A Near Escape: the 1981 Kansas City Royals Tour of Japan
This article was written by Chris Hicks
This article was published in Nichibei Yakyu: US Tours of Japan, 1960-2019
For decades it had been the hope of Matsutaro Shoriki, the owner of the Yomiuri Shimbun Group, a conglomerate that produces the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper and owns the Yomiuri Giants baseball team, that there would one day be a “true world series” played between the champions of the World Series and the Japan Series.1 After Matsutaro’s death in 1969, his son Toru continued the dream. The concept gained traction in 1971 when Commissioner Bowie Kuhn accompanied the Baltimore Orioles on their Japanese tour. When he returned to the States, Kuhn announced that he and the baseball commissioner of Japan, Nobumoto Ohama, had agreed to a “‘joint feasibility study’ of an international World Series.”2 Although no agreement emerged from the study, Shoriki continued to invite championship-caliber major-league teams to face off against the Japanese champion. Arrangements for the postseason tours, however, had to begin before the start of each season so Shoriki needed to guess which club would win the World Series. In 1974 he invited the New York Mets, a season after they had won the National League pennant, and in 1978 the Cincinnati Reds, but neither came to Japan as the reigning World Series champion.
Early in 1981, Shoriki invited the Kansas City Royals, the defending American League champions, gambling on their continued success. Should the Royals win the 1981 World Series and the Yomiuri Giants win the Japan Series, then the eight scheduled games between the teams would fulfill the dream of a “true world series.” The Royals’ full schedule in Japan consisted of 17 games played in 14 cities between October 28 and November 24, 1981.
But the 1981 season was filled with frustration for the Royals. The team struggled in the first half of the season with a 20-30 record before the players union went on strike on June 12. The strike ended 50 days later. As the players returned to the field for the All-Star Game in Cleveland on August 9, the owners hammered out the logistics of the interrupted season.3 The division leaders when the strike began would face the division winners (based on records after the strike) of the post-strike season in the playoffs.
Not long after the season resumed, the Royals fired manager Jim Frey and replaced him with Dick Howser.4 The team went on to win 30 of its last 53 games and finish at the top of the AL West Division in the season’s second half. The season’s arbitrary break into unequal halves shut some teams with overall winning records out of the playoffs. In the AL West, the Royals, with an overall 50-53 season record, went to the postseason while the Texas Rangers (57-48) and Chicago White Sox (54-52) stayed home. Royals third baseman George Brett, commenting on the Royals’ inclusion in the playoffs, said, “We don’t belong. We know it.”5 Oakland swept the Royals to advance to the second round of the playoffs.
Looking for a better 1982 season, Howser used the games in Japan to test staff changes and prepare his team. Immediately after the season, the Royals had hired Cloyd Boyer as the pitching coach and Joe Nossek as the third-base coach so that these integral members of the coaching staff could use the trip to get to know the team’s players.6 Coach Jim Schaffer and minor-league instructor Gary Blaylock also accompanied the team.7
The Royals took nearly all of their regular players to Japan, including stars Brett, Frank White, Willie Wilson, Dennis Leonard, and Dan Quisenberry. The only regular not making the trip was center fielder Amos Otis, who had just signed a new two-year contract and declined to go, stating that his priority was healing a leg injury and preparing for the 1982 season.8 Howser brought along a handful of young players who spent most of the 1981 season with Triple-A Omaha. The tour offered an ideal opportunity to evaluate Onix Concepcion, Tim Ireland, Pat Sheridan, Daryl Motley, and Atlee Hammaker.
For Hammaker, the Japan tour was not just about baseball. In 1954, after serving in the Korean War, his father, Col. Charles A. Hammaker, was stationed in Kyoto, where he met his future wife, Saeko. As a child, Atlee lived in Japan for a year with his grandparents, an aunt, and his mother while his father served in the Vietnam War. Hammaker’s grandmother was at the airport to greet her grandson and the rest of the Royals team when they arrived on October 28.9
The team spent two days resting and practicing before beginning the 17-game series on Saturday, October 31.10 The first two games were against the Central League champion Yomiuri Giants in what the organizers had hoped would be the opening games of the unofficial international world series.
