How Japan Took Over Baseball

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024
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Комментарии • 4,3 тыс.

  • @mikaellund1404
    @mikaellund1404 10 месяцев назад +1918

    As an American who spent 3 years growing up in Nagoya Japan. Watching the Nagoya Dragon baseball team is something I will never forget. Made it onto the jumbo-tron 3 times in a game and the crowd was WILD yet respectful. Drums, chants, cheers. Great life experience.

    • @difencrosby
      @difencrosby 9 месяцев назад +21

      I lived in Kasugai for 2 years.

    • @cejannuzi
      @cejannuzi 9 месяцев назад +15

      Yeah but they just go on cheering all the time instead of responding to what is going on the game. It's annoying.

    • @bena4072
      @bena4072 9 месяцев назад +12

      those games are fun especially if hometeam is winning but it takes some getting used to--especially when the home team is losing but the chanter/cheerleaders are still cheering and singing like they have a shot at winning...

    • @ahmedsalim571
      @ahmedsalim571 9 месяцев назад +13

      @@cejannuzilol i feel you man but it’s about the culture. In Japan the crowd cheers for Both teams for some reason and I still don’t get it tbh.

    • @Takoroomタコ部屋
      @Takoroomタコ部屋 9 месяцев назад +60

      ​@@cejannuziI'm replying as a Japanese person who loves baseball. That's completely off the mark. Japanese people deeply love baseball. It just became a form of singing cheering songs when supporting your favorite team. That's why I'm always happy and sad about what happens on the field, and when an opposing player makes a good play, I applaud even if it's from the opposing team, and I pay close attention to every move made by the players on the team I'm rooting for. This is because the fans have a deep love for their team and baseball itself.

  • @よしくん-k4n
    @よしくん-k4n 10 месяцев назад +3939

    The gutsy, traditional Japanese baseball culture showcased in this video is changing. The high school that won last year's Koshien Championship adopts the principle of "enjoying baseball" and allows freedom in hairstyles as well.

    • @morcatna4767
      @morcatna4767 9 месяцев назад

      Yesssir (^。^)

    • @mitchconner403
      @mitchconner403 9 месяцев назад +450

      Donald Douglas summed it up similarly, "Here's proof that free men can out-produce slaves."

    • @鈴-m6w
      @鈴-m6w 9 месяцев назад +228

      By the way, the winning school is also famous as the high school with the highest deviation value in Japan. After graduation, they will work in the bureaucracy or in prestigious companies.
      This comment uses a translation site

    • @rook1196
      @rook1196 9 месяцев назад +129

      Bobby Valentine who isn't really a players coach, took a nothing team to a Japan Series title w/ the radical idea that coaches aren't allowed to beat the shit out of their players. This idea probably also got him fired twice from the same team.

    • @Dudeguyforeverlulz
      @Dudeguyforeverlulz 9 месяцев назад +43

      He covered this in the video.

  • @daylight4449
    @daylight4449 10 месяцев назад +2729

    As someone who has played in the Japanese little league for a few years I can attest that these Japanese little league teams are insane. My team didn't personally practice more than a few hours a week, and it showed. Against the Japanese teams, our team was absolutely horrible and once got a game called in the 3 inning because we were losing 27 to 3, even though most of our players were at least a few years older than most of the other team. They just had an ungodly ability to make hard contact, and their pitching was leaps and bounds above anything I had seen before. Japanese little league is no joke.

    • @Fusion1231K
      @Fusion1231K 10 месяцев назад +37

      Awesome story, thanks for sharing. Was good to read!

    • @SadBoysCollectiveCirca96
      @SadBoysCollectiveCirca96 10 месяцев назад +74

      but the end result is shohei otani

    • @anamoose461
      @anamoose461 10 месяцев назад +167

      ⁠@@SadBoysCollectiveCirca96 imagine how many hundreds of thousands of boys go thru all the same stuff but don’t even make it to the japanese professional league much less the MLB like Shohei

    • @daylight4449
      @daylight4449 10 месяцев назад +12

      I’m sure I played against some future talents.

    • @SadBoysCollectiveCirca96
      @SadBoysCollectiveCirca96 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@anamoose461 because they’re not Shohei Otani

  • @onlyDoti
    @onlyDoti 9 месяцев назад +317

    If you watched/read Ace of Diamond, you cried watching this. The amount of heart these kids have brings me to tears.

    • @jmsantos1317
      @jmsantos1317 7 месяцев назад +25

      kataoka was the first person i've thought of when i saw this video😂 i was looking for a Daiya no Ace comment and i found yours😂

    • @AnimeFridays
      @AnimeFridays 6 месяцев назад +13

      Amazing anime. Big Windup! is amazing too

    • @linusblomberg913
      @linusblomberg913 4 месяца назад +9

      You really see how high schoolers don't care about the pro's either in the MLB or NPB. The focus was always nationals and only after that was it mentioned being pro.

    • @toidIllorTAmI
      @toidIllorTAmI 4 месяца назад +3

      As they are abused to think that way about the sport...

    • @linusblomberg913
      @linusblomberg913 4 месяца назад +1

      @@toidIllorTAmI Its just how the culture there is about high school baseball. Unless you also think americans are abused to think college/high school sports matter since even in europe thats not the case

  • @themail3079
    @themail3079 10 месяцев назад +1375

    I'm not that into baseball, but this channel is one of the best things in sports journalism today.

    • @cargopilotguy305
      @cargopilotguy305 10 месяцев назад +51

      Facts. This guy and Jxmyhighroller are the pinnacle of sports journalism on RUclips. Excellent content. I’m not even a basketball fan and I watch Jimmy’s videos. And this channel has turned me into a baseball fan

    • @Lady_Graham
      @Lady_Graham 10 месяцев назад +28

      Same. I literally never watch baseball but I find the stories entertaining

    • @a006delta
      @a006delta 10 месяцев назад +22

      No shit, can't be into a game that doesn't exist

    • @ibosutv
      @ibosutv 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@a006deltalol 😭😭😭

    • @ChannelyChannel
      @ChannelyChannel 10 месяцев назад

      @@cargopilotguy305Secret base is also a fantastic sports channel especially any content Jon Bois makes.

  • @willchu2601
    @willchu2601 10 месяцев назад +784

    As a Taiwanese I loved this video, baseball in Taiwan is basically the little brother of japan and although we have a very powerful baseball team it’s nothing compared to how powerful Japanese baseball has become in the last 5 years. We loved watching npb in Taiwan and have tried to learn more and more from Japan aswell

    • @mrlynchify
      @mrlynchify 10 месяцев назад +39

      You guys got a pretty good league in your own right. Wish Asian baseball was more available to watch over here, I’d love to watch those two leagues and KBO

    • @nanajiji765
      @nanajiji765 10 месяцев назад +82

      We Japanese enjoyed Taiwanese team in WBC tournament. Your team was exciting and fun to watch. From Japan

    • @DayvDoberne
      @DayvDoberne 10 месяцев назад +24

      I was fortunate enough to be in Japan for the Asia cup game between Japan and Taiwan last year. Taiwan's shortstop was so slick and Rui-Yang Gu Lin absolutely carved up a team of Japanese all-stars for 7 innings with his deadly curveball. Would love to see both of them on the world stage again!

    • @rv8766
      @rv8766 10 месяцев назад

      It sucks we cant stream japanese baseball here in the US without paying
      i found a link, but it was blocked in the US
      I wanted to watch their world series
      i couldnt find it
      if you know a link tell me the name
      for japan korea taiwan all of um
      at least there is the caribean series starting next week
      its only 10 days long though
      i hope i can find it, if its not on american tv
      i think espn has it, not sure
      for mlb,, check mlb66, they record games, and you can rewatch them up until the next day, and check, vsportsurge, thestreameast, best polaris stream,, those work pretty good

    • @sonny9054
      @sonny9054 10 месяцев назад +41

      The Japanese love the Taiwanese squad. So humble and respectful but at the same time giving everything they’ve got during the game. This is what the game is all about. Winning is just a bonus.

  • @eastxsidexswagg
    @eastxsidexswagg 10 месяцев назад +5150

    An hour long BDE video? What did we do to deserve this blessing??

    • @jabok2cold530
      @jabok2cold530 10 месяцев назад +59

      Wow I didn’t even notice this. Time for popcorn. And explains why he hasn’t been posting recently

    • @ZeuZLoD
      @ZeuZLoD 10 месяцев назад +17

      Joey and his team putting in some WORK!

    • @danielcarrales6702
      @danielcarrales6702 10 месяцев назад +15

      I thought I was tripping 😭

    • @zmusicoffical
      @zmusicoffical 10 месяцев назад +3

      Ikr

    • @Andorski
      @Andorski 10 месяцев назад +8

      BDE fans eating good today!

  • @pete6705
    @pete6705 9 месяцев назад +559

    I had a small skinny Japanese kid on my little league team who just moved to America. That was many years ago, but he’s one of my only teammates I remembered. He threw like a rocket, perfectly accurate throws from the outfield or from 3rd to 1st, like 70 mph when the rest of us probably only threw 40 mph

    • @AmericanOfficalCB
      @AmericanOfficalCB 4 месяца назад +9

      Was he crying after lost

    • @DaddyGovernment-u1l
      @DaddyGovernment-u1l 3 месяца назад +7

      @@AmericanOfficalCB he prob cried, and beat the coach with a belt

    • @IanKuhlke
      @IanKuhlke 3 месяца назад

      Whats your little league team called

    • @kaizillaboy
      @kaizillaboy Месяц назад +12

      I was on an American little league team that played, in Tokyo, against the then LLWS series champ. Our American team was so much larger, so much faster, and we could throw faster than the Japanese kids. It really isn't true that the Japanese generally throw faster and harder than Americans. BUT, their pitchers could throw change-ups, screw balls, knucklers, and curves like American pros. ALL of their batters could accurately PLACE a ball and some even used POOL-STYLE ENGLISH on the balls so they would spin in to the dug-out after going FAIR. Our AMERICAN pitchers could only throw change-ups. The small Japanese kids hit our pitches like it was batting practice, and they beat us 22-2. This was before the 10-run-lead rule.

