In a country of baseball fanatics, Hanshin Tigers supporters are known as Japan’s rowdiest — so they are aching to cut loose as a ban on cheering amid the COVID-19 pandemic drags into a third season.
Before the pandemic, the Tigers’ Koshien Stadium near Osaka was a riot of noise and color, with fans shouting, singing and playing trumpets in fervent support of their team.
However, since COVID-19 they have been silenced and their voices replaced by recorded chants piped into the stands through loudspeakers after cheering was banned at Japanese sports stadiums.
Photo: AFP
Tigers supporters, who often outnumber home fans at away games and are easily recognizable in their weird and wonderful yellow and black outfits, say they are “praying” for the day when they can yell their full-throated support again.
“I think people will be so happy that they’ll all get naked,” 57-year-old lifelong Tigers fan Hideyuki Takashima told reporters.
The start of the new baseball season last month saw fans in the league allowed back in full numbers, after attendances had been limited to maintain social distancing.
However, signs asking them to wear masks and refrain from chanting, singing and talking in loud voices remain.
Some Tigers fans, such as 59-year-old Hiroshi Umehara, say the cheers can “just slip out” after a drink or two, but others find different ways to release their pent-up emotions.
“I wait until I get home and then I let it out there, I sing in the bath,” 56-year-old Shigeyuki Morishita said.
The Tigers have won the Japan Series title only once, but they enjoy massive support in Osaka, which is known for its rough-and-ready humor and down-to-earth character.
When the team won the title in 1985, fans celebrated by jumping into Osaka’s Dotonbori Canal.
Yuko Kawase, who attends games wearing a homemade kimono covered in the team’s logo, said it is “a way of life.”
“It’s like you’re sitting on the bench with them, competing alongside them,” said the 47-year-old, who attends about 80 or 90 games a season and also travels to the team’s pre-season training camps. “Hanshin fans don’t look at it as a sport or a pastime — your life is Hanshin. No Tigers, no life.”
The Tigers’ lack of trophies over the years stands in stark contrast to Japan’s most successful team, the Yomiuri Giants.
The Tokyo-based Giants have won the Japan Series 22 times, and are considered their country’s version of the New York Yankees for their unrivalled dominance and spending power.
Tigers fan Kawase said that she refuses to attend regular-season games at Yomiuri’s Tokyo Dome and cannot even bring herself to say the word “Giants,” calling the team “G” or “that orange lot.”
Another Tigers supporter, who gave his name as “Angel,” said the rivalry between the Tigers and the Giants reflects the difference between Osaka and Tokyo — the capital is perceived as more uptight.
“The Giants don’t have such passionate fans,” said Angel, dressed in full tiger costume complete with face paint. “They only support their team when they’re doing well. They suddenly desert them when they’re not doing well.”
At the moment, it is the Tigers who are most definitely not doing well.
They have made their worst-ever start to the season, losing 18 of their first 21 games.
Kawase said that fans are quick to boo the players for poor performances, but she says those who do are “not true Hanshin supporters.”
“If we win the rest of our games this season we’ll win the title, that’s how the fans console each other,” she said. “Whether we win or lose, if the Tigers are playing, we’ll go and watch them.”
No timetable has been set for the end of Japan’s cheering ban, but the Tigers fans are largely resigned to it continuing for at least a few more months.
They long to sing the team’s anthem, Rokko Oroshi, and release balloons into the sky after the seventh inning, a tradition that has also been put on ice since the pandemic.
Kawase said she can hardly wait to feel the “togetherness” in the stadium when the rules are finally lifted.
“When you have tens of thousands of people all expressing themselves and not having to worry about it, it will be an amazing atmosphere,” she said.
TO THE TOP: After securing the international title on Saturday, Team Taiwan were to face Las Vegas to potentially win their 18th Little League World Series championship A team from Taipei’s Dong Yuan Elementary School won the Little League Baseball World Series’ international title on Saturday by defeating Aruba 1-0 in the annual baseball tournament held in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania. The Taiwan team, competing under the name Chinese Taipei, were after press time last night to face a team from Las Vegas, Nevada, which beat a team from Fairfield, Connecticut, in the US championship 8-2. Taiwan are seeking to win their first Little League Baseball World Series title since 1996. “Really haven’t taken a moment to data dump right now on Taiwan,” Nevada manager T.J. Fescher said. “They’re a
‘CATASTROPHE’: Despite losing several key forwards in the summer transfer window, Bayern were up 3-0 in the first half before Harry Kane scored a hat-trick in the second Harry Kane hit a hat-trick, Michael Olise a double and newcomer Luis Diaz also scored as Bayern Munich made a “statement” against RB Leipzig 6-0 at home in the Bundesliga season opener on Friday. Bayern’s big-money arrivals, all brought in from the Premier League across the past three seasons, were dominant as the Bavarians begun their title defense in style. Olise scored twice in the first half, either side of a Diaz strike. Not to be outdone, Kane scored three goals in the second half — with two assists coming from Diaz, to bring Bayern’s total to 6-0. Kane told the Bundesliga
Kevin de Bruyne is to lead SSC Napoli’s Serie A title defense today when he makes his full debut at promoted US Sassuolo, but the champions head into the new season rocked by a long-term injury to star striker Romelu Lukaku. De Bruyne was, alongside aging icon Luka Modric, the big new name to arrive in Italy this summer and fans were hoping his linkup with Belgium teammate Lukaku would push Napoli to success both at home and in their return to the UEFA Champions League. The 34-year-old has suffered from hamstring injuries which caused him to miss significant chunks of the
Marc Marquez continued his winning streak as he cruised to victory in the Hungarian GP sprint by two seconds on Saturday night to pad his championship lead. It was a seventh straight Sprint victory for the Spaniard, who has also won the last six longer Sunday grand prix races on his factory Ducati. Fabio Di Giannantonio, an Italian with the VR46 Ducati satellite team was a distant second at Balaton Park, followed by his team-mate and compatriot Franco Morbidelli third. Marquez, a six-time world champion, started the race from pole position. “I felt someone really close on the first corner, from there I