A crowd of 32,000 came to Korakuen Stadium in Tokyo to watch Jim Wright face Giants ace Suguru Egawa, who captured the 1981 Central League MVP honors with a 20-6 record and a 2.28 ERA. Despite giving up two hits in the first inning and six hits overall, Egawa pitched well, blanking the Royals though four innings. “[He] had good control today,” said Wilson. “He can make it in the majors.”11 By the fifth inning, however, Wilson noticed something. “He was running the same pattern on me, fastball, curveball, fastball, curveball. … [H]e threw the fastball, so I waited for the curve.”12 Wilson guessed right and sent the next pitch into the right-field stands to give the Royals a 2-0 lead. The Royals added another run in the seventh when Wilson singled to score Clint Hurdle. Meanwhile, Wright held the Giants to three hits before Hammaker entered the game in relief in the fifth inning. With his Japanese relatives in the stands watching, Hammaker pitched three one-hit, shutout innings to earn the 3-0 victory before Quisenberry closed out the game. Howser praised his pitchers’ performances: “Our pitchers were too good for the Giants.”13
In the third inning Hal McRae collided with Giants second baseman Kazunori “Toshio” Shinozuka while breaking up a double play, injuring his calf. McRae was removed from the field on a stretcher and taken to the hospital.14 He missed the next four games and was not at full strength when he returned.
The second game between the Royals and Giants at Korakuen was an extra-inning nailbiter. The Royals scored in the fourth inning as Frank White doubled off Giants starter Takashi Nishimoto and later scored on a balk. The Giants came back with a vengeance in the bottom of the inning when Yasutomo Suzuki hit a two-run double and Takashi Yoshida hit a pitch from Rich Gale over the outfield wall to score three more runs, making it a 5-1 ballgame. The Royals responded with two in the fifth on a two-run home run by Onix Concepcion but missed an opportunity for a third run when Frank White was unable to knock in Willie Wilson, who tripled with two outs. Home runs by George Brett in the sixth and Jamie Quirk in the seventh tied the game, 5-5. The Giants had opportunities in the sixth and eighth innings but failed to score. Yomiuri reliever Mitsuo Sumi struck out seven Royals in a row in the eighth and ninth and the beginning of the 10th before Concepcion doubled, stole third, and scored on a single by Wilson. Renie Martin held the Giants scoreless in the bottom of the 10th for the thrilling 6-5 victory.15
The Royals enjoyed the Japanese fans and their cheering sections with their rhythmic chants accompanied by horns, drums, and whistles. Quisenberry and Martin made up songs to the beat. “We kinda hot dog for them during batting practice and make them laugh,” said Quisenberry. They’re so much nicer than American fans. No fights in the stands, always polite, quick to laugh.”16
The third game of the series had the Royals taking on a new opponent, the Japanese All-Stars, at Korakuen Stadium on Tuesday, November 3.17 Six future members of the Japanese baseball Hall of Fame appeared in the game: Yutaka Fukumoto, Tatsunori Hara, Choji Murata, Hiromitsu Ochiai, Tsutomu Wakamatsu, and Koji Yamamoto. The scoring got underway in the first on a two-run homer by Willie Aikens. But in the bottom of the first, Tomohisa Shoji began with a double off Larry Gura. Gura then walked Hiromichi Ishige and threw a wild pitch, allowing the runners to move up a base. Yamamoto singled Shoji home and Ochiai singled to score Ishige. Hara followed with a three-run inside-the-park home run to give the All-Stars a 5-2 lead. Shoji added another run with a solo homer in the second. Neither team scored again until the top of the seventh inning, when Brett hit a solo home run off reliever Tatsuo Komtasu. In the bottom of the inning, Ishige put the final nail in the Royals’ coffin with a solo homer of his own, handing the Royals their first defeat of the series.18 Japanese Crown Prince Akihito and Princess Michiko witnessed the 7-3 victory.19
