There are always baseball players who want to use a calculator. Speaking of this year…: Tokyo Shimbun TOKYO Web

There is always a baseball player who wants to use a calculator. Swallows’ Munetaka Murakami, who mass-produces home runs this year. At this pace, it makes me want to predict how many homers he will hit in his career. ▼He has hit 159 homers in the last five years (as of the 27th), averaging 31.8 in the season. The question is, how many more years will it last? He is twenty-two now. He’s also had an extended career, so let’s assume he has another 20 years. 31.8 multiplied by 20 gives 636 numbers. Add 159 to this, and you have 795. Approaching Mr. Sadaharu Oh’s eight hundred and sixty-eight ▼ put down a calculator if it’s a stupid calculation. If it’s the current pace. If I can keep working for a long time. It is difficult to protect that case. Masaaki Ikenaga, who played for the Nishitetsu Lions, passed away. he is seventy-six years old. He is a famous pitcher who lost Moshi. In 1970, he was banished for life after being caught up in the “Black Mist Incident” of match-fixing. He was twenty-three years old at the time. No different from Murakami ▼ “It looked like a whirlwind (with the ball) to the boy’s eyes.” Written by writer Shizuka Ijuin. 103 wins in just over five years after joining the team. If he kept throwing, would he reach 300 wins?–Even though he denied the match-fixing, his senior forced him to pay a large amount of money, and the reason for his punishment was that he kept it. Even if he was lifted in 2005, there must have been a day when he didn’t think about it. He must not let go of if. It’s not just about baseball.



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