The Oakland Athletics were the home team, but the Seattle Mariners and outfielder Ichiro Suzuki were the crowd favorites when Major League Baseball opened its 2012 season today with a game that will start at about midnight HST. The Oakland
The Oakland Athletics were the home team, but the Seattle Mariners and outfielder Ichiro Suzuki were the crowd favorites when Major League Baseball opened its 2012 season today with a game that will start at about midnight HST.
Seattle is the only MLB team with a Japanese owner, retired Nintendo chairman Hiroshi Yamauchi, who has had a majority stake in the Mariners since 1992 yet has never seen his team play in person — a streak that will be extended this week.
Even though the games against Oakland today and Thursday will be played at the Tokyo Dome, about a two-hour drive from his home in Kyoto, Yamauchi, 84, will watch on television, the Mariners announced. No reason was given.
“He just indicated to me he’s not going to be here,” Mariners Chief Executive Howard Lincoln told reporters at a news conference when the team arrived last week. “Quite frankly, a man of his age and stature doesn’t have to explain why he’s not here.”
The Mariners have one other Japanese player, infielder Munenori Kawasaki, on their 25-man roster. Another, pitcher Hisashi Iwakuma, was among the 30 they brought on a trip that also included two exhibition games against Japanese professional teams.
In all, the Mariners and the Athletics will spend about a week in Japan, which will play host to its fourth MLB opener, after the New York Mets versus Chicago Cubs in 2000, the New York Yankees versus Tampa Bay in 2004 and Boston versus Oakland in 2008.
The teams played before near-sellout crowds of more than 42,000 in each of their doubleheader exhibitions last weekend against the Hanshin Tigers and Yomiuri Giants of the Nippon Professional Baseball’s Central League.
The Mariners lost 5-1 to the Tigers on Saturday and 9-3 to the Giants on Sunday. The A’s beat the Giants 5-0 and lost to the Tigers 12-6.
Suzuki, the main attraction for Japanese fans, was greeted by the twinkling of thousands of camera flashes as he approached the plate in each of his eight at-bats. Around town, he is omnipresent, his likeness all over the street on billboards and all over television on commercials.
Suzuki had one hit, a single in his first at-bat.
“It’s a special event, it’s important to us,” he said after Game 1, referring to the Mariners playing in Japan for the first time. “This is probably a once-in-a-lifetime event for myself.”
Oakland has its own Suzuki — Maui-born catcher Kurt, who starred for Cal State Fullerton in 2004 when the Titans won the College World Series.
Kurt Suzuki, the only A’s player who was also with the team when it opened in Japan against the Red Sox in 2008, hit a home run in each of the exhibition games, a two-run blast against the Giants and a three-run shot against the Tigers.