    • @zekkken-f7z
      @zekkken-f7z Месяц назад

      song 2:25??

  • @InsanelyDank2
    @InsanelyDank2 10 месяцев назад +898

    Japanese players who go to the MLB always say that one of the hardest things they have to adjust to, is the minimal amounts of practice they get before the game. Seiya Suzuki, known quite famously in Japan for practicing a lot despite his already successful career in npb, said in an interview that he had to find time to practice by himself in the MLB, since practice sessions before games are extremely short, and major league players simply don’t practice as much as normal npb players.
    Really shows the difference in culture between the two.

    • @cejannuzi
      @cejannuzi 9 месяцев назад +118

      Which is why Ichiro had his own in-season and off-season routines. In a way, his whole life was built around his training and practice routines.

    • @Rhugor
      @Rhugor 9 месяцев назад +50

      Same dynamic in basketball too. Euro players practice far more with many Americans down to little league equivalents considering 6 games a week as practice.

    • @davidnelson7719
      @davidnelson7719 9 месяцев назад +104

      I mean, it isn't a surprise. As easy as is to respect on the surface, the same mentality is destroying Japan... even down to the demographics.

    • @Rhugor
      @Rhugor 9 месяцев назад

      Unless I am misunderstanding, the Euro players in basketball are totally dominating, as they have a significantly better grasp of the basics of basketball and team play. Americans just want the highlight play and... well Carmelo Anthony is proof that gets you nowhere @@davidnelson7719

    • @titheproven954
      @titheproven954 9 месяцев назад +44

      I mean, it seems healthier to me. Besides the fact that they should have LIVES. The morality of telling people they have to give their current lives and futures with destroyed bodies is ghastly. It also seems to spit in the face of the purpose of a GAME is to have fun. You can for sure have extreme competition and take it seriously, but it seems to dishonor the spirit of the games.

  • @SabrinaMcMillan-f8v
    @SabrinaMcMillan-f8v 9 месяцев назад +428

    As a 23 year old Japanese guy who played baseball for 12 years in Japan, this content is so fun to watch.
    When in it comes to abusing, when I was in junior high school, I got kicked at my belly by a coach, but it was totally fineI got used to it and he’s too old no power
    When I was in high school, we were so focused on baseball to go to “Koshien”.
    In Japan, we have almost no rest day, personally when I was in a junior high school n high school, we had only one rest day in a week. I dumped my girlfriends cuz I wanted to practice it more and I had to study for uni we rarely had time to hang out with friends
    But this memory in high school is my treasure

    • @mitchconner403
      @mitchconner403 9 месяцев назад +69

      I think most people are okay with brutal work you put it.
      What people object to is making injured players play causing them further injury.
      It causes some people to die like some of the examples cited in this video, and dying for baseball is kind of the dumbest thing in my opinion.
      The same thing happens in American Football with traumatic brain injuries.
      People getting irreparable brain damage while playing a high school sport is also dumb.

    • @thewokestoic2432
      @thewokestoic2432 9 месяцев назад +38

      As an American this was so shocking to watch. We’ve definitely begun to respect Japanese baseball again with the rise of Ohtani & the 2023 WBC.
      What’s more shocking is how realistic I’m realizing the Anime *Ace of Diamond* is. I thought it was just over dramatic like anime often is, but NO HAHAHA

    • @skydivenext
      @skydivenext 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@BuffaloBob-556it sums up how boring baseball that you gotta came with gay ideas to make interesting lol

    • @skydivenext
      @skydivenext 9 месяцев назад +4

      It is sad lol my friend and I got hit in the ass with baseball bats lol
      One got an hematoma and the mother complained
      Lol baseball culture was so fucked up lolololol
      BORING AND TRAUMA INDUCING😅

    • @trashbug1
      @trashbug1 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@skydivenext lol

  • @yaniyuhara8165
    @yaniyuhara8165 10 месяцев назад +1262

    I was a baseball player when I was growing up in 70’s. Coach pushed us so hard in the middle of summer practicing WITHOUT water, I ended up having kidney stone! The big scar on my left side is my reminder that hard practice without scientific evidence is nothing but stupidity ! I still love Japanese baseball. But I think I like it better with modern scientific Japanese baseball. Hail to Ohtani !

    • @mrjoe5292
      @mrjoe5292 10 месяцев назад +160

      Yeah discipline and hard work are virtues but that sort of nonsense is just posturing.

    • @jamesm3471
      @jamesm3471 10 месяцев назад

      So, you had a kidney stone? Well, you’ve got two kidneys don’t you? Get back out there, ya quitter!

    • @Set_Your_Handlle
      @Set_Your_Handlle 10 месяцев назад +27

      Since all this footage was so old I suspect they've been integrating more science recently

    • @protonjones54
      @protonjones54 10 месяцев назад +40

      Yeah, we've done some pretty fucked up things in the sports world... and for what? Thankfully some of these practices have changed over time

    • @ciello___8307
      @ciello___8307 10 месяцев назад

      they have changed. most of the npb teams have staff that have worked in the majors and a lot of players have been going to driveline and similar facilities in the offseason@@Set_Your_Handlle

  • @kitbits8
    @kitbits8 2 месяца назад +69

    This channel changed my life when I stumbled on this video.
    I knew nothing about baseball and now I can't live without it... I even changed my Japan itinerary and visited a bunch of stadiums including koshien + the hall off fame museum. Now I'm following MLB religiously and went to my first game (blue jays v. dodgers). All of that happened literally in a span of 3 months from watching this video lmao... I wish I'd gotten into it sooner! So excited for post-season.

  • @Gehenaus235
    @Gehenaus235 9 месяцев назад +2141

    I'm just some random British bloke who has never watched baseball in my life but this video is sensational

    • @stelladavis7832
      @stelladavis7832 9 месяцев назад +31

      That's because the UK sucks when it comes to sports

    • @SerPinkKnight
      @SerPinkKnight 9 месяцев назад +19

      Yeah baseball is peak Americana

    • @Gehenaus235
      @Gehenaus235 9 месяцев назад +119

      @@stelladavis7832 this video is good because the UK supposedly sucks at sports? Bizarre take

    • @stelladavis7832
      @stelladavis7832 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@Gehenaus235 Yes, that's because the UK sucks at sports

    • @SamuelMills-ez4jo
      @SamuelMills-ez4jo 9 месяцев назад +14

      ​@@Gehenaus235 you would hate it, Dead boring.

  • @sootchh4055
    @sootchh4055 10 месяцев назад +1518

    A factual error regarding Ohtani: he wanted to come to the MLB as soon as he graduated from high school, but the team who drafted him, Nippon Ham Fighters, persuaded him not to be too hasty. They drew up a "business plan" which would better prepare Ohtani as a pro, both as a hitter and pitcher, so he would be ready for MLB a few years later. They wanted him to succeed first in the NPB, and then send him off.

    • @superninja252
      @superninja252 10 месяцев назад +218

      It ended up great for both at end of the day, Ohtani became a legend even on MLB, while Fiighters had won with Ohtani, a thing that they are still yet to do even with Big Boss in command

    • @akita1934
      @akita1934 10 месяцев назад +37

      MLBがドラフト指名出来るのはアメリカ🇺🇸プエルトリコ🇵🇷カナダ🇨🇦国籍か所属選手だけ。大谷は直接MLBと契約出来ません
      【追加】
      上記の件につき,幾つかの異議,異論が寄せられましたのでまとめて述べておきます
      ①「internationalFAで直接行けるはず」→internationalFAには「移籍の制限」「国内ルールを優先」項目があります。②「高校卒業でMLBと契約をすれば行ける」→大谷がNBPからドラフト指名を受けた時点で上記の項目に抵触します。大谷は実際ファイターズから指名を受け契約交渉権を指名した球団が破棄しない限り,翌年ドラフトまでファイターズが契約交渉権を保有し,他球団(海外であろうと)は契約出来ません
      ③「マイナーと契約出来る」MiLBだろうが,MLB機構の傘下です。
      現実的な話として大谷がMLB(マイナー含む)にNPB経由せずに行くには日本のドラフト指名がなかった場合かアメリカの大学に進学しドラフトを受けるケースしか考えられないが,私が知らないだけで(大谷の場合)NPBを経由しないで最短でMLB(マイナー含む)と契約入団出来るコースがあったら逆に教えて欲しい

    • @localneo-graphic4647
      @localneo-graphic4647 10 месяцев назад +40

      I believe it was more about MLB teams not being interested in him as a hitter. No doubt they were wrong, but the precedent for an elite 2-way player was a sample of 1 a hundred years ago. Combine that with the fact that every Japanese hitter besides Ichiro being a bust, MLB teams weren't going to develop him as a hitter, point blank.
      Japanese players famously have no leverage when it comes to going pro in the US (once they are in the NPL), and when you combine that with the fact that Ohtani would miss our on a TON of money because of new MLB salary rules (if he had left right after HS, he would have been grandfathered into the old uncapped system), he made a serious sacrifice joining the NPL.
      His team did give him unprecedented verbal commitments though, which they honored. This allowed him to play as the two-way player he wanted to be, and they allowed him to leave whenever he wanted, which was unprecedented.

