This day in baseball: American All-Stars face Eiji Sawamura

Seventeen-year-old Japanese pitcher, Eiji Sawamura, took the mound against a team of touring All-Star players from Major League Baseball on November 20, 1934.  He came into the game in the fourth inning and pitched nine innings, striking out nine batters and giving up only one run.  At one point, he successively struck out Charlie Gehringer, Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, and Jimmie Foxx.  The only run came on a home run by Gehrig as the American team won, 1-0.

American team manager Connie Mack was so impressed by the young man’s performance that he tried to sign him to a contract.  Sawamura declined, however, as anti-American sentiment was strong in Japan at that time.

Eiji_Sawamura
The Japanese Book

Baseball 101: Eephus pitch

I had to Google this one when I heard about it this morning, because I personally have never seen one in a professional ballgame before (or, really, any ballgame, unless you count Little League).

An eephus pitch, which translates to “nothing” pitch, is a very, very slow pitch with virtually nothing on it.  Supposedly, the pitch received its name from outfielder Maurice Van Robays, who explained, “Eephus ain’t nothing, and that’s a nothing pitch.”  Due to its lack of velocity, the eephus pitch floats to the plate in a high arc, resembling a pitch thrown in a slow pitch softball game, except thrown with an overhand motion.  Since it appears so rarely, by throwing an eephus pitch, a pitcher can catch a hitter off guard.

Last night, in a game between the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters and the Hanshin Tigers in Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball, Kazuhito Tadano tossed this doozy of a pitch while facing Mauro Gomez.  The pitch discombobulated the umpire, who called it a ball, in spite of its crossing the plate seemingly through the strike zone.

To watch the video of Tadano’s eephus pitch, click here.

Kazuhito Tadano throws an eephus pitch against Mauro Gomez (New York Daily News)