The starting pitchers from Game 1 were in the return matchup, and the outcome was different. Yamamoto, who took the loss in Game 1 after allowing seven runs in 5⅔ innings, pitched a nine-inning, one-run complete game. Hanshin’s Shoki Murakami, who had the first laugh in game one, took the loss after allowing four runs in five innings.굿모닝토토 주소
Yamamoto, who earned the complete game victory, allowed Hanshin batters to reach base early in the game, including a leadoff single in the second inning, but held on to the mound to give the Oryx Game 7.
Hanshin jumped on Yamamoto in the second inning with a leadoff solo home run by foreign-born Sheldon Noiji, but the Oryx answered with two runs in the bottom of the inning to take control of the game. After leadoff hitter Marwin Gonzalez singled up the middle, Yutaro Sugimoto doubled to put runners on second and third with no outs.
Sugimoto’s shot rose high as if it would be a home run and then suddenly disappeared. According to the local rules of Kyocera Dome, it was a legal double. The Kyocera Dome Local Rules specify that a ball must hit the inside of the Super Ring (ceiling structure) in the fair zone. If the ball hits and falls, it’s in play; if it doesn’t, it’s a double. Sugimoto’s case falls into the latter category.
The next batter, Kenya Wakatsuki, hit a game-tying single in the ninth inning. With runners on first and third, Keita Nakagawa made it 2-1 with a sacrifice fly to left field. That would prove to be the game-winning run.
The deciding run came in the fifth inning. Following Nakagawa’s single and Yuma Mune’s sacrifice bunt, APBC (Asian Professional Baseball Championship Series) shortstop Kotaro Kurebayashi hit a two-run home run to center field to extend the lead to 4-1. In the eighth inning, No. 5 hitter Yuma Tongu drove in a run with a solo shot.
Hanshin narrowly missed a comeback opportunity in the fourth inning. With runners on first and third, Koji Chikamoto hit a hard line drive to the fence. A pair would have put the game out of reach, but right fielder Tomoya Mori dashed Hanshin’s hopes. Mori is only 5-foot-7, but he reared back, stretched his arm out, and caught the ball in his glove. Hanshin requested a video review, but the call was upheld.
More than anything, Yamamoto’s heroics were the decisive factor in the victory. Yamamoto threw a whopping 138 pitches over nine innings, allowing just one run on nine hits and one hit by pitch. He struck out 14.
He was already up to 126 pitches in the eighth inning, but he continued in the ninth. He struck out the first batter, Gento Itohara, on six pitches before giving up a single to Seiya Kinami. He retired the next batter, Ryo Watanabe, on a three-pitch walk and then got the final batter, Chikamoto, to ground out to second base to end the game. It was a tricky pitch, but Koji Oshiro made a soft catch and fired to the shortstop for the 27th out.
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