    • @localneo-graphic4647
      @localneo-graphic4647 10 месяцев назад +7

      I believe it was more about MLB teams not being interested in him as a hitter. No doubt they were wrong, but the precedent for an elite 2-way player was a sample of 1 a hundred years ago. Combine that with the fact that every Japanese hitter besides Ichiro being a bust, MLB teams weren't going to develop him as a hitter, point blank.
      Japanese players famously have no leverage when it comes to going pro in the US (once they are in the NPL), and when you combine that with the fact that Ohtani would miss our on a TON of money because of new MLB salary rules (if he had left right after HS, he would have been grandfathered into the old uncapped system), he made a serious sacrifice joining the NPL.
      His team did give him unprecedented verbal commitments though, which they honored. This allowed him to play as the two-way player he wanted to be, and they allowed him to leave whenever he wanted, which was unprecedented.

    • @localneo-graphic4647
      @localneo-graphic4647 10 месяцев назад

      I believe it was more about MLB teams not being interested in him as a hitter. No doubt they were wrong, but the precedent for an elite 2-way player was a sample of 1 a hundred years ago. Combine that with the fact that every Japanese hitter besides Ichiro being a bust, MLB teams weren't going to develop him as a hitter, point blank.
      Japanese players famously have no leverage when it comes to going pro in the US (once they are in the NPL), and when you combine that with the fact that Ohtani would miss our on a TON of money because of new MLB salary rules (if he had left right after HS, he would have been grandfathered into the old uncapped system), he made a serious sacrifice joining the NPL.
      His team did give him unprecedented verbal commitments though, which they honored. This allowed him to play as the two-way player he wanted to be, and they allowed him to leave whenever he wanted, which was unprecedented.

  • @blackflagnation
    @blackflagnation 9 месяцев назад +944

    I played baseball on an American high school team in Japan. Our main competition was the other international schools and US military base schools in the area, but we would also play Japanese schools during the season. Mind you, none of the Japanese schools we played were Koshien caliber, but they would smoke us every time.

    • @itslife1399
      @itslife1399 9 месяцев назад +9

      I can say that some of our best could compete with their best. It's just there's more of them.

    • @wwpjd28
      @wwpjd28 9 месяцев назад +27

      @@itslife1399 What do you mean? At the HS school level, only a few American HS teams could compete with Japan's HS teams. But that is based on what we care about at each level of the game. Our professional teams are significantly better than theirs though. Yoshida was a top 5 hitter in the entire league over in Japan and was the second best rookie on his own team over here, a team that finished last place in their division. America is still clearly better at baseball. We just don't care about HS baseball that way. For good reason - I wouldn't let my kid play baseball if they were going to get tortured by coaching staff. I appreciate the respect, integrity, and tradition in the Japanese game, but there are better ways of promoting those values than the degree of physical abuse they put players through.

    • @bam6210
      @bam6210 9 месяцев назад +20

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@wwpjd28this dude said “finished last place in the division” as an argument lol. Ohtani hasn’t had a single playoff appearance with angels and is 2x unanimous mvp and best player in baseball. Sorry the sport is a team game. Maybe add some context, no you don’t appreciate Japanese baseball, you’re offended at the video and felt the need to subtly diss japan and boast about how the US Is still the best. Yoshida was in genuine rookie of the year talks in the middle of the season, he didn’t have a bad year at all. In fact he finished top 5, and was only the 2nd best rookie on the team because another Red Sox finished 3rd in rookie rankings. And Another funny thing regarding your “last place in division” comment is the fact that the Red Sox play in the best division in baseball, and their record despite finishing last, is better than 4/5 of the entire Al central. Context matters.
      And if you’re going to list yoshida, you can also name Kodai senga who came over as a 30 year old, runners up for rookie of the year and dominated. But only players that fit your point right?

    • @brandonbyrnes6302
      @brandonbyrnes6302 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@wwpjd28Oh yeah that’s why the highest paid player if all time and pitcher of all time are from Japan because American is sooooo much better than Japan at baseball… keep coping that Japan is far superior than the US at the sport and producing great baseball players😂 you should be happy that Japan takes the sport so seriously maybe players from other countries will start putting in the effort to be as disciplined and good as the people who love this sport the most

    • @777Justin
      @777Justin 8 месяцев назад

      Were you an ASIJ Mustang? I was a Kinnick Red Devil.

  • @solenstyle
    @solenstyle 10 месяцев назад +716

    Nomo should be in the hall of fame, simply for his impact on the baseball world. You can't tell the story of baseball without Nomo.

    • @masonc9565
      @masonc9565 10 месяцев назад +15

      Curt Flood too!

    • @J.C...
      @J.C... 10 месяцев назад +17

      Hideo deserves it more than anyone. I can't wait til Ichiro gets in this year. I watched his entire career since I've been a Mariners fan since 1989. And his buddy, Ken Griffey Jr is my favorite player. I fill believe Ichiro will be unanimous. Griffey should have been.

    • @J.C...
      @J.C... 10 месяцев назад +15

      ​​​@@masonc9565OK but that's a totally different subject altogether. There's also the fact that he's not Japanese 🤷 yea he did a lot for free agency but Hideo Nomo is to Japanese people what Jackie Robinson is to African Americans. Hideo essentially opened up MLB to Asian players just like Jackie did for Black players.

    • @masonc9565
      @masonc9565 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@J.C... I’m saying because of Flood’s impact on the baseball world lol

    • @learningvideosbynikhil8308
      @learningvideosbynikhil8308 10 месяцев назад

      Bro I love to imitate his action

  • @FrankThe77Tank
    @FrankThe77Tank 10 месяцев назад +445

    I think the most shocking fact was that the MOST pitches thrown in the 2023 season was 117… NOBODY got to the 120’s.. WILD

    • @carlolingesso1471
      @carlolingesso1471 10 месяцев назад +18

      The only one I can think of is Michael Lorenzen during his perfect game with 124

    • @coloradodrives7784
      @coloradodrives7784 10 месяцев назад +2

      That pitcher that did it is pushing 41 to lol. The younger guys gotta step up their game.

    • @FrankThe77Tank
      @FrankThe77Tank 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@carlolingesso1471 Why’d he say the highest was 117 then?? I knew that sounded off..

    • @nicholasming5976
      @nicholasming5976 10 месяцев назад +8

      I think that was because of the pitch clock. Pitchers were getting gassed in 7th because they couldn’t slow the pace.

    • @wpgjetsandbluejaysfan9064
      @wpgjetsandbluejaysfan9064 10 месяцев назад +4

      alex cobb threw 131 on august 29

  • @joshlewis575
    @joshlewis575 10 месяцев назад +389

    Could u imagine "big boss" rolling into Dodger Stadium on the hovercraft. The opposing team would be so butt hurt. The atmosphere of Japanese baseball is sick!!

    • @yaniyuhara8165
      @yaniyuhara8165 10 месяцев назад +33

      NPB is taking baseball entertainment to the nth degree !

    • @evergreenrider
      @evergreenrider 10 месяцев назад +21

      Japan also had the best MMA presentation with Pride

    • @Cap7171
      @Cap7171 10 месяцев назад

      NASCAR-levels of wacky extra crap!

    • @ebscoHOSTpub
      @ebscoHOSTpub 10 месяцев назад +6

      Dodger fans are some of the most vanilla. Why would anyone be butt hurt big boss flies around Dodger stadium?

    • @babobenson5203
      @babobenson5203 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@ebscoHOSTpubsomeone hasn't been to dodger stadium in another teams jersey.. wear a braves, Astros, or Yankees jersey in the outfield at dodger stadium and tell me the fans are vanilla.

  • @きむよ-b7g
    @きむよ-b7g 3 месяца назад +24

    I work at the koshien stadium, and there’s been talks every year about not having the tournament there anymore because it’s outdoors and the high schoolers are playing baseball in 37-40 degree heat during the day.
    But these proposals have been denied because almost all of the players put insane focus on playing at THE koshien stadium. I feel like that information itself shows how sacred this stadium/tournament is to them.

  • @atn7092
    @atn7092 10 месяцев назад +496

    To put those population numbers in context, Japan is 124 million people total.
    That means half the population of the entire country watched the national team’s exhibition games 😮

    • @KBEM.mp4
      @KBEM.mp4 10 месяцев назад +41

      That's just going by televisions, probably way more

    • @Xumal
      @Xumal 10 месяцев назад

      Insane to think about, I cannot imagine that many people in America watching anything @@KBEM.mp4

    • @ブレイヴフェンサ
      @ブレイヴフェンサ 10 месяцев назад +7

      Sadly a lot of that population are geriatrics

    • @KRIAJK
      @KRIAJK 10 месяцев назад +11

      Yeah... That's not how TV works. There's a few million in there that are from other countries.

    • @Jordan-Ramses
      @Jordan-Ramses 10 месяцев назад +24

      Basketball is just called Basketball in Japan and is written in Katakana like a foreign word. Baseball in Japanese is written as 野球 (Yakyū). They gave it Kanji and a Japanese name. Ramen doesn't even have Kanji. It's still written in Katakana.

  • @hoffmanredhawksfootball11U
    @hoffmanredhawksfootball11U 9 месяцев назад +463

    As someone coming from Japan who's followed Japanese baseball since 90's, I can testify that this video touches on every single significant moment/topic of the last 3 decades and on point with its analysis of pros and cons of Japanese baseball. Hats off to incredible research. Amazing work!

    • @octopuss1918
      @octopuss1918 8 месяцев назад

      But american baseball is still good too.

