logo
A Mirror-Image Game Turns Baseball on its Head

A Mirror-Image Game Turns Baseball on its Head

Yomiuri Shimbun19 hours ago
Old & New video A special baseball game where only left-handed playing is allowed and the bases are run in a clockwise direction was held on July 27 at Matsunoki athletic field in Suginami Ward, Tokyo.
The annual event, organized by the Suginami Ward elementary school PTA baseball association, was first held in 2010. This year marks the 10th time it has been held, after a hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Yoshihiko Nimura, 80, then chairman of the association, started the event to commemorate the association's 45th anniversary.By Ryuzo Suzuki / Yomiuri Shimbun Senior PhotographerA runner runs from third base to home in a clockwise direction, opposite from the usual direction.In baseball, infielders, except for the first baseman, typically throw the ball to their left after catching it, so many are right-handed. Moreover, right-handed catchers are said to be in an advantageous position because when throwing, such as during a stolen base attempt, a right-handed batter often gets in the way of a left-handed catcher trying to throw the ball.By Ryuzo Suzuki / Yomiuri Shimbun Senior PhotographerThe 'lefty zone,' in which batters are allowed to change direction toward first base even if they mistakenly run to third base.Left-handed Nimura had a strong desire to become a catcher throughout his long baseball life. When he shared this aspiration with his left-handed baseball friends, it resonated with them, leading Nimura and others to hold the lefty baseball event. The change in base-running direction creates an angle that allows left-handed infielders to make throws comfortably.By Ryuzo Suzuki / Yomiuri Shimbun Senior PhotographerA left-handed pitcher makes a throw.However, out of habit, even left-handed batters frequently start running toward normal first base immediately after hitting the ball. Therefore, this event has a special rule where a line is drawn approximately 3 meters from the home base to the pitcher's side, designating the area as a 'lefty zone' in which batters are allowed to change directions toward the normal third base.
About 20 players as well as 20 umpires and officials participated in this year's event, held under the scorching sun, and played a 7-inning game.By Ryuzo Suzuki / Yomiuri Shimbun Senior PhotographerAkihiro Taniguchi, center, is named the MVP for the 10th installment of the lefties baseball event.'In the past, the event once had four teams compete. I would like to make a fresh try in the future with participating teams that are too many to fit into one venue,' said Nimura, now chairman of the event, at the opening ceremony. 'Those who have played baseball always have teammates and friends. I would like you to make more friends so that we can hold the event next year with at least twice as many teams as this year.'
Akihiro Taniguchi, 36, a company employee from the ward who was named this year's MVP, has participated in the event since it started. 'While I sometimes feel restricted by throwing and batting left-handed in my daily baseball practices, I can play freely at this event because everyone is playing left-handed. I definitely want to participate again next year,' he said.
The event is open to anyone who plays left-handed, even if they are right-handed. Participants must be over 30 years old or have a child in elementary school or older. Those living outside the ward can participate if they have baseball experience.
By Ryuzo Suzuki / Yomiuri Shimbun Senior PhotographerGloves for left-handed players are placed in front of the dugout.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A Mirror-Image Game Turns Baseball on its Head
A Mirror-Image Game Turns Baseball on its Head

