Japan relied on solid pitching and just enough timely hitting on Saturday, August 7 to defeat the United States 2-0 and capture its first ever Olympic gold medal in baseball.
Munetaka Murakami gave Japan a 1-0 lead in the third inning with a solo homer to center at Yokohama Stadium off U.S. starter Nick Martinez.
The score remained that way until the bottom of the eighth when Tetsuto Yamada led off with a single to right and advanced to second on a sacrifice bunt by Hayato Sakamoto.
Tetsuto Yamada scores Japan's second run in the eighth inning. (REUTERS/Jorge Silva)
Masataka Yoshida then singled to center and Yamada dashed home when the throw from the center fielder got past the catcher.
“Everybody worked really hard,” Japan manager Atsunori Inaba said. “The players wanted the gold and we were able to play well in every game. We got a little momentum from Murakami’s homer and our pitchers performed beyond expectations.”
Japan starter Masato Morishita fires a pitch. (REUTERS/Jorge Silva)
Japan starter Masato Morishita picked up the win after striking out five and giving up three hits over five scoreless innings.
Japan reliever Ryoji Kuribayashi pitches in the ninth inning.
U.S. Comes Up Short in Ninth
There was a bit of a scare in the ninth when Nick Allen singled to right with two outs, but he was forced out at second on a grounder by Jack Lopez.
“We knew America had a lot of good batters and we talked about that before the game,” Japan catcher Takuya Kai said. “Our plan was to be aggressive with our pitches and we were able to do that.”
Japan manager Atsunori Inaba receives the traditional doage (victory toss) after the game.
Samurai Japan celebrated the gold medal and a perfect 5-0 record with a traditional doage in which the players repeatedly toss their manager in the air on the pitcher’s mound.
Sakamoto paid tribute to Japan’s fans.
“Even though they were unable to come out to the park, I want to thank all our fans watching on TV, we felt their energy,” Sakamoto said.
Japan manager Atsunori Inaba greets U.S. manager Mike Scioscia after the game. (REUTERS/Issei Kato)
Baseball became an official Olympic sport at the Barcelona Games in 1992. Japan won the bronze medal that year.
Japan won silver four years later in Atlanta and bronze in Athens in 2004.
With many of their top players from NPB, the team failed to win a medal in Beijing in 2008, a bitter disappointment for a team that had gold medal aspirations.
Baseball was dropped from the Olympic program for the 2012 London Games but was reinstated for Tokyo 2020 in part due to the overwhelming popularity of the sport here. Baseball will not be on the program for the 2024 Games in Paris.
NPB halted its schedule so that Japan’s top players would be available for the tournament and it was a move that clearly paid off.
The U.S. team was made up mostly of minor leaguers and several players from NPB including starter Martinez of the Fukuoka Softbank Hawks and Tyler Austin of the Yokohama BayStars. Players from the 40-man rosters of MLB teams were not permitted to take part.
Earlier, Juan Francisco drove in three runs to lead the Dominican Republic to a 10-6 win over 2008 gold medalist South Korea in the bronze-medal game.
Cristopher Mercedes, who pitches for the Yomiuri Giants, picked up the win after pitching 3⅓ scoreless innings in relief.
Author: Jim Armstrong
The author is a longtime journalist who has covered sports in Japan for more than 25 years. You can find his articles here, on JAPAN Forward.