
Toshiba Defends Japan Rugby League One Title
Reporting on the Japan Rugby League One final, golfer Rio Takeda's runner-up finish in the US Women's Open, F1 driver Yuki Tsunoda's struggles and more.
Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo players celebrate after winning the Japan Rugby League One playoff final on June 1, 2025, at National Stadium in Tokyo. (©SANKEI)
New Zealander Richie Mo'unga scored a tone-setting try in the eighth minute, and Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo collected their second consecutive Japan Rugby League One title on Sunday, June 1.
Star flyhalf Mo'unga's squad, which led 8-6 at halftime, held on for an 18-13 triumph over the Kubota Spears in the championship match at Tokyo's National Stadium.
In the second half, Toshiba took a commanding 15-6 advantage in the 48th minute on a Yuto Mori try and Mo'unga's conversion. Brave Lupus flyhalf Richie Mo'unga played a starring role in his team's title-clinching victory. (©SANKEI)
Mo'unga was the catalyst for Mori's score, initiating the scoring chance after a scrum. His burst of speed in the open field led to a well-timed pass to Mori.
The former All Blacks player kicked a penalty goal near the midway point of the second half to make it 18-6.
Kubota's Harumichi Tatekawa scored the team's lone try in the 73rd minute. The conversion cut the lead to 18-13. Brave Lupus captain Michael Leitch in action during the second half of the title match. (©SANKEI)
After their determined effort over the Spears, Brave Lupus players reacted to their title-clinching performance.
Mo'unga, who was named Player of the Match, spoke of the challenge of competing while playing injured.
"I broke my right hand in the semifinal (against the Koelco Kobe Steelers on May 24) and was unable to practice for the past week and was still in pain," Mo'unga was quoted as saying by NHK. "But I wanted to win so I chose to play."
The popular veteran player added, "For the first try, there was space and I judged that I could use my footwork, so I sensibly chose to dive in. I am happy to win again, and I think it is the result of a solid effort and a [match] that we should have won."
Toshiba captain Michael Leitch, a naturalized Japanese citizen, reflected on his club's successful quest to repeat as champs.
"It has been a season of learning with each game," Leitch told the media after the match, NHK reported. "I would like to thank the coaches and the support of the non-playing members of the team for helping us win back-to-back championships."
The Brave Lupus had a 15-1-2 record in the regular season. Toshiba's Yuto Mori scores a second-half try against Kubota. (©SANKEI)
As expressed by Leitch, teamwork was a critical element of Toshiba's success.
Mori shared similar sentiments after Toshiba won the match before an announced crowd of 51,009.
"At the end, even in the final, we felt like we won as a team," Mori was quoted as saying by Sankei Sports . Rio Takeda tees off the first hole during the final round of the US Women's Open in Erin, Wisconsin, on June 1. (Benny Sieu/IMAGN IMAGES/via REUTERS)
LPGA Tour rookie Rio Takeda shot an even-par 72 in the final round of the 80th US Women's Open and finished tied for second with world No 1 Nelly Korda on Sunday, June 1.
Takeda completed the tournament with a 5-under 283 at Erin Hills Golf Course in Erin, Wisconsin.
Sweden's Maja Stark, who entered the final round with a one-stroke lead, won her first women's golf major with a 7-under 281.
Japan's Mao Saigo carded a 73 on Sunday and ended up in a three-way tie for fourth at 4-under 284. Saigo's best 18-hole effort of the tourney was in the second round, when she shot a 66.
Compatriot Hinako Shibuno finished at 3-under 285 and tied for seventh. She began the event with a 70, followed by a 69 and a 72 before shooting a 2-over 74 on the final day.
Heading into the fourth round, Takeda, Saigo and Shibuno were two strokes off the pace.
Takeda made three birdies, a bogey and a double bogey in the final round. She shot a 1-over 37 on the front nine.
