
‘So lucky to have been around them’: Remembering the Virginia shooting victims
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adminThis story was reported by Andrea Adelson, David M. Hale and Adam Rittenberg
The photos that have run with nearly every story about the shooting deaths of three Virginia football players this week came from the team’s annual yearbook pictures. Devin Chandler, Lavel Davis Jr. and D’Sean Perry are each dressed in dark suits with white shirts and navy-and-orange ties, all three with bright, beaming smiles.
Former Virginia coach Bronco Mendenhall saved those pictures onto his cell phone this week and set them as his screen saver because he wants to remember those smiles — not forced expressions for team photos, but the genuine exuberance and love of life all three players showed every day.
“Those smiles are authentic,” Mendenhall said. “Their futures are genuine and those dreams we’re all talking about are real. And I just feel so lucky to have been around them.”
In the aftermath of Sunday’s shooting, the headlines that ran above those photos almost universally read the same way: “Three Virginia football players killed.” And yet for Mendenhall and all their other coaches, teammates, family and friends, Chandler, Davis and Perry were so much more than football players.
Chandler was a gregarious friend to everyone he met. Davis was passionate about his faith. Perry was an artist.
Their loss is felt most powerfully in Charlottesville, Virginia, but their impact is spread across the country, from South Florida to New England to Idaho and Washington. Their loss goes beyond anything captured by a depth chart or a box score.
“These are good young men who did not deserve this,” Virginia coach Tony Elliott said. “But this is where the healing starts because you get to celebrate life.”
Devin Chandler: ‘Gregarious, joyful, full of light and life’
Devin Chandler soaked in joy and delivered it back out into the world.
Before he transferred to Hough High School, just outside Charlotte, North Carolina, the team had standard touchdown celebrations: a few high-fives, maybe a chest-bump. Chandler changed that when he arrived in 2019. In the opener, Hough running back Evan Pryor, now with Ohio State, raced for an 83-yard touchdown.
Chandler ran after him.
“He sprinted 40 yards, waving his arms,” Hough coach Matt Jenkins said. “The guys still do that. Only my seniors know who he is, but the way guys celebrate touchdowns started with Devin. That sums him up. He was so excited when his teammates scored, maybe more than when he did.”
Chandler typically had a crowd around him. This spring at Virginia, he sat at a front table in an athletics administration course, just to the right of veteran instructor Gerry Starsia.
“He would usually be holding court before class started,” said Starsia, who has taught many Virginia athletes over the years. “Devin would always be in the middle. He was approachable, a sweet kid open to creating a relationship with me as an experienced faculty member, and also open to friendships and people around him. Non-student-athletes would go over, and he would welcome them into the circle.”
Chandler grew up in a military family. His father, Quentin, was a decorated Navy officer and an accomplished pilot, for the Navy and later for FedEx. The family lived in Hawai’i before moving to Memphis, where Devin started high school at Arlington, just outside the city.
Devin clicked with everyone at Arlington — teachers, students and other athletes, like running back Kenneth Walker III, now with the Seattle Seahawks.
“Just a happy person,” Arlington football coach Adam Sykes said. “He always exuded energy. He enjoyed having everybody around him.”
In 2017, Quentin was diagnosed with brain cancer. He died in September 2018, during Devin’s junior season at Arlington.
Arlington’s coaches didn’t think Devin should play in the game after his father passed. But Devin called Sykes. He wanted to be on the field the next night, saying Quentin would have wanted it that way.
“I had a hard time arguing with that,” Sykes said. “We let him go out there. He played with some great emotion. He had a great game. Seeing him after, everybody surrounding him and showing him love, was a very special moment.”
When Chandler transferred to Virginia, he moved into an off-campus apartment with linebacker Hunter Stewart and safety Chayce Chalmers. Chandler struck Stewart as “a goofy guy” with “a contagious smile,” someone who became fast friends with everyone he met.
Stewart, whose parents had served in the military before he was born, quizzed Chandler about all the places he had lived, as well as Quentin’s influence.
“He talked about his dad a lot,” Stewart said. “I always used to say, ‘Why are you like that?’ I would say he’s always on joke time. He would say, ‘I get it from my pops.'”
Chandler’s jovial nature translated to his cooking. Virginia runs a program called “Cooking with the Hoos” to help athletes prepare nutritious food while at home. When Stewart cooked, Chandler was the taste tester, and he loved what Stewart served.
The feeling wasn’t exactly mutual.