The Royals saw new surroundings but a familiar opponent when they played in Sendai’s Miyagi Baseball Stadium against the Yomiuri Giants on November 5. Yomiuri began with a run in the first inning as Yasuyuki Nakai doubled off Atlee Hammaker and came home on Kazunori Shinozuka’s single. The Giants scored three more in the third. Starting pitcher Shoji Sadaoka singled, Tadashi Matsumoto tripled, and Nakai hit another double before scoring on a fly out by Shinozuka. Yomiuri struck for three more runs off relief pitcher Jim Wright in the seventh inning to make the final score 7-0. Sadaoka gave up just one hit in six innings and reliever Hisao Niura pitched three innings of two-hit shutout ball to draw the series even at two wins and two losses. Yomiuri manager Motoshi Fujita noted, “Sadaoka succeeded in keeping the balls low and his balls were quite well controlled today.”20
In the fifth game the Royals played southwest of Tokyo at Yokohama Stadium against a combined team of Taiyo Whales and Yomiuri Giants. The Royals had no trouble getting runners on base but struggled to get them across home plate in a 9-1 drubbing. In a sloppy first inning, the Japanese scored three runs on two walks, two errors by Brett, a sacrifice fly and a passed ball. The Royals pushed a run across in the second inning on Pat Sheridan’s sacrifice fly with the bases loaded but the Japanese added runs in the third and sixth innings to lead 5-1 before Tomio Tashiro sealed the game with a three-run homer in the seventh. The Giants-Whales added a final run in the eighth. The Royals offense left 13 runners on base. Howser noted, “Our boys are hitting well … but the ground is slippery resulting in many errors. We will try to win three straight games from Sunday.”21 While their husbands were playing, the wives did a little sightseeing. They visited Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park and the Great Buddha, a 37-foot bronze statue dating from the thirteenth century, in Kamakura.22
The series returned to Korakuen Stadium as the Royals took on the Giants in the sixth game on Sunday, November 8. Kansas City jumped out to an early lead as Brett hit a solo home run (his third of the series) in the first off Yomiuri starter Hajime Kato, but the lead was fleeting as starter Dennis Leonard gave up a grand slam to Kenji Awaguchi in the third inning. Willie Aikens and Yasutomo Suzuki also hit solo home runs as Yomiuri won, 6-2. The loss was the Royals’ fourth straight and the visitors had a dismal 2-4 record.
In Game 7 on Tuesday, November 10, at Seibu Stadium, a combined Yomiuri Giants-Seibu Lions team looked to hand the Royals their fifth straight loss. George Brett started things off with a two-run home run in the first inning off starter Masayuki Matsunuma. But the lead was lost in the second inning when the Japanese scored four against starter Paul Splittorff, highlighted by a two-run double by Hiromichi Ishige and a solo home run by Tatsunori Hara. Brett struck back with a solo homer in the third to narrow the score to 4-3. The Japanese however, solidified their lead in the next inning as Ishige doubled in two runs after a successful double steal by Yoshiie Tachibana and Takanori Okamura. Hara knocked in the final run in the fifth inning on a sacrifice fly to hand the Royals a 7-3 loss. With the loss, the Royals had dropped five straight, setting the record for the most consecutive losses by a major-league team in a postseason tour of Japan. After the game, Howser said he “regretted” being the first American pro manager to lose five straight in Japan. He noted that his pitching staff “was in poor condition” and that except for Brett the Royals “couldn’t buy a hit.”23
The Giants and Royals left the Tokyo area the next day. The fans at Kusanagi Ballpark in Shizuoka were treated to a pitchers’ duel between the Royals’ Mike Jones and the Giants’ Hisao Niura in the eighth game. Over the first five innings, Jones blanked the Giants on one hit and Niura nearly matched him with two hits surrendered. Kazuaki Fujishiro replaced Niura in the top of the sixth and gave up a leadoff double to U.L. Washington. Washington moved to third on a fly out and scored on John Wathan’s single. Relievers Renie Martin and Dan Quisenberry locked down the game with four innings of one-hit shutout ball as the Royals won, 1-0. “I’m relieved,” said Howser after the win. “Our pitching has shaped up and [I] think we could play better in the remaining games.”24