    • @rickmortt8546
      @rickmortt8546 8 месяцев назад

      Now do hockey

    • @Ibhenriksen
      @Ibhenriksen 7 месяцев назад

      The reason why it's like this is because of nationalistic and historical disputes that trail back from China dating back to ancient times! Japan wanted to show what respect really should be.

    • @MrThejboe3oh5
      @MrThejboe3oh5 7 месяцев назад +3

      It's respectable but they really need to change their ways when dealing with pitcher's in their youth...that much strain definitely does damage and shortens their careers

  • @meetra5073
    @meetra5073 10 месяцев назад +361

    One fact I'd like to add about koshien and best performances:
    There was one player named Seiichi Shima, who back in 1939 pitched 5 games, allowed 5 hits, 5 shutouts, 57 Ks, and 2 no hitters in the semi finals and finals which earned him the nickname "The legendary pitcher". Sadly he was killed in ww2 before he ever got the chance to play professionally

    • @cargopilotguy305
      @cargopilotguy305 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@dog-ez2nuwas about to say the exact same thing.

    • @moderateatberkeley
      @moderateatberkeley 10 месяцев назад +201

      @@dog-ez2nuhe was drafted into the navy in 1944 when he was still a student at Meiji university, where he was studying to be a newspaper reporter. He died onboard an escort ship in March 1945 when it struck a mine. Doesn’t matter which side you might have supported: this was a tragic loss of life, and your simplistic hero villain brush painting is deplorable.

    • @meetra5073
      @meetra5073 10 месяцев назад +34

      @@dog-ez2nu what the other guy said for 1. For 2: either way a war took away what could've been one of the best pitchers seen

    • @unbearablepun8608
      @unbearablepun8608 10 месяцев назад +28

      @@dog-ez2nuI mean it’s the governments that throw their ppl into wars. Japan was basically a dictatorship (‘absolute monarchy’) at the time

    • @CrackzTV
      @CrackzTV 10 месяцев назад +63

      @@dog-ez2nuI don’t think he personally planned Pearl Harbor or the Chinese war, so yes sadly he was killed in ww2

  • @kanb
    @kanb 8 месяцев назад +32

    Even though they lost by 82 points in the summer Koshien tournament, they cannot afford to give up.
    They are the players who know that this game will be their last official match in their baseball life, and their best friends.

    • @Laremy
      @Laremy 3 месяца назад

      K dork

  • @urushi_7
    @urushi_7 10 месяцев назад +122

    This is entirely true. I'm Japanese and have been playing baseball for basically my entire life, but man is it tough. Nowadays its more of a taboo to force players to push themselves too hard to the point of "pissing blood" or abusing them hence public opinion, but some elite schools still have this kind of training.

    • @melo7038
      @melo7038 9 месяцев назад +9

      I'm glad things are changing. It seems that the spirit of sport and competition got lost in translation with Japan, with it becoming war. Sport is supposed to be fun. Not torture

    • @丼物-c9t
      @丼物-c9t 7 месяцев назад +12

      選手育成ノウハウがない時代にそういった指導が蔓延しただけ
      今はまずない

    • @neonfroot
      @neonfroot 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@melo7038
      ballsports as a profession brings out the worst in humans.

  • @Ariana321
    @Ariana321 10 месяцев назад +311

    I often joke about the idea of Shohei Ohtani being created in a lab as part of something akin to a supersoldier program, but the more I see of Japanese baseball culture? The more I think they might *actually* try and do that, lol.

    • @montanawildhack2760
      @montanawildhack2760 10 месяцев назад +11

      then you've totally misinterpreted Japanese culture...

    • @symptomofsouls
      @symptomofsouls 10 месяцев назад

      China had a breeding program to create superstar basketball players which ended up creating Yao Ming (yes this is a true story)
      They basically took the tallest men and women they could find, forced them to have intercourse, then trained the kids in basketball

    • @GIRTHYANDITCURVES
      @GIRTHYANDITCURVES 10 месяцев назад +19

      All this just to lose to Dominicans ☠️☠️

    • @ocha128
      @ocha128 9 месяцев назад +17

      As a Japanese, I can confirm Shohei Ohtani is the result of a scientific experiment😂

    • @w花b
      @w花b 9 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@montanawildhack2760Call it culture or whatever you want but at the core that's kinda what it is.

  • @hitaaaaaaa9659
    @hitaaaaaaa9659 6 месяцев назад +56

    Kousien is every man's dream in Japan. Before the Summmer Kousien we have a competition in the every prefecture and the winning team will get the ticket to the Kosien.

    • @njmksr8686
      @njmksr8686 3 месяца назад +8

      It makes me think of a Baseball version of March Madness, our college basketball tournament. The things dreams are made of.

  • @gabrielvazquez1691
    @gabrielvazquez1691 10 месяцев назад +203

    Seeing this after seeing “Ace of Diamond” anime, this puts it into another perspective, and I absolutely loved it. I think I’m going to rewatch it, that’s how hyped up this video got me for Japanese baseball.
    P.S. 1 hour video from their channel a gift from the creator. We your fans thank you.

    • @gabrielvazquez1691
      @gabrielvazquez1691 10 месяцев назад +5

      I just realized I made a huge mistake in not including “Mr. Baseball” in this conversation. 🎞️

    • @Tre325
      @Tre325 10 месяцев назад +22

      I was literally thinking of Ace of the Diamond once he mentioned the cheering section lol

    • @jac_238
      @jac_238 10 месяцев назад +13

      Major! is another great baseball manga/anime

    • @zikalokof1challenge414
      @zikalokof1challenge414 10 месяцев назад +15

      This anime perfectly embodies HS japanese baseball and the sheer amount of effort and training put into it. And that hard and non-stop training creates utter monsters like Todoroki Raichi. The Koshien mindset is also pinpoint perfect

    • @glovecompartment00
      @glovecompartment00 10 месяцев назад

      The GOAT of sports anime, too bad no one has heard of it though. @@jac_238

  • @0ppaiDragon
    @0ppaiDragon 10 месяцев назад +94

    I attended a Baystars game last year (Tokyo Giants). The atmosphere was amazing!!! Exactly what you want to encounter in MLB but never do except for the playoffs. They had songs for the pitchers, batters, etc. Their cheerleader sections were as professional as a college football marching band. Japan loves baseball.
    Just a few weeks ago I was in Japan on New Years vacation. I saw a team of (I'm guessing) middle schoolers during their afternoon (?) run down in Enoshima while walking to the train station. I was too slow to the entrance and the entire team apologize for blocking the way and bow as they continue their run. Not saying that the child abuse isn't real but I'm glad the video highlighted that it also promoted good values of hard work & dedication to the little guys. Great video!

    • @superninja252
      @superninja252 10 месяцев назад

      If you like college football marching band you should see koshien, they use bands simmilar to US college football marching bands

    • @丼物-c9t
      @丼物-c9t 7 месяцев назад +3

      育成ノウハウのない時代に虐待指導が蔓延していました
      今は殆ど聞きません

  • @HoopDreamz
    @HoopDreamz 10 месяцев назад +150

    Japan has so many good baseball players it’s crazy. Lot of dudes in the NPB that aren’t going to come over to MLB or too young can easily step into starting roles.

    • @usersixnine347
      @usersixnine347 10 месяцев назад +14

      Out of the 8 Japanese players in mlb last season, only 3 were chosen for the WBC. Americans mistake that all of the Japanese players in mlb are the best group japan has to offer…..without realizing that MOST of japans mlbers are not even among the best of japan, while overwhelming majority of japans best talent is literally in japan. Roki sasaki has some saying he’s already the best pitcher in the world currently and he hasn’t played a single mlb game. The NPB has world class Japanese players. The difference in level from the mlb is simply because the mlb draws the best talent around the world, while the NPB only has the best talent from their own, the Japanese.

    • @the_weasler
      @the_weasler 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@usersixnine347this is only partially true. Even if the MLB was only American players, the talent would still be greater. The US WBC and Olympic teams never feature the absolute best players they have to offer.

    • @usersixnine347
      @usersixnine347 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@the_weasler massive cope. The USA sent their best batters and were shut down by NPB pitching in last years wbc lmfao.

    • @willvintage3505
      @willvintage3505 8 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@usersixnine347 Japan won by 1 run against a staff where Adam Wainwright was the best pitcher and was outhit 9-5.
      Please define "Shut down"

    • @dltguitar6532
      @dltguitar6532 7 месяцев назад

      id rather have the Japanese than all the arrogant and mediocre Dominican players

  • @okolekahuna3862
    @okolekahuna3862 9 месяцев назад +71

    Because of my business, I would frequent Japan, and one occasion, I spent a month in Nagoya. The place where I worked was near a little league field. Every day I would spend my dinner sitting in the stands watching the kids practice and would sometimes watch a game during the weekends. They were so fundamentally sound with every aspect of the game.

    • @timbolandyy2295
      @timbolandyy2295 6 месяцев назад

      I’m curious, what type of business do you have that would make you frequent Japan ?

    • @cody1390
      @cody1390 10 дней назад

      ​@@timbolandyy2295 tentacle-porn author

  • @Sir-Chalz
    @Sir-Chalz 10 месяцев назад +159

    Full discretion, I'm a knuckle dragger that only watches UFC, but holy moly this was an amazing documentary and really gave me a whole new appreciation for Japan and baseball. Thank you so much for the hard work in this documentary and showing me a whole new world I didn't even know existed! Time to go train harder!