“He wasn’t the best cook,” Stewart said. “He would always make a cheeseburger every night, and would pair it with the wildest things. The last meal I remember him having at the crib was a cheeseburger and calamari. One time, he had a cheeseburger with a corn dog, basically anything in the cabinet.
“It was just odd pairings.”
During Virginia’s open week last month, Stewart traveled with Chandler and defensive lineman Lorenz Terry, Chandler’s best friend at Virginia, to Norfolk State University for the school’s homecoming celebration. They attended a music festival featuring old-school R&B music.
“Being around a different crowd of people, you saw Devin easily making friends,” Stewart said. “That was his gift. That may have come from being in so many different places because of the military, but getting friends came very easily to him.”
After Quentin died, Devin and his mother, Dalayna, moved to Charlotte, where Devin’s godfather, Joey, lived. Devin had a big senior season at Hough, scoring 14 touchdowns, as college recruitment picked up. His decision came down to Wisconsin, Virginia and Maryland. Virginia coach Bronco Mendenhall remembered sitting on his front porch with Chandler’s family, convinced that Devin would pick Virginia. But on signing day, he went with Wisconsin.
Then, in October 2021, Chandler entered the transfer portal. Mendenhall and Virginia wide receivers coach Marques Hagans flew to Wisconsin and met with Chandler, who decided to join the Cavaliers. Although Mendenhall would soon step down at Virginia, he knew Chandler would fit in perfectly.
“His smile and his personality was larger than life,” Mendenhall said. “This is a gregarious, joyful, full of light and life, vibrant, and just fun person to be around. Someone that, if you’re next to them, you can’t help but [smile and] feel good about yourself.”
When Sykes would text with Chandler, he “would almost feel him smiling as he texted back.” Jenkins described Chandler as “the anti-social media,” because each impression he made was genuine.
“He seemed like every day, he was having the best day,” said Jack Hamilton, an American studies professor at Virginia who taught Chandler this past spring.
On Friday, Hough High has a state playoff game near Winston-Salem. Jenkins and others will continue to grieve Chandler, but they’ll also celebrate him, especially each time Hough crosses the goal line.
“Devin made the world a better place because of who he was,” Jenkins said. “Obviously, he was a talented athlete. But the way he treated people, the way he interacted with people, it’s what this world is sorely missing.
“He was taken too soon, but we need more people like him.” — Adam Rittenberg
Lavel Davis Jr.: ‘You couldn’t find a better kid’
When the FaceTime call came in last Saturday night, nobody on the Woodland High School football team was surprised to see the friendly face smiling on the phone screen.
Even though his own Virginia football team had lost earlier in the day, Lavel Davis Jr. was calling to offer words of praise and encouragement after his alma mater advanced in the South Carolina state playoffs. Woodland athletic director Tydles Sibert recalled Davis’ message to the players: “Keep going, keep pushing.”
It was the last time Sibert spoke to Davis. He has found himself recalling that FaceTime over and over since Monday.
“He had an impact on everybody he met,” Sibert recalled in a phone interview this week. “You couldn’t find a better kid.”
That call was at the essence of what made those who knew Davis describe him as “one of a kind,” “unique,” and “special.” Those who knew him best point to his big smile, encouraging nature, boundless curiosity and determination to change the world around him.
They point to his work ethic and the example he set for others. Simply put: It was hard to miss Davis — not only because of his 6-foot-7 frame.
“Lavel was the first to praise the underdog,” said former Virginia coach Bronco Mendenhall, who recruited Davis. “Lavel was looking for the good and progress for all. He always would make sure I or the other coaches would know, ‘You should have seen so-and-so. Man he really did a nice job.’ He didn’t want any improvement from anyone on the team to go unnoticed.”
Known as “Vel,” Davis grew up the oldest of three children with his parents, Simone and Lavel Sr., in Ridgeville, South Carolina, about 40 miles outside Charleston. His younger sister is a freshman in high school; his little brother a fifth-grader “who follows him everywhere.” He played football, basketball and ran track at Woodland High, and excelled at them all. But Davis was determined to succeed on the football field, where four of his cousins — Joe Hamilton, Courtney Brown, Pierson Prioleau and J.J. McKelvey — all made the NFL.
None of them had his size.
“When he would jump up to get a football, it was like a work of art,” said Rodney Mooney, his high school offensive coordinator.
Coaches knew they had a natural matchup advantage, but Woodland coach Eddie Ford also pushed Davis to be more than a big receiver.
“I used to tell him all the time, ‘What are you doing for yourself that God hasn’t physically given you?'” Ford said. “What are you doing to get better? I think he really took that to heart. He didn’t want to be good just because he was taller than everybody else. He wanted to be good because he outworked everybody else.”