"If I had made a few more putts down the stretch, I think I could have tied for the lead," Takeda said, according to Kyodo News.
Asked about the overall experience of competing at the US Women's Open, the 22-year-old described it in positive terms.
"I was a contender for that last day of this major, so it was a very good experience for me," Takeda told a news conference. "Of course I wanted to win and I couldn't. So I'll come back next year and try hard again." [ODDS and EVENS] Rio Takeda Showcases Talent at Blue Bay LPGA in China Haas' Esteban Ocon (left) and Red Bull's Yuki Tsunoda in action during the Spanish Grand Prix on June 1 at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya in Barcelona. (Juan Medina/REUTERS)
Red Bull's Yuki Tsunoda placed 13th in Formula One's Spanish Grand Prix on Sunday, June 1 in Barcelona.
The Kanagawa Prefecture native had the worst performance in qualifying, placing last among 20 drivers on Saturday, May 31.
So, not surprisingly, he looked ahead to the next day's race with more negative vibes than positive feelings.
"It just isn't a good feeling, so far what I feel is the car is eating its tires a lot, and every lap, whatever I do, I have the degradation," Tsunoda said, according to F1's official website. But, anyway, hopefully the setup change made a step forward. I'm hoping it will be better, but realistically, I'm a little bit less hopeful."
The Spanish Grand Prix was the ninth race on the 2025 F1 calendar. Up next: the Canadian GP on June 15 in Montreal. Max Verstappen Returns to Winning Ways at the Japanese Grand Prix Los Angeles Dodgers starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto pitches against the New York Yankees on June 1 at Dodger Stadium. (KYODO)
Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto had his shortest outing of the Major League Baseball season in a 7-3 home loss to the New York Yankees on Sunday. Yamamoto (6-4, 2.39 ERA) lasted just 3⅔ innings. He allowed seven hits and four runs before being pulled from the game by Dodgers skipper Dave Roberts.
Yamamoto had pitched at least five innings in each of his previous 11 starts.
Brazilian forward Leo Ceara of the Kashima Antlers leads the J.League with 11 goals in the 2025 season. The soccer standout has appeared in 12 matches for the first-place squad.
Author: Ed Odeven
Find Ed on JAPAN Forward' s dedicated website, SportsLook . Follow his [Japan Sports Notebook] on Sundays, [Odds and Evens] during the week, and X (formerly Twitter) @ed_odeven .
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Calgary Herald
3 hours ago
- Calgary Herald
Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman buy Australian sailing team
Article content Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman are now in the sailing game. Article content Founded in 2019 by American billionaire and Oracle founder Larry Ellison and world champion yachtsman New Zealander Russell Coutts, SailGP is an international sailing competition that sees 12 national teams competing in races around the world using technologically advanced catamarans. The team will compete at the New York Grand Prix this weekend. Article content Article content The announcement of Reynolds and Jackman coming aboard as co-owners coincides with Australian underwear brand Bonds signing on as a team sponsor, which of course was the source of a joke in a statement released by Reynolds and Jackman. Article content 'We're incredibly excited to set sail together in this new adventure,' Reynolds and Jackman said in a joint statement. 'Hugh brings a deep love for and pride in his home country as well as being an avid fan of sailing. He will also be bringing his overly clingy emotional support human along for the ride. Apologies in advance to Australia. No comment on whether we're writing this in our Bonds. No further questions.' Article content Article content Article content The investment in the sailing team is just another move into the sports franchise game by Reynolds. The Vancouver native's sports holdings include the Welsh soccer team Wrexham AFC with his friend Rob McElhenney. Reynolds and McElhenney also invested in the Mexican soccer team Club Necaxa and Colombian club La Equidad, Article content Article content


Japan Forward
16 hours ago
- Japan Forward
Shigeo Nagashima (1936-2025): There Can Never Be Another 'Mr Baseball'
