game report

Interleague Series 5: DeNA @ Lotte, 31 May – 1 June 2014

Mr Yuk Series Preview:

Our Marines head back home after a four game interleague road trip that took us to Koshien and Hiroshima. We split two games in each series, yet our 6-2 interleague record still leads NPB. The BayStars make the trip to the other side of Tokyo Bay for this weekend’s series at QVC. DeNA currently resides in the CL basement, with Seibu being the only other team in NPB with a worse record. Speaking of the standings, we start the weekend tied for 3rd in the PL with the Fighters. The Fighters and Marines have identical records, with Lotte leading the season series at 7-2. All-Star voting has commenced, the weather is warming up, and the calendar turns to June. It’s starting to feel a bit like summer, let’s hope Our Marines heat back up as well.

 

Game 1 - Lotte LOSES 4-1 (Click to Expand)

DeNA: Guillermo Moscoso (3-5 4.40) @ Lotte: Ayumu Ishikawa (4-2 2.95)

By: Craig Roberts Matsunaga is charged with today's loss to Yokohama, but it'd be a stretch to say he's entirely to blame. True, the go ahead run did score on a Matsunaga wild pitch in the 8th. It didn't help that Masuda gave up two DeNA insurance runs the following inning though. Of course, you're also not going to win many games when you only score one run on three hits.

Game 2 - Lotte Loses 1-0 (Click to Expand)
DeNA: Shun Yamaguchi (0-1 7.62) @ Lotte: Takahiro Fujioka (3-1 3.12)

By Steve Novosel The only thing worse than scoring 1 run on 3 hits versus the second worst pitching team in NPB, at home? Scoring 0 runs on 5 hits the very next day. Yup, 1 total run and 8 total hits versus DeNA earns this series the very first Yuk button of the year.

One has to ask at this point, which team is the real Lotte? The team with two 6 game win streaks in the past month, or the team that seems to lose everything else? I really have no idea.

6 thoughts on “Interleague Series 5: DeNA @ Lotte, 31 May – 1 June 2014”

  1. That may have been a wild pitch, but Kanazawa absolutely, 100% should have blocked it. It was a very poor play, and it cost the game.

    Too bad for Ishikawa, but hey, at least he had it better than Kaneko did for Orix on Saturday.

  2. Correction:

    If anyone read the game 1 write up Saturday night, I wrote a Ueno instead of Ohtani.

    A ton of typos are usually par for the course for me, but I should correct when I make a name switch.

  3. I was able to watch Game 1 on TV Japan this weekend. While I was disappointed with the result it was nice to see QVC again. You’re right that Ishikawa deserved better, but what can you do when a number of batters seemed to prefer swinging at balls and watching strikes? Given the number of seeing eye singles against Ishikawa in the first two innings, it drew my attention to the vanilla defences both teams seemed to be playing. I’ve gotten so used to watching defensive shifts in MLB that this stood out for me. You guys see way more Marines games than I do, so I was wondering if you’ve noticed any teams playing shifts. If not, how many years, if ever, do you think it would take to catch on in Japan? Given the love of the sacrifice bunt, I know that old habits die harder there.

    1. There aren’t too many teams who play shifts here, and from the times that I’ve seen it it’s been mostly outfield shifts against guys who REALLY only hit the ball one way. Infield shifts – basically never.

      There aren’t too many managers who use metrics in game (not even advanced metrics, just metrics period). Itoh likes to play his favorites in high leverage situations even though the numbers don’t favor that situation, which causes me endless anguish when I’m watching. This probably mostly because his favorites and my favorites have very, very little overlap.

      On Sunday Nakahata kept bunting his team out of innings, but they got away with it the one time when Imae misplayed the ball. So it’s definitely not just Lotte who uses some dodgy ideas for in-game strategy….

  4. As a BayStars fan, I would have to agree with you, Steve, that Yamaguchi pitched well outside of his norm. Having to go longer than an inning, he actually used a changedup – and found that it worked! Any inning he failed to get three-up, three-down I was sure would break him. But he hung in there. This was not the usual uncloser Yamaguchi we’ve seen over the past several seasons.

    1. Hopefully for everyone involved it’s the start of something good for Yamaguchi. That’d be great for DeNA and it would mean Chiba’s offense didn’t completely implode on itself unassisted this weekend.

      Who knows, maybe he’s better suited to starting than closing!

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