The roots of baseball in this nation and its historical development to become Taiwan’s favorite game are explored through a multimedia exhibition, which opened this week at the National Museum of Taiwan History in Greater Tainan.
The exhibition is entitled “Come Back Victory — A Special Exhibit on Taiwan Baseball” and was launched on Tuesday with game representatives, officials and guests from Taiwan and the US.
“Baseball is considered the national sport of Taiwan. Many of our nation’s biggest baseball stars come from the Tainan region, so the exhibition is very special for us in many ways. It is also the first time the museum has organized an exhibition devoted to baseball,” Greater Tainan Mayor William Lai said at the launch event.
Photo: Jason Pan
Museum director Lu Li-cheng said that baseball has taken root to become one of the nation’s folk cultures, reaching into the collective memory of the masses, while building a common bond among Taiwanese and helping to forge a national identity.
On display are donated items from private collections, faded black-and-white photographs, worn-out leather gloves, old newspaper clippings and tattered baseball journals, many of which date back to the early 1900s when Taiwan was under Japanese rule.
Baseball was introduced to the nation in 1906, with the first club team formed in the then-Taiwan governor-general’s National Language School (now the Taipei Chien Kuo Senior High School).
The exhibition tells the tale of the subsequent development of the game and how its popularity spread among the receptive Taiwanese population during the Japanese-rule era.
A number of events in the nation’s century-long baseball history are highlighted, with pennants, trophies, team uniforms and baseballs covered in players’ signatures.
The breakthrough by the celebrated “Kano” baseball team from the Chiayi School of Agriculture and Forestry is chronicled with mementos and a video at the exhibition. Representing Taiwan at the finals of Japan’s high school Koshien tournament in 1931, the team won wide accolades and only lost in the final.
Their story is depicted in the upcoming movie Kano, scheduled for release in January next year. The film’s executive producer Wei Te-sheng also attended the opening ceremony.
“Baseball has a special place in many people’s hearts. In the old days, Taiwanese mostly lived in poor conditions... It was baseball that provided enjoyment and happiness for the common people during those early years,” Wei said.
Another highlight is the 1968 Hongye Elementary School team composed of mostly Bunun Aborigine children from a mountain village in Taitung County, which spurred on Taiwan’s fervor and dominance in Little League baseball over most of the next two decades.
Other features of the exhibition include the history of national teams winning at Williamsport competitions, and bundles of titles from high school and youth international tournaments in the 1970s and 1980s. There is also a record of the amateur and semi-professional leagues organized by schools and companies which started after World War II and led to the launch of Taiwan’s professional baseball league in 1990.
Three generations of Taiwanese baseball stars came to the opening — 90-year-old Hung Tai-shan, a slugger who gained fame during the late Japanese-rule era and is known as the “Babe Ruth of Taiwan,” Lin Hua-wei, an outstanding infielder nicknamed “The Deep-Mountain Tiger,” who played in the 1980s and later became manager of the Taiwan national team, and the current home-run king Chang Tai-shan, also known as the “Prince of the Forest” and clean-up hitter for the Uni-President Lions.
The exhibition runs until May 18 next year.
The museum’s Web site is: www.nmth.gov.tw.
A sumo star was born in Japan on Sunday when 24-year-old Takerufuji became the first wrestler in 110 years to win a top-division tournament on his debut, triumphing at the 15-day Spring Grand Sumo Tournament in Osaka despite injuring his ankle on the penultimate day. Takerufuji, whose injury had left him in a wheelchair outside the ring, shoved out the higher-ranked Gonoyama at the Edion Arena Osaka to the delight of the crowd, giving him an unassailable record of 13 wins and two losses to claim the Emperor’s Cup. “I did it just through willpower. I didn’t really know what was going
The US’ Ilia Malinin on Saturday produced six scintillating quadruple jumps, including a quadruple Axel, in the men’s free skate to capture his first figure skating world title. The 19-year-old nicknamed the “Quad god,” who is the only skater to land a quadruple Axel in competition, dazzled with an array of breathtakingly executed jumps starting with his quad Axel and including a quadruple Lutz in combination with a triple flip and a quadruple toe loop in combination with a triple toe. He added an unexpected triple-triple combination at the end to earn a world-record 227.79 in the free program for a championship
Shohei Ohtani’s interpreter is being criminally investigated by the IRS, and the attorney for his alleged bookmaker said Thursday that the ex-Los Angeles Dodgers employee placed bets on international soccer — but not baseball. The IRS confirmed Thursday that interpreter Ippei Mizuhara and Mathew Bowyer, the alleged illegal bookmaker, are under criminal investigation through the agency’s Los Angeles Field Office. IRS Criminal Investigation spokesperson Scott Villiard said he could not provide additional details. Mizuhara, 39, was fired by the Dodgers on Wednesday following reports from the Los Angeles Times and ESPN about his alleged ties to an illegal bookmaker and debts well
HSIEH MAKES QUARTERS: Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-wei and Elise Mertens of Belgium won in the women’s doubles and face Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Sofia Kenin of the US Top-ranked Iga Swiatek and US Open champion Coco Gauff were knocked out of the women’s singles at the Miami Open on Monday, while Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-wei advanced in the women’s doubles. Swiatek lost to Ekaterina Alexandrova 6-4, 6-2, hours after third seed Gauff fell in three sets to No. 23 Caroline Garcia 6-3, 1-6, 6-2. Alexandrova beat a top-ranked player for the first time and advanced to face Jessica Pegula, a 7-6 (7/1), 6-3 winner over Emma Navarro, in the quarter-finals. Alexandrova recorded her second win over Swiatek, following a 2021 victory in Melbourne. Swiatek had won their three matches since. “We played quite