The next day, November 12, the teams traveled west to Nagoya, where Kansas City played a combined Yomiuri and Chunichi Dragons team in the ninth game of the series. Brett continued hitting the ball well, belting a solo homer off starter Tatsuo Komatsu in the first inning. From there on, however, the only scoring came from the Japanese squad. Royals starter Larry Gura struggled, giving up a two-run homer to Yasunori Oshima and two solo home runs to Masaru Uno.25 After the 5-1 loss, Howser noted, “A homer by George Brett isn’t enough to win a ballgame.”26
Games 10 through 12 occurred in the area around Kyoto and Osaka. The schedule also allowed time for the Royals to do some sightseeing. The group shot the rapids on the Hozu River in traditional flat-bottomed boats steered with oars and powered by the current and bamboo poles. They also went to Nijo Castle in Kyoto, a home of the Shogun from the early 1600s, that was later named a UNESCO World Heritage Site.27 The touring party not only enjoyed the cultural sites but also shopping and eating. “The Royals are eating plenty of things they can’t spell and … some things they’d rather not have identified,” wrote Mike McKenzie of the Kansas City Star. “We’re eating like kings,” said Quisenberry. “Some guys are gaining weight. Not getting like Sumo wrestlers, but gaining.”28 During his brief time in Japan, Quisenberry became a Sumo fan. “They’re better than our pro wrestling. They psych each other out, and they’re for real. I can’t understand anything they’re saying, but it’s fun to watch.”29
On Saturday, November 14, the Royals played a Yomiuri and Hankyu Braves combined team at Nishinomiya Stadium. The teams stayed locked in a pitching duel with the score tied 1-1 until the eighth inning. Royals starter Dennis Leonard surrendered just the one run and three hits in seven innings, while the Japanese used four pitchers to hold the Royals. In the top of the eighth, designated hitter Hal McRae clocked a two-run homer off reliever Tomoyuki Sekiguchi to take the lead. In the bottom half of the inning, Quisenberry relieved Leonard and gave up a two-run home run to Kenji Awaguchi that tied the game at 3-3. The game remained scoreless through the 10th inning and then was declared a tie.30
With the 3-6-1 record, the Japanese media claimed the Royals were either not taking the tour seriously or were just not that good. After the 10 games, the Japanese had outhit them .238 (78-for-328) to .217 (74-for-341) and outscored them 49 to 23. Fans complained that they paid $22 to $25 a ticket to see “a feeble American team.”31
“We are trying,” said Dennis Leonard. “They are just embarrassing us. We’ve been outhit, outpitched, outplayed. I think when we came over here, we thought it was going to be a cakewalk. Instead, we’re struggling.”32 George Brett said, “Nobody likes to lose. We’re professionals. We go out and try to win every game. We just can’t seem to get the big hit when we need it.”33
“The team is mad,” said Quisenberry. “It’s depressing. A lot of guys 5-feet-6 and 150 pounds are hitting home runs against us. Their pitchers are throwing straight fastballs, letter high, and we’re popping up and striking out. The game is over, and we’re beaten 7-1, and we can’t figure out why or how. … Players come back to the bench after striking out or giving up a key hit, and they’re mad at the world. Not quite like the regular season, but almost. We don’t like to get embarrassed.”34
Howser and some players blamed the losses on the lengthy layoff between the end of the Royals’ season and the start of the games in Japan, noting that the Japanese had ended their playoffs only days before the start of the tour. “Not working out before we came hurt us more than I thought it would,” noted McRae. “Personally, I’m not in good shape,” Leonard admitted.35 “In previous years, we probably could have overcome [the layoff],” said Frank White. “But the Japanese players have improved, especially their pitching.”36 Quisenberry agreed: “About 50 percent of the pitchers I’ve seen could play in the major leagues. They are much more surehanded than we are in the field. … Their hitters are very disciplined, hardly ever striking out with their short, compact swings.”37
