Thursday, November 12, 2009

Matsui vrs Ichiro

Sun Spots: “Matsui vs. Ichiro”

From Jordan Ikeda


Faithful Rafu reader George Nakagawa has been giving me tips on players to check out in Japan, but recently called me to tell me that he had never heard about the Ichiro/Matsui non-friendship I wrote about in last week’s J-Slanted. Here’s several links on background info on Ichiro and his history with Matsui.

Keizo Konishi a special writer to The Seattle Times talks in depth about Ichiro in a 2005 piece: “I’ve been covering Ichiro since 1994, and from my experience I can say one thing for certain: Ichiro loves Seattle, and is extremely grateful to the fans here who have been supporting him. To really understand this, you need to look at the tough times he went through when he played in Japan. During the last three years before he came to Seattle, when Ichiro was playing for the Orix Blue Wave in Kobe, Japan, there were so few fans in the stands that you could look out from the press box in Green Stadium and count them. For six years, starting in 1995, Ichiro received the most votes for the Japanese All-Star team, 1.6 times as many votes as Hideki Matsui, now with the Yankees. If you consider that Orix was the least popular of the 12 Japanese professional teams, and that the Tokyo Giants, Matsui’s team at the time, was far and away the most popular, it should give you an idea of how phenomenal Ichiro’s popularity was.”

Jim Caple of ESPN write in 2003 of the possible birth of a rivalry: “Hideki Matsui tells a revealing story. He’s a year younger than Ichiro and when he was a junior, his Seiryo high school team traveled to play Ichiro’s Aikoudai Meiden high school. In Japan, teams frequently take communal baths after games and because Matsui’s team was the guest, they went into the bath first. When Ichiro arrived and found Matsui in the bath, he considered it a serious breach of etiquette. Ichiro was a senior and the first bath is reserved strictly for seniors. Ichiro never forgot the perceived affront. When the two were on a TV show a dozen years later after they had both reached the majors, Ichiro had an important question for Matsui. ‘Why did you take the first bath?’”

Caple further explains this rivalry in another piece from 2003: “The two players also are very different. Ichiro is guarded with reporters—like Bonds, he traveled with his own p.r. people during last year’s major-league tour of Japan—while Matsui is much more open and outgoing. Ichiro is a slap hitter and superb outfielder. Matsui is a power hitter and an average outfielder. There already is a rivalry growing between the two players. Back when both played in Japan, Ichiro once grumbled that ‘I could hit .400 and still Matsui would get more attention.’ And despite the gracious words expressed recently, Matsui and Ichiro appear to be, as gossip columnist Walter Winchell used to say, ‘Don’t invite ‘ems.’ In other words, they’re not the biggest fans of each other.”

Christian Red of Daily Sports News in a 2003 article: “Before Ichiro entered the batting cage to take a few practice swings, Seattle GM Pat Gillick showed the Seattle right fielder a copy of Tuesday’s Daily News, in which a cartoon Godzilla foot dwarfs an Ichiro caricature. Ichiro burst into a loud cackle and said (without the help of an interpreter), “That’s good, that’s good.” Before walking toward the plate, he was asked if it’s accurate to call him “cranky” with the press. Ichiro smiled and shook his head.

John M. Glionna of Los Angeles Times: “Ichiro is the stoic media-shy obsessive with the Seattle Mariners, who toiled in the obscurity of the smaller of his country’s two leagues before becoming the first Japanese position player to dominate in MLB. Matsui of the fabled Yomiuri Giants of Tokyo, is the one who famously cried on national TV when announcing his decision to leave for the Yankees, and who was swiftly forgiven at home as he shattered the perception that Japanese players couldn’t hit the long ball in the American game. If it was a rivalry for popularity in Japan, it wasn’t really close. For years after leaving Japan, Matsui grabbed the headlines and the big endorsement deals back home. He stroked the media entourage that shadowed him, his personality as big as the town he played in. Ichiro did his best to ignore the media. Racking up records but playing on a non-contender, the Mariners’ outfielder came to be seen as moody, even petulant. Then came the first World Baseball Classic in 2006, and the baton was passed.”

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