His coaches remembered Davis as the first one in the door and the last one to leave. On the field, he certainly was a force. Ford recalled their homecoming game Davis’ senior year. Woodland was down a touchdown late in the game, and Davis had been double-teamed all night. They called a timeout, and Davis approached Ford and said simply, “Throw me the ball.”
“They’re going to double cover you,” Ford told him.
“Coach,” Davis said. “I don’t care. I’ll make a play on the ball. Throw me the ball.”
So they did. Davis outjumped two guys, and scored the game-tying touchdown. Woodland ended up winning.
Despite his athletic ability, in-state schools Clemson and South Carolina never offered him — though first-year Virginia coach Tony Elliott recruited him while he was Clemson offensive coordinator and was well aware of his talents. Davis signed with Virginia in 2020 because he loved Mendenhall and the coaching staff, and grew especially close with receivers coach Marques Hagans.
It was easy to see his talent as a freshman, when he started seven games and averaged 25.8 yards per catch, good for second in the nation. But in the spring of 2021, Davis endured a second torn ACL in the same knee. He approached his rehab the same way he did in high school, determined to come back better than ever.
Even as he rehabbed, his mind was never far away from helping others. In the spring, he went back to Woodland to speak to the team.
“He basically told the kids, ‘This is what you have to do to be successful,'” Ford said. “He helped the wide receivers, worked out with those guys, gave them college tips. I mean, he was a Woodland favorite. Oh my gosh, he was.”
Davis also was a part of a group of Virginia football players known as the Groundskeepers, formed in 2020 to help push for racial and social justice. In an interview with ESPN in the spring, Davis explained why it was important.
“When I leave here, I just want to say, I was a part of the change, and I took a step forward, changing everything in the right direction,” Davis said. “Whatever I can do, even if it’s a small percentage to bring awareness to all the injustice our school has been through, just to shine a light on it and change it in the right direction. It’s a blessing to be a part of it. Because I know these four years are going to go by quick. I for sure want to say I took a step forward for UVA.”
That impact was felt beyond his work with the group. While Mendenhall was coach at Virginia, he established a program known as “Thursday’s heroes,” where the team welcomed in a local resident facing medical challenges each week to tour the football facilities and meet the team. Last year, the team hosted Jack, a 6-year-old boy who had been diagnosed with a rare cancer when he was 3 and spent a year in treatment at both UVA and The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
His grandmother, Julie Callahan, said two players stood out during their time with the team. One was Davis.
“Lavel tossed the ball and, more times than not, Jack dropped it,” Callahan said. “Yet they kept at it. Lavel loping along like a gazelle. Jack trotting more like a kid who had spent a year of his life in bed. What I’ll remember most will be his sweet kindness, his ability to create joy.
“Last week, I visited an art exhibit called the infinity mirrors. This particular one was The Chandelier of Grief – lights reflected into a series of mirrors seemingly forever. It symbolizes the beauty that can exist during times of great sadness. I absolutely understand the concept because we lived it. During the darkest time in our lives, Lavel was one of our pinpricks of light. For this, I will never forget him.”
Davis bonded with Hagans, his wife, Lauren, and two sons, Christopher (10) and Jackson (8). He would attend the boys’ baseball games in the spring while Hagans was out on the road recruiting, and made sure to be there for all their basketball games, too. The boys viewed Davis as their big brother.
On the bus ride back from the class trip, Davis had texted Lauren Hagans to tell her how much he enjoyed it.
“It was like he was one of our own,” Hagans said. “You can see in the pictures, my kids really clung to Lavel. He was so present in their lives. It was such a special relationship. I think that’s what really upset my boys the most is that he won’t get a chance to watch them go to high school, go to college. I just don’t know how it’s possible. I still can’t believe it.”
Davis returned to the field this season, and had 16 catches for 371 yards and two touchdowns, once again leading the team with an average of 23.2 yards per reception. He was under consideration for ACC Comeback Player of the Year.
“I truly believe that Lavel was the next to blossom,” said his cousin, Sean Lampkin, a former receiver and current assistant at Newberry College. “I continued to let him know that while he’s had a great career at such a young age, he had so much more big moments ahead of him if he just continued to give the game his all. He did just that, working his tail off on the field and in the weight room.”
Teammate Chayce Chalmers, also on the Groundskeepers, remembers a moment from a practice before the Georgia Tech game. The two were on the same punt return unit and coaches decide to practice punt block.
