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PERSONAL:
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His name, Ichiro, was chosen by his father, Nobuyuki. Ichiro means "first boy," even though he was the second son born.
VERY INVOLVED DAD
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Ichiro's father, Nobuyuki Suzuki, owned a cooler repair shop and was a tool manufacturer in Nagoya, 150 miles west of Tokyo. He stuck a full-sized bat and glove in the hands of his son at age 3. After he came home from work, he'd take his son to a nearby elementary school where they used the field to play catch, hit, take ground balls and run. Then they'd go home, where Ichiro did his homework. Later, his Dad would take him to the batting center, which is what the Japanese call batting cages.
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His Dad had virtually every part of Ichiro's life regimented. He made sure Ichiro's diet consisted of nothing but the finest proteins and vitamins. If his son didn't care for what his mother cooked for dinner, he would run to the store and get Ichiro what he wanted, it has been reported. The father would even give his son foot massages.
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Ichiro's Dad knew his son was naturally righthanded, but converted him to a lefthanded hitter, knowing it would move him two steps closer to first base. He had his son hitting off 80-mph batting machines before he reached high school. He never missed a single practice, let alone a game at Aikodai Meiden High School.
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Ichiro is said to have practiced baseball every day of his life from 3rd grade through high school. He is still very intense in his approach to the game.
He joined his first baseball team at age 7 and asked his father, Nobuyuki, to teach him to be a better palyer. The regimented daily routine included the youngster fielding 50 ground balls and 50 fly balls, throwing 50 pitches from the mound and hitting 200 "live" pitches and 300 pitches from a machine.
As a youngster, Suzuki had the word shuchu—concentration— written on his glove, and he would glance at the word before every pitch. (Steve DiMeglio-Baseball Weekly-6/1/05)
- When Ichiro was a youngster, one of his heros was Ken Macha, who spent four seasons as a player in Nagoya, Japan, hometown to the Chunichi Dragons, where he played from 1982 to 1985. Nagoya also happened to be the hometown of a young Ichiro.
The future Mariners outfielder took a liking to Macha as a player and supposedly, even had a poster of the future manager on his bedroom wall.
"It's flattering that a guy who's going to the Hall of Fame was in the city you played in," Macha said Friday. "I went out there and played the way I played, and he appreciated the way I played. I very much appreciate what he's done. When I was a player over there, not too many players had come over to the states, and they kind of took on the challenge of showing they could play Major League Baseball." (Jocelyn Syrstad-MLB.com-6/26/10)
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The Orix Blue Wave originally thought of Ichiro as a pitcher. They liked his strong arm when they signed him in 1992. But Ichiro wanted to hit. Only the team's minor league hitting coach, Kenichiro Kawamura, was able to see the beauty of the teenagers awkward, stumbling swing—all shoulders, elbows and knees.
In Japan, Kawamura is often called the man who gave Mariners star Ichiro his swing. Rather he's the man who saved it. That is because he totally refused to change it.
"I found his center of gravity was very strong," Kawamura says through an interpreter. "He makes a perfect triangle with his body, which makes a perfect center of gravity. His head always sits on the top of the triangle. He looks like he goes forward, but he doesn't. It looked awkward, but when he hits the ball it becomes the perfect form."
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In Japan, Suzuki is A-Rod, Derek Jeter and Junior rolled into one giant superstar. The back of his uniform is printed "ICHIRO," his first name. He is an icon in Japan. Mets manager Bobby Valentine said he is one of the five best outfielders in the world.
FROM JAPAN TO U.S.
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When Ichiro signed with the Mariners, he did not know any English. But he started learning the language before 2001 spring training.
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Expectations for Ichiro were high. Japanese media did not expect him to win the AL batting crown his first year, but they did think he'd hit about .340. Mariners manager Lou Piniella said that .280 would be acceptable for his first year.
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In Japan, he was known to play catch with the fans in the rightfield stands during game delays.
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In Kobe, Japan, on Flower Street, the Orix Blue Wave have a souvenir shop. One-third of the merchandise is dedicated to Ichiro: cups, key chains, baseballs, action figures, T-shirts and jerseys, posters, cellphone headsets, wristbands, stickers, calendars, notebooks, biographies, and loads of other stuff. The Mariners are the only other team besides the Orix Blue Wave. He is so big, that he started his own clothing line -- dropping Nike.
MUCH MEDIA ATTENTION
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When he and Yumiko Fukishima, a famous sports broadcaster, got married in the spring of 2000, they tied the knot in Los Angeles to avoid the massive publicity assault back home in Japan. They are hounded by the media wherever they go. There is a story of Ichiro once being rolled up in a carpet and stuffed in the back of a pickup truck so he could be driven stealthily past a crowd for a date with his future wife.
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Ichiro doesn't really like all of the immense attention he constantly gets. "It kind of disturbs me, the way I am treated," he said. When he was in Japan, he was also swarmed by the media. He can't go to dinner or shopping in Japan without being mobbed. Ichiro is a private person. Keeping his personal life secret is important to him.
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His intelligence is off the charts.
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He does not smoke or drink.
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Suzuki is a real big Los Angeles Laker fan and adores the Laker Girls.
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He often wears his cap backward, like Ken Griffey, Jr.
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Ichiro can read and write in English, and he speaks broken English to his teammates. He is real funny. In four or five minutes he can imitate you. He is like Jim Carrey. Ichiro speaks more English than most people think.
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Though he wears Randy Johnson's old number 51, Ichiro is a "small unit" at 5-foot-9 and 165 pounds.
- Ichiro has great feet. They are smooth and sleek, not calloused like those of most players. The reason? In between BP and the start of the game, he sits in front of his locker with a 6-inch, carrot-shaped stick. As he watches a video of the pitcher he'll face that night, he methodically pokes and prods his feet, one at a time, from heel to toes. It is not a dainty process -- he pushes so hard it looks like he'll puncture the skin. But it is very relaxing. In the body there are so many pressure points. He uses the pointed end of the stick to release that pressure. It is his routine.
He also has a personal masseuse that travels with him, giving him a rub-down, including his feet, before games.
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Both former M's manager Lou Piniella and former Blue Jays' skipper Buck Martinez said that Ichiro reminds them of Ralph Garr, known as "The Roadrunner" with the Braves and later the White Sox. He was a contact hitter who won a batting title and had a lifetime .306 batting average.
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Ichiro endorsed a hip-hop single song written and produced by a group of Seattle guys and performed by Xola Malik, once known as Kid Sensation.
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Ichiro credits his wife, Yumiko, with helping him handle the long grind of a Major League season, helping him stay in condition.
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In 2001, Ichiro and the rest of the Mariner's rookies had to endure the annual rite in which first-year players are required to travel in ridiculous garb. Ichiro was made to wear the white T-shirt and orange shorts of a Hooter's server.
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In August 2001, Ichiro signed his first U.S. endorsement deal, with Upper Deck. It was a one-year deal in which Ichiro agreed to sign cards and other Upper Deck Authenticated memorabilia. It was worth "well into the 7 figures," a source was quoted.
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Ichiro rejects endorsing most products. His agent, Tony Attansio said, "For every one we accept, we reject five to eight."
2001: Suzuki signed a contract with Cutter and Buck, giving the Seattle-based golf sportswear company the right to sell men's and women's apparel decorated with an Ichiro logo designed by the baseball star's brother and wife. Suzuki also has inked deals with Oakley Inc., a California sunglasses maker; Majestic Athletic, a Pennsylvania sporting-goods company; and Upper Deck, a California company that makes sports trading cards.
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Ichiro says that if it looks as if he is in total control, it is not by accident. "I prepare my body and my mind to play the game at high speed," he says. "To me, the most important thing in the game is perfect preparation."
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His teammates still watch like little children while Ichiro goes through his stretching routines. It is not just a pregame thing, but something he even does between pitches. Teammate Desi Relaford says, "He does things with his body I couldn't think of doing. He does a squat thing—keeps his feet flat on the ground, touches his butt on the ground and just chills for a while," Relaford says with a chuckle.
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Ichiro has been around the American League cities a few times now, so he is much more comfortable in his surroundings. There’s a sushi place he always visits in Toronto, about a 20-minute cab ride from the team hotel. He finds Chicago "beautiful in the summertime." He enjoys walking around downtown Boston because "it makes me feel good" and "only the people who wear the baseball hats recognize me. New York gives me the impression of a busy town," he says, smiling again. "It is sometimes fun to visit—occasionally."
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In Japan, Ichiro was just a baseball star. Now, he is a cultural icon. Japanese mornings begin with unprecedented TV broadcasts of each of his games. His face stares from T-shirts, subway ads, and periodicals.
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In 2003, Ichiro was pleased that his popularity with the Japanese media had dropped a lot. He moved to second, behind the Yankees Hideki Matusi, and he might be third on nights Hideo Nomo pitches. His "rock star" image was wildly exaggerated, the creation of a Japanese media and public that needed a rebel icon. The only thing revolutionary about Ichiro was the way he played baseball, but he wore sunglasses and colored outside the lines a little, so they made him Elvis. Now, despite the occasional magazine cover, he is closer to simply being like any other great baseball player.
WOULD LIKE TO PITCH AGAIN
- Ichiro says he would like to pitch in one of those blowout games when the Mariners need to save their bullpen arms. He was a hard-throwing pitcher in high school. He says he has a good fastball and a split-finger pitch.
Ichiro hasn't pitched in a game since the second Japanese All-Star Game of the 1996 season. On a lark, he was brought in to pitch against Hideki Matsui, now of the New York Yankees. Matsui's manager thought that was a little too much fun, though, and spoiled it."I was going to face Godzilla (Matsui)," Ichiro said, "but then they pinch-hit a pitcher for him, so I didn't get a chance."
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Mariner manager Bob Melvin was asked if he would ever put Ichiro on the mound. "That's not going to happen," Melvin said. That follows in the line of Ichiro's previous manager. Lou Piniella said that if he wanted to get fired, the best way to do that would be to use Ichiro as a pitcher. His value to the franchise is such that the risk of injury, although minimal, would be too much.
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According to a story in Time magazine's Asia edition, Suzuki once complained, "I could hit .400, and still Matsui would get more attention." Ichiro ended up with lots of attention when he left Japan for the Major Leagues, and then he didn't want it. Ichiro is not a snob or egotistical. He is just very focused. His first year in America, reporters hid in the bushes of his house in the Seattle suburbs, trying to get another special picture of him.
