MLB. The 2007 baseball season has been full of surprises for Japanese lefty Hideki Okajima in his first season with the Sox, and he added another accolade to his al-ready bulging resume when he became the final player named to the American League All-Star roster just prior to last night’s game.
Okajima has enjoyed arguably the best first half of any reliever in baseball this season, piling up a 2-0 record with a 0.88 ERA and 13 holds in 38 games.
“John [Deeble] and I are still in Japan and we’re very happy for him, although I’m sure we’re not as excited as [Okajima] is,” said Sox Special Assistant to the General Manager Craig Shipley, who, along with Deeble, heads Boston’s scouting outfit on the Pacific Rim. “It’s a great honor. He’s had a great first half, and it’s a great story.”
“Okaji,” who enters out of the bullpen armed with a funky corkscrew delivery and the mesmerizing “Oka-Doke” changeup, received 4.3 million votes during the four-day online balloting on MLB.com, barely beating out Detroit’s Jeremy Bonderman, as well as Minnesota’s Pat Neshek, Kelvim Escobar of the Los Angeles Angels and Toronto’s Roy Halladay.
“[The changeup] was something I worked on by myself in Japan this winter when I first started pitching with a Major League baseball, so it’s something else with movement that I came up to pitch in different weather with a different baseball,” Okajima said through interpreter Jeff Yamaguchi.
“I had never been able to throw it to the right location and didn’t have much confidence in it, but it’s been a very good pitch for me [with the Sox].”
Okajima is the third Sox player to win the online All-Star Final Vote program since its inception in 2002, as he joins Johnny Damon (2002) and Jason Varitek (2003) as other Sox players to have their All-Star tickets punched via Internet voting.