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Japan at Cuba

 
  Ichiro, Team Japan defeat Cuba to claim World Baseball Classic title
 

SAN DIEGO -- Forget beisbol. This was yakyu at its best, and the inaugural World Baseball Classic belongs to Japan.

COMMENTARY
Japan takes WBC title; tourney a crowning success
by Scott Miller
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Ichiro Suzuki and his less-famous countrymen beat Cuba 10-6 in the championship game Monday night, ripping a page out of Cuba's scorebook by winning a major international tournament.

On a festive night when Cuban and Japanese fans danced to Surf City and Sadaharu Oh escorted Hank Aaron -- there's 1,623 home runs between them -- onto the field, Japan won the 16-nation tournament that showed baseball in March can matter.

The Classic's slogan is "Baseball Spoken Here." In this case, it's yakyu, which in Japanese means "field ball."

Suzuki doubled, singled and drove in a run. He also scored three times, including in a four-run first inning that proved Cuba's pitchers are vulnerable, after all.

When big league reliever Akinori Otsuka got the final out, he was mobbed near the mound by his teammates. The Japanese then tossed Oh, their famous manager, into the air twice.

"I'm unbelievably happy," Suzuki said. "To be honest, I never imagined we'd get there. We had a great team, the best. I hope we showed everyone what a great sport baseball is."

Two Cuban players posed with Suzuki for a photo.

"My players showed me a fantastic performance tonight. I know they're doing it for Japan," Oh said through a translator.

After the winners took a victory lap with a huge Japanese flag, they celebrated in front of their dugout, with a large contingent of countrymen still cheering from the stands. Once in their clubhouse, they gathered around Oh for a final word from their manager, then tore into a champagne celebration.

"It's wonderful. That's the only thing I can say," Otsuka said.

Cuba's fans perked up when their team, wearing its lucky red uniforms, pulled to 6-5 on a two-run homer by Frederich Cepeda with one out in the eighth. Otsuka, the former San Diego Padres reliever now with Texas, came on and retired the side.

"We tried to get back on top, but they deserve the victory because they played better," Cepeda said.

Suzuki singled in the ninth to score Munenori Kawasaki on a close play at the plate and make it 7-5. Kawasaki slid, turned and stuck his right hand just inside of catcher Ariel Pestano's left foot to -- perhaps -- touch the plate. Japan broke it open on a two-run single by pinch-hitter Kosuke Fukudome and a sacrifice fly by Michihiro Ogasawara.

Otsuka allowed a run in the ninth before closing it out for a save.

When it was over, commissioner Bud Selig presented the championship trophy to Japan, and Hall of Fame manager Tommy Lasorda gave the tournament MVP award to Japanese starting pitcher Daisuke Matsuzaka.

With the United States failing to make it out of the second round and the Dominican Republic losing to Cuba in the semifinals, Suzuki, the Seattle Mariners' star, was the only major leaguer in the starting lineups. Otsuka is the only other big leaguer on Japan's roster.

The Cubans consider themselves amateurs, although Miguel Tejada and Albert Pujols, who played for the Dominican Republic, said leading up to the semis that most of the Cubans could be in the majors.

But for as good as the Cubans are -- they had won 22 of 24 games in international competition and have dominated the globe for decades -- they cracked at the worst possible time.

Japan went a disappointing 3-3 in the first two rounds and needed help in the form of Mexico's victory over Team USA to advance to San Diego on a tiebreaker.

But once Japan reached the single-elimination semifinals, it played its best ball -- shutting out previously unbeaten South Korea 6-0 Saturday night before jumping ahead of Cuba.

Japan took a 4-0 lead in the top of the first while hitting the ball out of the infield just once.

Cuba starter Ormari Romero was on a short leash to begin with, but was yanked after throwing 23 pitches. He retired leadoff hitter Kawasaki, then loaded the bases on infield singles by Tsuyoshi Nishioka and Nobuhiko Matsunaka, and a walk to Suzuki.

Vicyhoandry Odelin came on and hit Hitoshi Tamura on the left elbow with a pitch to force in the second run, then walked Ogasawara with two outs to bring in another before Toshiaki Imae hit a sharp, two-run single up the middle to make it 4-0.

