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328:. Jirō's rookie season was remarkable: a workhorse, he went 33–19 with a 2.04 earned run average, setting a rookie record for victories. He led the league in innings pitched, most games pitched, complete games (a remarkable 38), and hits and home runs allowed. He pitched in 72% of the team's games and had 67% of their total victories. When not pitching, he often played outfield or first base (although he only hit .251).
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went 15-13 with a 2.65 earned run average, following that with a combined 34–22 record in 1937, with a 2.21 ERA. (The 1936 and 1937 JBL seasons were split into spring and fall half-seasons.) Noguchi's 1937 totals led the league in games pitched and innings; he started nearly 70% of his team's games,
348:, the league outlawed the use of English in Japanese baseball.) In 1940, Jirō Noguchi put together another remarkable season, going 30–11 with a league-leading 0.93 earned run average. He also hit .260. He had nearly 60% of the team's total number of victories for the season.
375:. Jirō Noguchi won two-thirds of his team's victories, a league-leading 40 (he also lost 17 games), to go with a 1.19 ERA, and a still-league-record 19 shutoutsas well as 264 strikeouts. That year Noguchi pitched all 28 innings of a tie game against
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368:. Jirō Noguchi went 25–12 with a league-leading 0.88 ERA in 1941, becoming the only pitcher in Japanese professional baseball history to have two consecutive sub-1 ERA seasons.
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The franchise had its best season in 1942, finishing with 60 victories and a winning percentage of .606, good for second place in the league behind the
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This article is about the
Japanese baseball franchise founded in 1936. For the franchise founded in 1946 that was also known as the Tokyo Senators, see
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revived the Tokyo
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Akira
Noguchi left the team after the 1937 season, but he was replaced in 1939 as the team's ace by his brother
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meaning "wing"). (In
October 1940, responding to rising hostility toward the West due to
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and his 34 wins represented 68% of the
Senators combined victories for the full season.
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managed the team in 1936–1937. In the fall 1936 campaign, rookie pitcher
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was also merged with
Tsubasa and for 1941 the new team was renamed the
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The
Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum website. Retrieved Aug. 23, 2020.
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also pitching the entire game. The team's manager in 1942–1943 was
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Financial instability led to the team being acquired in 1943 by
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The
Senators were founded by a group that included politician
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Following the 1940 season, the team was wholly acquired by
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The team's undisputed star for most of its history was
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Nishitetsu gained a new baseball team in 1950 as the
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336:For the 1940 season, the team was renamed the
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113:Learn how and when to remove this message
411:In 1946, former team manager (and later
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210:Taiyō Baseball Club (1941–1942)
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261:(JBL). Founded in 1936 as the
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442:Team season-by-season records
834:1936 establishments in Japan
432:Nippon Professional Baseball
421:Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters
247:Shuichi Ishimoto (1942–1943)
208:Tsubasa Baseball Club (1940)
18:Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters
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781:Washington Senators
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366:Taiyō Baseball Club
467:Winning Percentage
257:was a team in the
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285:Sadao Kondoh
281:Yutaka Ishii
277:Chujiro Endo
273:Jirō Noguchi
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45:Please help
40:verification
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478:1936 (fall)
377:Nagoya Club
245:(1936–1937)
229:(1936–1942)
171:Established
145:Information
813:Categories
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232:Nishitetsu
73:newspapers
452:Team name
223:Ownership
103:June 2014
775:See also
481:Senators
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160:Ballpark
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628:Tsubasa
430:joined
342:Tsubasa
239:Manager
166:(Tokyo)
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470:Finish
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407:Legacy
234:(1943)
215:Colors
179:Folded
150:League
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