Manabu Kitabeppu

Manabu Kitabeppu
Manabu Kitabeppu
Pitcher
Born: July 12, 1957 (1957-07-12) (age 54)
Soo, Kagoshima, Japan
Batted: Right Threw: Right
Professional debut
NPB: September 16, 1976 for the Hiroshima Carp
Last professional appearance
NPB: August 21, 1994 for the Hiroshima Carp
NPB statistics
Win-Loss     213-141
Shutouts     28
Hightest win rate     81.8% (18-4) (1986)
Win rate average     60.2%
Earned run average     3.67
Strikeouts     1757
Teams

As player

  • Hiroshima Carp (1976–1994)

As pitching coach

  • Hiroshima Carp (2001–2004)
Career highlights and awards
  • 1986 Central League MVP
  • 2x Eiji Sawamura Award (1982, 1986)
  • 2x NPB Win Champion (1982, 1986)
  • 3x NPB Win Rate Champion (1980–1981, 1991)
  • NPB ERA Champion (1986)
  • 2x NPB MVP for Pitching (1982, 1986)
  • 2x Best Nine Award (1982, 1986)
  • Golden Glove Award (1986)
  • 7x NPB All-Star (1979–1980, 1982–1984, 1988, 1992)
  • #20 Honored Numbers of Hiroshima Carp

Manabu Kitabeppu (北別府学 Kitabeppu Manabu?), (July 12, 1957, Soo, Kagoshima, Japan) is a Japanese former professional baseball pitcher, the first-round draft pick of the Hiroshima Carp in 1975 and one of the most famous Japanese right-handed pitchers. He was known as the "Precision Machine" (精密機械 Seimutsu-Kikai?) because from his perfect control pitching, and his nickname was Pei-San (ペイさん).

He struggled his first few seasons, then went 17-11 with a 3.58 ERA to make his first All-Star team in 1979. It was the first of five consecutive All-Star picks for Kitabeppu, who helped the team to a Japan Series title in 1980.

In 1982 Kitabeppu went 20-8 with a 2.43 ERA, easily his best year to that point. He led the Central League with 267.3 innings, won the most games on the mound and was fourth in ERA. He won his first Eiji Sawamura Award that season and also was named to the Best Nine.

His streak of All-Star selections ended in 1984, though he continued to pitch well in '84 and '85. In 1986 Kitabeppu had his best season, going 18-4 with a 2.43 ERA. He led the circuit once again in victories, won his only ERA crown, led in complete games (17) and shutouts (4), won his only Gold Glove and in addition to the Best Nine and Sawamura, won his only MVP award as the Carp returned to the Japan Series, but failed to win.

Kitabeppu again was an All-Star in '88 but posted losing records from '87 through '89, once with an ERA of 5.48. The former star allowed the most runs in 1988 (87) and the most homers (22). The next season he again surrendered the most home runs, also 22. In 1989 he was in the minor leagues for the first time in his career.

He emerged resurgent from his trials and after a decent season in 1990, in 1991 he went 11-4 with a 3.38 ERA. He made his seventh All-Star team in 1992, with 14 wins in 22 decisions, and a 2.58 ERA. It was his lowest ERA and most victories since his MVP season of '86. The Carp made their third Japan Series of the Kitabeppu era, but lost to the Seibu Lions. Still just 34, Kitabeppu reached 200 career wins.

It was his last good season - he would pitch 24 more games, going 9-9, with ERAs over 5 each time, before retiring. His career line with Hiroshima was 213-141 with a 3.67 ERA.

Since Kitabeppu, only one pitcher in Nippon Pro Baseball (Kimiyasu Kudoh) has reached 200 victories. Kitabeppu ranks 17th all-time in wins, 20th in innings (3,113), 26th in strikeouts (1,757), 9th in hits allowed (3,225) and 4th in homers surrendered (380, the Central League record).

After retiring, Kitabeppu became an announcer and then the pitching coach for the Carp.

Career

  • 1st pitch, September 16, 1976
  • 1st win, October 12, 1976
  • MVP in the Japanese Central League, 1986
  • Eiji Sawamura Award winner, 1982 and 1986
  • Greatest Number of Wins, 1982 and 1986
  • Best Winning Average, 1980, 1981 and 1991
  • Best ERA, 1986
  • Best Nine of the year, 1982 and 1986
  • Gold Glove Award winner, 1986
  • Japan All-star game, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1988 and 1992
  • Hiroshima Prefectural Prize of Honour, 1994
  • 213 W, 5 S, 135 CG, 28 Shutouts and 1757 K.
  • Hiroshima Carp Pitching Coach from 2001 to 2004

statistics

Year Team No. GP W L S IP K ERA Titles
1976 Hiroshima 20 9 2 1 0 29.1 18 4.03
1977 Hiroshima 20 33 5 7 0 131.2 90 5.32
1978 Hiroshima 20 39 10 7 0 177.0 98 4.58
1979 Hiroshima 20 36 17 11 0 215.2 155 3.58 League Champion, Japan Series Champion
1980 Hiroshima 20 30 12 5 0 177.2 82 4.04 Best Winning Average, League Champion, Japan Series Champion
1981 Hiroshima 20 32 16 10 0 226.1 123 3.31 Best Winning Average
1982 Hiroshima 20 36 20 8 0 267.1 184 2.43 Sawamura Award winner, Greatest Number of Wins, Best 9
1983 Hiroshima 20 33 12 13 0 215.2 106 3.96
1984 Hiroshima 20 32 13 8 2 203.2 99 3.31 League Champion, Japan Series Champion
1985 Hiroshima 20 35 16 6 2 199.0 85 3.57
1986 Hiroshima 20 30 18 4 0 230.0 123 2.43 MVP, Sawamura Award winner, Greatest Number of Wins, Best ERA, Best 9, Gold Glove Award, League Champion
1987 Hiroshima 20 29 10 14 0 181.1 119 4.37
1988 Hiroshima 20 27 11 12 0 209.2 112 3.13
1989 Hiroshima 20 22 9 10 0 110.0 69 5.48
1990 Hiroshima 20 17 8 4 0 98.1 58 4.39
1991 Hiroshima 20 25 11 4 0 141.1 73 3.38 Best Winning Average, League Champion
1992 Hiroshima 20 26 14 8 0 181.1 101 2.58
1993 Hiroshima 20 13 6 6 0 69.0 38 5.22
1994 Hiroshima 20 11 3 3 0 50.2 24 5.68
TOTALS - 515 213 141 5 3113.0 1757 3.67 -

External links

Awards
Preceded by
Randy Bass
Central League MVP
1986
Succeeded by
Kazuhiro Yamakura



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