Things began to change the next day, as the Royals pulled off two high-scoring innings to wallop a Japanese all-star team at Koshien Stadium. The Royals pushed two runs across on four hits in the second to begin the scoring. In the top of the fourth, they added four runs, highlighted by John Wathan’s three-run homer, to take a 6-0 lead. The Japanese attempted a comeback in the bottom of the inning when Hiromichi Ishige homered and Taira Fujita hit an RBI single to cut the lead to 6-3. In another high-scoring inning, the Royals added six runs in the fifth on an RBI double by Tim Ireland and run-scoring singles by U.L. Washington, Wathan, Willie Wilson, and Willie Aikens. Japan scored again in the fifth on Yutaka Fukumoto’s solo home run, but Ireland matched it with his own solo homer in the sixth to make it 13-4. Although the all-stars added single runs in sixth, eighth, and ninth, they were not enough to overcome the deficit and the Royals won, 13-7.38 “It was great to swing the bats and score some runs,” said Howser. “I think the more we play the better we will hit. Today we got the big hit with two outs when Wathan homered. That really gave us a lift.”39
On November 16 the Royals faced a team of players from the Giants, Kintetsu Buffaloes, and Nankai Hawks in Osaka for the 12th game of the series. Kansas City got off to a hot start in the first when Brett hit his seventh home run of the series to score two runs. The Royals added two more runs on solo homers by Pat Sheridan and Willie Wilson.40 Kiyoshi Nakahata of the Giants drove in both of his team’s two runs with a single and solo home run in the 4-2 losing effort. “A couple of wins have loosened us up and we have been able to relax and get some key hits,” noted Brett. A pleased Howser told reporters, “With each game we are getting a little stronger in all areas.”41
The Royals’ good fortune in the previous two games went sour at Kurashiki Ballpark in Okayama Prefecture on Wednesday, November 18. A combined Giants/Hanshin Tigers team roughed up starter Larry Gura as the Central League’s Rookie of the Year, Tatsunori Hara, hit a grand slam in the first inning. The Royals tried to come back from the four-run deficit, scoring single runs in the second and third innings on errors, and another in the seventh on Wathan’s RBI single, but that was all they could muster as the Giants/Tigers were victorious, 4-3.42 Kansas City’s record was now 5-7-1.
Friday, November 19, was the last time the Royals faced a combined team, when they played a Carp/Giants squad at Hiroshima Municipal Stadium. Gura told a reporter how strange it felt to be playing baseball only a block from where an atom bomb exploded.43 Tatsunori Hara opened the scoring with a solo home run off starter Dennis Leonard in the top of the third inning. It was Hara’s fifth home run of the series. In the fourth, Willie Aikens gave the Royals the lead with a two-run, 420-foot blast over the center-field wall off future Japanese Hall of Famer Yutaka Ono. The game see-sawed back and forth over the next few innings with the Japanese tying the score with a run in the bottom of the fourth, the Royals surging ahead with two in the top of the fifth, and pinch-hitter Jitsuo Mizutani’s three-run homer putting the Carp/Giants back on top in the bottom of the inning. Down 6-4, Kansas City scored three in the top of the sixth to retake the lead, this time for good. The Royals solidified their lead as Brett hit a solo home run in the seventh and they tacked on two more runs in the ninth for a 10-6 victory. Aikens, who went 3-for-5, said, “I’ve really been struggling with the bat on this trip until today. I don’t know why. It felt good to have three hits and a home run. Hopefully I’ll keep hitting in the final three games.”44 “Today’s ball game was an exciting game,” Howser concluded.45
The Royals spent their day off touring the port and Itsukushima Shrine on the island of Miyajima in Hiroshima Bay before heading to the southern island of Kyushu for the final three games of the series, all against the Yomiuri Giants.46 With a 6-7-1 record, the club need to win two games to avoid becoming the first major-league team to lose a postseason series in Japan.