Eduardo Paret hit a leadoff homer for the Cubans in the first, but they didn't score again until the sixth, when they made it 6-3. One of Cuba's two runs that inning was unearned due to an error by shortstop Kawasaki, who earlier in the game made two brilliant plays.

Japan took a 6-1 lead by scoring twice in the fifth on three straight hits -- Suzuki's leadoff double and singles by Matsunaka and Tamura.

At first, communist Cuba was denied a permit to participate in the tournament due to decades of political animosity with the U.S. government.

And Japan kept a stiff upper lip after it appeared to be deprived of the go-ahead run in a 4-3 loss to the United States on March 12 in the opener of Round 2.

The tournament was considered a success, coming not long after baseball was booted from the Olympics effective in 2012.

Petco Park, the San Diego Padres' downtown ballpark, hasn't seen such a festive night since it opened in 2004.

Fans from both countries waved flags, blew horns and banged cowbells.

The San Diego Symphony Orchestra played the national anthems of Japan, Cuba and the United States. The Japanese players bowed after their anthem was played.

Oh, the Japanese hero who hit 868 homers and now manages the national team, escorted Aaron to the third-base line. Aaron, whose 755 homers are the most in major league history, went to the mound by himself to throw the ceremonial first pitch to Pestano, who had Aaron autograph the ball.

After streamers were shot from the upper deck, it was time for beisbol ... and yakyu.

 
Copyright 2012 by STATS LLC and The Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and The Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
 
 
 
Japan finishes the World Baseball Classic 5-3, losing all three games by just one run.  (AP)
Japan finishes the World Baseball Classic 5-3, losing all three games by just one run. (AP)

 
Scoreboard
Japan «40002000410103
Cuba1000020216111

Players of the Game
Cuba
F. Cepeda AB 4
R 1
H 2
HR 1
RBI 3
Japan
I. Suzuki AB 4
R 3
H 2
HR 0
RBI 1

Japan
Munenon Kawasaki INF5100001.259
a - Shinya Miyamoto SS0000000.667
Tsuyoshi Nishioka 2B4220110.355
Ichiro Suzuki RF4321100.364
Nobuhiko Matsunaka DH4330110.433
Hitoshi Tamura OF3112021.259
b - Kosuke Fukudome PH1012000.182
Tomoya Satozaki C2000213.409
Michihiro Ogasawara 1B2003102.231
Toshiaki Imae 3B5012015.200
Norichika Aoki OF2000012.200
c - Tatsuhiko Kinjo PH-CF2000000.200
Totals341010106714
a-Singled for H Tamura in the 9th.
b-Flied out for N Aoki in the 6th.
BATTING
2B - I Suzuki (1)
RBI - I Suzuki (5); H Tamura 2 (9); K Fukudome 2 (6); M Ogasawara 3 (7); T Imae 2 (4)
SF - M Ogasawara 2 (2)
S - T Satozaki (2)
BASERUNNING
SB - T Nishioka (5)
CS - T Nishioka (2)

Japan
Daisuke Matsuzaka (W,2-0) 4.04110511.38
Shunsuke Watanabe 3.04320201.98
Soichi Fujita 0.11110019.00
Akinori Otsuka (S,1) 1.22110201.59

Cuba
Eduardo Paret SS5122021.229
Michel Enriquez 3B5000013.194
Yulieski Gourriel 2B5210012.273
Ariel Borrero 1B4110011.318
Frederich Cepeda LF4123010.385
Osmani Urrutia RF4021010.345
Yoandy Garlobo DH4010003.480
Ariel Pestano C4110021.194
Alexei Ramirez CF4010002.375
Totals3961160913
BATTING
2B - F Cepeda (3); A Pestano (1); A Ramirez (2)
HR - E Paret (1); F Cepeda (2)
RBI - E Paret 2 (5); F Cepeda 3 (8); O Urrutia (7)

Cuba
Ormari Romero (L,2-1) 0.12331004.15
Vicyohandry Odelin 0.11111106.48
Norberto Gonzalez 3.13222303.86
Yadiel Pedroso 0.11000003.60
Adiel Palma 4.02421306.14
Yuneski Maya 0.01001000.00
Yulieski Gonzalez 0.10000000.00
Jonder Martinez 0.10000009.82