Yuya Ando
Yuya Ando 安藤 優也 | |
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Ando with the Hanshin Tigers | |
Hanshin Tigers – No. 86 | |
Pitcher / Coach | |
Born: (1977-12-27) December 27, 1977 (age 46) Oita, Japan | |
Bats: Right Throws: Right | |
NPB debut | |
April 7, 2002, for the Hanshin Tigers | |
NPB statistics (through 2017 season) | |
Win–loss record | 77-66 |
ERA | 3.56 |
Strikeouts | 822 |
Holds | 76 |
Saves | 11 |
Teams | |
As player As coach
|
Olympic medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's Baseball | ||
Athens 2004 | Team Competition |
Yūya Andō (安藤 優也, Andō Yūya, often Andoh, born December 27, 1977) is a professional baseball player from Ōita City, Japan. He is part of the starting rotation for the Hanshin Tigers baseball team.
Career
In 2006, Ando pitched his first Shutout game against Yokohama BayStars.[1]
Ando joined the Japanese Olympic baseball team for the 2004 Summer Olympics, and won a bronze medal.[2] Ando went 7-4 in college, battling shoulder problems. He went on to Toyota Motors in the industrial leagues and peaked at 93 mph there, drawing the interest of various scouts. In the 2001 Baseball World Cup, he went 2-0 with a 2.45 ERA, allowing 5 hits and fanning 14 in 11 innings.[citation needed]
References
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference (Minors)
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- 00 Javy Guerra
- 13 Suguru Iwazaki
- 14 Yuta Iwasada
- 15 Junya Nishi
- 16 Yuki Nishi
- 17 Koyo Aoyagi
- 19 Kaito Shimomura
- 20 Daichi Moriki
- 21 Takumi Akiyama
- 26 Tsuyoshi Shiiba
- 27 Masashi Itoh
- 28 Yūto Suzuki
- 29 Haruto Takahashi
- 30 Keito Monbetsu
- 34 Taisei Urushihara
- 35 Hiroto Saiki
- 36 Masumi Hamachi
- 37 Masaki Oyokawa
- 41 Shōki Murakami
- 46 Hiroya Shimamoto
- 47 Takuma Kirishiki
- 48 Hidetoshi Ibaragi
- 49 Kotaro Otake
- 50 Ren Tomida
- 54 Ren Kajiya
- 56 Keisuke Kobayashi
- 63 Yuya Ishiguro
- 64 Hidetaka Okadome
- 65 Atsuki Yuasa
- 66 Junya Tsuda
- 69 Daichi Ishii
- 92 Riku Kawahara
- 93 Masaki Iwata
- 98 Ren Satoh
- 99 Jeremy Beasley
- 2 Ryutaro Umeno
- 12 Seishiro Sakamoto
- 39 Yuki Sakaeda
- 57 Kenya Nagasaka
- 59 Kento Fujita
- 68 Hayato Nakagawa
- 95 Yuya Katayama
- 0 Seiya Kinami
- 3 Yusuke Ohyama
- 4 Takahiro Kumagai
- 8 Teruaki Sato
- 25 Ryo Watanabe
- 33 Kento Itohara
- 38 Ryuhei Obata
- 44 Reiji Toi
- 45 Jō Endo
- 51 Takumu Nakano
- 52 Shuya Yamada
- 56 Aoi Momosaki
- 62 Kai Ueda
- 67 Nozomu Takatera
- 94 Fumihito Haraguchi
- 1 Shōta Morishita
- 5 Koji Chikamoto
- 7 Sheldon Neuse
- 32 Kōta Inoue
- 40 Hinase Itsubo
- 43 Yuto Takahama
- 53 Kairi Shimada
- 55 Johan Mieses
- 58 Ukyō Maegawa
- 60 Dan Onodera
- 61 Hiroshi Toyoda
- 97 Kyosuke Noguchi
- 122 Ippei Ogawa (P)
- 123 Kai Matsubara (P)
- 125 Ryō Itō (P)
- 126 Kein Fukushima (OF)
- 131 Jose Betances (P)
- 132 Anthony Martinez (P)
coaching
- Manager: 80 Akinobu Okada
- Head coach: 78 Katsuo Hirata
- Pitching coaches: 86 Yuya Andoh, 90 Tomoyuki Kubota
- Battery coach: 83 Munehiko Shimada
- Hitting coaches: 77 Makoto Imaoka, 73 Eiji Mizuguchi
- Infield defense/base running coaches: 81 Toshifumi Baba, 74 Atsushi Fujimoto
- Outfield defense/base running coach: 96 Sō Tsutsui
coaching
- Manager: 86 Yutaka Wada
- Pitching coaches: 85 Shinobu Fukuhara, 72 Hirotaka Egusa, 89 Ryo Watanabe
- Battery coaches: 87 Katsunori Nomura, 84 Takeshi Hidaka
- Hitting coaches: 91 Hirotoshi Kitagawa, 75 Noriharu Yamazaki
- Infield defense/base running coach: 70 Shuta Tanaka
- Outfield defense/base running coach: 76 Takahito Kudo
- Fielding coach: 71 Hiroki Uemoto
This article about a Japanese Olympic medalist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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This biographical article relating to a Japanese baseball pitcher is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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