    • @avery.a5948
      @avery.a5948 9 месяцев назад +17

      UFC fans always make watching ufc their personality 😭

    • @mitchconner403
      @mitchconner403 9 месяцев назад

      @@avery.a5948soccer fans 👀
      Edit sorry “football” I knew that would have made someone mad

    • @Onlybadtakes2589
      @Onlybadtakes2589 9 месяцев назад +2

      Mma fan as well and now i know why Aoki always cries

    • @sunnydays405
      @sunnydays405 9 месяцев назад +3

      Nobody asked for your Grindr bio

  • @j.menapace625
    @j.menapace625 10 месяцев назад +164

    Suddenly, Tanaka's talk from "Major League II" about a baseball player needing to be a "warrior" makes a lot more sense.

    • @6thwilbury2331
      @6thwilbury2331 5 месяцев назад +2

      Best comment on this video 😀

  • @mrmr5580
    @mrmr5580 10 месяцев назад +62

    I've not been into Baseball long, as I'm in the UK and it's not a big deal over here, I kind of stumbled into it during covid, I know aside from the U.S, Baseball is massive in Japan, I just want to say thanks for the videos, and helping me learn more about it

    • @WAKEUPTODAYNOTTOMORROW
      @WAKEUPTODAYNOTTOMORROW 9 месяцев назад +2

      If you really want to learn about baseball mate … look no further than an island in the Caribbean called The Dominican Republic 🇩🇴

    • @HookedonChronics
      @HookedonChronics 9 месяцев назад +1

      The Caribbean, South Korea, and Taiwan as well

    • @usersixnine347
      @usersixnine347 9 месяцев назад

      Baseball is a bigger sport than your football (soccer for muricans) in Taiwan, South Korea, and japan.

    • @Fo44667
      @Fo44667 9 месяцев назад +1

      Baseball is an old sport in Japan.

    • @patricko_4202
      @patricko_4202 Месяц назад +1

      I know right, it’s so interesting just seeing how much baseball impacts many parts of the world. I’ve met Japanese baseball players and even some from Venezuela 🤯

  • @mds525700
    @mds525700 9 месяцев назад +17

    I watch quite a bit of japanese and Taiwan and south Korean baseball. They are like college football games. They have bands that play absolutely all game long and never let up, even when the pitcher is about to pitch.

    • @superninja252
      @superninja252 8 месяцев назад +1

      I like those beacuse of it too

  • @BarnabyBaltimoron
    @BarnabyBaltimoron 10 месяцев назад +51

    *Please do more stories on the unique baseball cultures in different countries.* This is one of my top 5 favorite videos you’ve made. Thank you ⚾️ 👊🏻

  • @RoadrunnerMoose
    @RoadrunnerMoose 10 месяцев назад +106

    As someone who's actually been to a Japanese Baseball game, yeah I completely agree with this video. These guys LOVE the sport. I went to see the Yokohama BayStars back in 2011. They were a basement dwelling team and the cheering and support was like being at the Super Bowl. I learned that day that the most expensive seats in the house aren't necessarily best. Next time I'm over there, I'm getting a seat next to first base.

    • @Jordan-Ramses
      @Jordan-Ramses 10 месяцев назад

      There was a Japanese Vtuber who was allegedly fired because she tweeted that she didn't understand Baseball.

    • @turkalpha6884
      @turkalpha6884 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@Jordan-Ramses I think Korone just came to her house with a baseball bat.

    • @areguapiri
      @areguapiri 10 месяцев назад +5

      I saw a game in the Tokyo Dome. A once in a lifetime experience!

    • @丼物-c9t
      @丼物-c9t 7 месяцев назад

      2011年のベイスターズがスーパーボウルみたいな声援だった???
      m.ruclips.net/video/9NgPTrGxui0/видео.html
      ↑これが???
      この時期は暗黒時代ですよ?常に最下位でガラガラ

    • @matthias8161
      @matthias8161 6 месяцев назад +4

      saw the giants play the baystars in the tokyo dome. one of one experience food was amazing and the atmosphere was awesome. reminds me of our college football but so coordinated chants and everything. still my favorite baseball experience

  • @hateusernames2
    @hateusernames2 10 месяцев назад +210

    The World Baseball Classic this past March was legendary; epic matches like Japan vs Mexico, their Championship Match vs USA with Ohtani facing Trout in the 9th inning and having viewership ratings that far surpass any other country. Their passion and dedication to the sport is intense, scary yet impressive.
    Japan's too strict or the US is too soft in baseball?
    Japan brings discipline, Latinos bring spice and fun

    • @jonahflores1147
      @jonahflores1147 10 месяцев назад

      Lmao yet USA gets to the gold medal round and goes toe to toe with them. You would think all that pissing blood practice and discipline would go reaches farther than American baseball but it doesn't 😂 its just people like you putting the Japanese on a God like pedestal.

    • @Venom3254
      @Venom3254 10 месяцев назад +7

      Trout is a bum

    • @ciello___8307
      @ciello___8307 10 месяцев назад +6

      venezuela vs USA was a fun match too. lots of great games

    • @ljpal18
      @ljpal18 10 месяцев назад +13

      Japan definitely too strict if they are physically beating on players.

    • @oyunboldboldbaatar5519
      @oyunboldboldbaatar5519 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@ljpal18that’s just a cultural thing. Beatings like those are completely normal in eastern Asian societies. You might find it abusive but they don’t.

  • @hittheboof1084
    @hittheboof1084 9 месяцев назад +18

    I went to a Tokyo Swallows-Hanshin Tigers regular season game while i was there. I was super impressed by the crowd participation, all the fans knew all the chants. Hanshin was the away team and they completely filled up the visiting section and brought a pep band. Dont see that in the MLB lol

    • @superninja252
      @superninja252 8 месяцев назад +1

      Hanshin Tigers are the most popular team in Japan and Swallows are a akin to White Sox/Mets but in Tokyo where they are the second team in the city

  • @vincenthuebner2110
    @vincenthuebner2110 10 месяцев назад +184

    Stories of abuse in high school baseball sounds like an extreme version of how American Football is treated in the US. Still remember an incident when a player broke his leg and missed practice for 2 weeks. He ended up having to run up and down the football field, and do a push-up every 5 yards. He did that 14 times, to make up the 14 days of practice he missed.

    • @anamoose461
      @anamoose461 10 месяцев назад +40

      yeah that’s honestly probably the best american sport to compare it to, especially since football has a similar level of fervent respect among fans and players of all levels of the sport. it just doesn’t have the militaristic element of japanese baseball.

    • @NRC613
      @NRC613 10 месяцев назад +5

      Japan far worst yout American nfl soft

    • @NRC613
      @NRC613 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@anamoose461 you Americans makee laugh .. Japan baseball alot harder on the people then football in America

    • @HallucinatingHedgehogs
      @HallucinatingHedgehogs 10 месяцев назад +25

      I remember a story from like maybe a decade ago. I saw it on the local news since I lived in MD. A university of Maryland football player died it was either of heat stroke or a heart attack. I think they were denied water in like 80* heat.

    • @cornman3765
      @cornman3765 10 месяцев назад +18

      ​@@NRC613Thats why the comment said it was more extreme? He admitted that japenese baseball is much more difficult.

  • @dmdeester
    @dmdeester 9 месяцев назад +303

    Jimmy Dugan: "There's no CRYING in baseball!!!"
    Japanese Baseball manager: "There IS crying in baseball!!!"

    • @Zzz-j2f
      @Zzz-j2f 9 месяцев назад +16

      And it better be blood!

    •  9 месяцев назад +10

      Manly tears in baseball: not a bad idea at all.

    • @6thwilbury2331
      @6thwilbury2331 5 месяцев назад

      Funny that you mention Jimmy Dugan. Think of when that movie is set. Then think about what kinds of things Japan was doing at the time. Suffice to say, the extreme and hardcore approaches that country holds dearly as a matter of tradition has exhibited some serious batshittery that goes well beyond torn UCLs and dislocated shoulders.

  • @sergioterrero
    @sergioterrero 8 месяцев назад +13

    I got to be honest, an 1 hour long video is tough to watch, but not for this channel. Is entertaining, narrative and even funny the way you tell the stories, and situations in your videos. Great job!

  • @midorimage
    @midorimage 10 месяцев назад +23

    I worked in Nishinomiya..where Koshien Stadium is... that place is to Japanese is as sacred as Arlington National Cemetary, Sistine Chapel, Italy and Mecca. For most Japanese players.. it is number one on the bucket list, more so the NBL or MBL.

  • @CorrespondenceTheory
    @CorrespondenceTheory 10 месяцев назад +59

    My grandmother most important time of the year was high school baseball season. I was born and raised in Japan but you sir have dug into things that even Japanese media struggles to tackle due to the cultural importance.
    One small thing I wanted to add was that practically every school can participate and most of the star players move into being majors such as ohtani and even if they stop after high school some major companies will simply hire them just for that achievement. But to young Japanese men it has always been a symbol that is tangible to all high schoolers that anyone can reach greatness with the right mentality and hard work. But ya shocked to hear the extent.