On Saturday the 21st, a crowd of 25,000 came to Kumamoto Ballpark to watch Mike Jones face Shoji Sadaoka. The Royals’ bats came alive as they hit four home runs and had 12 hits, while surrendering just six hits to the Giants. The Royals got a solo home run by Onix Concepcion in the third, a two-run homer by Willie Aikens in the fourth, and a solo homer by Frank White in the fifth. In the sixth, Pat Sheridan and Aikens hit consecutive doubles and Concepcion followed with another home run to put the Royals up 7-0. Yomiuri scored two in the sixth and one in the seventh as Kansas City won, 8-3.47 The Royals had now evened the series with a 7-7-1 record. “Everyone is pretty much in a groove now,” said Howser. “We are getting five or six good innings out of our starting pitching and the hitters are finally comfortable. As a result, we have scored more runs and played better baseball.”48
The 16th game was played the next day at Kokura Ballpark in the city of Kitakyushu. Royals starter Larry Gura continued to struggle, giving up home runs to Tatsunori Hara and Yasutomo Suzuki. Hara’s home run, his sixth, tied Sadaharu Oh’s record for the most home runs hit against a touring major-league club. Oh had hit six twice, against the St. Louis Cardinals in 1968 and the New York Mets in 1974. “It was a slider I hit,” Hara said. “I want to hit one more homer in tomorrow’s game to establish a record.”49
Meanwhile, Yomiuri starter Takashi Nishimoto pitched brilliantly, giving up just four hits as he entered the seventh inning with a 5-0 lead. The Royals finally got to Nishimoto in the seventh, racking up five hits and scoring twice to narrow the lead to 5-2. In the eighth, Yomiuri manager Motoshi Fujita brought in his closer, Mitsuo Sumi, who earned the 1981 Central League’s Fireman of the Year Award with a 1.47 ERA and 20 saves. That day, however, Sumi lacked his best stuff as the Royals rallied, scoring five runs on two walks and four hits including a double by Wilson and a two-run homer by Wathan. Ahead 7-5, Quisenberry closed out the victory with two no-hit innings. The win ensured that the Royals would not return home with a losing record. “We were aware of the record,” said Howser. “We didn’t want to be the first team to finish below .500.”50
The final game of the tour, played at Heiwadai Stadium in Fukuoka on Monday, November 23, began as a nailbiter. For seven innings the teams were locked in a pitchers’ duel. Starters Dennis Leonard and Suguru Egawa each pitched five scoreless innings with Leonard surrendering just three hits and Egawa one. Renie Martin and Hisao Niura continued the shutout for the next two innings. In the top of the eighth, Niura faltered. Tim Ireland and Frank White began the inning with singles. After two outs, Concepcion connected for his fourth home run of the tour to put the Royals on top, 3-0. Wathan then singled and came home as Willie Aikens doubled. The Royals added four runs in the ninth to seal the victory and a 9-7-1 record for the tour.51
The press on both sides of the Pacific noted that the final four victories enabled the Royals to not only leave Japan with a winning record but also to surpass the 1966 Dodgers’ 9-8-1 tour record – the worst for a postseason major-league team. The Dodgers, however, came to Japan without their top two players: Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale. “Ever since we arrived in Japan, we’ve been having trouble with our hitting,” Howser had noted after the sixth game, and the offense continued to struggle for the remainder of the trip.52 The team’s 4.47 average runs scored per game was the worst of any visiting postseason major-league team; their .260 team batting average trailed only the 1966 Dodgers; and their 25 home runs were the fewest since the 1958 Cardinals tour. Although the batters struggled, the pitching was the team’s downfall. The staff’s 4.01 ERA was the second worst in the history of the professional tours. (The 1966 Dodgers were 4.53.) The Japanese hit Gura the hardest. He served up nine home runs and left Japan with a 0-3 record and an 11.12 ERA in 17 innings.
Despite the team’s overall poor performance, a number of players did particularly well. Brett led the team with eight home runs, while sitting out the final three games of the series with a wrist injury. According to the Japan Times, he “was the only one who lived up to his reputation as a superstar.”53 John Wathan led the team with a .407 batting average while Willie Wilson batted .338 with 12 RBIs. Quisenberry was outstanding, posting a 0.95 ERA and striking out 16 in 19 innings. On the tour he experimented with a knuckleball. “Quiz was almost unhittable,” exclaimed Howser. “I couldn’t believe the amount of strikeouts he had. … The knuckler worked well enough that it was giving our catchers some trouble. I felt very encouraged from what I saw.”54 Quisenberry added the pitch to his repertoire for the rest of his career.
But the true surprises were the rookies. Onix Concepcion hit .302 with 4 home runs and a team-leading 14 RBIs, while Tim Ireland hit .300. Both played well defensively at several positions. The tour allowed Howser and his coaches to evaluate how the players could contribute to the team in 1982. “Concepcion and Ireland should fill our needs as utility infielders,” said Howser. “I knew before going over that Concepcion could play. I was a little less aware of Ireland, but he made some exceptional plays around third base.”55 Although Ireland got only seven major-league at-bats before signing with the Hiroshima Carp in 1983, Concepcion became the team’s utility infielder for the next four seasons.