Yomiuri Shimbun

time19 hours ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

A Mirror-Image Game Turns Baseball on its Head

Old & New video A special baseball game where only left-handed playing is allowed and the bases are run in a clockwise direction was held on July 27 at Matsunoki athletic field in Suginami Ward, Tokyo. The annual event, organized by the Suginami Ward elementary school PTA baseball association, was first held in 2010. This year marks the 10th time it has been held, after a hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Yoshihiko Nimura, 80, then chairman of the association, started the event to commemorate the association's 45th Ryuzo Suzuki / Yomiuri Shimbun Senior PhotographerA runner runs from third base to home in a clockwise direction, opposite from the usual baseball, infielders, except for the first baseman, typically throw the ball to their left after catching it, so many are right-handed. Moreover, right-handed catchers are said to be in an advantageous position because when throwing, such as during a stolen base attempt, a right-handed batter often gets in the way of a left-handed catcher trying to throw the Ryuzo Suzuki / Yomiuri Shimbun Senior PhotographerThe 'lefty zone,' in which batters are allowed to change direction toward first base even if they mistakenly run to third Nimura had a strong desire to become a catcher throughout his long baseball life. When he shared this aspiration with his left-handed baseball friends, it resonated with them, leading Nimura and others to hold the lefty baseball event. The change in base-running direction creates an angle that allows left-handed infielders to make throws Ryuzo Suzuki / Yomiuri Shimbun Senior PhotographerA left-handed pitcher makes a out of habit, even left-handed batters frequently start running toward normal first base immediately after hitting the ball. Therefore, this event has a special rule where a line is drawn approximately 3 meters from the home base to the pitcher's side, designating the area as a 'lefty zone' in which batters are allowed to change directions toward the normal third base. About 20 players as well as 20 umpires and officials participated in this year's event, held under the scorching sun, and played a 7-inning Ryuzo Suzuki / Yomiuri Shimbun Senior PhotographerAkihiro Taniguchi, center, is named the MVP for the 10th installment of the lefties baseball event.'In the past, the event once had four teams compete. I would like to make a fresh try in the future with participating teams that are too many to fit into one venue,' said Nimura, now chairman of the event, at the opening ceremony. 'Those who have played baseball always have teammates and friends. I would like you to make more friends so that we can hold the event next year with at least twice as many teams as this year.' Akihiro Taniguchi, 36, a company employee from the ward who was named this year's MVP, has participated in the event since it started. 'While I sometimes feel restricted by throwing and batting left-handed in my daily baseball practices, I can play freely at this event because everyone is playing left-handed. I definitely want to participate again next year,' he said. The event is open to anyone who plays left-handed, even if they are right-handed. Participants must be over 30 years old or have a child in elementary school or older. Those living outside the ward can participate if they have baseball experience. By Ryuzo Suzuki / Yomiuri Shimbun Senior PhotographerGloves for left-handed players are placed in front of the dugout.

Shohei Ohtani Fans Trout with 101 Mph Fastball While Pitching into the 5th in Return to Big A Mound
Shohei Ohtani Fans Trout with 101 Mph Fastball While Pitching into the 5th in Return to Big A Mound

Yomiuri Shimbun

time21 hours ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

Shohei Ohtani Fans Trout with 101 Mph Fastball While Pitching into the 5th in Return to Big A Mound

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Shohei Ohtani returned to the Angel Stadium mound with 4 1/3 innings of five-hit, four-run ball for the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday night in his first pitching appearance in Anaheim since he left the Los Angeles Angels nearly two years ago. Ohtani put on a two-way show for his old home crowd with seven strikeouts. He fanned Mike Trout twice, getting his friend and fellow MVP the second time with his fastest pitch of the night — a 101 mph fastball in the fourth inning. Ohtani also staked himself to an early lead by tripling and scoring as the Dodgers' leadoff hitter before he even took the mound, entertaining Angels fans with the same inimitable feats he accomplished regularly during his first six major league seasons with their club. Ohtani's mound start was his longest since he returned to pitching two months ago, but he didn't finish strong. He gave up three consecutive one-out hits in the fifth and left after Zach Neto's two-run double trimmed the Dodgers' lead to 5-4. Anthony Banda still escaped the jam, but only after the Angels loaded the bases. Ohtani also gave up a homer to Taylor Ward during the Angels' two-run second inning. He looked sharp in the next two innings before getting chased by two singles and Neto's drive. Ohtani is still beloved in Anaheim by fans who mostly couldn't blame him for leaving a team that could never assemble a winning lineup around him and Trout during six consecutive losing seasons. The three-time MVP — two of those trophies claimed with the Angels — has received cheers whenever he returns to the Big A, although that's also because much of the crowd wears Dodger Blue for these Freeway Series rivalry games. The fans were locked in on the main event in this showdown: After Trout and Ohtani acknowledged each other with slight nods and smirks, Ohtani finished his 1-2-3 first inning by throwing five straight fastballs to Trout before striking him out looking with a sweeper. The MVP ex-teammates hadn't faced each other since Ohtani famously struck out Trout in Tokyo — with the same pitch — to end the 2023 World Baseball Classic. Ohtani was even meaner to Trout in their second meeting, starting him out with a 73 mph curve before eventually fanning him with that blazing fastball in the low outside corner. Outside of Trout, Ohtani saw plenty of familiar faces Wednesday: Seven of the nine hitters in the Angels' starting lineup played with him in Anaheim. But Ohtani hadn't been on the mound at the Big A since Aug. 23, 2023, when he abruptly left a start against Cincinnati in the second inning with elbow pain later revealed to be a torn ligament. The resulting surgery kept him off the mound entirely in 2024 after he signed his 10-year, $700 million contract with the Dodgers. Ohtani returned to pitching two months ago, and the Dodgers have gradually built up his innings while maintaining his everyday role as their DH and leadoff hitter. Before his mound return, Ohtani homered in each of the first two games of this series — although he also lined into a triple play Tuesday. After getting loud pregame cheers, Ohtani began by driving a 2-2 pitch from Kyle Hendricks into deep right for a triple, and he quickly scored on Betts' single. Will Smith added his 15th homer a few minutes later to stake his pitcher to a 3-0 lead. Ward blasted a 97 mph fastball from Ohtani to right for his 29th homer, just the second allowed by Ohtani this season. Yoán Moncada then doubled and scored on two flyouts. Ohtani struck out at the plate in the second inning, but he drew a walk in the fourth, loading the bases and chasing Hendricks. Angels reliever Andrew Chafin struck out Ohtani with a slider when the slugger came up again in the sixth.