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Ichiro credits Hideo Nomo with opening up the United States for Japanese players back in 1995.
Ichiro went to the Majors in 2001 and said his fellow Japanese players owe Nomo for being a pioneer.
"Before Nomo came here I think everyone looked at Major League Baseball as monsters playing the game," said Ichiro through a translator. "When he came here it showed us we can play the game, too. He's probably the one that kind of introduced the game to all of us, introduced the game of baseball."
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Now Suzuki will conduct brief interviews in English, and he'll allow multiple Japanese reporters to question him—although each reporter must have at least one question.
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Ichiro is uncommonly relaxed and confident when he is on the field. Former Mariners manager Lou Piniella said, "He really has the mental part of the game under control."
Ichiro believes having a clear mind is more important than having a healthy body. “It’s the times when you’re in a normal mental state that you have a chance to turn in a great performance. If you allow yourself to drift out of normalcy because of pressure or frustration or some other factor, that’s when things can go wrong," Ichiro said. "I believe your best chance to perform at your maximum potential is when you’re in a state of normalcy."
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Ichiro did an interesting interview with Bob Costas for HBO. In it, Ichiro revealed that his favorite English expression was, "It's as hot as two rats f------ in a sock in August in Kansas City."
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In what is believed to be the first and possibly only occurrence of its kind, Hiroshi Yamauchi, the Mariners owner, gave Ichiro 5,000 shares of stock (worth $109 per share in the most recent close) in the company he founded in 1949. Club officials pointed out that this was a gift from Yamauchi in observance of his single-season hit (262) record. "I was surprised and honored, most honored," Ichiro said.
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In April 2005, Aikodai Meiden High School, Ichiro's alma mater in Japan, won the national spring championship for the first time in school history. Ichiro played in the tournament during his junior year as a left fielder, and as a pitcher during his senior season. The team was eliminated in the first round both years.
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Ichiro takes batting practice with high-tech sunglasses that are equipped with tiny earpieces and the ability to download music, which provides a soothing background in his ears to prepare him for the upcoming game.
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During the off-season before 2006 spring training, in an interview with Kyodo News Service published in the Tokyo Shimbun newspaper in November 2005, Ichiro lamented his necessity to motivate himself with individual goals, rather than pennant aspirations. Among his concerns:
He was upset to see his teammates playing cards so frequently, and was dismayed that no coach or veteran scolded them for doing so.
Midway through the season, he felt as though his teammates had given up on the rest of the year. (Mariners manager Mike Hargrove, by contrast, said he was satisfied with the team's approach, though he also indicated there were instances in which the team could have done better.)
Ichiro is disappointed that the team has finished out of the playoffs every year since 2001. He misses playing in postseason games. Amid the losing culture, his pursuit of 200 hits has been one of his few motivating factors. Given a choice, he said he would much rather be compelled by the external influence of a pennant race, rather than individual statistics.
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During the offseason before 2006 spring training, Ichiro took an acting part as a murderer in a Japanese television drama.
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In April 2006, Ichiro posed for the Japanese edition of the French fashion magazine L'Officiel. He said he has been approached for modeling shoots before and took this one because of his familiarity with the magazine. That, and he thought it would be a hoot.
"Experiences such as this, and the drama, that are in a different world from baseball are a plus," he said through interpreter Ken Barron.
Ichiro said the magazine editors presented him with various clothing options, and he made the final choices. One picture on the magazine's Web site shows Ichiro reclining on a chair in a tuxedo, holding a bow tie. He said there are four photos. Ichiro said he doesn't consider himself knowledgeable about fashion, but enjoys selecting his outfits.
"I feel it's a way of self-expression," he said. "Not only clothes, but watches, cars ... I really, really enjoy it." (Larry Stone-Seattle Times-4/30/06)
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September 26, 2006: Ichiro didn't play in the M's game, stopping his streak of 396 consecutive games played.
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During the 2007 All-Star Game in San Francisco, Ichiro went 3-for-3 and hit the first inside-the-park home run in All Star Game history. He was name the All-Star MVP. (The only other Mariner to be MVP of the All-Star Game was Ken Griffey, Jr. in 1992.)
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Ichiro is the face of the Mariners' franchise.
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Ichiro is often teased by his teammates for his style choices, but that's a critique that can cut both ways.
"Although I enjoy (what I wear), all my teammates don't think that what I'm wearing is good fashion," Ichiro said. "A lot of times, they can't believe what I am wearing, but if you ask my opinion, everything they are wearing is a crime."
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Ichiro eats the same lunch before every home game: Japanese curry. That lunch is made by the same person: his wife.
He gets to the ballpark at the same time each day, performs the same ritual sleeve-tug before every at-bat and follows a routine that is so repetitive that Jack Nicholson would get more exhausted playing the part of Ichiro than he did as that obsessive-compulsive character from "As Good As It Gets."
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During the All Star Game days in St. Louis in July 2009, Ichiro took time to visit the grave of Hall of Famer George Sisler, whose season hits record he broke in 2004. Ichiro had long wanted to pay his respects to Sisler, and brought flowers to leave at the gravesite.
Ichiro had briefly greeted the members of the Sisler family that were at Safeco Field the night he got his 257th and 258th hits to tie and break Sisler’s 1920 record for the St. Louis Browns. Sisler died on March 26, 1973, in Richmond Heights.
“There’s not many chances to come to St. Louis,” Ichiro said in the American League clubhouse, speaking through interpreter Ken Barron. “In 2004, it was the first time I crossed paths with him, and his family generously came all the way to Seattle.
“Above all, it was a chance … I wanted to do that for a grand upperclassman of the baseball world. I think it’s only natural for someone to want to do that, to express my feelings in that way."
Ichiro said his wife, Yumiko, went with him, as well as some friends.
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On June 5, 2010, Ichiro scored the 1,000th run of his Major League career. He's third in Seattle history in that category, and he's the eighth-fastest active player to accomplish the milestone, doing so in 1,481 games.
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Following the devastating earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan in March 2011, Ichiro donated 100 million yen (about $1.25 million) to the Japanese Red Cross for relief efforts.
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April 2, 2011: Ichiro broke Edgar Martinez' Mariners franchise record for career hits when he got his 2,248th hit.
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After being traded to the Yankees, Ichiro and his wife, Yumiko, enjoyed calling New York home. But their dog, not so much.
"I'm OK. My wife and I are OK adjusting," Ichiro said through an interpreter. "It's my dog, Ikkyu, that is having a hard time adjusting to the city life. So I'm definitely worried about him, and hopefully he can get used to New York City."
Yes, Ichiro's beloved Shiba Inu may be the only one who might complain about the July 23 trade. For a canine, Central Park and its taxi-clogged roadways are no match for the Seattle suburbs.
"He grew up with a lot of greens around and a lot of fields, and he could run around," Ichiro explains. "Now he's in a high-rise building with a lot of noise, so he has a lot of stress."
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On his first encounter with an alligator while on a golf course during 2013 spring training in Florida: "In Japan, you really don't have to look out for yourself safety-wise," Ichiro said through his interpreter, Allen Turner. "Coming here, obviously there's things that I have to be aware of, but even more here in Florida you have to be aware of the surroundings and protect yourself."
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August 21, 2013 -- Yankees outfielder connected for his 4,000th hit between Japan's top professional league and the Major Leagues, a first-inning single off the Blue Jays' R.A. Dickey at Yankee Stadium. The total includes 1,278 hits that Ichiro collected over nine seasons in Nippon Professional Baseball as a member of the Orix Blue Wave from 1992-2000, as well as the 2,722 he has logged in the Majors with the Mariners and Yankees since 2001. Ichiro joined Pete Rose (4,256) and Ty Cobb (4,191) as the only players to reach the 4,000-hit plateau when considering hits from the highest levels in the U.S. and Japan.
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Ichiro painstakingly cleans every piece of his equipment, including shoes and glove, before each game. He has done this for 22 seasons, during an amazing career that has stretched across two continents. He keeps his bats in a humidor-like carrying case.
His physical preparation is just as thorough. He begins his game day routine with weight lifting and a series of stretching exercises and yoga-like poses. For years, his wife has prepared the same Japanese green curry for lunch at pretty much the same time. After games, he records his thoughts on the day in a personal journal.
To understand how Ichiro got to this remarkable place [of recording 4,000 hits] in baseball history, his pregame preparation might be a good place to start. He's a private man by nature, guarded in his public comments. He's fluent in English, but chooses to communicate with reporters in Japanese via an interpreter. More on that later.
Nevertheless, he has revealed plenty about himself during nine Major League seasons in Japan and 13 with the Mariners and Yankees with how he has gone about his job. His accomplishment is also a tribute to his enormous physical gifts, to his quick hands and extraordinary reaction time and all the rest.
Funny thing is, when he joined the Mariners in 2001, dozens of scouts didn't believe he'd succeed in the United States. Perhaps it was his unorthodox approach to hitting and how he shifted his weight forward, essentially hitting off his front foot, which is just the opposite of how American hitters are taught.
He seemed to slap at the ball, seemed constantly late reacting to pitches. He was unlike any other successful hitter most American scouts had ever seen, and they could not comprehend how that unorthodox approach would translate against the 95-mph fastballs he would be seeing.
That first year, he sprayed the ball all over the field and took advantage of his speed and instincts on the bases. As if all that wasn't enough, he had one of the best throwing arms in the game. For a baserunner to go from first to third on a hit to right field against the Mariners was to set the stage for an electrifying moment.
He had eight assists on his way to winning a Gold Glove that season and picked up a couple of other nice little trophies: American League Most Valuable Player and Rookie of the Year. By the end of that first season, we knew he was something special. His game wasn't power or strength. It was precision, and there's beauty in that, too.
In Ichiro's first 10 seasons, he led the AL in hits seven times. In short, he's the living, breathing definition of greatness. He took on the most difficult game on earth and made it look easy. His perfectionist nature has contributed to our not knowing him as well as we might have. He does speak English. In the clubhouse. To teammates. In television commercials.
In fact, at the urging o fDavid Ortiz, his pregame talks to the American League All-Star team became the stuff of legend. Yet when American reporters have pressed him to do interviews in English, he smiles and says, "No!"
One of his interpreters once explained to a Seattle reporter that Ichiro wasn't completely comfortable getting his message across with his second language. Just like stepping into the box against a 2-1 pitch, he wanted to be precise, didn't want his words open for misinterpretation. Therefore, he does interviews in Japanese.