The ability of their Japanese opponents surprised some of the Royals. “They’re better than we expected,” said Brett.56 Royals President Joe Burke noted, “They have probably five or six quality players on every team. But what surprised me the most was their pitching.”57 Brett agreed: “They throw harder than I thought, and they have good command and control of their pitches.”58 “They have several pitchers who throw in the 90s,” said Hal McRae. “We had been led to believe we would see a lot of side-armers and submariners with offspeed pitchers.”59 Tatsuo Komatsu of the Chunichi Dragons stood out as the top Japanese pitcher, going 2-0 with a 1.80 ERA in 10 innings. Young Giants stars Suguru Egawa and Mitsuo Sumi also impressed with ERAs under 3.30. Despite these standouts, Howser concluded, “[O]ur players have [a] little more speed, overall stronger arms, and more power in general.”60
Although the desire for an international world series crested after the Royals’ five consecutive losses, enthusiasm for the event waned by the end of the tour. Despite the Royals’ overall record, they had beaten the Japanese champion Yomiuri Giants in six of their eight games. The consensus, according to reporter Leslie Nakashima, was that a “real world series” was “still remote because of the difference in the levels of baseball played” between the two leagues.61
CHRIS HICKS began watching baseball with his grandfather as a child, which led to a lifelong passion for the game and his local Kansas City Royals. A wheelchair user since childhood, Chris became interested in the history of the game and the baseball card collecting hobby. His uncle took him to a Monarchs reunion in the early 1990s. This began years of learning independently about the history of the game. He joined SABR in 2020.
1981 Kansas City Royals Tour Batting and Pitching Statistics62
(Click images to enlarge)
Notes
1 Associated Press, “Royals Arriving for Japan Test,” Japan Times, October 28, 1981: 7.
2 United Press International, “Royals Not Coming as Champs,” Japan Times, October 17, 1981: 12.
3 Chris Bumbaca, “Explaining the 1981 MLB Season: How Baseball Survived Shortened Year,” USA Today, March 15, 2020. https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/mlb/2020/03/15/1981-mlb-season-coronavirus-delay-baseball/5054780002/.
4 Mike McKenzie, “Royals Fire Frey; Howser Appointed,” Kansas City Star August 31, 1981: 1C.
5 Mike Downey, “Quisenberry Tells Jokes, But Laugh’s on the Royals,” Detroit Free Press, October 7, 1981: 1F.
6 Mike McKenzie, “Royals Hire Cloyd Boyer, Nossek for Coaching Staff,” Kansas City Star, October 15, 1981: 1C.
7 “K.C. Royals to Start Exhibition Games Sat.,” Japan Times, October 30, 1981: 11.
8 Mike McKenzie, “Who’s on First? Maybe Brett,” Kansas City Star, October 18, 1981: 14.
9 Associated Press, “Royals’ Japan Tour Reunites Pitcher with Kin,” Pacific Stars and Stripes, November 1, 1981: 26.
10 “K.C. Royals to Start Exhibition Games Sat.”
11 “Royals Open Tour With 3-0 Pasting of Japan Champs,” Pacific Stars and Stripes, November 2, 1981: 20.
12 “Royals Open Tour With 3-0 Pasting of Japan Champs.”
13 Associated Press, “McRae Injures Calf,” Japan Times, November 1, 1981: 13.
14 Toshio Shinozuka changed his first name to Kazunori in 1992. As Baseball Reference.com refers to him by his later name, we will do so as well.
15 “Royals Outclass Giants 6-5,” Japan Times, November 2, 1981: 6.
16 Mike McKenzie, “Royals Get Grief on Field (3-6-1 mark) – But Little from Fans,” Kansas City Star, November 15, 1981: 24 Sports.
17 “Japan All-Stars Wallop Royals 7-3; Hara Homers,” Japan Times, November 4, 1981: 7.
18 “Japan All-Stars Wallop Royals 7-3; Hara Homers.”
