Milestone maker Murakami breaks mold of Japan baseball s big bat sluggers Abbeyfeale Golf Club

Milestone maker Murakami breaks mold of Japan baseball s big bat sluggers Abbeyfeale Golf Club

Milestone-maker Murakami breaks mold of Japan baseball's big-bat sluggers - Abbeyfeale Golf Club Abbeyfeale Milestone-maker Murakami breaks mold of Japan baseball’ s big-bat sluggers Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram The youngest man to win a batting Triple Crown while mashing a historic number of home runs, Munetaka Murakami has opened eyes and shattered the stereotypical perceptions of how sluggers attack baseballs and put them in the seats. Not only did the 22-year-old cleanup hitter for the Yakult Swallows of Japan’s Central League, surpass the best single-season homer total of the nation’s career home run king, Sadaharu Oh, but he did so in unique fashion. Murakami’s 56 home runs this season, second most in Japanese pro baseball history and one more than Oh’s iconic 1964 total of 55, were hit with a bat that is a stark departure from those favored by history’s great sluggers. Munetaka Murakami bats during the Yakult Swallows’ final regular-season game against the DeNA BayStars at Jingu Stadium in Tokyo on Oct. 3, 2022, when he hit his 56th home run of the season. (Kyodo)5 The reception area of ​​the Mizuno Technics Corp. factory in Yoro, Gifu Prefecture, is decorated with bats used by three-time Triple Crown winner Hiromitsu Ochiai and two-time winner Randy Bass, whose bats look nothing alike except for their thin handles and long barrels. Bass’ stick resembles a beer bottle’s shape, while the silhouette of Ochiai’s bat consists of two straight lines fanning out from grip to tip. Murakami’s, however, is shorter in length and thicker in the handle. After hitting one homer in six Central League games in his first season as an 18-year-old, Murakami was introduced to the Yoro facility by teammate and former MLB player Norichika Aoki, and has since used a type of bat favored by average hitters. Murakami wanted a bat that was easy to swing rather than one that would help him generate power through centrifugal force from the bat’s length, and craftsman Tamio Nawa was astounded by what he heard. Mizuno Technics Corp. craftsman Tamio Nawa poses with Munetaka Murakami’s baseball bat (front) and that used by Hideki Matsui, in Yoro, Gifu Prefecture, in central Japan on Sept. 6, 2022. (Kyodo) “His opinions were well formed at a young age,” Nawa said. “He settled on that style because he could generate power with his bat speed.” Although a left-handed hitter like Oh, Murakami is not the same kind of dead pull hitter. When Oh hit 55 home runs 58 years ago, 49 of them went out to right field. Murakami pulled 25 of his to right, while hitting 18 to the opposite field and 13 to center. Murakami had a slight adjustment made to his bat part-way through this season. To move the bat’s center of gravity and sweet spot closer to his body, he had the grip reshaped and the tip hollowed out. This, Nawa said, marked another departure from the slugger stereotype. “He looks for pitches as close to his body as possible and hammers them,” Nawa said. “I think that’s part of what allows him to hit for power to all fields.” Related coverage: Baseball: Murakami, Sasaki headline Samurai Japan fall roster Baseball: Murakami celebrates Japan’s youngest Triple Crown with 56th homer Baseball: Yakult wins 2nd straight Central League pennant in walk-off . Related Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram Leave a Reply Cancel reply Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked * Advertisement Recent Posts 6 seconds ago Milestone-maker Murakami breaks mold of Japan baseball’ s big-bat sluggers 54 seconds ago NCAA Basketball Season 2 mins ago Stephen Kenny’ s Ireland will meet France in the qualifiers for the first time since Thierry Henry’ s infamous handball 4 mins ago Injury updates from 49ers Week 5 win over Panthers 4 mins ago Steve Kerr praises Jordan Poole’ s mental fortitude with extension looming Back to top button Abbeyfeale Golf Club
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