Thursday, August 9, 2007

Why I Am A Fan Of The Hanshin Tigers!

(Koshien Stadium)


(The Lucky 7th Inning!)


"The Japanese Red Sox"

Recently, in my ever growing obsession for ALL THINGS baseball, I have taken up an interest in the Japanese Nippon Professional Baseball League. The best part is there is already a perfect team in place for me to root for!

The Hanshin Tigers (阪神タイガース) are a Japanese professional baseball club, formed in 1935, and currently member of the Central League of the Professional Baseball Organization of Japan. Hanshin, like many early Japanese baseball organizations, took its name, colors, and mascot directly from a team in (American) Major League Baseball -- namely, the Detroit Tigers.

Hanshin's home field is the storied Koshien Stadium, located between Kobe and Osaka in Nishinomiya, Hyogo Prefecture. (To reach Koshien, take the Hanshin line west from Kobe Sannomiya station or east from Osaka Umeda station, and get off at Koshien station.)

Hanshin was one of the first professional baseball clubs established in Japan, and enjoyed great success in its early days, winning the first three Japan pro championships. Since the establishment of a two-league structure, however, Hanshin has played the Boston Red Sox (ボストン赤い硫素化合物), to Japan's answer to the New York Yankees: the Yomirui Tokyo Giants. Although the Tigers-Giants rivalry is fierce, it has been a trifle one-sided; while the Kyojin have won numerous Japan Series titles, the Tigers have claimed only one, in 1985. The Tigers have finished second to the Giants in the Central League race 13 times, while claiming only three pennants of their own.

Koshien Stadium adds to the Red Sox comparisons, for while it is the oldest (built in 1924) and most famous ballpark in Japan (in addition to the Tigers, Koshien hosts the exceedingly popular annual national high school tournament), the stadium is in dire need of repair (though the new Red Sox ownership has poured Millions inot renovationg Fenway Park recently).

Tigers fans do not fall short of the mark set by their Beantown and Chitown counterparts. This oft-abused but ever-hopeful bunch is reputed to be the loudest and most loyal in the country. They would have to be in order to root for a team that has set new records for futility in the past several seasons. The fans' enthusiasm does not preclude much shaking of heads and sighs of "Wait 'til next year," and indeed Tigers fans will have to wait, for as this node speeds into the ether, Hanshin finds itself an also ran yet again.

In 2003, further binding their connection to the Red Sox, the Tigers easily won the 2003 Central League pennant, only to fall in the Series, mirroring the Red Sox crushing ALCS defeat.

No write-up of the Tigers would be complete without mentioning the Tigers' fight song, Rokko Oroshi. (See the fight song, Tessie, for the Red Sox Equivalent.). Easily among the most recognizable tunes in Japan, it inspires a frenzy of balloon waving, clapper clapping, and "Fure" shouting whenever played.

The lyrics, in romaji and English:

Rokko oroshi ni sasso to Soten kakeru nichirin no Seishun no haki uruwashiku Kagayaku wagana zo Hanshin Taigasu O-o-o-o Hanshin Taigasu Fure-fure-fure-fure

Toshi hatsuratsu tatsu ya ima Nekketsu sude ni teki o tsuku Ju-o no iki takaraka ni Muteki no warera zo Hanshin Taigasu O-o-o-o Hanshin Taigasu Fure-fure-fure-fure

Dashing swiftly through the wind blowing from Rokko
Like the big sun soaring in the clear blue sky
Mighty spirit of the youth shows the victor's grace
The name that shines in glory "Hanshin Tigers"
Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Hanshin Tigers
Hooray, Hooray, Hooray, Hooray!

Powerful hits and skillful pitches achieved a thousand times Trained with every discipline here at Koshien Crowned with constant victory, glorious, matchless feats Always proud, invincible "Hanshin Tigers" Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Hanshin Tigers Hooray, Hooray, Hooray, Hooray!

The best part is they even have their own lame "Curse of the Bambino" type issue!

The Curse of the Colonel
(カーネルサンダースの呪い):

The Curse refers to an urban legend regarding a reputed curse placed on the Japanese Kansai-based Hanshin Tigers baseball team by deceased KFC founder and mascot Col. Harland Sanders. The curse was said to be placed on the team because of the Colonel's anger over treatment of one of his store-front statues.

As is common with sports-related curses, the Curse of the Colonel is used to explain the Japan Championship Series drought that the Hanshin Tigers have had to endure since their first and only victory in the 1985 Japan Championship. The curse is a classic example of a scapegoat.

The Hanshin Tigers are considered the eternal underdogs of Nippon Professional Baseball, in opposition to the Yomiuri Giants of Tokyo, who are considered the kings of Japanese baseball. The devotional (or fanatical, from the non-Kansai perspective) fans flock to the stadium no matter how badly the Tigers play in the league. Comparisons are often made between the Hanshin Tigers and the Boston Red Sox, who were also said to be under a curse, the Curse of the Bambino, until they won the World Series in 2004.