  • @MCHkid13
    @MCHkid13 10 месяцев назад +40

    I love Japanese baseball. Everyone should experience going to a game at least once in their lives. The school I teach at is known for baseball and it’s a joy to watch the kids play. Makes me wish I played baseball as a kid. 😂

  • @thomasredden4263
    @thomasredden4263 9 месяцев назад +33

    I know it’s not the same, but high end Texas High school football has a lot of similar practices that really don’t get talked about. I and a lot of other kids I knew destroyed our bodies bc we would be bullied out of getting injuries checked out, we would get pinned against one another constantly, underclassmen and upperclassmen with no prospects of starting were used as literal live tackling dummies for us to practice getting an idea of the other teams plays, so much so that often JV only got about 30 minutes of practice a week the day before game day to actually practice got there own games. I had a friend who almost died bc he kept being told he was just trying to get out of practice when he said he was sick, they wouldn’t let him leave till he started to throw up blood, turned out good appendix was in the process of bursting. He left a starter and came back 3 weeks later after being berated about being out and never touched the field again in a game in any meaningful way. My first head coach was allowed to step down rather than be fired after he slammed a players head off a locker when he caught them with a vape. They used to hit us, verbally abuse us in ways that were nuts looking back. We would lift and train for 2 hours before school, we would watch film for an hour before practice, practice for 3 hours in the beating Texas sun, then go for another hour long lift to finish up the day. When I went to quit after my 3rd hip surgery my head coach looked at me and said, “I destroyed my knees and I don’t regret it, I think this is just you taking the pussy way out.” And I just left his office without saying anything else. I was a pretty important player to the team as we were thin at offensive line as it was and I was the second best of the ones we had, and they just saw you as a stepping stone to move them along in there career to either an athletic director position at one of the 5A or 6A schools or a good position on a college coaching staff. It’s just very predatory on young kids and using there dreams to manipulate them and use them into accomplishing your own. Not all the coaches are that way, but A LOT of them are.

  • @megg734
    @megg734 10 месяцев назад +92

    Koshien is a dream destination for children who play baseball, and a place where high school students absolutely want to participate.
    High school students practice hard every day to earn the right to participate.
    Japanese people love the pure efforts and passionate battles of high school students.

    • @RexZShadow
      @RexZShadow 9 месяцев назад +4

      This video finally made all the baseball manga about going to Koshien make so much more sense.

  • @Ianmccor
    @Ianmccor 10 месяцев назад +34

    I remember when Yuki Saito actually came to South Carolina a year after winning the Koshien as part of a series between the Japanese and American college all-star teams that was to be played a week later in North Carolina. His team played the Columbia Blowfish in the game I went to, and despite the Blowfish not being that good for a college summer team at the time would beat the Japanese All-Stars. One player who graduated from the same high school as mine even got a big hit off Saito in the 6th inning. There were a swarm of Japanese media covering Saito and I was even interviewed by one reporter since I was pretty much the only person in the crowd who had heard of Saito and knew his nickname (which I learned in the local newspaper which most people don't read).

    • @DaveUnknown
      @DaveUnknown 10 месяцев назад

      Can't find anything about this when looking it up, got a link to an article or something?

  • @darthdab57
    @darthdab57 10 месяцев назад +56

    my friend ron passed away last year and i wish he was still here to sit down and enjoy this absolutely monster of a video from you he would have loved that you made an hour long vid!

    • @somepoliticalgamer6459
      @somepoliticalgamer6459 9 месяцев назад +1

      RIP, Ron.

    • @Anna-kj3np
      @Anna-kj3np 9 месяцев назад

      I’m willing to bet he is watching it with you, man… you don’t have to believe in ghosts but I believe in you

  • @pyrojkl
    @pyrojkl 8 месяцев назад +21

    As an american who never got into baseball until watching the anime Major just so i could appriciate the sport 10 years ago, Its since to see an indepth look at japanese baseball, the history and traditions and how its evolving.

    • @gingerail4605
      @gingerail4605 5 месяцев назад +1

      What a dedicated weeb
      ...jk

    • @toidIllorTAmI
      @toidIllorTAmI 4 месяца назад

      Are you bragging about watching anime?

  • @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705
    @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705 9 месяцев назад +49

    Thank you Hideo Nomo.
    As a Latino kid growing up and admiring Valenzuela I enjoyed watching Hideo when he was with the Dodgers. I was ecstatic when he had his no hitter, in Coors Field, of all places.

  • @EddiMoFetti
    @EddiMoFetti 10 месяцев назад +38

    An hour long video talking about Japanese baseball is a blessing

  • @brianmoore6724
    @brianmoore6724 10 месяцев назад +48

    As someone who is an International baseball scorer for the WBSC and has scored tournaments all over the world involving these Japanese phenoms when they were young and also with NPB, including the 2021 gold medal game in Tokyo, I knew a lot of this about Japan and their baseball process. But this video was still awesome, informative, interesting and well well done. Props to Baseball Doesn't Exist for this! I know baseball fans in the small baseball countries in Europe and other places will really really enjoy this as well. I had other stuff to do, but just sat and watched this video uninterrupted. Loved it!

  • @zrumpz
    @zrumpz 9 месяцев назад +32

    I'm not really a baseball fan, but I happened to be in Japan for about 6 weeks which also included the WBC title. I had no idea baseball was THAT big of a deal in Japan. It was everywhere, and pretty cool to see. Even as an American myself I found myself rooting for the Japan team just because of all the devotion they had over there for it (also because like I said, I don't watch baseball so I had no particular loyalty to the US team).
    Anyways really good video, I don't know how it ended up in my feed but I was not expecting to actually be entertained enough to watch it all. Incredibly interesting.

  • @siamiam4306
    @siamiam4306 9 месяцев назад +19

    Having attended the inaugural World Baseball Classic in Orlando, I was amazed how Domincan and Venezuelan fans celebrated in te stands. It was awesome to see and a lesson MLB can learn from.

    • @sdeepj
      @sdeepj 9 месяцев назад +2

      Latin American baseball games look like a party.

    • @hotohori69
      @hotohori69 9 месяцев назад +2

      The whole American Attitude sucks about baseball. The whole "unwritten rules" bullshit they believe in takes away from the fun. Players should strut and celebrate after a home run. They should talk shit and celebrate for striking out someone ending an inning and so on. Instead they feel slighted they would rather hit them with a pitch which is dumb and dangerous. The way the latin teams celebrated was way more fun and should be commended.

  • @shji-kk3xs
    @shji-kk3xs 10 месяцев назад +72

    1 hour long bde video is just what i needed

    • @jlui21
      @jlui21 10 месяцев назад +3

      -- i have zero interest baseball until...Ohtani. Now I will glance at vids including this HOUR long vid.

  • @movitde
    @movitde 9 месяцев назад +148

    I am from germany and don't even comprehend what is going on in baseball but still watched this 1hr video. Goes to show how good your vids are.

    • @kojbo
      @kojbo 9 месяцев назад +9

      I know, right? What the hell are even the rules

    • @octopuss1918
      @octopuss1918 8 месяцев назад +5

      @@kojboYou hit the ball with a bat and then you run in a circle. Easy to understand.

  • @263production9
    @263production9 6 месяцев назад +34

    When you think about the size of Japan it’s pretty cool that some of the best players come from there. Makes me think of Ivory Coast in soccer

    • @Khalrua
      @Khalrua 4 месяца назад +5

      It’s physically the e size of California but has like 3.5 times the population. Japan is pretty big!

  • @suitbanter1851
    @suitbanter1851 10 месяцев назад +110

    and to think that Ohtani went through this system, dominated it, and still be the nicest guy in the world? my respect for the guy (as high as it already was) has just gone through the roof. And of course, this goes for all the other players in Japan as well. I knew it was strict but I didn't know it was this outrageously strict.

    • @Dylonysus
      @Dylonysus 10 месяцев назад +14

      Hm it may seem Extreme to us and it def is in some respects but honestly you pay the price for greatness , American culture is a shallow clownshow in many respects and promotes being a loser as ok.

    • @mirikaku5811
      @mirikaku5811 10 месяцев назад +27

      Just for fairness. Far from all coaches are abusive! (Some footage of this video used scenes from old tv drama totally unrelated to baseball..for more dramatic effect)
      The abuse cases were so bad it was in the media..not a norm.
      In fact, Most coaches are munched loved for their devotions to their students. Or nobody will play baseball or letting their kids play bb.
      Shohei’s Coach Hiroshi Sasaki, refused to let Shohei pitch in their decisive Koshien games, because he had seen int the X-Ray that Ohtanis joints still weren’t finished growing..
      The team lost the game. Shohei cried and cried but Coach Sasaki was adamant. He cared more about Shohei’s career and future.
      Same coach also is the Social studies teacher and made the student write, the now famous, Mandala chart of their life goals when he was 15 yrs old.
      Coach was disciplinary, when Sho overslept and kept others waiting he had to run extra hour and clean more spaces and the toilets for three days. And wasn’t allowed to play for those days..

    • @ciello___8307
      @ciello___8307 10 месяцев назад +18

      to be honest, this video is a little outdated. The system is not as harsh and has been more modernized.

    • @piyushraj8109
      @piyushraj8109 10 месяцев назад

      @@Dylonysus I don`t think that same culture has produced some of the greatest Athletes in history without ever needing such a grueling training . It is like they are working mindlessly hard without thinking too much
      That system is abusive it is not difference of culture rather just that japan is still backwards in social values

    • @piyushraj8109
      @piyushraj8109 10 месяцев назад

      @@mirikaku5811 That coach was good not all coaches are abusive but many of them are it is quite clear

  • @NonyaBuzinezz
    @NonyaBuzinezz 9 месяцев назад +34

    Can we all take a minute to acknowledge the perfectly executed narration, background music, & editing? It's not often all three come together so flawlessly. We might as well appreciate the research required to make an hour long video, as well as the unbelievable amount of time spent just to go through and select all the individual clips. Great work my friend, truly impressive.

  • @bb-double-yuh
    @bb-double-yuh 10 месяцев назад +274

    The 12-hour practices these kids have to endure makes me feel better about my 12-hour overnight shift. The discipline and determination in everything the Japanese do is unrivaled.

    • @MrOdaddy2011
      @MrOdaddy2011 9 месяцев назад +77

      More akin to abuse than that

    • @UndercoverNormie
      @UndercoverNormie 9 месяцев назад +36

      200 pitches every other day in high schools seems extremely unwise...