Davis got blocked up, freeing Chalmers to make the play. But he missed the ball.
“He came up to me like, ‘Chayce you’ve got this, all you have to do is block the punt,'” Chalmers said. “In the moment I was like laughing, ‘Oh yeah, it’s simple.’ Sure enough, we lined up against Georgia Tech, and I break through, get around the shield and get my hands on the ball and blocked the punt. It’s almost like he predicted it for that week.”
What those close to Davis want people to remember is the impact he had on those around him. Chalmers recalled making an educational video with Davis as part of the Groundskeepers in conjunction with the local police department called “Youth, Blue & U.” Davis took his role incredibly seriously because he knew young people would be watching.
In South Carolina, Woodland plans to wear a decal on its helmets with the initials LD and his high school number, 13, during its state playoff game on Friday night.
“I remember before his graduation, we talked about what kind of legacy did he want to leave at Woodland,” Mooney said. “He wanted to leave one that people could all look back and say Lavel left an impact on this school, whether it was academically or character wise or work ethic wise. The legacy that he left at UVA, the legacy that he left at Woodland High School, the legacy that he left with his family and friends, it’s going to last a lifetime.” — Andrea Adelson
D’Sean Perry: ‘A generational soul’
At his news conference this week, Tony Elliott called D’Sean Perry “possibly the most interesting man on the team,” and that was almost certainly true.
Perry was an accomplished artist. He was fond of drawing anime, but as former high school teammate Gabe Taylor recalled, sometimes a feeling or emotion would pop into Perry’s head, and he’d sit down with his notepad and begin to draw until some beautiful picture emerged to properly express how he felt.
Perry was skilled at pottery. His high school teammate, Anton Hall, Jr., was in the beginner’s pottery class next door to Perry’s advanced class. Perry would always wrap his project early then wander over to the beginner’s class and offer tips or start sketching out new designs. And, invariably, he’d start cracking jokes and have the rest of the class laughing hysterically. Hall is convinced Perry could’ve been a professional comedian.
Perry loved to dance. In high school, he began a tradition at Miami’s Gulliver Prep, that every Thursday after team dinners, the players would gather in the locker room, put on music and dance. Perry was always the first one in the circle.
“And after we’d win games, he’d be the first one to cut the music on and just go crazy getting everyone pumped,” said Westley Neal, who played next to Perry on the defensive line.
Perry was passionate about music. Former Virginia assistant Kelly Poppinga would invite players to his house for the holidays, and he remembered Perry quickly building a rapport with Poppinga’s four daughters, even playing dress-up with them. Then he’d sit down at the family’s piano and start playing.
“He didn’t know how to read music,” Poppinga said, “but he’d just get on the piano and start playing.”
In the wake of Perry’s death, one of Poppinga’s daughters told him that Perry’s piano sessions had always brought her peace.
Music was also at the heart of perhaps Perry’s most popular moment as a member of the Virginia football team. Perry had a gift for freestyle rap. On car rides, he’d always sing along with the music on the radio, and former high school teammate Amin Hassan remembers Perry feigning anger when his phone would ring with a call from his mom or dad, interrupting the rap session. But Perry didn’t need a soundtrack to impress. He had a knack for rhymes, and in the fall of 2019, he was able to showcase his skills for thousands of Virginia fans.
It was Perry’s freshman season at Virginia, and former Cavaliers assistant Mark Atuaia had developed a tradition of celebrating with players after the team’s final walk-through with a rap session. He dubbed it “Freestyle Friday,” and he’d reel off a few verses as players surrounded him, whooping and cheering. Over the course of the season, however, a few Virginia players told Atauia that he should give Perry a shot, too. So on one Friday, with cameras filming the action, Atuaia rapped his intro then turned the reins over to Perry, who delivered an epic freestyle, while his teammates roared their approval.
Virginia shared the video on social media, and the moment quickly went viral.
I told them, “Your older brothers had Pres. Ryan, tonight y’all have Coach Atuaia.” No one is immune to the transitional woes from HS to college; yet, our #UVA standard doesn’t change. We love our new Hoos & they LOVE being here at UVA #FreestyleFriday #GoHoos BELIE⚔️E #1stYears pic.twitter.com/qvrH5I55cu
— Mark Atuaia (@CoachAtuaia) June 28, 2019
“It was just an authentic display of his gratitude to be part of the team and this fun side where he’s always smiling and grateful,” Mendenhall said. “I was so grateful to see his moment where he was the star.”
But Perry was never interested in being the star. For all his talents, the thing he did best was make those around him feel important.