Everyone loved Shigeo Nagashima. During the Showa years, kids gathering to play sandlot ball would vie for the honor of wearing the "Number 3" jersey just like him. Even many fathers who prided themselves on being "Giants haters," did not let that stop them from enjoying Shigeo Nagashima's play. It was a phenomenon you could experience in public squares and living rooms across Japan. Nagashima's way of playing baseball symbolized an era when Japan was recovering from the war and moving towards becoming an economic superpower. It was a buoyant era when people were confident of a bright future. 2025 marks an even century since the start of the Showa era and 80 years since the end of the Pacific War. Nagashima, who passed away on June 3 at the age of 89, was a giant of the game and an unrivaled superstar who seemed to embody the Showa and postwar eras. Shigeo Nagashima of the Giants hits a walk-off home run in the first professional baseball game to be watched by the Emperor. June 1959, against the Hanshin Tigers at Korakuen Stadium. Perhaps the best-known moment in his lengthy career was the walk-off home run he hit against his worthy rival Minoru Murayama in a game attended by the Emperor Showa in 1959. Professional baseball fans went wild over his competitive spirit as well as his spectacular swings and misses that would send his helmet flying. He always lived up to expectations in crucial situations like those. September 16, 1968 (Showa 43) - Giants player Shigeo Nagashima swings and misses, sending his helmet flying at Korakuen Stadium. Nagashima teamed up with his teammate and buddy Sadaharu Oh to blast "O-N (Oh-Nagashima) Cannon Shots." But he also thrilled the crowds with his deft defensive performance at third base, where he would routinely leap for a fiercely hit ball and then wave his right hand as if striking a pose after throwing the ball to first base for the out. Nagashima would wear a large helmet that could fly easily. And his movements after throwing the ball were straight out of kabuki theater. He was clearly out to entertain the fans. With O-N taking the lead, Japanese professional baseball grew in popularity to the point that it became the national pastime. And Nagashima came to be called "Mr Giants." With time, that became "Mister Pro Baseball," and eventually he was known affectionately to all Japanese simply as "Mister." His boundless cheerfulness and consistently positive attitude were the true source of his popularity. Giants' player Shigeo Nagashima watches the ball's trajectory. Nagashima was also loved for his many famous words of wisdom, such as "Failure is the mother of success." Asked how he deals with the psychological pressure before an important game, he replied, "I enjoy the pressure." When young, he made light of the famous line by author Kenji Miyazawa meant to embody the will to endure, "Unbowed by the rain, unbowed by the wind." He dismissed it as "boring." And instead his sayonara message for his junior high school graduation message board was: Rejoice in the rain, enjoy the wind. His thoroughly positive personality appears to have remained unchanged since his childhood. When the war ended in the summer of 1945, Nagashima was nine years old. Tokyo and other major Japanese cities had been turned into burned-out ruins. But the speed of recovery that followed astonished the world and speaks volumes about the industriousness of the Japanese people. In 1956, the government's White Paper on the Economy declared that "We are no longer in the postwar period." At that very time, Nagashima was a star player as third baseman at Rikkyo University, a member of the Big Six league of elite Tokyo universities. Two years later, he made his debut with the Yomiuri Giants. And in his very first year as a pro player, he won the Central League home run and RBI titles. Shigeo Nagashima at Korakuen Stadium [Photo taken on November 1, 1963] In 1960, the Hayato Ikeda Cabinet launched its "Income Doubling Plan." And 1965 marked the start of the "Izanagi Boom." It was also the year in which the Giants won the first of nine consecutive Japan Series titles. The color television joined automobiles and air conditioners to form the "new three sacred treasures." It was a staple in the living room of every household. And in the evenings, fathers would monopolize the choice of channels to catch live night games in which the Giants played. That was the scene in Japan during the Showa era, and