Ichiro Is About To Get His Hall Of Fame Moment. For Japan, He's More Than Just A Baseball Star
Ichiro Suzuki is all about baseball, but he's much more than that in Japan.
Back home, he's a wellspring of national pride, much like Shohei Ohtani now. His triumphs across the Pacific buoyed the nation as Japan's economy sputtered through the so-called lost decades of the 1990s and into the 2000s.
"He healed the wounds in Japan's national psyche," Kiyoteru Tsutsui, professor of sociology at Stanford University, told The Associated Press.
On Tuesday, he's expected to be the first Japanese player elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, and possibly only the second player chosen unanimously after New York Yankees closer Mariano Rivera.
Ichiro debuted in Major League Baseball in 2001 with the Seattle Mariners, the first Japanese position player to span the Pacific and an instant star. Left-handed pitcher Hideo Nomo preceded him, and Hideki Matsui came just after, both boosting the country's confidence in a period of national malaise.