He has also said that his real job, the only job that really matters, is playing baseball. His body of work will stand the test of time, and his 4,000th hit—and the Yankee Stadium ovation that followed the achievement—allowed us to let him know we understand how lucky we've been to watch him play. (Richard Justice - mlb.com-8/21/13)
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In more ways than one, long-time Mariners and current Yankees outfielder Ichiro Suzuki is one of the most unique players in baseball history. His hitting style is unteachable—as in you wouldn't teach anyone to hit like that—but his freakish hand-eye coordination has made it work.
Ichiro is also known as an all-world joker and character guy with a tremendous sense of humor. So much so that he's even learned to speak some Spanish throughout his career so he can trash talk opponents and get a laugh. Brad Lefton of the Wall Street Journal has more:
Ramon Santiago, the veteran shortstop of the Cincinnati Reds, recalls being startled and amused during his first encounter with Ichiro Suzuki in 2003. Santiago was barely into his first full season with Detroit when Ichiro's Mariners came to town. After a leadoff single to open the game, Ichiro dashed to second on a steal. As he popped up safely from his slide, he looked at Santiago and deadpanned in Spanish, "No corro casi."
Loosely translated, he was telling Santiago, a native of the Dominican Republic, "I don't have my legs today." Before Santiago could stop smiling, Ichiro was stealing third two pitches later on those same heavy legs.
"I knew he always spoke through an interpreter," Santiago said recently. "And that was for English, so of course I never imagined he could speak such nice Spanish."
Veteran first baseman Carlos Pena remembered one of his frequent encounters with Ichiro. He was defending first for the Tampa Bay Rays, and Ichiro had just arrived on one of his patented infield hits. Ichiro peered over at Pena and asked, "Que coño tu mira?," or, "What the hell are you looking at?" Pena clamped his lips together to prevent the laughter from bursting through.
Ichiro said he feels a special bond with Latin American players because they're all foreigners in a different country playing the game. And, he added, "we don't really have curse words in Japanese, so I like the fact that the Western languages allow me to say things that I otherwise can't."
Ichiro has picked up on Spanish through conversations with teammates over the years -- he still uses an interpreter for interviews because he is talking to fans and wants his message to be clear -- but he can't carry on a conversation in the language. He only knows some words and phrases.
There are very few players in baseball who could learn another language just to trash talk and still get a laugh out of opponents. Ichiro is that guy. (By Mike Axisa/ 2014)
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2015: Ichiro is the first player from Japan to suit up for Marlins.
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2015 Trade: Uniform numbers are revered more in Japan than America. That's probably explained in part by the culture of free agency and trades in the United States decreasing the chances that a player will be identified by one number for his entire career.
The most anticipated moment of the news conference announcing Suzuki's signing with the Marlins was the return of his iconic No. 51 to his uniform.
The only number Ichiro had known as a pro player from his debut in Japan in 1992 until his trade from the Mariners to the Yankees in 2012 was No. 51. But that number was unavailable with the Yanks because they had not given it out since Bernie Williams retired in 2006. Ichiro mulled over his choices upon arriving in New York and decided to preserve the 1 by choosing to wear No. 31.
One of the first questions Ichiro asked the Marlins during their pursuit of him was if No. 51 was available. When he learned it was, his interest in a city he had visited only once in his 14-year Major League career intensified.
In 1994, his first full season with Orix's big league club, Ichiro burst onto the scene by recording the first 200-hit season in the history of Japanese baseball. His 210 hits in 130 games captivated the country. Orix offered to commemorate Ichiro's accomplishment by bestowing him with No. 7, an exalted number in franchise lore, but he turned the honor down because he felt he was establishing his own identity as No. 51.
By the time he arrived in Seattle in 2001, No. 51 was synonymous with Ichiro, at least in Japan. In Seattle, it was recognized as Randy Johnson's number. He won 130 games wearing it over 10 seasons with the Mariners. By then, Johnson was two teams removed from Seattle and was pitching for the D-backs. Sensitive to Johnson's history with No. 51, the Mariners sent out a feeler to him. Johnson gave his blessing for it to be offered to Ichiro.(Brad Lefton / Special to MLB.com/ 2015)
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August 14, 2015: Ichiro Suzuki is at a point in his career where each hit moves him closer to another milestone. With his opposite-field single in the fifth inning of the Marlins' game with the Cardinals, the 41-year-old now has the distinction of being mentioned in the same sentence as the legendary Ty Cobb.
Counting his hits from Japan along with his MLB numbers, Ichiro now has 4,191 professional hits, the same figure Cobb had in his Hall of Fame career. It's not recognized as an official record, but to compile that many hits at any professional level is impressive.
"Hall of Famer," Miami manager Dan Jennings said. "Plain and simple. He's a Hall of Famer. He continues to defy age. He gives tremendous at-bats. He ranges in the outfield. He's got to be one of the most prepared players of this era."
Ichiro now has 2,913 Major League hits, as he inches closer to becoming the 30th player in MLB history to reach the 3,000-hit milestone. In nine seasons playing in Japan, Ichiro had 1,278 hits.
"To produce the way he's produced, and continue now at age 41, it's just a tip of the cap of just who he is and the career he's had," Jennings said. (JFrisaro - MLB.com - August 14, 2015)
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October 4, 2015: The itch to pitch has been there a long time for Ichiro Suzuki, the iconic 41-year-old outfielder who is pursuing 3,000 Major League hits. But on October 5, in the Marlins' 7-2 loss to the Phillies at Citizens Bank Park, Ichiro's bat was not the story. Ichiro's right arm was. With the Phillies up four in the eighth inning, Miami manager Dan Jennings allowed the 10-time All-Star to accomplish another first—pitch in a big league game. No one will confuse the veteran with Marlins ace Jose Fernandez, but Ichiro provided an entertaining inning, allowing one run on two doubles. He didn't strike anyone out or walk a batter, but he did make it through on 18 pitches with 11 strikes. ( Joe Frisaro / MLB.com )
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October 2015: At 42, Ichiro is still driven by passion for the game. Ichiro avoided any speculation about his future when he re-signed with the Marlins two days after the 2015 regular season ended. The third-oldest active player in the Majors has a comfort level in Miami, and his passion for the game has rubbed off on the rest of the organization.
"Off the field, Ichiro has been one of the most interesting players I've personally come across, since I've got into this game," team president David Samson said the day the club announced Ichiro signed for 2016. "Forget his love of the game, and the fact he's in the best shape of any player I've seen at any age. His desire to play baseball the right way, to be respectful of Major League Baseball, respectful of other players and the game itself and the traditions of the game."
"Anyone who watches this team can see that we have a lot of talent," Ichiro said after the final game of the season. "But I can really say this is the best group of guys that I've been around. The best teammates I have played with. This team, if we can do the little things, the possibilities are endless. We have a real bright future here."
"Ichiro would never tell us he was tired," Samson said. "Do we think he was tired toward the end of the year? He's human. He'd have to be. Everyone was tired, and he played almost every day." (J Frisaro - MLB.com - October, 2015)
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April 29, 2016: Marlins' Ichiro became the only active player with 500 career stolen bases by swiping second base in the 6-3 win over the Brewers.
Suzuki singled to lead off the game against Brewers starter Zach Davies. It was the 2,944th hit of his career, moving him past Frank Robinson for 33rd on the all-time hits list.
The 42-year-old is the eighth player in Major League history with at least 2,900 hits and 500 stolen bases, joining Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner, Paul Molitor, Eddie Collins, Rickey Henderson, Lou Brock and Barry Bonds. (A Gruman - MLB.com - April 29, 2016)
- July 25, 2016: With Ichiro sitting on 2,996 hits, it was only a matter of time before he reached that hallowed mark of 3,000. And when he eventually retires, the countdown clock is on for when he'll be elected to the Hall of Fame. So it makes perfect sense that Ken Griffey Jr. and Mike Piazza were asked about their contemporary.
While Griffey and Piazza recalled their earliest memories of Ichiro, including their shock at how good he was given his slight stature, the best revelation came when Griffey said that he tickled Ichiro before games. (Michael Clair - MLB )
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August 7, 2016: With one more iconic swing while moving out of the batter's box, Ichiro entered historic company on a towering triple off the right-field wall at Coors Field. The drive off Rockies left-handed reliever Chris Rusin in the seventh inning of a 10-7 Marlins win made Ichiro the 30th player in Major League history to reach 3,000 hits.
After time was called, Ichiro was mobbed at third base by his teammates, fittingly led by second baseman Dee Gordon, the 2015 National League batting champion.
"More than the number 3,000 itself," Ichiro said through a translator, "when I saw the teammates come out and how happy they were and how warm the fans were, it's not about just the 3,000 and what I did, it's about my teammates and my fans. That's powerful today."
In his professional career, Ichiro has 4,278 hits—1,278 in Japan and 3,000 in Major League Baseball. Pete Rose, MLB's Hit King, finished his career with 4,256 hits in the big leagues.
Ichiro's hit tied him with Hall of Famer Roberto Clemente for 29th all-time and made him just the second player to collect 3,000 hits after turning 27. Rose recorded 3,353 of his hits after turning 27. Ichiro, 42, joins Hall of Famers Cap Anson (45) and Rickey Henderson (42) as the only players who were 42 or older when they recorded career hit No. 3,000.
"I haven't seen anyone else get 3,000," Marlins manager Don Mattingly said. "I'm sure there have been some no-hitters and things like that, but this guy has been amazing for the game. What he's been able to accomplish, coming over when he was 27, what he's been able to do is pretty amazing."
A 10-time All-Star and Gold Glove winner, Ichiro set the MLB single-season hits mark of 262, passing George Sisler, in 2004.
Ichiro's first big league hit came on April 2, 2001, a double, off T.J. Mathews of the A's. His 1,000th hit was a single off Jon Lieber of the Phillies on June 14, 2005, and No. 2,000, a double, came against Gio Gonzalez, then with the A's, on Sept. 9, 2009.
"When I got my first hit as a big leaguer, I felt good for myself," Ichiro said. "Today when I got my 3,000th hit, I was happy, but I was happy for the people around me, for the people that have supported me and have cheered me on. I really felt that today." (Weinrib & Frisaro - MLB.com)
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If there's one thing baseball players like more than baseball, it's food! (Probably. Actually, that might just be us). Anyway, for some reason, maybe because of a special deal at the Canada-owned Tim Horton's, an anonymous Marlins player gifted donuts to Canadian Joey Votto when the team arrived for a series in Cincinnati. Judging by the interaction between Ichiro and Joey at first base during the game two days later, our guess is it was Ichiro.