Shohei Ohtani homers in 3rd straight game, but Dodgers' malaise continues in another loss
Shohei Ohtani homers in 3rd straight game, but Dodgers' malaise continues in another loss

The Mainichi

time3 days ago

  • The Mainichi

Shohei Ohtani homers in 3rd straight game, but Dodgers' malaise continues in another loss

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -- Shohei Ohtani's latest home run binge hasn't been enough to spark the Los Angeles Dodgers out of a summer malaise that's endangering their customary perch atop the NL West. Ohtani homered in his third straight game Monday night, hitting his 42nd of the season in the eighth inning of the Dodgers' 7-4 loss to the Los Angeles Angels. The Dodgers trailed 7-0 when Ohtani connected off Shaun Anderson with one out, driving his fourth homer in five games into the right field bleachers to tie Philadelphia's Kyle Schwarber for the NL lead. Seattle's Cal Raleigh leads the majors with 45 homers. Ohtani also started a rally: Mookie Betts and Will Smith then singled before Max Muncy brought them home with his 17th homer, trimming the Dodgers' deficit to three runs and inspiring thunderous roars from the Dodgers fans comprising more than half of the Angel Stadium crowd. But the Dodgers got no closer, with Connor Brogdon and longtime Dodgers closer Kenley Jansen calmly wrapping up the sub-.500 Angels' fifth consecutive win over their crosstown rivals. The loss shrunk the Dodgers' lead over San Diego in the NL West to just one game -- the smallest cushion since June 14. "I mean, it's a really bad loss for us," Muncy said. "There's not really any way of getting around that." Ohtani has a 10-game hitting streak in August, his longest of the season, and he has four homers among his nine hits in the Dodgers' last five games. The two-way superstar is the presumptive front-runner for his fourth MVP award. Despite his heroics, the Dodgers are 10-12 since the All-Star break. With meager production across their lineup and inconsistent relief pitching just when their problematic rotation finally started to click, they've only rarely looked like the juggernaut franchise that has won two of the past five World Series, four of the last eight NL pennants and 11 of the last 12 division crowns. "It's not going well for us right now," Muncy said. "We've got to find a way to snap out of it. No one is going to feel sorry for us. It's on us to find our way out of it, and we will." A day after the Dodgers' bullpen blew an eighth-inning lead in a 5-4 loss to Toronto, top starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto got raked by the Angels' largely average lineup for six runs on six hits and five walks, creating a hole the Dodgers couldn't escape. The Dodgers began the weekend with two solid performances against the AL-leading Blue Jays, only to fall back into another rut. "We're all looking for some traction here, and trying to stack some wins," manager Dave Roberts said. "Hate to say that yesterday's loss carried over to tonight. ... You win yesterday, and you feel even better about coming into today, but now you look at losing two games in a row. It's baseball, and we're good at resetting, coming back." Their loss in Anaheim ended a few minutes after the streaking Padres beat San Francisco to move one game back of the defending champions. Muncy said he doesn't watch the standings, but most Dodgers are aware of their biggest rivals breathing down their necks. "There definitely has to be some urgency," Roberts said. "I don't think anyone is blind to the fact that the standings are the standings, and so it's got a lot more interesting. We've got to go out there and play good baseball, but I definitely feel our guys are starting to feel that urgency. It's been long enough of middling baseball, as far as overall team wins and losses." The rivalry is about to hit a fever pitch, too: The Padres and Dodgers are meeting in three-game series on each of the next two weekends. Dodgers fans are well aware that San Diego made a frenzied flurry of moves at the trade deadline, acquiring seven major leaguers while addressing every perceived need on their roster. The Dodgers did almost nothing, making only secondary additions to their bullpen instead of acquiring a difference-making position player or another starting pitcher. Ohtani played his first six major league seasons in Anaheim, winning two MVP awards and a Rookie of the Year award while never playing on a winning team. He is scheduled to pitch at Angel Stadium on Wednesday night for the first time since he left for a $700 million contract with the Dodgers and promptly won the World Series. Ohtani's homer was the 100th of his career at the Big A, making him just the sixth major leaguer to hit that mark.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store