    • @Tofuey
      @Tofuey 9 месяцев назад

      Japanese culture loves abusing and taking advantage of people. It's why suicide is so prevalent in Japan. It's why no one wants to have children. People in charge push anyone below them to their brink; anything less than that is seen as a betrayal.

    • @maninthemask6275
      @maninthemask6275 9 месяцев назад +4

      The weak hate the strong because they are better then them.

    • @doublestarships646
      @doublestarships646 9 месяцев назад +27

      Discipline or complete and ignorant blind loyalty that abuse is part of your daily life? Come on now.

  • @zacharythomasrobertson8471
    @zacharythomasrobertson8471 9 месяцев назад +12

    As someone who's lived in Japan for nearly 20 years, I can vouch for everything in this video. Amazing job 👍

  • @Forevermade32
    @Forevermade32 10 месяцев назад +17

    I’m just a bloke from London that doesn’t watch baseball at all and you’re one of my favorite RUclips channels and make me want to watch baseball proper content mate

  • @dontknowdocare
    @dontknowdocare 10 месяцев назад +41

    The 2006 Koushien tournament was what got me into baseball. Handkerchief prince was a god in Japan that year. I wonder what would've happened had he become a pro after high school I stead of going to university but I imagine he must be satisfied with his life, I see him on Japanese TV all the time even now, 18 years later.

    • @paulb2092
      @paulb2092 10 месяцев назад +1

      I believe that he did become a pro. If memory serves me, he was a rival of Tanaka at one time.

    • @Fo44667
      @Fo44667 9 месяцев назад

      虚偽広めんな
      誰だよハンカチ王子って
      大半の日本人が知らねえわw

    • @ゆなゆななゆなゆ
      @ゆなゆななゆなゆ 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@Fo44667 ある程度の年齢は知ってるよ。

    • @ゴミ選別太郎-f5l
      @ゴミ選別太郎-f5l 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@Fo44667 いや知らない人居ないくらいハンカチ王子は有名でした。今の10代〜20代は知らないでしょう。

  • @BruhMoment-k5o
    @BruhMoment-k5o 9 месяцев назад +26

    I love how they appear to be yelling at each other and just a random kiss is given.

  • @naoto9556
    @naoto9556 10 месяцев назад +21

    I remember the moment we won WBC for the first time. A teacher at school stopped teaching and we all cheered for the final game together 😂

  • @hellpwn3391
    @hellpwn3391 10 месяцев назад +233

    Baseball coincidentally follows a similar structure to traditional turn-based JRPG combat. No wonder they took to it so well.

    • @stardogbillionaire
      @stardogbillionaire 10 месяцев назад

      They’re also kinda similar to Vulcans who love Baseball. ruclips.net/video/QnQ-U0Ovgks/видео.htmlsi=Chfnpv2AhhondUBw

    • @meetra5073
      @meetra5073 10 месяцев назад +41

      lmao this is amazing

    • @ManBearPigLOL
      @ManBearPigLOL 10 месяцев назад +23

      ive unironically thought this before

    • @AirLancer
      @AirLancer 10 месяцев назад +3

      You say that like baseball hadn't had decades of presence in Japan before video games even existed.

    • @stardogbillionaire
      @stardogbillionaire 10 месяцев назад +16

      @@AirLancer Buddy it's a joke. And it's not like Turn Based RPGs aren't enjoyed by everyone hell the Germans invented the whole concept of miniature wargames.

  • @trban8r
    @trban8r 10 месяцев назад +66

    If you want more insight into Japanese baseball, I highly recommend the anime Major. You get to see the MC go through the grueling Japanese process from a kid to the major leagues

    • @marcus9450
      @marcus9450 10 месяцев назад +21

      an excellent anime. Crazy how Ohtani is literally a real life Goro...

    • @Bozbaby103
      @Bozbaby103 10 месяцев назад +7

      Thanks for the recommendation. Going to watch. I love baseball history and anthropology, so the anime is a mix of both along with this video.

    • @ガス欠-b2g
      @ガス欠-b2g 9 месяцев назад +4

      あのアニメは誤解を招きかねない
      特に高校時代の話は明らかに野球をしている人間からしてもあまりにハードかつ全く合理的で無いトレーニングをしている

    • @dshawandunwell3892
      @dshawandunwell3892 9 месяцев назад

      @@Bozbaby103 If you like major, diamond no ace is also another series to watch out for that details a similar process

  • @mrhoneycutter
    @mrhoneycutter 8 месяцев назад +15

    While I can appreciate the intensity and commitment it’s great to hear that the abusive culture has changed. There is no question that those kids are committed and dedicated, while discipline is great, there’s a fine line between abuse and discipline, that said they are doing a lot to address it these days. That said, it’s great for the MLB & Baseball in general that Japanese baseball is getting more recognition and exposure; plus it’s amazing to see more Japanese players in the MLB too.

  • @Notsam12345
    @Notsam12345 10 месяцев назад +8

    It’s wild, I lived next to a high school there. They are out there playing baseball before and after school for hours

  • @kronosis2767
    @kronosis2767 10 месяцев назад +36

    This was a masterpiece. Had my attention riveted to the screen for all 60 minutes and 33 seconds.
    This is a monumental accomplishment because I find baseball generally intolerable unless it’s an exceptional highlight reel.
    In real time, the Sport is a snooze fest for 90 percent of the game with the players spending half of it on their asses.
    BUT MAN THE DRAMA THATS JAPAN BRINGS TO THE TABLE!! It’s just infectious.

  • @sea4our
    @sea4our 10 месяцев назад +29

    getting to watch Ichiro emerge into american baseball with my own eyes was genuinely something special. getting to watch Ken Griffey Jr. was amazing, and he will always be my hero, but Ichiro was one of a kind. the only other person i can think of that was close in terms of hitter profile was Tony Gwynn.

    • @LarrySalamander
      @LarrySalamander 10 месяцев назад +1

      Pete Rose was better

    • @jongordon7914
      @jongordon7914 10 месяцев назад

      Both Gwynn and Ichiro didn't have great OBPs and didn't score a ton of runs, even though they got a lot of hits. They were slap singles hitters.

    • @sea4our
      @sea4our 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@jongordon7914 didn't score a lot of runs? Ichiro is 90th on the ALL TIME RUNS list. that's top 100. all time. literally one slot in front of David Ortiz. wtf were you smoking when you made this hot armchair analysis? lmfao. bro came in here and stated the obvious while being completely wrong at the same time.

    • @sea4our
      @sea4our 9 месяцев назад

      @@LarrySalamander and Pete Rose is still unfortunately banned from baseball. Anything else you'd like to add?

  • @Swallows_kara
    @Swallows_kara 6 месяцев назад +20

    High school baseball is changing. There are restrictions on pitch counts, practice time, and freedom of hairstyle, so players are respected.

    • @Laremy
      @Laremy 3 месяца назад

      Your comment explains absolutely nothing.

    • @Coach_Shiner
      @Coach_Shiner Месяц назад

      ​@@Laremy then why the hell are you here?

  • @ianlulu
    @ianlulu 9 месяцев назад +13

    I often dismissed baseball but after seeing this vid it opened my eyes to how interesting and exciting it can be

  • @NinjaWaffle14The1st
    @NinjaWaffle14The1st 10 месяцев назад +54

    An hour of sweet, sweet Baseball Doesn't Exist content is exactly what I needed right now!

  • @solodecade
    @solodecade 10 месяцев назад +23

    Upon getting over halfway though the video I finally realized why I love the unity and discipline in Japanese baseball culture so much, it’s like hbcu show band culture, which I not only love quite a bit but am a proponent of. Only at the high school level thus far but still, the semi-militaristic nature, the hellish practice, the school/cultural spirit, the camaraderie, the determination, it’s insane. If show bands were as popular in America as baseball is in Japan I think I’d explode from joy.

  • @masaharumorimoto4761
    @masaharumorimoto4761 8 месяцев назад +7

    Thru the lens of baseball, I think you helped me get a lil deeper understanding of seppuku.

  • @romaneaster9492
    @romaneaster9492 10 месяцев назад +47

    The amount of work you put on these videos is totally unmatched. So fluid and entertaining. Incredible work!

    • @yaniyuhara8165
      @yaniyuhara8165 10 месяцев назад +2

      That’s what I said !

    • @timmyg831
      @timmyg831 10 месяцев назад +3

      He should have sold this 1-hour production to Fox Sports or ESPN or 30 for 30. He could’ve made a lot of money for this masterpiece.

  • @Jakemufcfan
    @Jakemufcfan 10 месяцев назад +28

    Proud to say I got to go to the Giants vs baystars in October whilst in Tokyo! The pitching level was insane

    • @GozarianGozar
      @GozarianGozar 6 месяцев назад

      NPB has some good pitchers but the pitching in MLB is the best in the world and it's not even close.

  • @Somnivore7
    @Somnivore7 10 месяцев назад +55

    Watching Ohtanis run as the GOAT culminating in him winning the JPN-USA against his American teammate who is also considered by some is one of the Greatest players is nothing short of poetic. How could you not love baseball?

    • @RandallBalls
      @RandallBalls 10 месяцев назад +4

      To be fair ohtani doesn't even come close to Trout yet. His last few seasons have certainly been historic, and will certainly go down as some of the single greatest seasons ever along with Babe Ruth's dual seasons...
      But he's got a lot of baseball to play and an awful lot of injuries stacking up. So let's revisit the who is better between ohtani and trout in about 8 to 10 years
      Because as of right now Trout's body of work is still far more impressive

    • @mikelucas4247
      @mikelucas4247 10 месяцев назад +3

      ​@RandallBalls I think Ohtani already out-pitches Trout. Do you think Trout would have his batting performance if he also pitches too? As for Babe, I wouldn't say "ALONG with Babe as a two-way player" Ohtani already surpassed Babe as a two-way player, before Babe decided to be a full time batter. PERIOD!!!!! Babe playing in a segregated league traveling only a few states to play other teams.

