The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Team helps put hurler Sasaki on perfect path

- By Yuichi Sato Yomiuri Shimbun Sportswrit­er

Roki Sasaki, the Chiba Lotte Marines’ 20-yearold pitching phenom, on April 10 red a perfect game — returning all 27 batters he faced — against the Orix Bu aloes, becoming the youngest pitcher to achieve that feat in Nippon Profession­al Baseball (NPB) history.

Sasaki has been blessed to be on teams with leadership and support systems that have made his future developmen­t a priority over immediate success.

NO MAX-EFFORT PITCHING

Behind the blossoming of Sasaki’s talent is a combinatio­n of e orts made by coaches and sta members of his teams to train him, all the while with their eyes rmly planted on his future developmen­t.

Sasaki’s Ofunato High School team lost in the nal of the Iwate prefectura­l tournament in the summer of 2019 as the amethrower, then in his third and nal year of high school, was never even given the opportunit­y to take the mound in the championsh­ip game.

His manager decided to have the pitcher, who had thrown in the semi nal round the previous day, sit out the deciding game.

Ofunato manager Yohei Kokubo, a 35-year-old teacher at the school at the time, prioritize­d injury prevention over team success, even though the school was on the verge of punching a ticket to the national tournament at Koshien Stadium for the rst time in 35 years.

Kokubo’s decision to sit Sasaki drew a mixture of both support and criticism nationwide. ough Sasaki was 190 centimeter­s tall back then, he was rail thin.

He su ered a rash of injuries during his middle school days, when he sprouted up more than 20 centimeter­s, and his growth spurt continued even a er he entered high school. He was also said to have heeded the advice of experts, saying, “Athletes tend to be more susceptibl­e to injury if they do too much before the end of the growth phase.”

Kokubo had always thought about creating an environmen­t that would limit Sasaki from throwing at maximum e ort, something likely to increase the risk of injury.

e manager even went so far as to prioritize nding teams that would play against Ofunato High even if Sasaki was not going to take the mound.

And when Kokubo gave a lecture last November at the Japan Society of Baseball Science, which comprises entities that are part of the baseball community, he made his priorities clear by telling the audience: “I have placed a great value on the words: ‘Make the future lives of the students shine.’ To advance toward something better, courage is needed.”

BUILDING PHYSICAL STRENGTH

e Marines, who are in charge of polishing this diamond in the rough, have also supported Sasaki’s developmen­t with a carefully thought-out training regimen. e Marines determined that his physical strength had not caught up with his extraordin­ary pitching talent, so the team prioritize­d preparing him physically during his rst year as a pro. As a result, Lotte never put him in a game — not on the top team or the farm.

Last year, in his second year as a pro, he made his top-team debut in May. But a er that rst appearance, the Marines went to unusual measures to reduce the physical stress on Sasaki, giving him more than the typical rest between starts.

is season, Marines manager Tadahito Iguchi has made it a rule to check for signs of stress on Sasaki’s shoulders and elbows a er every outing.

Sasaki, his trainers and those who analyze the right-hander’s pitching data are all involved.

Iguchi on April 17 even made the bold decision to remove Sasaki in the eighth inning of what could have been an unpreceden­ted second consecutiv­e perfect game, following his historic achievemen­t the week prior.

Iguchi said before the season, “ere will certainly be times when we have to rest him.”

erefore, Lotte has put methods into practice that focus on using Sasaki in ways that are not predicated on him setting records or short-term goals.

CUSTOM PLANS FOR EACH ATHLETE

e high school baseball community, for its part, has also advanced with reforms. e Japan High School Baseball Federation in November 2019 set a limit on the number of pitches high school players can throw at “500 per week,” based on a proposal from the panel of experts on preventing pitchers from serious injury.

Masayoshi Ogura, a 65-year-old baseball manager at Nihon University No. 3 High School, who guided teams to the national high school championsh­ip twice, is among those o cials in favor of moves to reduce the workload of high school players.

“I o en have players who are still in the stage of growing physically train in ways that don’t put a strain on their bodies,” Ogura said.

Having been aware of the need for working out a training regimen that is in tune with each individual player, Ogura even sought advice from a volleyball coach to nd better ways to train players who are on the taller side.

Yet, he has also seen his share of students who were unable to train without limitation­s during the growth phase, and eventually had to quit baseball without reaching their potential.

“Training plans that fit individual athletes are being called for now. Yet, it is quite difficult to look down the road for every athlete,” said Ogura, pointing out that this is a challenge facing the entire high school baseball community. (May 14)

 ?? Pool photo ?? Roki Sasaki
Pool photo Roki Sasaki

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