Asian continent, and may be a prelude to many others, both in Japan
and
elsewhere.
According
to Wikipedia, 34 Japanese played in MLB between 1964 and 2007. Several Japanese players have signed their
first Major League contracts for the 2008 season: Kosuke
Fukudome (Chicago Cubs), Masahide Kobayashi (Cleveland
Indians), Yasuhiko Yabuta (Kansas City Royals), Hiroki
Kuroda (Los Angeles Dodgers) and Kazuo
Fukumori (Texas Rangers).
Most
of those 34 players were stars in Japan
and performed creditably or better in the U.S. The
best player, without a doubt, has been
Ichiro Suzuki (aka Ichiro)of the Seattle Mariners.
Ichiro
may be the best all-around player in the Major Leagues today. Ichiro hits for average, his 262 hits in one
season is the current major league record. He
may be the best outfielder in the game as well,
catching anything
even remotely within range and possessing a gun for an arm. He has also stolen 272 bases between 2001 and
2007.
Almost
as ballyhooed as Ichiro was Hideki Matsui, who came to the Yankees in
2003. Known as “Godzilla” in Japan,
Hideki
has yet to perform to the lofty expectations that name had promised but
nevertheless has been one of the best clutch performers on the Yanks. In his five years as a Bomber, he hit .295
with 103 homers and 462 rbi’s. He
continues to be one of the most colorful players on a team that has
been
chock-full of stars such as Arod and Jeter, Bobby Abreu and Johnny
Damon.
The
influx of foreign-born players has energized the game.
Just as Jackie Robinson excited baseball fans
back in 1947 and Roberto Clemente did in the Fifties and Sixties, so
has Ichiro
and Dice K, Hideo Nomo and both Matsui’s, Hideki and even Kaz, who last
year helped
propel the Colorado Rockies to the National League pennant with his
fielding,
timely hitting and verve on the basepaths.
The
Latino players who have become stars in the United States
are almost too
numerous to mention. In fact, there has
been concern voiced on the part of black U.S.
players that their representation in the major leagues has become
marginal,
that player development has become stilted in the U.S. and that Latino players are easier to manage
both financially and on the field.
There
is, of course, a great deal of truth in that thinking.
Latinos compose today almost 30% of all
players and there are about 80 players in MLB from the Dominican Republic
alone. But they are also among the best
players. In fact, in October of 2005, a
“Latino Legends” team was named and its membership reads like a “Who’s
Who” of
baseball superstars in the modern era.
From Puerto
Rico, there was
Ivan Rodriguez, Edgar
Martinez and Roberto Clemente. Representing
the Dominican
Republic were
Albert Pujols, Alex Rodriguez,
Vladimir Guerrero, Pedro Martinez and Juan Marichal.
There were also two players from Panama,
Rod
Carew and Mariano Rivera. And one great
pitcher from Mexico
named Fernando Valenzuela. One other
player I’ve saved for last for obvious reasons, none other than Manny
Ramirez
of the Dominican
Republic,
who outshone every other player on that Japanese field with his
performance
today.
Fans
may have to get up at 6:00 AM, or even 3:00 AM for those Oakland fans,
to view
a MLB game played in Asia, or be somewhat inconvenienced by a game
played in
Mexico or the Dominican Republic, but it’s evident that, as measured by
the
excellence of the product on the field, we all benefit from the
globalization
of our game.
There
aren’t too many sandlots to be found in the U.S.
today, at least not in our
major cities. Perhaps there should be.