Votto, a very generous man in his own right, returned the favor by having 51 pizzas delivered to the Marlins clubhouse and stacked in front of Ichiro's locker on August 18th. A solid pregame snack before the Reds' eventual 5-4 win. Pizza, donuts and baseball . . . what else really matters in life? (Monagan - MLB.com - 8/18/16)
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Reflecting on Ichiro by Tracy Ringolsby, MLB.com and Baseball America - August 2016: “There was a mystery about him,” said Randy Adamack, Mariners senior vice president of communications. “He had been a star in Japan, but now he was coming over here. He had his first name, Ichiro, on the back of his uniform.”
Ichiro provided a quick answer to all questions, joining Fred Lynn of the 1976 Red Sox as the only players to win the MVP and Rookie of the Year awards in the same season.
“He became the face of the Mariners franchise in a very short period of time,” said Lou Piniella, the Seattle manager at the time.
The 2001 Mariners won the American League West with 116 victories, equaling the single-season record for wins established by the 1906 Cubs.
“It was a special season for the team and Ichiro,” former Mariners president Chuck Armstrong said. “It was hard for him, coming from Japan to the big leagues because it was such a major event in Japan. He handled it. He made the adjustments to Major League Baseball quickly.”
Under MLB rules, any telecasts outside of the United States belong to MLB, and so the Mariners received the same share for the Japanese television deal as each of the other major league teams.
“The big upside was he played well,” Adamack said. “He had a marquee value. We quickly became known internationally. Financially? His sponsorship presence was $1 million or $1.5 million. The (international) television rights were not ours.
“There were ticket sales through travel companies in Japan, and we sold a lot of merchandise, and the Japanese tourists put more value on items they purchased directly from our stores at Safeco. We had people buying in bulk to take the merchandise back home.”
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So, it's hardly a surprise that Ichiro told the Miami Herald that he wants to play until he's 50. In 2017 Spring Training, at 43, [Ichiro] is the oldest position player in the Majors. Only Braves pitcher Bartolo Colon - 51 days his senior - is older among active players. And yet there is no sign of quit in him. He said he wants to continue playing until he's 50. "I'm not joking when I say it," Suzuki said.
Only a handful of Major Leaguers have kept playing close to 50 years of age. Many were token appearances, but some like Julio Franco (49) and Jamie Moyer (49) were everyday members of the roster. So, who's to say Ichiro can't do it -- especially since he almost literally has #nooffseason.
The last time he took [a vacation] - 2004 or '05, he doesn't recall which - was a week-long trip to Milan, Italy. He worked out pretty much the entire time ... His typical offseason - if it can be called that - hardly exists. "Three or four days, tops," said his translator, Allen Turner. (Monagan - mlb.com - 3/29/17)
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Ichiro treasures the game so much that he refuses to throw his bats or glove in moments of frustration. His response is, "Those are my tools, why would I throw my tools?" (Frisaro - mlb.com - 4/30/17)
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April 30, 2017, the Marlins celebrated Ichiro's being the 30th player in MLB history to reach the 3,000-hits milestone. Prior to the Marlins-Pirates game, there was a video tribute to Ichiro, chronicling his career from Japan to the Major Leagues.
The Marlins presented Ichiro with an original collage, featuring 3,000 images of the legendary outfielder -- one image of each of his first 3,000 big league hits. Marlins president David Samson said the Plexiglass piece is 8 1/2 feet by four feet, and weighs approximately 100 pounds. There are 16 "milestone eggs" embedded throughout the piece to call attention to Ichiro's most significant hits, ranging from his first (April 2, 2001) through No. 3000 (Aug. 7 at Colorado).
"It's the most emotional I've ever seen him," Samson said. "The magnitude to him, when he saw hits one to 3,000, I think it occurred to him how many hits that is. I said, 'By the way, this is just your Major League Baseball hits. It doesn't include the hits you had in Japan or since August.' And then, when Mr. Oh was on the board, Ichiro had a whole different level of emotion. I thought the highlight of the whole ceremony was when he bowed to Mr. Oh."
On the large video scoreboard at Marlins Park, Japanese home run king Sadaharu Oh gave a short tribute to Ichiro. Touched by the events, Ichiro bowed, and tipped his cap to the fans and players in both dugouts.
"Everything he gets, he deserves," Mattingly said. "Ich, for me, has been an amazing player for a long time. The fact that he's still rolling along, I think whatever he gets is well deserved.
"Even more than his hits, it's the whole thing. Every day, he is out there throwing, working," Mattingly said. "It's just an ongoing movement. It never stops. Some guys get tired of it, or get out of their routines. But his routine, he just seems to be able to do it every day. It's just good to watch."
Ichiro has maintained he'd like to play until he is 50, and the way he prepares, he's hard to doubt. The Marlins have him signed through this year, with a club option for 2018.
"I don't know if anybody can keep up with him," Mattingly said. "Anytime you start doing something every day like that, and do it over a number of years, it's just a testimony for his love of the game. He brings a different perspective to it. I enjoy just his whole aura, of who he is, it's really cool." (Frisaro - mlb.com - 4/30/17)
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Ichiro is a pretty safe bet to be enshrined in Cooperstown one day, and June 25, 2017's 4-2 win over the Cubs marked another day of history along the way for the international icon.
At 43 years and 246 days old, he started in center against the Cubs, making him the oldest starting center fielder since 1900, per Elias Sports. The record was previously held by Hall of Famer Rickey Henderson, who made his last start in center on July 24, 2002, at 43 years and 211 days old, while with the Red Sox.
Manager Don Mattingly had no idea of the feat when he penciled Ichiro's name on the lineup card. "Seriously?" Mattingly said. "I thought about it though in the first: 'We have a 40-something out there in center.' But he doesn't play like that. He runs good, throws good, so it didn't feel like that."
And while the 17-year Major League veteran went 0-for-4, he didn't waste time making his presence felt. His quickness helped force an error on a grounder to shortstop Addison Russell in the first inning, and he scored on a Marcell Ozuna single.
Mattingly said. "I know he's not as comfortable in center as he is in right, but you're never afraid to put Ich on the field in any situation, because he's prepared, he works every day like he's going to play. You're never even remotely worried about his being in the wrong spot or not throwing to the right base." (Pinak - mlb.com - 6/25/17)
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June 25, 2017: At 43 years and 246 days old, the Marlins outfielder started in center against the Cubs, making him the oldest starting center fielder since 1900, per Elias Sports. The record was previously held by Hall of Famer Rickey Henderson, who made his last start in center on July 24, 2002, at 43 years and 211 days old, while with the Red Sox.
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A Newly Discovered Wasp Is Named After the True Hit King Ichiro
According to MLB.com, the Diolcogaster ichiroi got its name thanks to Jose Fernandez-Triana, a researcher at the Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids and Nematodes, who discovered the species and named it after a favorite player.
Here’s how Fernandez-Triana explained the etymology of the wasp’s name in an article published on Zoo Keys:This unique and remarkable species is named to honor the truly unique and remarkable Ichiro Suzuki, my favorite baseball player and one the best ever to play the game. At the time the research for this paper was being conducted, Ichiro was still playing for a Florida team and thus naming a species endemic from Florida after him made complete sense.
Unfortunately, the new owners of the Miami Marlins did not keep Ichiro, an unpopular decision not liked by many Marlins fans. Hopefully soon another Major League team gives the Universal Hit King the chance to continue his extraordinary career in baseball. ( Alex Putterman - MLB - January 20, 2018 )
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How long does Ichiro think he can continue to pursue his baseball career? "I think everybody has heard I want to play 'til I'm 50. But I always say I want to play at least until I'm 50. Make sure everybody understands that," Ichiro said with a smile. (Johns - mlb.com - 3/7/18)
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March 8, 2018: During a news conference, the 44-year-old Ichiro was asked about his impressions of 23-year-old Shohei Ohtani, now a member of the Angels and somebody Ichiro will face on a regular basis, given that their teams are AL West rivals. But even more intriguing than that matchup already seems, Ichiro took it a step further -- hinting that he wouldn't mind a chance pitching to Ohtani himself.
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April 2018: Ichiro entered the 2018 season as the second-oldest active player in baseball, behind only Bartolo Colon.His start in the outfield is also a larger piece of history: At 44 years, 5 months, and 7 days, Ichiro became the 5th-oldest player in MLB history to start on Opening Day.
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May 3, 2018: Oakland manager Bob Melvin called Mariners outfielder Ichiro Suzuki the "most committed player that I've ever had." And Melvin should know -- he had a front-row seat to watch vintage Ichiro for two remarkable seasons in Seattle in 2003 and 2004.
Ichiro's 18-year big league career came to a pause when the Mariners announced the Japanese superstar would transition from player to special assistant advisor within the organization for the rest of this season. As far as beyond that, Ichiro, 44, could return to baseball next season.
"Obviously if he's on board with it, at least for the time being, it seems like the right thing to do for him. He never wants to stand in anybody's way," Melvin said before the A's 4-1 loss to the Mariners. "It is great that he is still part of this organization because he has been such a presence … in this city."
Shortly after Melvin was hired to replace Lou Piniella in November of 2002, the former Arizona bench coach made a special trip to Seattle to meet Ichiro. The two sat down and talked for a couple of hours, striking a close-knit bond that has held true the past 15 years. "It was really easy to talk to him," Melvin said. "It kind of developed from there." And on game day, it was never troublesome to get Ichiro ready to play, Melvin said.
"His whole day, his whole night, and everything he thought about was about the next day's game," Melvin said. "I've often said he was the easiest guy I've ever had to manage because all you had to do was tell him what time the game was, and you knew he'd be ready and committed to go." Ichiro arguably had his finest season in 2004 when he registered a Major League record 262 hits, batting a career-best .372. He racked up 80 multi-hit games.
Melvin said his favorite Ichiro moment came late that season when he broke George Sisler's 84-year-old single-season hits record (257) with a third-inning single against Texas. In 18 seasons, Ichiro totaled 3,089 hits, and holds a .311 career batting average. He won 10 Gold Gloves and went to 10 All-Star Games.
