1997 Japan Series

The 1997 Japan Series was the Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) championship series for the 1997 season. It was the 48th Japan Series and featured the Pacific League champions, the Seibu Lions, against the Central League champions, the Yakult Swallows. The series is the third time the two teams played each other for the championship, the last two contests being in 1992 and 1993. Played at Seibu Dome and Meiji Jingu Stadium, the Swallows defeated the Lions four games to one in the best-of-seven series to win the franchise's 4th Japan Series title. The Swallows' star catcher Atsuya Furuta was named Most Valuable Player of the series. The series was played between October 18 and October 23, 1997, with home field advantage going to the Pacific League.

1997 Japan Series
Team (Wins) Manager(s) Season
Yakult Swallows (4) Katsuya Nomura 83522, .615, GA: 11
Seibu Lions (1) Osamu Higashio 76563, .576, GA: 5
DatesOctober 18–23
MVPAtsuya Furuta (YKS)
FSAKazuo Matsui (SEI)
Broadcast
TelevisionTV Asahi (Games 1, 2, 4), Fuji TV (Games 3, 5)
RadioNHK Radio, JRN, NRN
Japan Series

Summary

CL Yakult Swallows (4) vs. PL Seibu Lions (1)

GameDateScoreLocationTimeAttendance 
1October 18Yakult Swallows – 1, Seibu Lions – 0Seibu Dome2:4131,634[1] 
2October 19Yakult Swallows – 5, Seibu Lions – 6Seibu Dome4:4531,397[1] 
3October 21Seibu Lions – 3, Yakult Swallows – 5Meiji Jingu Stadium3:2532,867[1] 
4October 22Seibu Lions – 1, Yakult Swallows – 7Meiji Jingu Stadium3:0832,877[1] 
5October 23Seibu Lions – 0, Yakult Swallows – 3Meiji Jingu Stadium2:5033,056[1]

Matchups

Game 1

Saturday, October 18, 1997 at Seibu Dome, Tokorozawa, Saitama
Team123456789RHE
Yakult000000010170
Seibu000000000032
WP: Kazuhisa Ishii (1–0)   LP: Fumiya Nishiguchi (0–1)
Home runs:
YKS: Jim Tatum (1)
SEI: None

Game 1 of the series featured a pitching match-up of two strong aces. Seibu's Fumiya Nishiguchi had a career year in 1997 (only his second full season), finishing first in the Pacific League in wins, strikeouts and winning percentage. His sparkling season earned him the Best Nine Award, the Golden Glove, the Sawamura Award and league MVP. Facing him in Game 1 from the visitor's side was Kazuhisa Ishii, a former number-one draft pick and established southpaw who had pitched a no-hitter earlier in the season. The game lived up to its billing as a pitcher's duel, with each starter not allowing any runs after seven innings. However, Yakult finally managed to get to Nishiguchi when journeyman Jim Tatum deposited a slider into the right-center field seats. Ishii protected this lead, and finished the game with no runs allowed and 12 strikeouts.

Game 2

Saturday, October 19, 1997 at Seibu Dome, Tokorozawa, Saitama
Team12345678910RHE
Yakult02110100005142
Seibu50000000016133
WP: Shinji Mori (1–0)   LP: Futoshi Yamabe (0–1)
Home runs:
YKS: None
SEI: Yusuke Kawada (1)

Game 3

Tuesday, October 21, 1997 at Meiji Jingu Stadium, Shinjuku, Tokyo
Team123456789RHE
Seibu0021000003111
Yakult03000002X5110
WP: Shingo Takatsu (1–0)   LP: Hisanobu Watanabe (0–1)
Home runs:
SEI: None
YKS: Atsuya Furuta (1)

Game 4

Wednesday, October 22, 1997 at Meiji Jingu Stadium, Shinjuku, Tokyo
Team123456789RHE
Seibu001000000140
Yakult00300022X7130
WP: Kenjiro Kawasaki (1–0)   LP: Hiroshi Shintani (0–1)
Home runs:
SEI: None
YKS: Shinichi Sato (1)

Game 5

Thursday, October 23, 1997 at Meiji Jingu Stadium, Shinjuku, Tokyo
Team123456789RHE
Seibu000000000050
Yakult02010000X391
WP: Kazuhisa Ishii (2–0)   LP: Fumiya Nishiguchi (0–2)   Sv: Shingo Takatsu (1)

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.