In the days following Perry’s death, Ulises Sarria has been scrolling back through old messages and photos, remembering better times with his friend. There’s one video Sarria keeps coming back to. It’s actually a highlight from his first touchdown at Gulliver Prep. In the video, Sarria is streaking down the field, about to score, and in the background is his Perry, running stride for stride down the sideline, leaping into the air in celebration, just as Sarria crosses the goal line.
“I just think that really described D’Sean,” Sarria said. ‘He was so selfless and he was always happy for everybody, even if that meant he wasn’t successful.”
Anton Hall, Jr. was a year younger than Perry at Gulliver, and he remembers his older teammate pulling him aside after a playoff loss Perry’s senior season. It was the end of Perry’s high school career. He could’ve been angry or frustrated or sad. Instead, he put his arm around Hall and offered a message: “It’s your time to shine now.”
“It was like him saying to follow in his footsteps, passing the torch,” Hall said.
Years after they’d last played together, Perry would still send messages encouraging his former Gulliver teammates. His social media channels are filled with videos of his friends’ highlights.
“He’ll always send a little message saying he’s proud of me and he saw it in me from the get-go, even when others doubted me,” said Neal, now a defensive tackle at Rhode Island.
Perry’s optimism and energy were infectious, and he never had a bad moment. Sarria said he has dozens of videos on his phone in which he was filming nothing in particular, but the camera catches Perry, and he’d smile or laugh, and his joy would be immediately palpable.
“He seized every moment, no matter what he was doing,” said Harrison Easton, who was a year ahead of Perry at Gulliver. “We looked up to him because, no matter what was going on, good or bad, you could lean on him. No matter what he was going through, he made others feel supported.”
Perry was an outstanding athlete at Gulliver. He starred on the defensive line, but coaches decided to use him as a hybrid tight end, too. Easton, who played quarterback, remembered his first pass to Perry. They connected on a slant route, and Perry — this massive bowling ball of a player — juked his way downfield with ease.
“His first catch,” Easton said, “and next thing you know he’s making defensive backs look stupid.”
At Virginia, success didn’t come nearly so easily. Perry found himself mired on the depth chart, often working with the scout team. He never complained. Mendenhall remembered working him so hard in practice, Perry could barely stand by the end. And yet, without fail, before he left the field for the day, Perry would find his coach and say thank you.
Easton remembers his old coach at Gulliver, Earl Sims, Jr., had a simple philosophy for keeping players in shape. He told them all to eat healthy and, every day, do 100 push-ups before going to bed.
“We were young high school kids, so not everybody stuck to that,” Easton said. “But I can for damn sure tell you that D’Sean did.”
Perry’s work ethic and personality made him a favorite within the Virginia locker room, but the offensive coaches didn’t always find it so pleasant.
“He was relentless in his approach and treated every day like game day, so many times it would infuriate coaches because he’d be winning in a practice setting against really good players,” Mendenhall said. “And he’d do it day-in and day-out without ever lobbying for more time. There’d be so many times where he’d meet with Coach Poppinga about the depth chart and his future and those pictures weren’t always positive, and yet he just would not relent. He just kept working to the point where he started to contribute on the field.”
Perry got his first career interception against Abilene Christian in 2020. Afterward, he was selected to “break the rock,” a postgame tradition in which Virginia honored its most impactful players.
He played in seven games in 2021, largely on special teams, and he had seven tackles, including one for a loss, this season. But the numbers hardly tell the story of what Perry meant to his team.
Will Bettridge was a freshman at Gulliver when Perry was a senior. He was so inspired by Perry that he eventually followed him to Virginia, where he now is the Cavaliers’ starting kicker. There’s a chicken restaurant back in Miami, and during his recruitment, Bettridge would tease Perry by noting, “I know you miss Chicken Kitchen.” Then when Bettridge was on a visit to Virginia, in the middle of a game, Perry found his old teammate on the sideline and joked, “Where’s my Chicken Kitchen?”
There was a game back at Gulliver when Bettridge shanked a couple kicks. Perry was always the first one to offer support. When Bettridge missed a pair of kicks against Georgia Tech this season, the same scene played out again. Perry was the first teammate to find Bettridge on the sideline.
“He just said, ‘We’ve all got your back, and if no one else does, you know I’ll always be there for you,'” Bettridge said.
Bettridge said Perry would drive him to and from practice, introduced him to new friends on campus, and made sure he felt at home in Charlottesville. But it wasn’t just special treatment for an old friend. Perry did that for all the freshmen.
