As you can see, I'm updating the dozen or so starts that Darvish has made since I stopped posting in late-April. My thesis is finished and I'm free for a few weeks. Within a couple of days this will be complete.
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Darvish Watch 08: Episode 8
After a disappointing walk-off road loss for Darvish against the Seibu Lions, the Chiba Lotte Marines marched into Hokkaido to take on the Fighters at home. Darvish's 136 pitch effort had gone to waste and it was on his mind to take revenge and right the ship on this night.
For the most part, this contest proved to be fairly unremarkable although the lack of control that Nippon Ham's ace displayed continues to be the major flaw that he must correct to dominate completely. In the end, he scattered five hits and struck out eight, but walked four batters and racked up another lofty pitch count (130) over eight innings of work. He was in trouble in the 2nd, 3rd, 6th, and 8th innings but managed to limit the damage to a single run in the 6th.
His opponent Hiroyuki Kobayashi was a bit more effective, working nine innings on seven hits and a single walk. He did, however throw a ridiculous 150 pitches for Bobby Valentine prompting me to think that Kobayashi must have hit on Bobby V's wife or something. The game did close on an exciting note, as Lotte scored two big runs in the top of the 11th inning on a two-run homer by Shoichi Ohmatsu. The Fighters answered with three in the bottom of the inning to reverse the score and walk off with a victory.
Darvish Watch 08: Episode 7
The Nippon Ham Fighters visited Seibu bringing Yu Darvish into battle with them. Darvish would face budding ace Hideaki Wakui in a marquee matchup of Pacific League hurlers. In Japan, even to a greater degree than in the US, the marquee pitching matchup has a way of ending 1-0 on some kind of late inning breakthrough. It's a lot like a prize fight between two superb technicians.
The Fighters would draw first blood in this game pounding out three hits in the first four batters. The lone out was a typical sac bunt by the number two hitter, Takahito Kudo. The 1-0 lead handed to Darvish became 2-0 after another rally by the Fighters in the top of the 2nd. Seibu third baseman, Takeya Nakamura, blasted a two out home run against Darvish in the bottom of the 2nd to announce that the Lions would not go quietly into the night.
Both pitchers would settle down a bit and show the ace form that we've come to expect from each young star, but Nippon Ham scratched out a run in the top of the 5th to give Japan's ace, Darvish, a bit of cushion to work with. It was just that kind of game, however, as catcher Tooru Hosogawa smoked a one out homer to keep it close in the bottom of the frame. Wakui continued to work strong as the game progressed, while Darvish again faced some problems in the bottom of the 7th.
A leadoff double prompted a quick sacrifice, allowing light-hitting, part-time first baseman Hiroyuki Oshima to drive in the runner from third on a ground out. Game tied. Wakui gave way to the bullpen after eight complete innings and 135 pitches, while Darvish labored on. The bottom of the ninth saw the game still knotted and a rally in the works for Seibu. A one out double by Nakamura saw Darvish fall apart as he issues walks to the next two batters. The bases were loaded with only an out on the board, and the number nine hitter Hiram Bocachica representing the potential winning at bat. Bocachica popped out to second to end the threat of a game tying sacrifice, however that bit of good fortune was met by heartbreak as leadoff man Yasuyuki Kataoka hit a seeing eye grounder to left to score both the tying and winning runs on Darvish's 136th and final pitch.
As they say in Japan, "Zannen," or "too bad."