In 1985, much to Japanese people's surprise, the Hanshin Tigers faced the Seibu Lions and took their first and only victory in the Japan Championship Series, largely due to star slugger Randy Bass, a gaijin player for the team.

The rabid fan base went wild, and a riotous celebration gathered at Ebisubashi Bridge in Dotonbori, Osaka. There, an assemblage of supporters yelled the players names, and with every name a fan resembling a member of the victorious team leapt from the bridge into the waiting canal. However, lacking someone to imitate MVP Randy Bass, the rabid crowd seized the Colonel Sanders (like Bass, the Colonel had a beard and was not Japanese) plastic statue from a nearby KFC and tossed it off the bridge as an effigy.

This impulsive maneuver was to cost the team greatly, beginning the Curse of the Colonel. Urban legend has it that the Tigers will not win the championship again until the statue is recovered.

After their success in the 1985 series, the Hanshin Tigers began an 18-year losing streak placing last or next-to-last in the league. Brief rallies in 1992 and 1999 brought hope to fans, but they were soon followed with defeat. During this time attempts were made to recover the statue, including sending divers down and dredging the river (again, and eeirie parallel to the Search For Ruth's Piano.), but they all failed. Fans apologized to the store manager, but the statue remained in the canal and the Tigers "cursed".

The Hanshin Tigers Today (Best Unofficial Site)

阪神タイガース公式サイト (The Tiger's Japanese Site)

The Hanshin Tigers Page (Unofficial English)

JapaneseBaseball.com

Japan Baseball Daily

JapanBall.com

(Current NPB Standings. . .)

Ganbare Mouko!!!


TomC

Feeding The Monster & Epstein's Importance

I just recently finished reading Feeding the Monster, by Seth Mnookin, which covers the time from when the Red Sox were sold to Henry/Werner/Lucchino, until April of the the 2006 season, and the book was pretty insightful into the inner workings of the team during that time. I think the most important thing that it shows is the importance of Theo Epstein to the success of the organization. I mean even in the Introduction, the author quotes liberally from one of the last meetings before Theo's hiatus from the team in the 2005 off season. What he says has an eerie ring to it:

"In general, we've had a lot of success in player development," Epstein said, starting off with an unqualified positive. After years of being known as an organization that traded away its best up-and-coming players in dubious -- or just plain stupid -- deals, the Red Sox, under Epstein's leadership, had hoarded draft picks and jealously guarded the team's minor league prospects. One of the brightest spots of the second half of the 2005 season was the emergence of Jonathan Papelbon, a flame-throwing right-hander whom Epstein envisioned as the type of hard-working, no-nonsense player the Red Sox would be defined by in the years to come. In 2005, Epstein told everyone at the table, the Red Sox had been able to integrate some of the team's most promising young pitchers into the bullpen. Still, he felt compelled to warn his colleagues of what the future would likely bring: "We're going to need a lot of patience, because there's going to be a lot of failure." He reminded the group that most young hitters will look lost at the plate for their first half-season or so, and most young pitchers will struggle with their confidence and command before settling into a groove.

"It could get rough," he said. "Right now, there's a lot of hope [about the team's young talent]. But remember, the most popular player on the football team is always the backup quarterback. When [second base prospect Dustin] Pedroia gets up here and he hits a buck-fifty, discovers he can't reach the wall and can't find his stroke because it's freezing out -- well, that will happen. The rest of the organization really needs to realize this."

Epstein, who can appear reserved in public, began to speak more quickly. "We sat here in April and talked about building an über-team. That's dangerous. That's very dangerous. We need to be aware of the potential that the bubble could burst. Yes, it's a pro that, on the business side, we continued to grow. But on the con side is the amount of hype as we move toward superpower status. Yes, we won 95 games this year, but this approach isn't really sustainable over the long run. Sooner or later we might need to take half a step backward in return for a step forward. . . . I warned about this in April. What if we win 85 games [in 2006]? We're bringing up some young players that are going to be better in '07 than they will be next year. And they'll probably be even better than that in '08."


Hmmmm
. . . Creepy predictions. For starter, the Red Sox went 86-76 in 2006, which was exactly one game off of the pace that Theo predicted in this meeting before the season. and barring a catastrophic collapse, adding some of those homegrown talents to the '07 team (Youkilis, who plays every day now, Pedroia, Papelbon, Delcarmen all have bigger roles than in the '05 season, never mind Jon Lester) has improved them over that '06 team. To Top it all off, while a year later, his prediction regarding Pedroia was creepily accurate: When given the full time job in April 2007 he hit .182/0HR/2RBI/.544 OPS in April, but because they followed his advice to be patient, they have a possible rookie of the year candidate.



So all I have to say after that, is the rest of the book is as informative as those two paragraphs, and I thoroughly suggest it.

TomC