Sims, a former Virginia player himself, said Perry was “a beautiful soul” and compared him to a flower, plucked too soon.
Easton called him a light in the world.
Hassan and Hall and Neal and Bettridge all called Perry an older brother.
But ask any of those who knew Perry for a favorite memory, and they struggle to decide. There were just so many, most of them small moments — a laugh or a smile or car trip together — because that’s what Perry did best. He took the in-between moments in life and made them something special. He never needed to be the star. He just wanted to see those around him happy.
“That man was always laughing, always smiling, always telling jokes,” Taylor said. “That was a generational soul right there.”
After Perry’s death, his father, Sean, sent around a photo to a host of his son’s current and former teammates. In the picture, Perry is in the weight room, and he’s wearing a t-shirt with the word “Finish” on the back.
“That’s the model to continue this journey and finish,” Hassan said. “Finish for D’Sean.”
It’s a fitting tribute to a friend who inspired so many people to go farther than they might’ve believed they could, Bettridge said, but it’s also not quite enough to describe a man who never stopped working, laughing or inspiring.
“He was always the hardest worker I knew,” Bettridge said. “But I don’t think D’Sean had a finish.” — David M. Hale
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How Ichiro’s HOF induction helps tell the story of Japanese baseball
Published
8 hours agoon
August 2, 2025By
admin
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Bradford DoolittleJul 29, 2025, 10:35 AM ET
Close- MLB writer and analyst for ESPN.com
- Former NBA writer and analyst for ESPN.com
- Been with ESPN since 2013
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — Hall of Famers coming to Cooperstown — the newbies and the veterans alike — are typically subject to a fairly regimented schedule. They have a garden party. Ozzie Smith holds an annual charity event. There’s a golf tournament on Saturday morning. They roll down Main Street on Saturday night during the Parade of Legends. Finally, there is the induction itself.
Ichiro Suzuki, a 2025 inductee, took part in much of this, but even though he is an avid golfer, he did not play in the golf tournament. It turns out that doing so would’ve meant that he wouldn’t be able to maintain his usual workout routine. So he headed out to one of the numerous Little League fields a few miles outside of Cooperstown and got in his work.
At 51 years old, he follows the same routine he always has. He played long toss, did his stretching and running, played catch with Billy Wagner’s son — an aspiring ballplayer himself — and took batting practice against Wagner.
When asked why, Ichiro kept it simple.
“Because I love it,” he said.
That much has been clear, not only through his 19-year MLB career but well before it and since. His induction weekend was not the first time Ichiro made the pilgrimage to Cooperstown — he has been here many times. Each trek he made as a player was to view and study different relics that held special meaning to him.
“You just don’t see players come to the Hall of Fame, while they’re actively playing in the winter time — seven, eight times, because they just want to touch the bat of the guy whose record they broke,” Hall of Fame president Josh Rawitch said, “or be here in the freezing cold and snow to see this place.”
Ichiro didn’t limit those travels to the stops in Cooperstown — he famously visited the gravesite of Hall of Famer George Sisler after he broke Sisler’s single-season hit record in 2004 — but the beauty of the Hall of Fame is that it ties all of these interlocking stories together, linking the stars of the past with the stars of the present with the stars of the even more distant past, and in some cases, the stars of the future.
For a person like Ichiro, who is deeply interested in historical artifacts and the stories they represent, there is no better place than Cooperstown, and there is no better ambassador for Cooperstown than Ichiro.
“The history of baseball is very important,” Ichiro said. “We’re able to play the game today because of players of the past. I really want to understand them and know more about them. I think we all need to know the game of the past, things of the past, so we can keep moving it forward.”
Ichiro’s plaque there suggests the closing of a historical, cultural and symbolic loop that brings together two great baseball cultures.
It was the converging of paths, joining the practice of yakyu, the game Ichiro began playing at age 3, and the pastime of baseball, the game he still plays — with ritualistic abandon — at 51.
For all of the cultural significance and the historic nature of Ichiro’s induction, it’s this work ethic and his meticulous nature that is almost certainly going to be his greatest legacy. And it’s one that spins into the future, as he blazes a path to serve as a guide for the Japanese and American stars of the future — and present — to follow.
Before Shohei Ohtani, there was Ichiro. Before Ichiro, there were many, but none who followed the path that perhaps only he could see.
EVEN BEFORE SUNDAY, Ichiro Suzuki had a Hall of Fame plaque on a wall. That one was hung in January at the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Museum, located within the Tokyo Dome.