"One of the great players in the history of the game, if not the greatest hitter as far as just the volume of hits worldwide," Melvin said. Even though many of the current Oakland players have only played against Ichiro late in his career, they know the vast impact he's had on the game across the globe. "It's definitely going to be a different game without him in it," Athletics catcher Jonathan Lucroy said. (May 3, 2018 - MLB.com - May 3, 2018)
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Jan 4, 2019: The Mariners are rebuilding their roster with an infusion of young talent this offseason, yet a 45-year-old Ichiro Suzuki is still expected to be part of the club when it opens the regular season. Mariners general manager Jerry Dipoto intends to keep his word to the man who has spent 13 of his 18 Major League seasons in Seattle, which means an opportunity to be part of the 28-man roster that opens the regular season on March 20-21 in the Tokyo Dome against the A's.
There are a few steps between now and Tokyo, of course. Ichiro is a free agent, so he'll need to be signed -- presumably to a Minor League contract with an invitation to camp -- and then he needs to stay healthy this spring before being promoted to the Major League roster prior to the trip to Japan.
The Mariners and A's each will be allowed to carry three extra players for the Opening Series and Ichiro figures to be on the 28-man roster. Chances seem slim that he'll remain with the big league club when that group is trimmed to 25 for the resumption of the regular season the following week back in the United States, but don't try telling Ichiro that quite yet. The 10-time All-Star has been working out diligently in Japan this offseason before flying to Seattle for the holidays, which is why he was able to meet newly signed free-agent pitcher Yusei Kikuchi for the first time.
For Dipoto, it's a matter of respect and acknowledgment of the importance of Ichiro in Mariners history that he'll keep the veteran on board even amid the rebuilding process. "Ichi will be on our team when we go to Tokyo," Dipoto reiterated. "He'll be an active player. We are still committed to the idea of developing this roster. Mitch Haniger is going to be our right fielder, Mallex Smith is going to play center field and Domingo Santana will be the primary left fielder. And we'll find at-bats for Jay Bruce, whether they be in left field, DH or occasionally at first base.
"That's the way we envision the 2019 season playing out. But one thing I've learned with Ichiro, first of all his preparation and focus is the best I've ever seen on any player I've ever encountered. His single-mindedness in achieving a goal is so real that I won't put anything past him."
When the Mariners were hit by a series of injuries in their outfield last spring, Dipoto signed Ichiro to fill the void and bring one of the franchise's all-time greats back to his roots. Ichiro hit just .205/.255/.205 in 47 plate appearances in the first month before being moved into a role as "assistant to the chairman," which allowed him to continue working out and hitting with the team every day despite not being eligible to play in games. Whether Ichiro has anything left will be seen this spring, and Dipoto isn't committing to more than just being on the roster for the two Tokyo games.
"Frankly if he rolls out in Tokyo and gets seven hits in two games, there's a pretty good chance he'll play a third game," Dipoto said with a smile. "You have to adjust as you go. We're not going to predetermine anything. We'll give him the opportunity to come in and do what he does, and prepare the way he prepares."
Ichiro's mere presence helped the Mariners recruit Kikuchi and it remains to be seen if he'll remain in a front-office or coaching type role whenever retirement ultimately comes. "We want Ichiro to be part of the Mariners in perpetuity," Dipoto said. "But if you talk to Ichi, he is so focused on this, and he knows he can still play. We can't cross that bridge until we get to that bridge. Because anything more than that would be predetermining an outcome and he won't be able to focus on those games." (G Johns - MLB.com - Jan 4, 2019)
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March 17, 2019: Ichiro Suzuki didn’t make any magic in his first appearance back at the Tokyo Dome since 2012, going hitless in three at-bats in the Mariners’ 6-4 win over the Yomiuri Giants. But the 45-year-old legend made plenty of people happy as a sell-out crowd of 46,315 celebrated his every move on a flashbulb kind of night. Ichiro received a loud ovation when he was introduced in pregame ceremonies, with each Mariner player bowing in respect as he walked down the line shaking hands prior to the first of two exhibitions the teams will play this weekend.
The crowd, which chanted and sang loudly in support of its hometown Yomiuri club throughout the game, erupted again when Ichiro tracked down a deep drive to right field off the bat of Hayato Sakamoto, the second batter of the game against Seattle starter Mike Leake. And every time Ichiro strode to the plate, he was greeted with a welcome roar from the orange-clad Yomiuri faithful.
“It certainly was not surprising at all, the support and fanfare Ichiro has had coming back to play here in Japan,” manager Scott Servais said. “He’s really excited about it. He’s having a good time with it. He seems very loose in the clubhouse, in pregame, in the dugout. He’s enjoying it and certainly he should. He’s earned the right and it’s great to see.”
But this spring hasn’t been kind to the 45-year-old Ichiro at the plate, where he’s now 2-for-28 with three walks and nine strikeouts.
“I don’t think Ichiro is under any pressure," Servais said. "He’s certainly earned the right to partake in this series. He’s off to a slow start this spring, but I thought his timing was better today. He just missed a ball he pulled down the right-field line that was foul. I thought his swings were fine and he made a nice catch in the outfield early in the game, so he’ll be in there again tomorrow.”
The Mariners have given Ichiro the opportunity to return to his homeland this spring and he’ll be in the starting lineup for Wednesday’s Opening Day game against the A’s in one of the corner outfield spots, where he’ll no doubt be even more of a favorite as the Japanese fans won’t have their own team to root on in that Major League contest.
While the Mariners aren’t expected to keep Ichiro on their 25-man roster once they have to whittle down from the 28 players allowed for the two-game Opening Series, they’ve given Ichiro and the Japanese fans a unique opportunity and both have embraced the moment. Ichiro played to the crowd prior to the game while running in the outfield and then signing autographs for some of the luckiest. The Japanese TV broadcast followed his every move and the fans – many wearing Ichiro gear – held their breath in unison during every at-bat.
“I only threw fastballs to Ichiro,” said Giants starter Nobutaka Imamura. “It was a special moment and very good experience.” (G Johns - MLB.com - March 17, 2019)
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Former teammates and contemporaries will laud Ichiro's skills, his professionalism, his talent. What they may exclude, however, is insight to the other side of Ichiro, one the outfielder did embrace -- but in a more private setting.
Ichiro is funny. Hilarious, really. He can zing you with a one-liner and hurl an insult for a laugh. He also knows how to poke fun at himself, and he invites others to laugh with him. "That's probably my normal personality," Ichiro said, during an interview with MLB.com, with the assistance of an interpreter, in 2018.
Ichiro's All-Star speeches were legendary, and intended for mature audiences only. This got started in the earlier years of Ichiro and David Ortiz as All-Star teammates. It's customary for managers to give a little "go get 'em" pregame speech just before the players head out to the field, and one year, after the AL manager was finished, Ortiz stood up and gestured toward Ichiro.
"I'd say, 'Hey guys, don't go anywhere,'" Ortiz recalled. "'Ichiro has something to say.' I pretty much put him on the spot."
Ichiro would get up in front of the players and say a few words, most of which he picked up in baseball circles as he was learning English. Those words, not repeatable, sent the room into hysterics.
"It was funny because it was coming from a Japanese guy ... if it came from somebody that's lived here a long time, then it's probably not as funny," Ichiro said, chuckling at the memory. "It's things you can't write. So it was funny coming from me. It was funny that way, but it's something that shouldn't be written."
Eh, let's take a stab at it. Is there anything we can repeat? "Basically," Ortiz said with a wink, "His speeches were, 'Let's go and whoop them.'" (Footer - mlb.com - 3/18/19)
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Ichiro wasn't always that outwardly bold. As an 18- and 19-year-old honing his skills with the Orix BlueWave of Nippon Professional Baseball in the early 1990s, he was more reserved, especially around his older teammates.
It probably helped that, back then, he was only under-the-radar famous and not yet one of the most celebrated athletes in Japan's history. His pre-fame days allowed him a little more freedom when he stepped outside.
"The first year that I played with him, he rode his bike to the games," recalled Kelvin Torve, who had brief stints with the Mets and Twins before ending his playing career in Japan. "I don't think he was old enough to drive, and if he was, I don't think he owned a car. So he would ride his bike."
Torve's final two years as pro ballplayer overlapped with Ichiro's first two. At that time, most of the attention was on Hideki Matsui -- the big, strong outfielder who bore the nickname Godzilla and went on to sign with the Yankees.
The 5-foot-11 Ichiro, a slightly built contact hitter with sprinter speed, wasn't quite the same draw. Yet. "Even when he was 18, he could do everything except throw," Torve said. "As he got older and matured and got stronger, he started throwing like a Major Leaguer. He could do it all, even at age 18. I saw a big leaguer there, but I did not see the unbelievable talent that he demonstrated in the United States."
As Ichiro got older, he got bolder. A rising star in his early 20s, he branched out a little bit and took some risks -- fashion risks. "I was kind of influenced by the hip-hop culture," Ichiro recalled. "I went to the [Japanese League] All-Star Game [in 1994] in shorts -- baggy shorts -- and an Oakland Athletics jersey. I walked in and one of the older players actually got mad at me and said, 'You can't dress like that.' Some didn’t mind it, though."
It didn't end there. Underneath the A's jersey, Ichiro wore a T-shirt with an English phrase that would, ahem, never get past the censors in the United States. But if you don't know what the T-shirt says, does it matter?
A TV station in Japan asked to interview Ichiro, and he tried -- half-heartedly, he admitted -- to warn them. "It was a live interview," Ichiro said, chuckling at the memory. "I said, 'Well, I have this shirt on.' They said, 'That's OK.' So, in 1994, I did a live interview at the studio in a T-shirt that said, [expletive]. It was all over Japan. It was a national television channel." (Footer - mlb.com - 3/18/19)
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March 21, 2019: For a man who never wanted to quit playing baseball, there can be no perfect ending. But Ichiro might have come as close as possible to finding the right exit to a brilliant career when he announced that he's retiring from the game after playing one last time with the Mariners in a 5-4, 12-inning win vs. the A's in his home country of Japan during 2019 Spring Training.
The 45-year-old gathered himself for a final hurrah in front of a sold-out Tokyo Dome crowd that cheered his every move and then bid farewell to baseball and his Japanese fans in a touching tribute that brought goosebumps to an entire nation and tears to the 45-year-old's eyes.
Mariners manager Scott Servais sent the legendary right fielder out to his position in the bottom of the eighth inning of the Opening Series finale, then pulled the rest of his defenders off the field to allow Ichiro to come off on his own as he was replaced by rookie Braden Bishop.
Ichiro tapped his chest and waved repeatedly to the crowd, then hugged his teammates one by one before eventually being swarmed up in the arms of Hall of Fame friend Ken Griffey Jr. "It was fun. It was awesome," Griffey said. "He had a chance to play in his home country where they've seen him grow up. This is what baseball is about."
