OSAKA – Yoshinobu Yamamoto cruised through eight innings before giving up a late run, leading the Orix Buffaloes to a 4-1win over the Seibu Lions on Saturday afternoon.
With extremely sharp command of his fastball and cutter, the 20-year-old kept hitters from putting the barrel of their bats on the ball, and made the Lions’ jobs exponentially more difficult with an occasional curve or splitter they did not see coming.
The right-hander, a starter this season after starring in late relief last season, struck out 10 while allowing five hits and two walks over 8-1/3 innings at Kyocera Dome. Seibu’s first two hits were grounders that just missed gloves, and the third a softly hit fly over the infield.
Yamamoto’s location deserted him in the ninth, when he put runners on the corners with no outs, setting up Hotaka Yamakawa’s sacrifice fly. Brandon Dickson, however, struck out both batters he faced to record his 10th save.
“I was a little anxious at the end, but the veterans had my back and. … Dickson bailed me out,” Yamamoto (6-4) said. “I was really relaxed at the start and established a great tempo. I was able just to focus on each hitter and the strikeouts took care of themselves.”
The Buffaloes scored four runs off Lions starter Shinsaburo Tawata (1-6) over 2-2/3 innings. Three straight one-out singles by Masahiro Nishino, Masataka Yoshida and Steven Moya put Orix up by a run in the first.
“You’re trying to score as many runs as you can, and I saw my opportunity. I was trying to swing at anything close to the plate, and try to fire up the team and bring the runs home,” Moya said.
Another run scored on a Stefen Romero groundout, while rookie Keita Nakagawa singled in another. Leadoff hitter Shuhei Fukuda singled with two outs in the second inning, stole second base and made it 4-0 on a Nishino single.
Hawks 6, Fighters 3
At Sapporo Dome, lefty Ariel Miranda (5-3) struck out six, while allowing a run over seven innings, to help PL-leading Fukuoka SoftBank top Hokkaido Nippon Ham for the second straight day.
Source : Baseball – The Japan Times