The contrast between Cooperstown, a tiny rustic village in upstate New York, and Tokyo, one of the world’s largest and most dense cities, couldn’t be more stark. But the baseball galleries within them look very similar, right up to the shape and size of the plaques themselves.
This is no coincidence. The American version came first; the very concept of a Hall of Fame is a purely American convention. So when one was built in Japan, back in the late 1950s, it was an early sign of the dissolution of differences between the two leading baseball cultures.
The differences, convergences and exchanges between the two is the story told in the Hall of Fame’s stunning new exhibit “Yakyu | Baseball: The Transpacific Exchange of the Game.”
“This isn’t just an exhibition about baseball in Japan,” said RJ Lara, the curator of the exhibit. “This isn’t just an exhibition about baseball in the United States. It’s about how the two countries and how baseball in two countries has come together and exchanged equipment, ideas, concepts, players, teams.”
Baseball’s roots in Japan trace to the 1850s, the game exported there by visiting Americans and seafarers. For decades, even as the popularity of baseball spread, it remained a strictly amateur practice, with the college level seen as the pinnacle of the sport into the middle of the 20th century.
While baseball grew into America’s pastime as a source of joy and play for anyone who could toss a ball or swing a bat, in Japan, at least in the early years, yakyu was viewed as a martial art. In fact, the first thing you see when you walk into the exhibit is a suit of traditional Samurai armor, full of red and gold — a gift from the Yomiuri Giants to Los Angeles Dodgers president Peter O’Malley in 1988.
Yakyu, one of the Japanese words for baseball, describes a game that evolved from the American version and still differs in mainly intangible ways and strategic preferences. The gap between the two has narrowed, as the success of Ichiro, Ohtani and others strongly suggests. But it might never completely disappear.
The “Samurai Way of Baseball” — as author Robert Whiting described it — meant a painstaking focus on practice and repetition, a heavy emphasis on fundamentals and a standardized version of the game in which every discrete act had a precise method behind it, and everything was about the team: the “wa,” as outlined by Whiting in the seminal “You Gotta Have Wa.”
Starting around 1905, teams on both sides of the Pacific began making the voyage to compete against one another. But the biggest influence on the professionalization of baseball in Japan came in 1934, when a team of American barnstormers stuffed with future Hall of Famers — including Babe Ruth — toured the country, drawing huge crowds nearly everywhere they went.
Plans for a professional league were already being hatched, and the success of the 1934 tour helped to cement them. The Yomiuri Giants were founded in 1935, and, as longtime Tokyo resident Whiting put it, grew into a behemoth that became as popular as the Dodgers, New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox combined. It set the stage for Sadaharu Oh, Shigeo Nagashima and the legends who laid the foundation of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) — and the collision of Japanese and American baseball that the exhibit celebrates.
THE YAKYU EXHIBIT has three centerpieces, and appropriately the first one you encounter focuses on Hideo Nomo. (Ichiro is the second and, though you can probably guess who is the third, we will come to that a bit later.)
Nomo was not the first Japanese-born player to make the transition to the major leagues: The seal was broken in the mid-1960s, when Masanori Murakami pitched two seasons for the San Francisco Giants. There was a lot of rancor in Japan over the move, and after two seasons, Murakami went back to Japan. Meanwhile, greats such as Oh and Nagashima stayed put, both spending their careers with Yomiuri, thanks to the reserve clause in place in Japan, as well as a societal pressure to remain true to Japanese baseball.
Oh talked in later years about how he would’ve liked to have played in the majors, but he just couldn’t do it. The taboo against jumping the pond remained in place until the mid-1990s. This was when Nomo “retired” from his team in Japan, a ploy cooked up by agent Don Nomura to exploit a loophole. Nomo ended up with the Dodgers, and Nomo-mania was born.
Nomo was heavily criticized at the time in Japan, and doubt existed in America about whether a Japanese player could truly make the leap. Nomo more than proved his ability to make the transition, and did so with such verve that it swept through Southern California and beyond, and also captivated audiences in Japan. The practice of baseball fans on the other side of the Pacific rising in the early morning to watch MLB began at that time.
The exhibit features some of Nomo’s equipment, as well as videos of hitters flailing at his nasty splitter. There are also some model baseballs with which you can try to simulate the grips Nomo used on his various pitches, including that splitter.
Jack Morris was in the midst of praising the nastiness of Nomo’s splitter when fellow Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith interjected, “You should try to hit it!”