Ichiro went 0-for-4 in his finale as 46,451 fans held their breath, hoping for a storybook finish. But Ichiro made several nice running catches in right field and this is a man whose story has long been written as he's etched himself into the record books while racking up more hits than anybody in history over 18 seasons in the Majors and nine in Japan.
The man who went by one name wound up with 4,367 hits across two leagues. He'd had the most hits of any active Major Leaguer with 3,089 in his 19 seasons in MLB and figures to be a sure-fire first-ballot Hall of Famer when he becomes eligible in 2025, a process he delayed a full year by choosing to play in the two regular-season games in Japan. (Johns - mlb.com - 3/21/19)
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In November, 2000, along came Ichiro Suzuki, the first position player to make the move from the Japanese major leagues to Major League Baseball, who became a fixture in the Mariners’ lineup for 12 seasons. The signing was driven by the fact that Ichiro was a favorite of then-majority owner Hiroshi Yamauchi, the head of Nintendo, who made it clear he didn’t care what it cost to sign him.
“There was a mystery about him,” Mariners senior vice president of communications Randy Adamack said. “He had been a star in Japan, but now he was coming over here. He had his first name, ‘Ichiro,’ on the back of his uniform.”
The 2001 Mariners won the American League West with 116 victories, equaling the record established by the 1906 Cubs.
“It was a special season for the team and Ichiro,” former Mariners president Chuck Armstrong said. “It was hard for him, coming from Japan to the big leagues, because it was such a major event in Japan. He handled it. He made the adjustments quickly.”
Ichiro was no small part of that, with Seattle not only building off a strong Asian population base in the Pacific Northwest, but also a huge interest from Japan—where a deal was struck for Mariners games to be televised in that country. There were at least 20 newspaper reporters and television crews from Japan documenting Ichiro’s every move.
That helped build an international image for Seattle. But contrary to popular perception, it did not provide a major cash influx for the Mariners. Yes, it did sell signage to Japanese firms, particularly behind home plate, which showed up on telecasts back to Japan. But there was no cash windfall for the Japanese television rights.
That’s because any telecasts outside of the U.S. belong to MLB. So the Mariners received the same share for the Japanese television deal as each of the other 29 teams.
The Mariners did, however, have the services of one of the game’s premier players, who compiled a record 10 consecutive 200-hit seasons his first 10 years. That included 262 hits in 2004, which broke George Sisler’s 84-year-old record of 257.
“The big upside was he played well,” Adamack said. “He had a marquee value. We quickly became known internationally. Financially? His sponsorship presence was (worth) $1 million or $1.5 million. The (international) television rights were not ours. There were ticket sales through travel companies in Japan, and we sold a lot of merchandise—and the Japanese tourists put more value on items they purchased directly from our stores at Safeco. We had people buying in bulk to take the merchandise back home.”
And there was the Yamauchi factor.
It’s not that Ichiro was an unknown to the Mariners’ front office. Club officials traveled to Japan in 1997 to look at high school players at the urging of Yamauchi. While they were there, they met with Ichiro, who played with Orix. Jim Colborn, director of Pacific Rim scouting for the Mariners, was the pitching coach.
“There was a picture of (Griffey) on the wall, and he told us through a translator that he wanted to play in the same outfield as Ken Griffey Jr.,” Armstrong said. “Two years later, he was in our spring training on an exchange program (in 1999).”
Two years later, Ichiro was in camp as a member of the team—with the Mariners having bid $13.2 million for his posting rights, $4 million more than the Dodgers—and then signed him to a three-year, $14 million deal.
“Mr. Yamauchi told us whatever we have to spend, we needed to spend,” Armstrong said.
Then came the negotiations with Ichiro, which took a strange turn when Yamauchi said the Mariners would not give Ichiro more than the four years and $30.2 million they gave reliever Kazuhiro Sasaki a year earlier.
Armstrong said agent Tony Attanasio balked, but “Ichiro told our scout, Ted Heid, (who had replaced Colborn), that he would take it. He really wanted to come (to the U.S.), and it was a Japanese thing—where the senior member had a special ranking.”
That turn of events led to a special time in Seattle. (Tracy Ringolsby - Baseball America - May, 2019)
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Sept 14, 2019: In 19 seasons in the Major Leagues, Ichiro Suzuki used an interpreter to express himself to reporters, preferring to be careful that his words were correctly understood. But, in his first public farewell since his retirement, Ichiro spoke from his heart -- in English -- to a T-Mobile Park crowd that hung on every word.
After being presented with the Mariners Franchise Achievement Award -- the first player to receive the honor -- Ichiro talked for five minutes about his appreciation for the support he received in Seattle and across the Major Leagues after coming to the U.S. to pursue his baseball dreams.
"This is a happy occasion. When I retired that night in Tokyo, I had an incomplete feeling because the great fans of Seattle could not be there. Tonight I want to express my appreciation to you for your touching support over the years. When I came to Seattle in 2001, no position player had ever come from Japan before. The one you got was 27 years old, small and skinny.
"And I know, you had every reason not to accept me. However, you welcomed me with open arms and you have never stopped, even when I left and came back. I was so grateful for the chance to return in 2018, and the reason is you fans."
The 45-year-old outfielder retired in March, 2019 making that announcement after the Mariners played two games in Tokyo to open their regular season. He’s spent this season as a special assistant to the chairman, working both as a front-office advisor and hands-on aide with the Mariners and occasionally with their Triple-A Tacoma and Class A Short Season Everett clubs.
“I enjoy being around them, because I feel their passion for the game I love is genuine,” Ichiro said. “As I look back on my career, the thing I look at with pride is that I enjoyed every challenge and had passion for every day.” (G Johns - MLB.com - Sept 14, 2019)
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Dec 18, 2021: Ichiro strikes out 17 -- vs. high schoolers!
The offseason exploits of Ichiro Suzuki continue to create memorable moments for baseball fans around the globe.Weeks after the Mariners legend showed up to hit dingers at a high school in his native Japan and surprised Daisuke Matsuzaka during the right-hander’s retirement ceremony, Ichiro stepped onto the mound to face a select team of girls high school baseball players.
The 19-year MLB veteran pulled no punches during the exhibition, with Jason Coskrey of the Japan Times sharing that the prolific outfielder threw 147 pitches and topped out at 84 mph on the stadium radar gun en route to recording 17 strikeouts. He also hit at least one batter and was limited to an 0-for-3 day at the plate by the elite team of high schoolers. The 48-year-old icon and current special assistant in the Mariners front office made only one appearance on an MLB mound, pitching an inning in relief for the Marlins during the 2015 season."I used to pitch in high school," Ichiro said through interpreter Allen Turner following his lone MLB outing. "I did pitch in an All-Star Game in Japan. But to be on the mound at a Major League Baseball game, you can say one of my dreams came true today. But I'll never ask to do that again." (M Guzman - MLB.com - Dec 18, 2021)
- Jan 22, 2025:
For Ichiro Suzuki, whose baseball career defied convention and shattered records, his induction into the Hall of Fame has long felt less like a crowning achievement and more like an inevitable conclusion to one of the sport’s most remarkable journeys. Indeed, Suzuki is officially headed to Cooperstown. Suzuki’s election in his first year on the ballot, which saw him fall one vote shy of being the first position player to receive a unanimous vote, further solidifies his place among baseball’s all-time greats. Suzuki received 99.7 percent of the votes cast by eligible members of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. (D Kramer - MLB.com - Jan 22, 2025)
TRANSACTIONS
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November 2000: The Mariners won the lottery to be able to negotiate a contract to play in America in 2001, giving the Orix Blue Wave $13 million. Then, Ichiro signed a three-year contract with the M's worth just over $14 million.
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December 18, 2003: Ichiro signed a four-year, $44 million contract with the Mariners. The deal kept the Mariners from going to arbitration with him.
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July 13, 2007: Ichiro signed a five-year, $90 million contract that keeps him in a Mariners uniform until age 39, in 2012. But the M's will be paying him for at least a quarter century. The pact calls for the team to defer $25 million of the $90 million he is owed, money that the team will not have to fully pay until at least 2032.
Ichiro got a $5 million signing bonus and annual salaries of $17 million from 2008-12 under the terms of the deal.
Seattle will pay $12 million in salary each year and defer $5 million per season at 5.5 percent interest. Suzuki will receive the money in annual installments each Jan. 30 starting with the year after his retirement from the major leagues.
Because of the deferred money, the average annual value of the contract is discounted to $16.1 million under the provisions of baseball's collective bargaining agreement.
In addition, he gets a housing allowance of $32,000 in 2008, an increase of $1,000 from the 2007 season, and the amount will rise by $1,000 each year. He also will be provided with either a new jeep or Mercedes SUV by the team, which also gives him four first-class round trip tickets from Japan each year for his family. Provisions for the Mariners to give him a personal trainer and an interpreter were continued.
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July 23, 2012: The Yankees sent RHP D.J. Mitchell and RHP Danny Farquhar to the Mariners, acquiring Ichiro.
Suzuki had to agree to several personal sacrifices to become a Yankee. The club asked Ichiro to change outfield positions, hit toward the bottom of New York's lineup and possibly sit out against left-handed pitching. A career .322 hitter, Ichiro was batting just .261 with a .288 on-base percentage for the Mariners at the time of the trade.
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December 12, 2012: Ichiro and the Yankees agreed on a two-year contract worth $13 million keeping him in pinstripes until his 41st birthday.
Two other teams offered $2 million more for two years, and another unknown team offered an extra $3 million for the two years. But Ichiro really enjoyed playing in pinstripes.
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January 23, 2015: Ichiro and the Marlins agreed on a one-year contract. It is a $2 million, one-year deal. The deal includes $2.8 million in performance bonuses based on plate appearances: $400,000 apiece for 300 and each additional 50 through 600.
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Nov 3, 2017: Ichiro chose free agency.
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March 6, 2018: The Mariners signed Ichiro; the contract will pay him $750,000, with potential incentives that could get him back to the $2 million he earned last year in Miami.
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May 3, 2018: Ichiro Suzuki insists he's not retiring from baseball. He's not done playing, in his mind anyway. That's the hard part, walking away from the game after 27 seasons in Japan and the Major Leagues.So the 44-year-old icon will transition in a unique way, accepting the opportunity to finish this season as a special assistant advisor with the Mariners, without shutting the door on a potential return to the playing field in 2019.
