Note: In the wake of the Twins and infielder Tsuyoshi Nishioka being extremely close on a three-year, $10 million contract, I decided to re-post a piece I had written on my blog.
Although originally posted two weeks ago, I feel that the information is still pertinent. This should provide some insight as to what to anticipate from the newest member of the organization for those that rarely stray from the mainstream sites (such as this) to the bowels of the internet (my site).
After doling out $5.3 million to talk Chiba Lotte's shortstop into moving from the Far East to the Midwest, the Twins are in the midst of a 30-day negotiating process with Tsuyoshi Nishioka's agents. What fans are interesting in is what may be expected from what could be the Twins' newest import.
While we live in an age where you can just about anything you want from the annals of the internet, we still do not have a comprehensive data available for imports from Japan. There are no sites like Fangraphs.com or Baseball-Reference.com that carries over the pertinent Nippon Professional Baseball information – like batted ball splits or platoon splits –needed to making analysis on what a player's conversion rate might be. If there were, it might have been possible for the Mets to vet Kaz Matsui before acquiring him (although, by some ratings systems, he is still ranks as the fourth-best player ever in Japan).
For the most part, the common accepted belief is that the NPB is a step below major league caliber play – at best, a AAA with a half-A. Still, with the exception of Hideki Matsui, there has not been a player from Japan whose power skills also made the trip across the Pacific with him. (Of course, the short right field porch at Yankee Stadium was very welcoming for Matsui who went from 50 home runs in Tokyo to 16 in NYC his first season.) Likewise, both Akinori Iwamura and Kaz Matsui hit over 30 home runs while in the Nippon league but failed to hit out of the single-digits in the majors. It would appear that power is a high tariff in the United States on goods from Japan.
Perhaps because Nishioka does not possess that particular skill but has several other universal skills like line drive tendencies and a strong zone acumen that he would find greater success than his other two infield predecessors – who have since returned back to their homeland as their careers on this side of the globe had fizzled. With little hard data available on Nishioka's career we can use this video that has circulated around recently to see what it might reveal about his potential.
Old-fashioned scouting with new fangled video techniques:
As you will see below, he attacks the pitch well with a level swing from both sides of the plate. His hands/weight remains back while he takes a large stride and his hips and hands explode at the same pace through the zone up to the point of contact – which is out in front in both examples.