I thought only industry insiders voted for The Reuben Sturman Award.
Read More...Hideki Matsui, Most Valuable Player in the 2009 World Series, and his former manager Shigeo Nagashima received Japan’s People’s Honor awards at a ceremony today in Tokyo, public broadcaster NHK reported.
Matsui set a record for Japanese players with 175 home runs in 10 Major League Baseball seasons, seven with the New York Yankees, after smashing 332 homers in 10 seasons with the Yomiuri Giants in Japan. Nagashima, who ...
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1. Tripon posted on October 21, 2012 at 01:40 PM # hit 0 | hit 0Edit: If Japan wants this to stop happening, they need to do the one thing that will likely staunch it. Offer more money to their draftees.
Yeah, they do, but as Tripon said, that doesn't apply to the players themselves. However, NPB does have a rule where if a player decides to skip the draft and go straight to America they aren't allowed to come back for a certain amount of time. So if Otani were to sign with, say, the Dodgers, and then quickly flame out for one reason or another, he'd basically be screwed, as no NPB team would be signing him for a few years.
The greatest trick the demon mystery pitch ever played was convincing the world it didn't exist...
High school and college players are not eligible unless submit letters of intent to their respective governing organizations. Players who go to the industrial leagues out of high school aren't eligible for the draft until they've played three years. I guess there's nothing that stops a player from leaving the industrial leagues for MLB.
Many other aspects of the NPB draft system seem downright bizarre to me. It's nothing at all like the drafts that we're familiar with for major North American sports.
Therefore, Ichiro should not be in the Hall of Fame.
The Mariners have somehow had a separate line item for signing foreign players - The Ichiro Fund, I think they call it. Now that its namesake is gone, maybe they'll want to spend some big money on another Japanese player.
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