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Give Her the Ball
RAFU STAFF AND WIRE SERVICE REPORTS
Friday, Nov. 28, 2008
A Japanese pro men’s team drafts 16-year-old knuckleballer Eri Yoshida.

Kyodo News
Japanese high school student Eri Yoshida, 16, smiles as she poses for photographers during a press conference in Osaka, after being drafted by the Kobe 9 Cruise in a new independent league that starts in April. Yoshida, who throws a side-arm knuckleball, says she wants to follow in the footsteps of Boston Red Sox knuckleballer Tim Wakefield.

Mainichi Japan
Yoshida pitches at Skymark Stadium
in Kobe on Nov. 3, during tryouts for
the new league.
TOKYO.–The knuckleball–the fluttering, hard-to-hit pitch that’s rare in the major leagues–is propelling a 16-yearold girl to the pros in Japan.
Eri Yoshida was inspired to learn how to throw the knuckler after seeing a video of Boston Red Sox pitcher Tim Wakefield. On Monday, she broke the gender barrier by being drafted for an independent league team as Japan’s first female professional baseball player in a men’s league.
The high schooler was chosen by the Kobe 9 Cruise in the Japanese League, which starts its inaugural season in April.
The Cruise are a far cry from Tokyo’s Yomiuri Giants. Making the squad is more like earning a tentative slot on a farm team than warming up in the bullpen for the Red Sox.
Even so, the 5-foot, 114-pound Yoshida has smashed the glass ceiling with her unorthodox, sidearm pitch in baseball-crazy Japan, where women normally are relegated to amateur, company-sponsored teams or to the sport of softball.
“I’m really happy I stuck with baseball,” Yoshida said in a news conference after she was chosen with 32 other players in the new league’s draft. “I want to pitch against men.”
Professional women’s baseball teams existed in Japan between 1950 and 1952, but Yoshida will be the first woman to play alongside male professional players if she joins Kobe 9 Cruise.
Yoshida, who attends Kanagawa Prefectural Kawasaki Kita High School, has indicated she is interested in joining the team, and is set to begin negotiations over her schooling environment and other issues.
“I wanted to shine in baseball and I am aimed to becoming a professional player,” said a delighted Yoshida at the press conference. “My mind has gone blank but I’m happy.”
The knuckleball, a floating, diving pitch that is successful when it is thrown with little or no spin on the ball, is the weapon Yoshida will rely on solely. Her size won’t likely allow her to develop a 90 mph fastball.
“I also want be a player who can hold them down with a knuckleball,” she said.
The tryouts for the Kansai Independent Baseball League, which begins in April next year, were held between Nov. 2 and 4, and 400 people took part. Yoshida pitched to eight batters without giving up a hit and passed the test.
Kobe 9 Cruise manager Yoshihiro Nakata, 49, a former Hanshin Tigers pitcher, said that Yoshida had proved herself in the tryouts.
“Rather than all the talk about her, the fact that she achieved results in the game was the deciding factor. I want her to build up her lower body,” Nakata said.
Yoshida started playing baseball when she was in the second grade, tagging along with her elder brother, now 19, and played first base on a boy’s team in junior high school. She also joined her high school baseball club, but quit because the training was too tough. Then she joined a private club.
She was reportedly inspired to throw knuckleballs when her father, Isamu, showed her a video of Wakefield pitching. Yoshida is hoping to find enough success to one day challenge the likes of the long-established Central and Pacific leagues, home to the best and brightest Japanese players and increasingly a fertile ground for talent headed to the majors in the United States.
Yoshida said she wants to emulate Wakefield, who has built a successful major league career throwing a knuckleball, which is difficult to learn and even harder to throw with success.
“Hope I can see her pitch one day,” Wakefield said in a text message to the Red Sox that was relayed to The Associated Press. “I’m honored that someone wants to become me. I wish her the best of luck. Maybe I can learn something from her.”
American major league scouts also are eager to get a look at Yoshida when she makes her debut in April.
“She must be doing something right,” said Dave DeFrietas, a scout in Japan for the Cleveland Indians. “She got signed. I hope it’s because of the way she plays, and I wish her success.”
Her manager agrees. “Her sidearm knuckleballs dip and sway, and could be an effective weapon for us,” said Nakata.
Wakefield and Seattle’s R.A. Dickey were the two most prominent pitchers who were primarily knucklers to appear in the major leagues last season.
Eddie Cicotte of the Chicago White Sox was the first highly successful knuckleballer and won 20 games three times in four seasons before he was kicked out of baseball following the 1920 season for his role in the Black Sox scandal.
Three Hall of Famers relied on the knuckler: Hoyt Wilhelm, Phil Niekro and Jesse Haines, and the pitch also was associated with Tom Candiotti, Charlie Hough, Joe Niekro, Steve Sparks and Wilbur Wood.
“It’s funny that I’ve reached that point in my career that people want to emulate me,” Wakefield said. “I’m glad I had people like the Niekros, Charlie Hough and Tom Candiotti that I could look up to. I am deeply humbled that it is me this time.”
The news of Yoshida’s signing–she was chosen in the seventh round–was met with some skepticism that the league might be trying to grab headlines by naming a woman. In that, they certainly succeeded–Yoshida’s photo was all over the morning news Tuesday, and she was featured in a profile in the prestigious Asahi, a major national newspaper.
“I think her recruitment is in part for the publicity,” said Toshihiko Kasuga, the director of the Women’s Baseball Association of Japan. “It would be extremely hard for women to squarely compete against men in any sport.”
But Kasuga said Yoshida’s success could encourage other female players, whose population has surged since little league teams opened their doors to girls about 10 years ago.
Baseball history in the United States has occasional examples of women taking the field with men. While pitching for the Double-A Chattanooga Lookouts in an exhibition game against the New York Yankees, Virne Beatrice “Jackie” Mitchell Gilbert struck out Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig in succession. In the last couple of decades, at least three women have pitched in independent minor leagues.
In the mid-1990s, an all-female pro team, the Colorado Silver Bullets, challenged men’s teams across the country. The team, ironically, was managed by knuckleballer Phil Niekro. |