Record-breaking Japanese baseball phenom Rintaro Sasaki went 2-for-5 and drove in three runs in his first game in a Trenton Thunder uniform.
Rintaro Sasaki

Read the full story on SportsLook - Slugger Rintaro Sasaki Homers in His MLB Draft League Debut

Rintaro Sasaki had an impressive debut game for the Trenton Thunder in the MLB Draft League on Tuesday, June 11.

As the cleanup hitter, the future Stanford University player smacked a two-run home run off Frederick Keys starter Grant Richars with two outs in the third inning. The powerful blast, on a 0-2 fastball, traveled 352 feet (about 107.3 meters), sailing over the right-field fence. It gave the Thunder a 3-1 lead. 

The Thunder recorded an 11-1 victory over the Keys at Harry Grove Stadium in Frederick, Maryland.

Sasaki went 2-for-5 with two runs scored and three RBIs in the rout. He also walked once.

In the sixth inning, he lined a two-out single to right, driving in another run and extending the lead to 5-1.

"The whole night was exciting. He brought a new energy to our ballclub," Thunder manager Adonis Smith said of Sasaki, according to the Frederick New Post. "[Sasaki's] very strong, very talented, understands what he's doing at the plate. The kid can play."

Smith elaborated on the exciting experience of watching Sasaki hit his first MLB Draft League home run.

"I knew something special was going to happen, so I actually turned around and told the guys, 'I want to admire this.' Then next thing you know, he drops the head [of the bat] and he clears [the fence]," Smith was quoted as saying by MLB.com. "It was magical."

An announced crowd of 2,488 was on hand to see Sasaki's MLB Draft League debut. 

Rintaro Sasaki
Rintaro Sasaki rounds the bases after hitting a two-run homer over the right-field fence in the third inning. (AP/via KYODO)

Rintaro Sasaki Opts for US College Ball Over NPB

Sasaki, 19, enrolled at Stanford University in April 2024 after crushing a Japan record-breaking 140 homers in his Hanamaki Higashi High School career. He followed in the footsteps of current MLB players Shohei Ohtani and Yusei Kikuchi in playing for the prominent baseball school in Iwate Prefecture.

He'll be eligible to play for Stanford starting in the fall of 2024.

Instead of pursuing playing for an NPB team to launch his pro career and then aim to move to an MLB team in the future, which is the customary path for Japanese players, Sasaki is getting ready to compete for the powerhouse Stanford squad.

The MLB Draft League, which was established in 2021, is a six-team circuit with a split-season format. Teams are based in New Jersey, Ohio, Maryland, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Continue reading the full story on SportsLook.

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Author: Ed Odeven

Find Ed on JAPAN Forward's dedicated website, SportsLook. Follow his [Japan Sports Notebook] on Sundays, [Odds and Evens] during the week, and X (formerly Twitter) @ed_odeven

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