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Akinori Otsuka

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Win–loss record
  
13–15

Name
  
Akinori Otsuka

Earned run average
  
2.44

Role
  
Baseball player


Strikeouts
  
217

Height
  
1.82 m

Saves
  
39

Weight
  
95 kg

Akinori Otsuka httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Akinori otsuka


Akinori Otsuka (大塚 晶則, Ōtsuka Akinori) (born January 13, 1972) is a retired Japanese baseball pitcher who coaches for the Chunichi Dragons in Nippon Professional Baseball. He was formerly the set-up man for the San Diego Padres and the Texas Rangers. He was also the closer for Japan's 2006 World Baseball Classic winning team.

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Akinori Otsuka Akinori Otsuka Wikipedia

Otsuka threw a low-90's 4-seam fastball (tops out at about 94 mph) that is very straight, along with a hard, late-breaking slider. He employed an unorthodox pitching delivery wherein he lifted his lead leg up very slowly, tapped his glove, then fired to home plate, making his pitches look faster coming out of his hand and thus harder to pick up.

Akinori Otsuka The Unforgettable Akinori Otsuka Padres Public

Aki Vs. Ants, Picnic!


San Diego Padres

Otsuka came to the United States after several years of pitching in the Japanese League when his former team, the Chunichi Dragons, used the posting system to solicit bids from MLB clubs for the right to negotiate with him. The Padres offered the top bid, and signed him to a three-year contract on December 9, 2003.

On January 6, 2006, Otsuka was traded to the Rangers, along with pitcher Adam Eaton and minor league catcher Billy Killian, in exchange for pitcher Chris Young, first baseman Adrian Gonzalez, and outfielder Terrmel Sledge.

Texas Rangers

Otsuka took over the role as the closer for the Rangers during the 2006 season, replacing Francisco Cordero, and recorded 32 saves while posting a 2.11 ERA. However, on December 19, 2006, the Rangers announced that newly signed Éric Gagné would take over the closer role in 2007, with Otsuka moving back into a set-up role. On January 13, 2007, T. R. Sullivan reported that, in an interview in Japan, Otsuka said "If there is the team which needs me as a closer, I am going to think about (the trade)". Due to Gagné starting the season on the DL, Otsuka began the 2007 season as the closer. With the trade of Gagne to the Boston Red Sox, Otsuka assumed the closer's role again. However, Otsuka went on the DL after experiencing tighntess in his throwing shoulder. His stand-in was C. J. Wilson. Otsuka was not offered a new contract by the Rangers and became a free agent on December 12, 2007.

Post MLB and Retirement

On January 10, 2008, Otsuka announced that he would undergo elbow surgery.

Shinano Grandserows

Otsuka was the player-manager of the Shinano Grandserows of the Japanese Baseball Challenge League from 2012–2014. The team held his retirement ceremony on September 15, 2014.

Chunichi Dragons

Otsuka returned to the Chunichi Dragons on the 3rd of October 2015 as one of the second team pitching coaches.

In 2016, with first team pitching coach Shinichi Kondoh on leave to have hernia surgery, Otsuka helped lead the first team pitchers in spring camp. He however returned to working with the second team following Kondoh's return. On 26 September, Otsuka was unveiled as the pitching coach for the U-23 Japanese national team for the 2016 WBSC U-23 World Cup.

San Diego Padres

Otsuka rejoined the Padres organization in 2017 when he was announced as the bullpen coach of the El Paso Chihuahuas, the AAA affiliate of the Padres.

Personal life

Otsuka and his wife, Akemi, have one son, Toranosuke, and one daughter, Hikaru.

Statistics

Major Leagues (Total as of July 26, 2008)

  • 236 Games
  • 232 Innings pitched
  • 13 Wins
  • 15 Losses
  • 39 Saves
  • 217 Strikeouts
  • 2.44 ERA
  • Japanese Professional Leagues

  • 305 Games
  • 350.2 Innings pitched
  • 14 Wins
  • 23 Losses
  • 137 Saves
  • 474 Strikeouts
  • 2.39 ERA
  • Season by Season
    Last update: 26 July 2008

    *Bold = led league

    References

    Akinori Otsuka Wikipedia