19 United Press International, “Japan All-Stars Dump Royals 7-3,” Pacific Stars and Stripes, November 5, 1981: 23.
20 “Giants Hand Royals 2nd Loss With 7-0 Whitewash,” Japan Times, November 6, 1981: 11.
21 “Royals Suffer 3rd Defeat,” Japan Times, November 8, 1981: 11.
22 “Royals Report,” Kansas City Star, November 8, 1981: 17.
23 Associated Press, “Royals Take 5th Straight Loss Here,” Japan Times, November 11, 1981: 7.
24 “Royals Take 8th Game for 3rd Win,” Japan Times, November 12, 1981: 6.
25 “Dragons, Giants Beat Royals 5-1,” Japan Times, November 13, 1981: 11.
26 Associated Press, “Royals Drop 6th Game 5-1,” Pacific Stars and Stripes, November 14, 1981: 26.
27 “Royals Report,” Kansas City Star, November 16, 1981: 4C
28 McKenzie, “Royals Get Grief on Field (3-6-1 mark) – But Little from Fans.”
29 McKenzie, “Royals Get Grief on Field (3-6-1 mark) – But Little from Fans.”
30 United Press International, “Royals Tie Combined Giants-Braves Squad,” Japan Times, November 15, 1981: 11.
31 McKenzie, “Royals Get Grief on Field (3-6-1 mark) – But Little from Fans.”
32 Mike McKenzie, “Royals Answer Media, Say They’re Trying,” Kansas City Star, November 15, 1981: 24.
33 McKenzie, “Royals Answer Media, Say They’re Trying.”
34 McKenzie, “Royals Get Grief on Field (3-6-1 mark) – But Little from Fans.”
35 McKenzie, “Royals Answer Media, Say They’re Trying.”
36 McKenzie, “Royals Answer Media, Say They’re Trying.”
37 McKenzie, “Royals Get Grief on Field (3-6-1 mark) – But Little from Fans.”
38 “Kansas City Royals Drub All-Stars 13-7,” Japan Times, November 16, 1981: 7.
39 “Royals Report,” Kansas City Star, November 16, 1981: 4C.
40 United Press International, “Royals Down Local Nine 4-2,” Japan Times, November 17, 1981: 7.
41 “Royals Report,” Kansas City Star, November 16, 1981: 4C.
42 “Royals Lose 4-3 on Hara Grand Slam,” Japan Times, November 19, 1981: 7.
43 “Royals Report,” Kansas City Star, November 19, 1981: 6C.
44 “Royals Report,” Kansas City Star, November 19, 1981: 6C.
45 Associated Press, “K.C. Royals Outslug Carp-Giants,” Japan Times, November 20, 1981: 11.
46 “Royals Report,” Kansas City Star, November 19, 1981: 6C.
47 “K.C. Royals Embarrass Giants 8-3,” Japan Times, November 22, 1981: 13.
48 “Royals Report,” Kansas City Star, November 22, 1981: Sports 20.
49 K.C. Royals Edge Giants; Now 8-7-1,” Japan Times, November 23, 1981: 6.
50 Mike Fish, “Royals’ Trip Helped Players Gain Experience,” Kansas City Times, November 25, 1981: C1-2.
51 “Royals Rout Giants 8-0 in Final Game in Japan,” Japan Times, November 24, 1981: 7.
52 Associated Press, “Royals Drop 6th Game 5-1.”
53 Leslie Nakashima, “K.C. Defends Prestige With 4 Wins,” Japan Times, November 25, 1981: 7.
54 Joe McGuff, “Japan Tour Is ‘School’ for Royals,” Kansas City Star, November 29, 1981: Sports 1.
55 Fish.
56 McKenzie, “Royals Answer Media, Say They’re Trying.”
57 Fish.
58 McKenzie, “Royals Answer Media, Say They’re Trying.”
59 McKenzie, “Royals Answer Media, Say They’re Trying.”
60 Nakashima.
61 Nakashima.
62 Listed Japanese players have a minimum of 5 at-bats, 3 innings pitched, or a decision. Yoshikazu Matsubayashi, Baseball Game History: Japan vs, U.S.A. (Tokyo: Baseball Magazine, 2004), 103; Nippon Professional Baseball Records, https://www.2689web.com/nb.html.