Dodgers infield shift, Japanese multi-day game make for cricket-flavored baseball

Dodgers infield shift, Japanese multi-day game make for cricket-flavored baseball

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The past week has produced a couple of baseball games that looked more like cricket than America’s (or Japan’s) pastime. First, the Los Angeles Dodgers employed an extreme infield shift that resembled the wall of slip fielders used in cricket.

The intent in both sports is the same — namely to have the ball batted into a wall of defenders.

Australia demonstrates the use of nine slip fieldsmen

In terms of unusual placement of fielders, Australia has twice tried the cricket equivalent of the Dodgers’ defensive tactic. They arrayed all nine fielders in the slips during a 1999 ODI test versus Zimbabwe, and once before in 1980 versus New Zealand.

[fusion_title size=”4″]FOUR DAY BASEBALL MARATHON[/fusion_title]

In baseball a four-day game is considered a freakish one-of-a-kind marathon. In the most traditional form of Test cricket, it would be considered a day shorter than the norm.

Sunday, in Japan, Chukyo outlasted Miura Gakuen 3-0 in the National High School Rubber Baseball Tournament history after battling for 49 scoreless innings over four days.

Incredibly, both pitchers chalked up a complete game: Chukyo pitcher Taiga Matsui threw a mind-and-elbow numbing 709 pitches and Miura Gakuen’s Jukiya Ishioka came in at 689.

2014-09-02T16:26:19+00:00 September 2nd, 2014|

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