Shugo Maki
Shugo Maki (牧 秀悟)
- Bats Right, Throws Right
- Height 5' 10", Weight 205 lb.
- School Chuo University
- High School Matsumoto Daiichi High School
- Born April 21, 1998 in Nakano, Nagano Japan
Biographical Information[edit]
Shugo Maki has played in Nippon Pro Baseball and for the Japanese national team.
He was with Japan collegiate team for the 2019 contests against their US counterparts. [1] The Yokohama BayStars took him in the second round of the 2020 NPB draft. [2] He was thrown right in, filling in for the injured Neftali Soto at first base on Opening Day and hitting third. He grounded out against Tomoyuki Sugano his first time up. [3] He got his first hit off Yuhei Takanashi and his first homer off Hirotoshi Takanashi, both within a week of his debut. [4] He kept on rolling from there, becoming the first rookie since Koji Chikamoto to hit for the cycle and setting records for most doubles in consecutive at-bats (5, breaking a mark shared by Ichiro Suzuki, Yoshio Itoi and Shuhei Takahashi). [5] His 35 doubles broke the Central League rookie record held by the great Shigeo Nagashima since 1958. [6] For the 2021 season, he hit .314/.356/.534 with 35 doubles, 22 homers, 73 runs and 71 RBI while he fielded .984 at 2B and handled 329 chances error-free at first to boot. He was third in the CL in average (.003 behind leader Seiya Suzuki, also trailing Shogo Sakakura), third in slugging (after Suzuki and Munetaka Murakami), tied Keita Sano for 7th in runs, was 6th in hits (153, between Toshiro Miyazaki and Ryoma Nishikawa), was second in doubles (four behind Masayuki Kuwahara), tied for 8th in triples (3), tied Jefry Marte for 8th in dingers, was third in OPS (behind Suzuki and Murakami) and 4th with 260 total bases (between Kazuma Okamoto and Tetsuto Yamada). [7] He got 76 votes for the 2021 Central League Rookie of the Year Award, finishing second behind Ryoji Kuribayashi's 201 votes. [8] He was second to Yamada in Best Nine votes at second base while also getting votes at first. [9]
Making his first CL All-Star team, he started 2022 NPB All-Star Game 1 at second base, hitting third. He had a first-inning sac fly off Tomohisa Ohzeki to score Yasutaka Shiomi then struck out against Takahiro Norimoto and was replaced by Yamada. [10] In Game 2, he replaced Kaito Kozono and flew out against Takayuki Kishi before singling off Naoya Masuda. [11] He produced at a .291/.354/.507 clip with 36 doubles, 24 homers and 87 RBI in 2022, fielding .981 at second. He made leaderboards for average (8th, between [[Yuki Okabayashi and Sakakura), OBP (8th, between Dayán Viciedo and Sakakura), slugging (2nd, a distant .203 behind Murakami), OPS (2nd, 307 behind Murakami), runs (tied Sano and Kazuma Okamoto for 10th), hits (148, 7th), doubles (1st, one ahead of Teruaki Sato), homers (tied Sho Nakata and Gregory Polanco for 4th), RBI (tied Yusuke Ohyama for 2nd, 47 behind Murakami), sacrifice flies (6, tied for second, one behind Teruaki Sato) and hit-by-pitch (10, tied Sakakura for second, two shy of Shiomi). [12] He was 4th in 2022 CL MVP voting, behind Murakami and pitchers Koyo Aoyagi and Scott McGough. [13] He won the Best Nine at second, with 271 votes to Yamada's 17. [14]
Maki split second base with Yamada on Samurai Japan's team in the 2023 World Baseball Classic. He went deep off Changlong Su of China and Filip Čapka of the Czech Republic and was 3-for-15 entering the finale. He sat out the finale, which Japan won over Team USA, the only game of the Classic he did not appear in. [15]
Sources[edit]
- ↑ Japanese Baseball Federation
- ↑ Prospectslive.com
- ↑ Box score from his debut
- ↑ Japanese Wikipedia
- ↑ Japanese Wikipedia, Tokyo Sports
- ↑ Japanese Wikipedia
- ↑ 2021 CL batting title qualifiers
- ↑ 2021 CL Rookie of the Year voting
- ↑ 2021 Best Nine voting
- ↑ 2022 NPB All-Star Game 1
- ↑ 2022 NPB All-Star Game 2
- ↑ 2022 CPBL batting leaders
- ↑ 2022 CL MVP voting
- ↑ 2022 CL Best Nine voting
- ↑ World Baseball Classic
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