Japan's RHP Yu Darvish Coming to MLB in 2012?

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  • EmpireWF
    Giants in the Super Bowl
    • Mar 2009
    • 24082

    Japan's RHP Yu Darvish Coming to MLB in 2012?

    It's likely Japan's best pitcher, 25-year old Darvish will make his way to America next year. Factors on his side besides his stats is he has been headstrong from a young age. He survived a cigarette scandal as a teenager and has dealt with Japan's tricky customs since his father is Iranian.



    An old Yahoo! article on his popularity and background - http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slu...ndarvish032308

    If he does come over, say hello to the post system again.

    Famous postings include:

    2000 - Ichiro - Seattle bid over $13 million for negotiating rights and signed him to a 3-year, $14 million deal.
    2002 - Kaz Ishii - Dodgers bid over $11 million for neg. rights and signed him to a 4-year, $12.3 million deal.
    2006 - Matsuzaka - Red Sox bid over $50 million for neg. rights and signed him to a 6-year, $52 million deal.
    2006 - Igawa - Yankees bid over $26 million for neg. rights and sign him to a 5-year, $20 million deal.

    The last player to come over using the system was Nishioka (Twins bid over $5 million and signed him to a 3-year, $9 mil deal.)


  • Sharkweather
    Senior Member
    • Jul 2009
    • 8906

    #2

    Comment

    • Obst
      RIP West
      • Oct 2008
      • 4182

      #3
      These Japs never work out.

      Unless the Phillies sign him, then he is the pitcher version of Ichiro.

      Comment

      • Woy
        RIP West
        • Dec 2008
        • 16372

        #4
        Does he throw a gyroball?



        ^ Shouts to MvP for the sick sig. GFX TEAM BACK

        .

        Comment

        • KnightNoles
          Kdub #9
          • Jul 2009
          • 2409

          #5
          27 Complete Games

          09-11

          :eek:

          Comment

          • Warner2BruceTD
            2011 Poster Of The Year
            • Mar 2009
            • 26142

            #6
            I want to know more about this cigarette scandal.

            But yeah, Jap pitchers, like Jap MMA fighters, never live up to the hype.

            Comment

            • Irish
              do you see my jesus chain
              • Oct 2008
              • 4416

              #7
              Originally posted by Warner2BruceTD
              I want to know more about this cigarette scandal.

              But yeah, Jap pitchers, like Jap MMA fighters, never live up to the hype.
              I also was interested.

              When he was 18, Darvish was caught smoking a cigarette inside a pachinko gambling hall by a gossip magazine photographer. Less than a week later, two anti-smoking doctors announced they would commission a study on the smoking habits of players from all 12 teams in Nippon Professional Baseball, because, they said, “some may be addicted and need to receive medical treatment.”

              Major League Baseball has steroids. Japan has cigarettes.

              Darvish inspires hysteria, and never was it more evident than during the tobacco scandal of 2005. It was February, a week before his high school graduation, and he was at his first spring training with the Fighters. In the previous six months, Darvish had thrown a no-hitter at the prestigious Koshien high school tournament and gone No. 1 in the draft to Nippon Ham. The last pitcher to jump from high school to Japan’s major leagues with such expectations was Daisuke Matsuzaka.

              It is illegal to smoke until age 20, according to the government of Japan, which, by the way, owns a majority of Japan Tobacco. First the Fighters banished Darvish from their spring training facility in Okinawa to the minor league dorm in Chiba for “re-education.” Then Tohoku High School followed by suspending him for five days, causing him to miss the graduation ceremony.

              When Darvish arrived at Haneda Airport, more than 200 reporters awaited him. He bowed and apologized, bowed and said he would not smoke another cigarette in his life, bowed and promised to do right by Nippon Ham, the pork company that owns the Fighters.

              “I’ve never seen anything in the United States that’s an equivalent to what that young man went through at 18,” Hillman says.

              Actually, it happens every day in Los Angeles, the paparazzi chasing starlets and chronicling their foibles. Darvish was their Japanese equivalent, only he spent his days writing in “reflection journals” to convince his school and the Fighters that he recognized the error of his ways.

              “He was always thinking he could do anything,” Farsad says. “He learned what came with it. He made trouble, he took responsibility. And I saw growth.”

              The school lifted its suspension and mailed Darvish his diploma. The Fighters reinstated Darvish and sent him back to the training site for several months of conditioning. He debuted June 16 and began the game by pitching eight scoreless innings.

              Comment

              • Villain
                [REDACTED]
                • May 2011
                • 7768

                #8
                Originally posted by Obst
                These Japs never work out.
                [REDACTED]

                Comment

                • NAHSTE
                  Probably owns the site
                  • Feb 2009
                  • 22233

                  #9
                  Been waiting on him to make the jump for years. He's like the Ricky Rubio of MLB at this point.

                  Comment

                  • EmpireWF
                    Giants in the Super Bowl
                    • Mar 2009
                    • 24082

                    #10
                    [ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFwSzZQ4MVI"]Neil Diamond Coming To America - YouTube[/ame]


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