- March 21, 2019: Ichiro announced his retirement from playing baseball.
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October 2, 2018 : While Mariners general manager Jerry Dipoto says there are many questions to be answered as the upcoming offseason plays out, one answer is already known. Ichiro Suzuki will be on the Major League roster when Seattle opens its regular season in Tokyo against the A's in the Japan Series next March, as long as he is healthy.
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Jan 24. 2019: Mariners signed Ichiro Suzuki to a minor-league deal. If he makes the roster he’ll make $750,000. At least until he retires.
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BATTING:
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Ichiro is a superb hitter in the leadoff. One flaw in his being a leadoff hitter: he rarely walked before the 2002 season, not because he lacked selectivity, but because when he swings the bat, he almost always puts the ball in play. He really has a knack for putting the bat on the ball! He hits the ball "where they ain't," having the ability to hit the ball where he wants to hit it.
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At the plate, Ichiro crouches down and pops up. He plants his left foot in the batter's box and drags it parallel to the plate. Then he wags his bat below his belt, flips it into a loop, and with his left elbow cocked high in the air, is ready to attack.
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"Pitching to Ichiro is like pitching to a computer," one AL scout said. "Just because you got him out twice one way, with hard stuff, let's say, doesn't mean you'll do it a third time. He adjusts as well as any of the best hitters in the game. If you let him, he'll take balls off the ground, off the plate and line them. He's just a smart hitter, plus that speed is good for 40-50 hits a year."
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He is determined to hack. "No hitter should go to the plate looking for a walk," he said in 2002. "Hitters should hit."
Pitchers don't like to walk Ichiro, either, because he is so fast and likes to steal. When you make contact as much as him, when you put the ball in play as often as he does, when you hit open spots in the defense like he does, you don't have to walk.
However, in 2002, he had as many walks by the first week of June as he had during the entire 2001 season (30). But he accepted only 36 bases on balls for the entire 2003 season.
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As for bunting, he sure is good at it, having the ability to drop one down anywhere he damn well pleases. "It's not that I don't like to bunt," Ichiro said. "Bunting is one of the traits of a good baseball player. And I enjoy looking at the pitcher and infielders and knowing the catcher and sizing up the defense to see where I might bunt. It is enjoyable to bunt successfully. But I do like to hit."
Every year he has been in the Majors, his bunt hits have gradually decreased. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, he had 11 bunt singles in 2001, nine in '02, eight in '03, four in '04, and none in 2005 as of August 8th.
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He slaps hits through the left side of the infield just to keep his batting average up. But when he is hot, he hits line drives all over the yard. He has Rod Carew-like bat control.
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He isn't real physical, but he is capable of as many as 10-15 home runs per season in the Major Leagues. One of the great contact hitters, he never struck out more than 57 times a season in Japan. He is a patient hitter who rarely strikes out, reminding scouts of Tony Gwynn or Wade Boggs because of that, and because he sprays the ball to all fields.
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While playing in the Japanese Majors, Suzuki once went 40 games and 216 at-bats without striking out! That's plate discipline. He has such great bat control that during one 16-game stretch, every ball he swung at was hit into play—no fouls, no swinging strikes.
- Suzuki won 7 Pacific League batting titles in his 7 full seasons in the league. He had a .353 lifetime batting average entering the 2001 season, when he moved to the United States.
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Playing in the U.S.A., he eliminated almost all of his high leg kick as he strode into the ball. His swing is smoother, making more use of his upper body to produce power.
TREMENDOUS ROOKIE YEAR—2001
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Ichiro was the 2001 American League Rookie of the Year. And he also was named MVP of the AL for 2001. He was the first player since Fred Lynn in 1975 to win both awards.
- Ichiro passed Shoeless Joe Jackson for the all-time record for hits by a rookie with his 234th on September 30, 2001.
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Ichiro became the second rookie to lead either league in batting (.350). The first was the Twins' Tony Oliva in 1964 (.323).
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April 2 (Opening Day): Ichiro's bunt hit during an 8th-inning rally was his first sacrifice bunt try since 1994, he said.
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His first month in America, Ichiro started a 23-game hitting streak. It ended May 19, 2001, falling one game short of the Mariner record set in 1997 by Joey Cora.
FIVE DIFFERENT SWINGS
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Ichiro almost looks like he's inventing different ways to get base hits.
Example: He has the run-and-chop, something like you may have seen in your softball league, where he actually begins to move to first as he drags a groundball toward the shortstop hole. Then, there is the two-fisted tennis backhand, when he wants to force the head of the bat out front and hook a ball to right.
There are times when he's just a plain, natural hitter, stroking line drives wherever the ball is pitched. Ichiro has about five different grooves and he breaks out a different one depending on what the situation in the game is. He will change his swing from one pitch to the next.
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Baseball Weekly reported the five swings that M's players (mostly John Olerud) had seen:
1. The Running On-Hander: he takes two or three steps out of the batter's box before he makes contact. 2. The Leaner: He leans into the ball and punches it into centerfield. 3. The Fist Swing: He jams himself on purpose, then takes the ball the other way. 4. The Chip Swing: He just chips the ball into left field like he the chip-golf-swing would produce. 5. The Power Swing: He keeps his power in his back pocket, like Ken Griffey Jr.
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The Seattle Times listed the following: 1. "The Spoil": flicking tough strikes foul to the right side. 2. "The Slap": guiding the ball to the left side. 3. "The Stroke": up the middle, seemingly at will. 4. "The Slam": shooting gaps, with power on certain pitches. 5. "The Chris Evert Backhand": two-hand flick; ball can go anywhere.
On each, it often appears Ichiro's body is halfway to first while his hands, like a cartoon character, are still back in the box swinging the bat.
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Mariner teammate John Olerud loves observing Ichiro. "What I notice more than anything is his balance. You'd think, with the way it appears he's moving toward first as he swings, pitchers would be able to throw him changeups, split-fingers and sinkers away. But he stays on those pitches and lines them the other way."
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Mariner teammate, pitcher Paul Abbott noted: "It's ridiculous what he does with nasty pitches. The thing is, he knows that as fast as he gets down the line, he can be late on the ball, hit a soft ground ball to the left side, and beat it out. So that makes you wonder if throwing something down and away is a good idea. But he has also shown he can handle the ball in on his hands. I think I'd try just throwing the ball down the middle to see if it confuses him."
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Pitchers have not figured out how to pitch Ichiro. Most try to pound him inside, hoping to back him off the plate and at least make him uncomfortable enough that he can't settle in, but that really isn't that effective. And he is a superb bad-ball hitter who can make solid contact with pitches well out of the strike zone.
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Pitcher Mark Buerhle had a piece of good advice on how to pitch Ichiro: "You might as well throw a strike early in the count and let him do what he's going to do, instead of wasting six or eight pitches."
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Ichiro says keeping his hands in the proper position is his key to handling any pitch.
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His clutch hitting results in his being among the American League leaders in intentional walks—a stunning statistic for a hitter who rarely hits a home run!
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Ichiro is a contact hitter. He puts the wood on the ball and then runs faster then almost anyone else in the game. Infields play him differently, but if he hits a ball that makes an infielder take two steps to field it, he's probably going to beat that out.
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Ichiro actually rolls over his feet when he hits the ball. He looks like he's running out of the batter's box, but really his lower half is basically squaring up to allow his upper half to stay back longer and to see the ball longer. That means he can swing at a pitch, foul one off or whatever he needs to do to put himself in a more advantageous situation in that at-bat.
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Ichiro gauges speed, direction, the spin on the baseball, then often fouls off several balls that he can't hit through the infield before selecting a pitch he can hit.
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Ichiro's tendencies as a hitter: He especially nails fastballs early in the count, or when he is ahead in the count. He also hits both fastballs and curves when there are runners on base. But his weaknesses at the plate are that he will chase a slider, changeup or splitter, especially with two strikes.
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Like almost every other professional baseball player, Ichiro is very careful when it comes to selecting that bat he will use in a game. Interestingly, Ichiro taps the barrel of each of his bats, listening for a sound only he seems able to hear.
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For many years, starting in the mid-90s, Suzuki has carried his bats in a high-tech, airtight, heavily-padded silver case Seattle media-types call The Humidor. It contains Ichiro's polished black bats. There is room for six-to-eight bats, each 33-1/2 inches long and weighing 900 grams (which is 31.75 ounces).
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In 2002, Suzuki became the seventh player in Major League history with at least 200 hits in each of his first two seasons. The last player to do it was Harvey Kuenn (1953-54). The others to accomplish it: Shoeless Joe Jackson, Lloyd Waner, Johnny Frederick, and Joe DiMaggio.
On September 3, 2007, Ichiro got his 200th hit of the year, allowing him to reach 200 hits for the seventh consecutive season, tying the AL record.
The Major League record for consecutive 200-hit seasons is eight by Willie Keeler (1894-01). Suzuki matched the AL mark held by Wade Boggs (1983-89). Four more players have collected 200 hits various times during their career: Paul Waner and Lou Gehrig, 8 times, Ty Cobb 9 times and Pete Rose 10 times during his career.
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Former Mariner hitting coach Gerald Perry, now with the Pirates, really enjoyed working with Ichiro in Seattle. "He has outstanding hand-eye coordination," Perry said in 2003. "His swing is the same every time, whether it's in a game or in batting practice. For him to do what he's done there is amazing. All the pitchers were geared to get him out. He had all that media scrutiny. He could get a hit every imaginable way -- and some in unimaginable ways. I've never seen anything like it, and I don't think I ever will again. Plus, he's a heck of a guy and a heck of a teammate."
AMAZING NUMBER OF HITS!
- In Japan, Ichiro never played more than 135 games in a season or had more than 540 at-bats. In his first three seasons (2001-2003) in the United States, he has had more than 2,000 at-bats—an average of 670 a year!
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May 21, 2004: Ichiro singled to right field for hit No. 722 in the Major Leagues, to go along with the 1,278 he collected in his nine years as a member of the Orix Blue Wave of Japan's Pacific League. Ichiro is the first player to compile 2,000 hits between the two leagues.
Also in May 2004: Ichiro went 50-for-125 (.400), getting 50 hits in a month for the second time in his career. In July, he got 51 hits in one month again, becoming the first player since 1936 to have two 50-hit months in a season.
Then, in August, Ichiro got over 50 hits again. It was the seventh time a player has had consecutive 50-hit months. The others were Joe Medwick (1936), Lou Gehrig (1930), Bill Terry (1929-30), Rogers Hornsby (1924) and Ty Cobb (1917).
