EDITORS NOTE: Fumio Ishii, our Japanese Little League
correspondent, covered the Japanese Little League Tournament for us this week
and did an amazing job bringing words and images to us from games that we never
get to hear about. Here’s his recap of the national championship game and a
scouting report on Musashi Fuchu, the team which will represent Japan in
Williamsport, Pennsylvania for the Little League World Series.
Just got back from the Japanese Little League Tournament (Zavas Cup) and as I predicted, Musashi Fuchu Little League will be taking their third trip to Williamsport and gunning for their second Little League World Series title since 2003. Please bear with me as all the Japanese Little League programs are in Japanese so I might get the names wrong because there are so many ways to pronounce the characters.
Just got back from the Japanese Little League Tournament (Zavas Cup) and as I predicted, Musashi Fuchu Little League will be taking their third trip to Williamsport and gunning for their second Little League World Series title since 2003. Please bear with me as all the Japanese Little League programs are in Japanese so I might get the names wrong because there are so many ways to pronounce the characters.
Musashi Fuchu has been known for their potent offense in the
past. The first four hitters in their lineup include right fielder Kazuteru
Ishida (石田和輝),
shortstop Sho Miyao (宮尾将), third baseman Shunpei Takagi (高木俊平), and left fielder
Takuma Gomi (五味卓馬).
From the Zavas Cup tournament, most of the runs were scored by these top four
players, but they also have good hitters in the bottom of the order too.
On defense, there are four players returning from last year’s Musashi Fuchu team which was the Tokyo runner up to the 2012 Little League World Series Champions Kitasuna Little League. They are Miyao, Gomi, second baseman Dai Okada (岡田大), and first baseman Kensuke Tsuchida (土田健輔). Their defense is very solid. Miyao looked like Ozzie Smith at times, he has very good range.
Like Kitasuna last year, they do have a big team, but their
big boys are mostly on the bench. I can’t trust the measurements from the
Little League program, because last year, they listed Kotaro Kiyomiya as 5-foot-9
and 176 pounds. I stood next to him and I’m 5-foot-11 and weigh over 200 pounds.
Kiyomiya is bigger than me, so I knew his measurements had to be wrong unless I
really shrank. It was ESPN who got his measurement right of 6-foot-1 and over
200 pounds. Fuchu has six players over 5-foot-6. The biggest player is (TKO)
Ryutaro Takeo (竹尾竜太朗).
I never stood next to him, like I did
with Kiyomiya, but I know he weighs more than 200 pounds and is 5-foot-9. He is
a backup catcher and a closer. He throws in the low to mid 70’s. Then, there is
another player, Ryu Nagano (永野龍李), who is around 6-feet, 140 pounds. I see him being
used as a middle reliever, but he’s mostly on the bench. Keita Saito (齊藤恵太)
is around 5-foot-8, 150 pounds and used
as backup left fielder and middle reliever. Shinya Nishino (西野清也)
looks like their starting left handed pitcher who is 5-foot-10, 130 pounds. I
don’t see him playing other positions besides pitcher. Toru Kobayashi is
5-foot-10 and 160 pounds and he was a middle reliever.
The pitching is kind
of erratic. When I mean erratic, I mean wild. It seems like their manager
Masumi Ohmae wanted his big kids to pitch regardless of control. Their ace
seems to be Shinya Nishino who is a south paw, he seems to throw in the high
60’s to low 70’s, but he has control problems and easily rattled when someone
hits the long ball off him. Their other pitcher is their leadoff hitter
Kazuteru Ishida. He seems to throw in the low 70’s too, but also has control
problems. Then they have Saito who has heat, but control problems as well as
middle reliever Nagano. He has heat, but control problems too. TKO is their
closer, but I know that Ohmae does not want to use him for more than an inning.
He closed a bases loaded no out jam in the 1st round of the tournament. He seems
to have a pretty good velocity too.
Overall, this is no Kitasuna of last year. They are always
known for their hitting, but I don’t think they are as good as the team in 2003
when Yutaro Tanaka caused havoc with his bat and on the mound to win the Little
League World Series. This reminds me much more like the 2000 team which got
beaten in the International Finals against Venezuela. I think they will be
playing in the Little League World Series Finals, because their offense is
better than the 2000 team and compares well against the 2003 team. Maybe the
Japanese hitters were good this year which made the pitching staff look bad.
I’m not sure. This team is beatable compared to last year’s Kitasuna team but
that was the best team I’ve ever witnessed.
Follow all Little League news on Twitter: @LittleLeaguePro
Comment below or join the discussion with super Little League fans here: Little League World Series Discussion
Follow all Little League news on Twitter: @LittleLeaguePro
Comment below or join the discussion with super Little League fans here: Little League World Series Discussion
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