Nagashima could always be found center stage. Shigeo Nagashima (center) on the day of his retirement, with Sadaharu Oh (left) (October 14, 1974). In 2021 Nagashima was awarded the Order of Culture. He was only the second athlete to receive this honor, following the swimmer Hironoshin Furuhashi, nicknamed the "Flying Fish of Fujiyama" [Mount Fuji] by the sports world. Furuhashi set 33 world records during his career in the immediate postwar years. Just as Furuhashi symbolized the postwar reconstruction era, Nagashima symbolized the high economic growth era. Led by Coach Shigeo Nagashima, the Giants won their first Japan Series title in six years. Players, including Hideki Matsui, circle the stadium with their manager at Tokyo Dome. October, 2000. In 2004, while getting ready for the Athens Olympics as the manager of the Japanese national baseball team, Nagashima suffered a cerebral infarction (stroke) and was hospitalized. He subsequently became disabled. Nevertheless, he continued to appear in public, displaying to all his efforts at rigorous rehabilitation. Nagashima forced himself to live in such a way that others would see him. His conduct serves as inspiration for others who have suffered the same disability to live courageously. That no doubt is why he acted as he did. In 2013, the Japanese government bestowed the National Honor Award (People's Honor Award) upon Nagashima and Hideki Matsui in a joint ceremony at Tokyo Dome. Nagashima had mentored Matsui and Matsui considered himself Nagashima's disciple. When asked upon his retirement what scene from his career came immediately to mind, Matsui answered, "Batting practice with Manager Nagashima." The two men, mentor and disciple, kept in close touch even after Matsui left to play ball in the United States. Back in Japan, Nagashima continued to listen to the whistling sound of Matsui's bat swing over his cellphone, which he placed on the floor of his home or hotel room. At the People's Honor Award ceremony, the pair rode side by side in an open car. And since Nagashima was waving his left hand while hiding his disabled right hand, Matsui also continued to wave only with his left hand. Later Matsui explained, "I wanted to draw attention to the manager's vigor." Obviously, another of Nagashima's great achievements was his nurturing of kind-hearted successors. Shigeo Nagashima encourages Ichiro (left) before a practice match between the Japanese WBC team and the Giants in February 2009 at Sun Marine Stadium in Miyazaki City. Across the wide Pacific, Shohei Otani paid tribute to Nagashima before the start of a Los Angles Dodgers game. Then in the game, he proceeded to hit a huge home run. Looks like we are rapidly gaining a symbol for the Reiwa era. This is how the tapestry of stars transcending eras is woven. Shigeo Nagashima, "Mr Pro Baseball" (1936-2025) OBITUARY | Baseball Great Shigeo Nagashima Dies at 89 (Read the editorial in Japanese .) Author: Editorial Board, The Sankei Shimbun


Winnipeg Free Press
17 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts gifts pink toy luxury car to Shohei Ohtani's baby daughter
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts and his wife have gifted Shohei Ohtani's baby daughter with a pink toy Porsche. Ohtani posted a video of him, Roberts and the toy car on his Instagram account. 'We had a little running practical-joke situation going on,' Roberts said Wednesday, 'but this was a gift for the baby.' Last May, Roberts joked that Ohtani should give him a Porsche when the slugger broke the Dodgers record for most home runs by a Japanese player. Ohtani obliged, gifting a purple toy model Porsche for Roberts' office. In breaking the record, Ohtani surpassed the mark set by Roberts, who was born in Japan, during his playing days. Ohtani went slightly bigger in March, when he left another toy Porsche in Roberts' parking space at Camelback Ranch in Arizona. Ohtani gifted Ashley Kelly, wife of Dodgers pitcher Joe Kelly, a Porsche for her husband giving up his No. 17 when Ohtani signed with the Dodgers in December 2023. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. Ohtani's first child was born on April 19. He and his wife, Mamiko Tanaka, have not revealed the baby's name or any other information in keeping with Ohtani's penchant for privacy. Ohtani's reaction to the gift from Roberts and his wife Tricia? 'He was very grateful,' Roberts said. ___ AP MLB: