Grinding His Way to International Stardom

Baseball
Published 07.04.2023
Grinding His Way to International Stardom

ST. LOUIS — Five Japanese reporters accompanied by nonetheless and broadcast cameras coated baseball’s opening day in St. Louis. Curiously, the one participant on both workforce who was born in Japan was pitcher Yusei Kikuchi of the Toronto Blue Jays, whose first begin wouldn’t come till the following sequence.

Instead, the Japanese contingent was there to doc the season debut of Lars Nootbaar, a Cardinals outfielder with a Dutch final identify who was born in Southern California.

Nootbaar, who impressed many along with his play for St. Louis final season, turned an unlikely worldwide star because of the World Baseball Classic. His mom is Japanese — she got here to the United States for school and met her future husband right here — and her passport certified her son to signify Japan on the event. That made him the primary participant born outdoors Japan to be chosen for the nationwide workforce.

Nootbaar, 25, gave Japanese followers loads of causes to cheer. He led off and began in heart area in every of Japan’s seven video games. He reached base 14 occasions in 33 plate appearances, scored seven runs, and stole two bases. He additionally made a pair of highlight-reel catches within the early rounds earlier than knocking within the run that put Japan forward for good in its dramatic 3-2 win over the United States for the championship.

The efficiency didn’t shock anybody again in St. Louis, the place Nootbaar began slowly final season however got here on sturdy as issues heated up, batting .294 with energy and endurance in July and August earlier than cooling down some in September. He got here into this season as a flexible common within the workforce’s outfield, although he was rapidly placed on the 10-day injured checklist with a bruised thumb. He is predicted to return within the subsequent week.

The Cardinals, who went 2-4 of their opening homestand, may use his vitality and enthusiasm. Those have been the traits, in any case, that led to Nootbaar touchdown on Japan’s roster within the first place, based on Manager Hideki Kuriyama.

“Center field was an area of need for us, and as I explored our options, I fell in love with this guy from the moment I first talked to him,” Kuriyama stated in his first nationwide look after returning to Tokyo following the event. “I knew right away he would be the right fit.”

Kuriyama stated he believed that Nootbaar would assist the workforce’s temper and {that a} language barrier wouldn’t be a difficulty.

“I think his overall demeanor moved fans and teammates alike,” Kuriyama stated.

Japanese followers took to Nootbaar instantly. He embraced the nickname Tacchan, an affectionate play on the Japanese portion of his center identify, Taylor-Tatsuji. And he helped convey some American baseball fashion to the workforce by routinely celebrating hits with a transfer widespread amongst Cardinals gamers the place they mimic twisting a pepper mill after “grinding out a hit.” The pepper mill gesture turned a shocking image of Japan’s championship run.

The transfer proved wildly widespread amongst Japanese followers and beginner gamers, although it landed one excessive schooler who imitated it in hassle. After reaching first base on an error throughout Japan’s highschool baseball event, the participant did the gesture, drawing an official reprimand.

“We understand players’ desire to enjoy the game, but we ask you to enjoy it through your play,” the Japan High School Baseball Federation stated in a press release.

For Nootbaar, becoming a member of Team Japan was an unlikely dream come true. When he was 9 years previous, whereas enjoying Little League baseball in El Segundo, he declared on video that he wished to signify Japan some day.

Nootbaar, who speaks little Japanese and had not visited the nation since he was 6, knew going into the event that one participant held the important thing to a clean transition: Yu Darvish.

At 36, Darvish was the workforce’s senior participant, a big element in a hierarchical tradition. Nootbaar admits he was nervous when he unexpectedly encountered Darvish a day earlier than being launched to the remainder of the workforce.

“I had just arrived in Japan, and the idea was to take it easy, crash early and meet the team at the ballpark the next day,” Nootbaar stated. “I was eating in the team food room at the hotel when the door opened, and in walked Yu Darvish. I was so nervous, like almost shaking. This isn’t how I expected to meet him, but he was so nice and put me at ease right away.”

He added of Darvish: “He said the goal was to make me comfortable so I could play my game and anything I needed, I should feel free to ask him.”

After three weeks below Darvish’s management, Nootbaar stated he was satisfied that their early assembly was no coincidence.

“I think he sought me out,” Nootbaar stated whereas discussing Darvish and his position with the workforce in comparison with the one held by Shohei Ohtani, the Los Angeles Angels’ two-way celebrity.

“So much attention is given to Shohei, and rightly so, because he’s such an incredible player,” Nootbaar stated. “But Darvish deserves the credit for bringing us together and leading us. He understood his role and gave the younger pitchers so much confidence and taught them so much.”

Ohtani’s impression largely got here on the sphere, the place he was named probably the most helpful participant of the event. Being round such a participant was intimidating for Nootbaar, he stated, though he performs with superstars like Nolan Arenado and Paul Goldschmidt in St. Louis.

“We hit together in the indoor cage,” Nootbaar stated of Ohtani. “I was like, ‘Wow, I’ve never seen anything like it.’”

Nootbaar discovered himself much more impressed with the dramatic method Ohtani closed out Japan’s championship. Having began the sport at designated hitter, Ohtani got here out of the bullpen because the nearer within the ninth inning. After Ohtani recorded two fast outs, his teammate with the Angels, Mike Trout, stepped to the plate. Nootbaar seemed on from left area as Ohtani fanned the three-time winner of the Most Valuable Player Award with a 2-2 slider.

“The movement was ridiculous,” Nootbaar stated. “Obviously, you know, the fastball is fast, but the slider movement is ridiculous.

“He really is different from everybody else.”

When the workforce headed house after 20 days collectively spent on two completely different continents, Ohtani offered Nootbaar with a luxurious watch from Japan. It got here with one situation: Nootbaar has to provide it again if he doesn’t play for Japan on the subsequent W.B.C. in 2026.

“He won’t be getting the watch back because there’s no other team I would consider playing for,” Nootbaar stated. “If they ask me again, I would absolutely love to play for Japan.”