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Baseball: Rookie Sugano earns 10th win as Orioles hold off Mariners

Baseball: Rookie Sugano earns 10th win as Orioles hold off Mariners

The Mainichia day ago
BALTIMORE, Maryland (Kyodo) -- Tomoyuki Sugano earned his 10th win of his debut Major League Baseball season Thursday, holding the Seattle Mariners to a single run over 5-1/3 innings as the Baltimore Orioles prevailed 5-3.
Sugano (10-5) scattered three hits while giving up a walk and a hit batsman in an 81-pitch effort at Oriole Park. He became the 10th Japanese pitcher to reach double figures in wins in his first year in the big leagues.
"I managed to use all my pitches effectively and throw as I planned for the game," said the 35-year-old right-hander who struck out two en route to winning two starts in a row for the first time.
"(Ten wins) is just a point along the way, but I'm genuinely happy. I hope to keep this up until the end of the season."
The Orioles scored three runs in the fourth on a wild pitch from Logan Evans (6-5), a double steal and a Jeremiah Jackson single before adding two more in the fifth on Gunnar Henderson's RBI double and a sacrifice fly.
Sugano gave up a one-out single in the sixth and was pulled after a rain delay before reliever Rico Garcia surrendered a two-run home run to Julio Rodriguez.
In action elsewhere, Shinnosuke Ogasawara (1-1) picked up his first win in the majors after striking out a batter in the seventh during the Washington Nationals' 3-2 win over the Philadelphia Phillies.
Kodai Senga did not get a decision after allowing two runs on five hits over 5-2/3 innings in his New York Mets' 4-3 loss to the Atlanta Braves.
Los Angeles Dodgers rookie Roki Sasaki, meanwhile, allowed three runs on six hits over two-plus innings in his first rehab start for Triple-A Oklahoma City, throwing 41 pitches, including his newly added two-seamer, in his first game action since May 9.
"I made a slack start. I want to show more dynamism and power as a whole," said the right-hander who is recovering from a shoulder impingement.
"I'm confident things are going well in terms of my health. The question is whether I can raise my level of performance."
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Can Japan's Once-Strong Olympic Spirit Be Restored?; New JOC President Hashimoto Faces a Challenge
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Can Japan's Once-Strong Olympic Spirit Be Restored?; New JOC President Hashimoto Faces a Challenge

In June, the Japan Olympic Committee selected Seiko Hashimoto, 60, as its new president. Hashimoto is a member of the House of Councillors and a former president of the Tokyo Organizing Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. She became the first female president of the JOC not long after the International Olympic Committee elected its own first female president, Kirsty Coventry, in March of this year. How Hashimoto will revitalize the Olympic movement in Japan is a topic of great interest. The JOC presidential election was held on June 26, following the resignation of President Yasuhiro Yamashita. Since the JOC became independent from the Japan Sports Association (now the Japan Sport Association) in 1989, it has been customary for candidates to be narrowed down to a single choice behind the scenes. But this time, the selection was made by a vote for the first time in history. 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Kyoto gov'ts request deletion of abusive posts targeting school
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Baseball: Rookie Sugano earns 10th win as Orioles hold off Mariners
Baseball: Rookie Sugano earns 10th win as Orioles hold off Mariners

The Mainichi

timea day ago

  • The Mainichi

Baseball: Rookie Sugano earns 10th win as Orioles hold off Mariners

BALTIMORE, Maryland (Kyodo) -- Tomoyuki Sugano earned his 10th win of his debut Major League Baseball season Thursday, holding the Seattle Mariners to a single run over 5-1/3 innings as the Baltimore Orioles prevailed 5-3. Sugano (10-5) scattered three hits while giving up a walk and a hit batsman in an 81-pitch effort at Oriole Park. He became the 10th Japanese pitcher to reach double figures in wins in his first year in the big leagues. "I managed to use all my pitches effectively and throw as I planned for the game," said the 35-year-old right-hander who struck out two en route to winning two starts in a row for the first time. "(Ten wins) is just a point along the way, but I'm genuinely happy. I hope to keep this up until the end of the season." The Orioles scored three runs in the fourth on a wild pitch from Logan Evans (6-5), a double steal and a Jeremiah Jackson single before adding two more in the fifth on Gunnar Henderson's RBI double and a sacrifice fly. Sugano gave up a one-out single in the sixth and was pulled after a rain delay before reliever Rico Garcia surrendered a two-run home run to Julio Rodriguez. In action elsewhere, Shinnosuke Ogasawara (1-1) picked up his first win in the majors after striking out a batter in the seventh during the Washington Nationals' 3-2 win over the Philadelphia Phillies. Kodai Senga did not get a decision after allowing two runs on five hits over 5-2/3 innings in his New York Mets' 4-3 loss to the Atlanta Braves. Los Angeles Dodgers rookie Roki Sasaki, meanwhile, allowed three runs on six hits over two-plus innings in his first rehab start for Triple-A Oklahoma City, throwing 41 pitches, including his newly added two-seamer, in his first game action since May 9. "I made a slack start. I want to show more dynamism and power as a whole," said the right-hander who is recovering from a shoulder impingement. "I'm confident things are going well in terms of my health. The question is whether I can raise my level of performance."

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