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Tomoyuki Sugano

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Win-Loss
  
25-11

Name
  
Tomoyuki Sugano

Salary
  
15 million JPY (2013)

WHIP
  
1.126

Weight
  
90 kg


Strikeouts
  
277

Height
  
1.85 m

Earned run average
  
2.74

Role
  
Baseball player

Education
  
Tokai University

Tomoyuki Sugano d1udmfvw0p7cd2cloudfrontnetwpcontentuploads2

Current team
  
Yomiuri Giants (#19 / Pitcher)

Similar People
  
Tatsunori Hara, Hayato Sakamoto, Kenta Maeda, Shoki Kasahara, Shintaro Fujinami

VVM32 AT 2017 WBC CUBA VS JAPAN 2 OUT RBI FIRST PITCH VS TOMOYUKI SUGANO


Tomoyuki Sugano (่…้‡Ž ๆ™บไน‹, Sugano Tomoyuki, born October 11, 1989 in Kanagawa Prefecture) is a Japanese professional baseball pitcher for the Yomiuri Giants in Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball.

Contents

Tomoyuki Sugano ijapanbaseballjpfilesphotosingle404imageid

College career

Tomoyuki Sugano WBC NonMLB Top 10 4 Tomoyuki Sugano The Crawfish Boxes

In 2010, he recorded the fastest pitch by a Japanese college pitcher at 157 km/h (98 mph).

2011 NPB draft

Tomoyuki Sugano Tomoyuki Sugano Wikipedia

Due to his performance as pitcher for Tokai University (37-4, 0.57 ERA), Sugano was a top pitching prospect for the October 2011 draft. Prior to the draft selection, he declared his desire to join the Yomiuri Giants and play under the guidance of his uncle, the present Giants manager Tatsunori Hara. It therefore came as a shock when the Fighters also decided to select him as their first pick. The two teams fought it out via lottery, but the Fighters drew the lucky straw in the end, to the surprise and disappointment of Manager Hara and the Giants for they had assumed no other team would dare pick Sugano.

Tomoyuki Sugano Sugano keeps Tigers guessing in steady effort on mound The Japan Times

Both Sugano's father and grandfather were disappointed because they were not notified of the Fighters' intention to draft him, the latter even quoted saying it was a violation of human rights. The Fighters did admit to having intentionally kept their intention to draft Sugano unannounced, and apologized for the surprise and the commotion they caused.

Tomoyuki Sugano Giants Sugano fans 10 batters in eight stellar innings The Japan

After long consideration and deliberation with his family, Sugano finally announced on November 21 his decision to turn down the Fighters' offer and instead take the year off and re-enter the 2012 draft. "I may be taking a longer route (to becoming a professional ballplayer), but my childhood dream (of playing for the Giants) was stronger," he said, hinting at his intention to wait until the Giants win the rights to negotiate with him. He also mentioned that he wasn't as upset about not being informed by the Fighters ahead of time that they might select him, but rather because they promised they wouldn't select him. Only two players in NPB history have turned down the Fighters: Shinji Kuroda in 1976 and Ikuo Takayama in 1980.

Tomoyuki Sugano Starter Sugano gives victorious Giants strong outing against rival

Having no team to play for, he then stayed with Tokai University for another year using the "graduation postponement system" established for students who are unable to land post-graduation jobs while they are still in college. He was not allowed to play in Tokai's official games, but this did not sway him enough to join the Industrial League for it will take at least two years before he can be drafted again.

Nippon Professional Baseball career

Tomoyuki Sugano Tell you all about Tomoyuki Sugano of Tokyo Yomiuri Giants

Sugano was selected as the Giants' first pick in 2012.

Playing style

Although Sugano recorded the fastest pitch (98 mph) by a Japanese college pitcher, his fastball velocity was down since the beginning of his professional career. The Giants confirmed that he had ligament damage in his right elbow during the 2014 season. After rehab he set a pro career-high 96 mph in 2016.

With a three-quarters delivery Sugano throws two fastballs (four-seam, shuuto/sinker) sitting 91 mph, a solid slider, a curveball, and a forkball. He has excellent command, posting a BB/9 of 1.7 in his NPB career.

References

Tomoyuki Sugano Wikipedia