The Yomiuri Giants are a professional baseball team based in Bunkyo, Tokyo, Japan. The Giants are members of the Central League (CL) in Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). In baseball, the head coach of a team is called the manager, or more formally, the field manager. The duties of the team manager include team strategy and leadership on and off the field.[1][2] The team has employed twelve different managers since the formation of a professional baseball league in Japan. The current Giants manager is Tatsunori Hara.[3]

In 1934, an All-Japan team was formed to play sixteen games against a Major League Baseball All-Star team in Japan. After seeing the enthusiastic fan response to these games, Yomiuri Shimbun-owner Matsutarō Shōriki decided to keep much of the Japanese team intact to form the Great Japan Tokyo Baseball Club in December of that same year. This team spent much of the next year in the United States playing various Minor League and amateur teams.[4] During this time, the team's managers were Japanese Baseball Hall of Famer Daisuke Miyake and Yoshio Asanuma.[5] Encouraged by the success of Shōriki's team, which had quickly changed their name to the Giants, other Japanese teams were formed and Japanese Baseball League, Japan's first professional baseball league, was established in 1936.[6]

The Giants dominated the Japanese Baseball League.[4] The team won nine championships in sixteen seasons under five different managers. Sadayoshi Fujimoto, the team's first manager, held the position for ten seasons and has the highest winning percentage of any Giants manager.[3] Hideo Fujimoto was a player-manager from 1944 to mid-1946, however the 1945 season was cancelled because of World War II.[3][4]

Since the NPB was formed in 1950, the Giants have had eight different managers. Starting with the NPB's inaugural season, Shigeru Mizuhara managed the team for eleven seasons, earning the team its first four Japan Series titles. Mizuhara's total winning percentage was .638, the highest of any manager in the NPB-era. Following Mizuhara, Tetsuharu Kawakami began a 14-year managerial tenure in 1960, the longest in franchise history. Under Kawakami, the team won eleven more Japan Series titles, including nine consecutive titles from 1965 to 1973. Kawakami won 1,066 games as the Giants' manager, the most in franchise history.[3]

Table key

# A running total of the number of Giants managers. Any manager who has two or more separate terms is only counted once.
GM Number of regular season games managed; may not equal sum of wins and losses due to tie games
W Number of regular season wins in games managed
L Number of regular season losses in games managed
T Number of regular season ties in games managed
Win% Winning percentage: number of wins divided by number of games managed that did not result in a tie
PA Postseason appearances: number of years this manager has led the franchise to the postseason
PW Postseason wins: number of wins this manager has accrued in the postseasonA
PL Postseason losses: number of losses this manager has accrued in the postseasonB
PT Postseason ties: number of ties this manager has accrued in the postseason
LC League Championships: number of League Championships, or pennants, achieved by the managerC
JS Japan Series: number of Japan Series won by the manager
Elected to the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame
  • ^A This does not include the one-win advantage that league champions are automatically awarded in the second stage of the Climax Series.
  • ^B This does not include the one-loss disadvantage first stage winners are automatically given in the second stage of the Climax Series.
  • ^C After the Climax Series was created in 2007, the team with the best record during the regular season was still named the league champion, not the winner of the Climax Series.

Managers

Tetsuharu Kawakami is the longest-tenured Giants' manager, having managed for 14 straight seasons.

Statistics current through the 2022 season

# Image Manager Seasons GM W L T Win% PA PW PL PT LC JS Ref
1 Sadayoshi Fujimoto 1936194260442216814.715
2 Haruyasu Nakajima 19438454273.667
3 Hideo Fujimoto 194419466034233.596
Haruyasu Nakajima 1946194717196741.565
4 Osamu Mihara 194719493021771187.600
5 Shigeru Mizuhara 195019601,40988149929.63882224284
6 Tetsuharu Kawakami 196119741,8661,06673961.59111441801111
7 Shigeo Nagashima 1975198078038733855.534248020
8 Motoshi Fujita 1981198339021114831.588276021
9 Sadaharu Oh 1984198865034726439.568124010
Motoshi Fujita 198919925203052132.589247021
Shigeo Nagashima 199320011,2026475514.540398032
10 Tatsunori Hara 200220032801571185.571140011
11 Tsuneo Horiuchi 200420052841331447.480
Tatsunori Hara 20062015144179559551.57293233162
12 Yoshinobu Takahashi 2016201842921020811.502212000
Tatsunori Hara 201954927324333.529000000

References

General
  • 読売ジャイアンツ 年度別成績 (1936-2018) [Yomiuri Giants Results By Year (1936–2018)] (in Japanese). Nippon Professional Baseball. Retrieved May 10, 2018.
  • "Hall of Famers List". The Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Retrieved September 29, 2012.
Specific
  1. "Manager: Definition | Dictionary.com". Dictionary.Reference.com. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language. 2006. Retrieved February 24, 2009.
  2. Dickson, P. (2009). The Dickson Baseball Dictionary (Third ed.). W.W. Norton & Co. p. 530. ISBN 978-0-393-06681-4.
  3. 1 2 3 4 読売ジャイアンツ 年度別成績 (1936-2012) [Yomiuri Giants Results By Year (1936–2018)] (in Japanese). Nippon Professional Baseball. Retrieved May 10, 2018.
  4. 1 2 3 Fitts, Robert K. (2008). Wally Yonamine: The Man Who Changed Japanese Baseball. University of Nebraska Press. p. 2–3. ISBN 0-8032-1381-6.
  5. Maguire, Joseph; Nakayama, Masayoshi, eds. (2006). Japan, Sport and Society: Tradition and Change in a Globalizing World. Routledge. pp. 47. ISBN 0-7146-5358-6.
  6. Reaves, Joseph A. (2004). Taking in a Game: A History of Baseball in Asia. Bison Books. p. 77. ISBN 0-8032-9001-2.
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