1988 Japan Series

The 1988 Japan Series was the Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) championship series for the 1988 season. It was the 39th Japan Series and featured the Central League champion Chunichi Dragons against the Pacific League champion Seibu Lions. Chunichi won the Central League pennant by a comfortable 12 games to advance to the championship. However, the representative from the Pacific League was undecided up until 3 days before Game 1 of the Japan Series. Seibu fought neck-and-neck for first place with the Kintetsu Buffaloes over most of the season and finished their regular-season schedule with a 0.5-game advantage over Kintetsu, with Kintetsu having 4 games left to play. On the last day of the season (October 19), Kintetsu had to win both games of an away double-header against the last-place Lotte Orions to claim the PL pennant. Kintetsu won the first game by one run (by scoring one run in the top of the ninth inning), but Lotte forced a comeback tie in the second game, capping a dramatic finish to the season (known to Japanese baseball fans as 10.19) and giving Seibu the PL spot in the Japan Series for the fourth year in a row.

1988 Japan Series
Team (Wins) Manager(s) Season
Seibu Lions (4) Masaaki Mori 73516, .589, GA: 0
Chunichi Dragons (1) Senichi Hoshino 79465, .632, GA: 12
DatesOctober 22–27
MVPHiromichi Ishige (SEI)
FSAMasaru Uno (CHU)
Broadcast
TelevisionTHK (Game 1), CBC (Game 2), TBS (Games 3-4), NHK General TV (Game 4), TV Asahi (Game 5)
RadioNHK Radio 1, TBS (JRN), JOQR (NRN), NBS (NRN), Radio Nippon
Japan Series

Played at Nagoya Stadium and Seibu Dome, the Lions won the series four games to one, winning the final game on a walk-off base hit by catcher Tsutomu Ito. The 1988 contest was the third in Japan Series history to end on a walk-off (after 1950 and 1965). Seibu shortstop Hiromichi Ishige was named Most Valuable Player of the series. The series was played between October 22 and October 27 with home field advantage going to the Central League.

Summary

PL Seibu Lions (4) vs. CL Chunichi Dragons (1)

GameDateScoreLocationTimeAttendance 
1October 22Seibu Lions – 5, Chunichi Dragons – 1Nagoya Stadium3:0328,963[1] 
2October 23Seibu Lions – 3, Chunichi Dragons – 7Nagoya Stadium2:3928,953[1] 
3October 25Chunichi Dragons – 3, Seibu Lions – 4Seibu Dome2:3032,081[1] 
4October 26Chunichi Dragons – 0, Seibu Lions – 6Seibu Dome2:4432,261[1] 
5October 27Chunichi Dragons – 6, Seibu Lions – 7Seibu Dome4:0932,304[1]

Matchups

Game 1

Saturday, October 22, 1988 at Nagoya Stadium, Nagoya, Gifu
Team123456789RHE
Seibu021001001590
Chunichi000001000171
WP: Hisanobu Watanabe (1–0)   LP: Kazuyuki Ono (0–1)   Sv: Osamu Higashio (1)
Home runs:
SEI: None
CHU: Kazuhiro Kiyohara (1), Hiromichi Ishige (1)

Game 2

Sunday, October 23, 1988 at Nagoya Stadium, Nagoya, Gifu
Team123456789RHE
Seibu000030000380
Chunichi01200004X790
WP: Genji Kaku (1–0)   LP: Tai-Yuan Kuo (0–1)
Home runs:
SEI: None
CHU: Yonetoshi Kawamata (1)

Game 3

Tuesday, October 25, 1988 at Seibu Dome, Tokorozawa, Saitama
Team123456789RHE
Chunichi100000200342
Seibu00001300X430
WP: Kimiyasu Kudoh (1–0)   LP: Masahiro Yamamoto (0–1)
Home runs:
CHU: Toshikatsu Hikono (1), Masaru Uno (1)
SEI: Hiromichi Ishige (2)

Game 4

Wednesday, October 26, 1988 at Seibu Dome, Tokorozawa, Saitama
Team123456789RHE
Chunichi000000000021
Seibu00212010X680
WP: Ryoji Moriyama (1–0)   LP: Tadashi Sugimoto (0–1)
Home runs:
CHU: None
SEI: Koji Akiyama (1), Kazuhiro Kiyohara (2), Hatsuhiko Tsuji (1)

Game 5

Thursday, October 27, 1988 at Seibu Dome, Tokorozawa, Saitama
Team1234567891011RHE
Chunichi11200200000680
Seibu300011001017112
WP: Hirohisa Matsunuma (1-0)   LP: Genji Kaku (1–1)
Home runs:
CHU: Masaru Uno (2)
SEI: Kazuhiro Kiyohara (3), Hiromichi Ishige (3)

See also

References

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