    • @Fo44667
      @Fo44667 9 месяцев назад

      Goat is Messi and Ronaldo
      Who is otani😂😂not goat Otani and not sports baseball

    • @Fo44667
      @Fo44667 9 месяцев назад

      Old sports baseball

  • @endingsnow
    @endingsnow 6 месяцев назад +6

    That line around 18:00 mark reminded me of Nori from Ace of Diamond. He said something similar when they found out he had a small injury right before the finals in the qualifiers to Koshien.

  • @denniskung9900
    @denniskung9900 9 месяцев назад +84

    Another perspective on the crying. Consider the following. You just realized that your baseball career is over, as you've lost the last tournament game in your 3 years of high school. You get flashbacks of all the training and sacrifice over not only high school but years previous. Seven days of repetive grounders, cleaning the baseball grounds with your hands, 35+ degree temperature, verbal and physical humilation. But you strive on. It's all you've known for years. Surrounding you now are teammates, who've taken the journey with you. Your juniors come and both congratulate and console you, thanking you for your guidance, promising to continue the fight. All is over now ... bittersweet. Every year, this is what many highs schoolers go through. After you've given your all, and finality inevitably comes ... how can you not cry?

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter 9 месяцев назад +7

      It's definitely similar in America in terms of that mindset. I remember my last game in high school and how disappointed I was in not being able to continue playing with my teammates. All the hard work I had put in over 4 years (3 years with our new head coach) with fellow seniors that I have known since either my JV days freshman year, or with two teammates, our club days. It is bittersweet to let go. Some will openly cry, others will not, but the pain is mostly still there.

    • @tonyp1376
      @tonyp1376 5 месяцев назад +1

      Good points. To add on to that.. in Japanese baseball they expect the players to cry after a loss, therefore they're encouraged to let those emotions out. In American baseball you're expected to not cry after a loss, therefore most players suppress and hold back their emotions. There's even the popular saying here in America, "There's no crying in baseball!"

  • @Chuckdiesel86
    @Chuckdiesel86 10 месяцев назад +62

    Japan is quietly awesome at sports. They started doing an American Football world championship years ago and Japan always finishes in the top 3. They seem to be all around good at sports.

    • @epicbirdy42069
      @epicbirdy42069 10 месяцев назад +11

      They should start playing cricket. With that mindset and training, they would do really well in the World Cup.

    • @keanu161
      @keanu161 10 месяцев назад +1

      their college football national championship started on 1947
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koshien_Bowl

    • @atomknight8361
      @atomknight8361 10 месяцев назад +8

      They are still lackluster in soccer, but yeah their culture of discipline really helps in sports

    • @mr.dynamite2924
      @mr.dynamite2924 10 месяцев назад +9

      ​@@atomknight8361 Lackluster in Football?? Lol. Japanese National Team is the best in Asia.

    • @atomknight8361
      @atomknight8361 10 месяцев назад

      @mr.dynamite2924 they've only made it out of group stage at world cup 4 times in their entire history. Making it to the world cup is decent, but like I said they've never ascended from okay to good

  • @Rottilargo55
    @Rottilargo55 10 месяцев назад +35

    These Koshien stories about guys throwing a million pitches are insane. If I saw a sports anime where the pitcher main character threw a 200 pitch complete game then threw another 200 pitch complete game the next day I would assume it was a laughable exaggeration, but not only does it happen but we have it on tape! That’s insane

  • @kwalex6882
    @kwalex6882 7 месяцев назад +6

    I grew up playing my countries version of baseball but as a kid never really had an opportunity to get familiar with American or Japanese baseball so had no idea of any of this going on. However this was such an amazing video. So well put together and narrated that in my opinion it deserves to be on Netflix and other streaming platforms.

  • @user-nv3eh6ni6b
    @user-nv3eh6ni6b 10 месяцев назад +21

    it's videos like this that get me through the offseason

  • @conradbaker
    @conradbaker 10 месяцев назад +9

    we used to watch the autumn and summer tournament and summer koushien in 2022-2023. we often screamed our heads of the overpitching that kept going on. and yet sometimes, even teams with a lot of star pitchers didn't always win.. one of the other problem is the 20-man count for highschool teams for the prefectural tournaments and the 18-man count for summer koushien. iirc professional baseball teams have 40 man count.

  • @Edgedrifle
    @Edgedrifle 10 месяцев назад +20

    This just makes me want to go to Japan, awesome incredible video, I don’t know how you keep the energetic pace going for that long and how much your throat must hurt after all the recording for a video like this, mad respect and thank you for this education on Japanese baseball

    • @mtr7076
      @mtr7076 9 месяцев назад

      they are also very racist and rude nd have too much to the xtreme lvl paperwork and red tae and police work eg open bank account or take cash is 5 letters, 5 days wait 5 days manager meeting, then written letter, then bank account...ok so now you want atm card, ok repear. go in person give handwritten note, get in line, not once or twice but 4 5 times. it is not hard work or smart in anyway, its waste of paper time petrol life. and it is just there to the random old extra ppl keep their jobs

  • @usvidragonslayer3091
    @usvidragonslayer3091 9 месяцев назад +9

    Aweome video. I already saw a video about the NPB and its teams. Now thiss video teaches me about Japanese baseball culture, the good and the bad, as a whole.

  • @ranger-du7gk
    @ranger-du7gk 10 месяцев назад +9

    At 30 years old I have never watched a full game of baseball and yet here I am. Awesome video

  • @yaniyuhara8165
    @yaniyuhara8165 10 месяцев назад +16

    Hallelujah ! The depth of your research and subsequent analysis to make the video is second to NONE ! And I grew up playing baseball in the infamous Japanese military baseball league !

  • @sol6131
    @sol6131 10 месяцев назад +179

    As a 23 year old Japanese guy who played baseball for 12 years in Japan, this content is so fun to watch.
    When in it comes to abusing, when I was in junior high school, I got kicked at my belly by a coach, but it was totally fine😂I got used to it and he’s too old no power
    When I was in high school, we were so focused on baseball to go to “Koshien”.
    In Japan, we have almost no rest day, personally when I was in a junior high school n high school, we had only one rest day in a week. I dumped my girlfriends cuz I wanted to practice it more and I had to study for uni 😅 we rarely had time to hang out with friends
    But this memory in high school is my treasure 😌

    • @katlynklassen809
      @katlynklassen809 10 месяцев назад +22

      Best choice. Highschool girlfriends are just stress

    • @Peakfreud
      @Peakfreud 10 месяцев назад +7

      Culturally, it may look abusive and very well maybe. But when you contrast it with some American inner city Highschools whats more Abusive militarist sports culture or After School Gang violence & crime that leads to incarceration, homicide and zero contribution to society.

    • @stalfithrildi5366
      @stalfithrildi5366 10 месяцев назад +35

      ​@@Peakfreudah yes, the Only Two Options

    • @Peakfreud
      @Peakfreud 10 месяцев назад

      @@stalfithrildi5366 Write more than three word in a reply to someone else and you attention junkies line up like addicts.
      Reminds me of the 80's street corners.

    • @kn2549
      @kn2549 10 месяцев назад +26

      @@Peakfreud The fact that its somewhat approved by the culture as whole and lead by supervised adults is what makes it abusive compared to gang violence(don’t even know why you thought this was a good comparison).
      Wait, gangsters in America go to high school? 😂

  • @LooxJJ
    @LooxJJ 3 месяца назад +2

    its a once is life time thing just to attend Koshien...and you are still in high school! An absolute awesome experience.

  • @AndrewVaughanOfficial
    @AndrewVaughanOfficial 9 месяцев назад +24

    I always appreciate how you keep the density of information consistent in your videos. This was an hour long but none of that time felt wasted; there were questions that came after I heard something you said and you answered them immediately afterward.

  • @Ganobrator
    @Ganobrator 9 месяцев назад +8

    Dude I was so enthralled by this video that I didn't know it was an hour long until after I finished it and started reading the comments.

  • @randyblouin
    @randyblouin 10 месяцев назад +27

    Been watching your videos for a while now and, hands down, this one is your best. Extremely well done, eye opening, and informative. Loved it!

  • @theAirborne17th
    @theAirborne17th 8 месяцев назад +5

    The story of the catcher playing with teeth knocked out is nutty. When I was in high school I got my front tooth nearly knocked out by a fastball and got a root canal from it, painful.

  • @zzyzxzy9061
    @zzyzxzy9061 9 месяцев назад +9

    my god... I never would have thought that practice conditions could reach that level of demand. What a video too. It didn't feel like an hour long. I was HOOKED!

  • @cole5274
    @cole5274 10 месяцев назад +7

    i cant help but feel like videos like these are also increasing awareness of baseballs popularity in japan

  • @miracle3105
    @miracle3105 10 месяцев назад +27

    I played baseball in japan as a transfer student for 2 months and the coach was really nice and I thought it was fun

    • @anthonydelatore9477
      @anthonydelatore9477 10 месяцев назад +1

      You're just trying to sound tough on the internet bro lmao

  • @jayc6428
    @jayc6428 9 месяцев назад +2

    Don't watch Baseball just always knew it was weirdly popular in Japan, you kept me here for the full hour, well done and thank you.