- The record for most 50-hit months in a career is 10, by George Sisler, and the second most is 7 by Heinie Manush. Ichiro has four 50-hit months in his career so far.
- The record for most hits in a month is 67, accomplished twice by Cobb and once by Tris Speaker. The 56 hits Ichiro got in August 2004 was the most since Cleveland's Jeff Heath had 58 hits in 1938.
- There have been two-hundred fifteen 50-hit months all-time. None have occurred in April, but it has happened in May (11), June (21), July (92), August (68) and September (23).
According to Elias, MLB's official statistician, Ichiro is the first player with as many as four 50-hit months in his career since Pete Rose (August 1966, August 1988, July 1973, and September 1979.)
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In 2004, Ichiro became the first player Major League history to start an MLB career with four consecutive 200-hit seasons.
And in 2008, Ichiro set the all-time Major League record when he got over 200 hits in his 8th straight season. (He had been tied with Wade Boggs with seven consecutive 200-hit seasons.)
- October 1, 2004: Ichiro broke George Sisler's record for hits in a season (257). The only players besides Ichiro in Major League history to reach 250 hits are Sisler in 1920, Lefty O'Doul (254) in 1929, Bill Terry (254) in 1930, Al Simmons (253) in 1925, Rogers Hornsby (250) in 1922, and Chuck Klein (250) in 1930. All of these players except O'Doul are in the Hall of Fame.
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2006: Ichiro led the American League in hits for the third time. He also is one of 30 players in Major League history to collect the 200-100-40 trio and just one of six players to accomplished such a feat twice (he also did it in 2001).
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2008: And with eight straight 200-hit seasons, Suzuki matched Wee Willie Keeler's eight in a row from 1894-1901.
Also in 2008, Ichiro passed Wade Boggs as the fastest player to get to 1,800 career major league hits.
And Ichiro and Lou Gehrig are the only players to have had 200 hits and scored 100 runs in each of eight seasons. Gehrig accomplished the feat in 1927-28, 1930-32, 1934 and 1936-37.
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Back before the 2005 season, Ichiro was asked if hitting .400 was a realistic goal.
"It has been many years since anyone hit .400," Ichiro said after participating in the Mariners' first full-squad workout. "I don't know if I'll ever do it. I just want to be a player people say has a chance. But it is probably best that no one does it. Then, no one expects it can be done."
Actually, Ichiro did hit .400 before, but it was at Aikoudai Meiden High School in Kobe, Japan, where he hit .500—and that, he confessed came as a surprise.
"In junior high, we used rubber baseballs, and it is impossible to hit a rubber ball square; it just goes out of shape," Ichiro said. "I hit .200 and I definitely was worried that I wouldn't be able to hit in high school."
But in high school, they switched to regular baseballs.
"That was much easier for me to hit," he explained. "When your bat speed is faster, it is hard to hit rubber well. A quick bat is much better for hardballs, but it was only when I reached high school I realized it would be much easier for me." (Bob Finnigan-Seattle Times-2/23/05)
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In 2008, Ichiro tied with Boston's Dustin Pedroia for the most hits in the American League. It was the fifth time in eight years Ichiro led the AL in hits. Among the players who have won five or more hits titles are some of the big names in baseball, including Pete Rose, Stan Musial, Tony Gwynn, and Ty Cobb.
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September 6, 2009: Ichiro got the 2,000th hit of his Major League career in his 1,402nd big league game. Only Al Simmons was quicker to 2,000 hits, doing it in 1,390 games.
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Suzuki, while playing for Seattle in his first 10 seasons, never hit below .300 and never had fewer than 200 hits in a season.
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On August 20, 2013, Ichiro collected his 4,000th career hit between the U.S. and Japanese Majors, a first-inning single off the Blue Jays' R.A. Dickey at Yankee Stadium.
The total includes 1,278 hits that Ichiro collected in Japan as a member of the Orix Blue Wave. The single off Dickey also marked the 2,722nd hit of Ichiro's Major League career, moving him past Yankees legend Lou Gehrig on the all-time list.
"I've said this before, but if you don't get hits in games, you're not playing in games," Ichiro said. "When I had my first hit, I wasn't thinking I was going to get 4,000 hits."
The achievement includes Ichiro's nine seasons in Nippon Professional Baseball from 1992-2000. Only two Major Leaguers have reached the 4,000-hit plateau: Pete Rose (4,256) and Ty Cobb (4,191).
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April 24, 2015: In the fifth inning of the game against the Nationals, Suzuki sprinted home from second base on Latos'' single, and the 41-year-old dashed into the Japanese record books.
The run was the 1,309th of Ichiro's professional career, and it moved him into elite company. Ichiro has matched Sadaharu Oh for the most runs scored by a Japanese player.
"Ichiro, he's a big part of this team," Miami manager Mike Redmond said. "I think he's having fun. We brought him in here to provide depth in that outfield. He's a big part of our team. He's a great guy. He's having fun. You see him over there laughing, and enjoying Miami, for sure." (J Frisaro - MLB.com - April 24, 2015)
April 25, 2015: Suzuki scored run No. 7 in the Marlins' 8-0 win over the Nationals at Marlins Park.
For Ichiro, it was more than just an add-on run. It was a tally that established a piece of history, because it was the 1,968th run of the 41-year-old's professional career, the most ever by a Japanese player.
Ichiro has 1,310 runs in his MLB career, plus another 658 during his years playing in Japan.
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May 22, 2015: Suzuki passed The Babe. It was hit No. 2,874 of his career, and it placed him 38th on the list since 1900.
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8/15/15: Suzuki etched his name in the record books by passing Ty Cobb with career hit No. 4,192.
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In a season filled with milestones, Ichiro achieved another one just by stepping into the batter's box in a game against the Pirates. With his first-inning at bat, Ichiro made his 10,000th Major League plate appearance, becoming the second-fastest player, in terms of seasons, to reach that mark behind only Pete Rose.
It took Rose 14 seasons to do so, while Ichiro is in his 15th MLB campaign.Ichiro is the third active player to reach 10,000 plate appearances, as New York's Alex Rodriguez (11,836) and Texas' Adrian Beltre (10,447) have reached the mark as well. The Dodgers' Jimmy Rollins is the next slated to reach the feat, as the shortstop who broke in with the Phillies in 2000 entered Tuesday with 9,985 plate appearances. (Wilaj - mlb.com - 8/25/15)
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April 26, 2016: Ichiro's hit was No. 2,943 of his Major League career, which matches Hall of Famer Frank Robinson for 33rd in history. Ichiro also had 1,278 hits in nine seasons with the Orix Blue Wave in the Japan Pacific League before coming over to the States in 2001, giving him 4,221 hits in professional baseball. MLB all-time hits leader Pete Rose had 4,256.
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May 31, 2016: With his two-hit performance, the 42-year-old had 2,963 career hits, moving him past Hall of Famer Sam Crawford for 31st on Major League Baseball's all-time list.
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June 15, 2016: Suzuki entered rarefied air with a double in the ninth inning of the Marlins' 6-3 loss at Petco Park. With two hits, the 42-year-old outfielder now has 4,257 career hits—1,278 in Japan and 2,979 in Major League Baseball. Pete Rose, MLB's Hit King, finished his career with 4,256 hits in the Majors. Leading off against the Padres, Ichiro legged out an infield single that gave him a piece of combined history. And in the ninth, he delivered a sharp double to right. Ichiro also is at 2,979 MLB hits, moving him within 21 of 3,000.
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Alex Rodriguez said that it is still difficult to rank Ichiro against the many hitters he has played with and against during his career, just because of how unique his skill set has been.
"I'd say he's on an island by himself," Rodriguez said. "I've always been intrigued by guys like Wade Boggs and Ichiro, who if they really put their minds to it could probably hit 25 home runs, but they chose to hit 250 hits or 220 hits. He's right there at the top. When it comes to singles hitters, he's right there at the top." (Hoch - MLB.com - 6/15/16)
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August 7, 2016: Suzuki tripled for his 3,000th career MLB hit. His current and former teams offered congratulations and respect, along with teammates and opponents, including fellow 3,000-hit club member Derek Jeter.
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August 10, 2016: Ichiro notched his 3,001st career hit, passing Roberto Clemente for 29th place all time.
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September 7, 2016: Ichiro collected two hits in a 6-0 win over the Phillies at Marlins Park, and he established another benchmark in the process.
With his single in the fifth inning, Ichiro had 3,021 career hits, which, according to Elias Sports Bureau, moved him into 26th place on Major League Baseball's all-time list, ahead of Rafael Palmeiro (3,020).
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September 11, 2016: Suzuki had two hits in his first three at-bats against the Braves, allowing him to tie and then pass Lou Brock (3,023) for sole possession of 25th place on baseball’s all-time hits list.
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Major League hit No. 3,054 carries a special meaning to Ichiro. By reaching that number, Ichiro passed Rod Carew and now has more big league hits than any player born outside of the United States. Ichiro now ranks 23rd all-time, one behind Rickey Henderson.
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July 18, 2017: With his pinch-hit single in the eighth inning off Joaquin Benoit, Ichiro passed Rickey Henderson into sole possession of 23rd place on Major League Baseball's all-time hits list.
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Aug 4, 2017: In his illustrious career, Marlins outfielder Ichiro Suzuki hadn't had much success off Braves right-hander Jim Johnson. The 43-year-old was just 2-for-11 off the reliever, until the game against the Braves. Ichiro singled off Johnson to open the eighth inning, and in the process moved up MLB's all-time hits list.
Now with 3,061 career hits, the iconic outfielder moved past Craig Biggio for 22nd place. Next up is Cap Anson, who is 21st all-time, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, with 3,081. (J Frisaro - MLB.com - Aug 5, 2017)
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September 28, 2017: When Ichiro ripped a pinch-hit single in the sixth inning, he became just the sixth player in Major League history to record 50 or more hits at age 43 or older. His 27 pinch hits in 2017 are one shy of the MLB record, set by John Vander Wal in 1995.
- Ichiro used the very same bat for 27 years -- until the day he retired. It was a Mizuno Pro - Ichiro Custom - 33.5-inches and 31 ounces.
He wore BeMoLo cleats -- size 10.5.
- As of the start of the 2018 season, Ichiro's career Major League stats were: .312 batting average, 117 home runs and 3,080 hits with 780 RBI in 9,885 at-bats.
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