NOMO’S DEBUT SEASON in 1995 preceded the now-celebrated 1996 Japan tour, which saw an MLB all-star team that included Cal Ripken Jr. play an eight-game series against players from the NPB, then called All-Japan. Ripken had gone on a similar tour in 1986, along with Morris and Smith, and a decade later he already noticed a marked difference in the caliber of play from his Japanese opponents.
“Going over there, you kind of look and shake your head and go, ‘These people are crazy about baseball,'” Ripken said. “They were talking about drawing 60,000 fans for a high school championship game.
“I thought the Japanese were always really competitive and very serious. They wanted to do really well. They wanted to beat us.”
One of the opponents of the all-star group in 1996 was Ichiro, and that experience for the Japanese star, in combination with the phenomenon that Nomo created, began to turn his head toward the other side of the Pacific. He wanted to test himself.
“The excitement I felt in that series was definitely a turning point,” Ichiro told author Narumi Komatsu in “Ichiro on Ichiro.” “Instead of something I just admired from afar, the majors became a set goal of mine.”
Ichiro had become a phenomenon in his home country, his face splattered on billboards all over Tokyo and beyond, as he exploded on the scene by becoming the first player in Japanese professional history to record 200 hits in a season, setting the since-broken record of 210 at age 20. He hit .353 during his nine years for Orix, which would far away be the all-time highest average in Japanese history if he qualified for the career leaderboard.
He did it in his own way, forging a path unlike any players before him. He famously refused to change the batting stance he’d used since high school — much to the chagrin of his first manager with Orix.
Ichiro also donned the name “Ichiro” on his jersey, departing from Japanese tradition. Suzuki is a common name in Japan and his club felt that would make him all the more marketable, which it did. To this day, in baseball everywhere, when you hear the name “Ichiro”, you know exactly who’s being referenced.
Bobby Valentine, who initially bucked against tradition when he went to manage in Japan, eschewing conventions such as marathon practice sessions and incessant meetings, saw things evolving, especially when he prepared for his first stint with the Chiba Lotte Marines in 1995, the year Nomo debuted with the Dodgers.
“That was the year after Ichiro was Rookie of the Year for Orix in 1994,” Valentine said. “Every night, all the coaches got together and looked at video and looked at charts, trying to figure out one guy, Ichiro.
“He showed me what he could do. I asked him for an autographed bat and told him that he was one of the best players I ever saw.”
Later, when Valentine was managing the New York Mets, he unsuccessfully lobbied his front office to pursue Ichiro.
“I was told at the end of the day, that they didn’t want a singles hitter in the outfield,” Valentine said mournfully. “And I said, ‘What if you get 200 of them?’ I swear. And he got like 240 of them.”
AT TIMES, IT has been far from certain that the paths that came together through Ichiro on Sunday would indeed merge. That part of the story isn’t overlooked in the yakyu exhibit.
It’s depicted in a couple of very different ways that relate the baseball sliver of the story of the years during and after World War II, including the post-war period when the United States occupied Japan under the supervision of Gen. Douglas MacArthur.
One object from the war years is the most melancholy relic in the exhibition, and indeed perhaps in the entire Hall of Fame.
It is a handmade, wooden home plate that once was part of Zenimura Field at the Gila River in Arizona internment camp during the war. The field was built by Kenichi Zenimura, a baseball advocate born in Hiroshima who spent most of his childhood in Hawaii.
The home plate is a a solemn reminder of how the forces that too often keep nations apart can’t be overcome by baseball alone. But if baseball can’t keep nations from conflict, conflict can’t keep people from baseball.
“It was the anchor of the Gila River community, and that’s how we like to describe it,” Lara said. “During these tragic, incredibly hard times at this camp in Arizona, it was the anchor that brought the community together, around a single baseball diamond that they built with their hands.”
After the war, when the occupation of Japan began, much of the country, and especially Tokyo, was in ruin. The battle for the ideological soul of the country was well underway in those early years of the Cold War, and the influence of communist Russia was of chief concern for the Americans.
MacArthur thought that reigniting the dormant cultural elements of Japanese society might help to calm things down and help make some headway in turning heads from the encroaching communist influence. With many of the country’s cultural institutions in rubble or ashes, sports, especially baseball — which can be played outside and a sport the Japanese already loved — was the answer.
Author Robert K. Fitts describes the sequence in “Banzai Babe Ruth.” League play resumed in 1946. Things improved enough that in 1947, Japan celebrated Babe Ruth Day at the same time that the major leagues were honoring the dying slugger. Quality of play began to recover but the overall fervor around yakyu still fell short of the pre-war years.
In 1949, on a suggestion from MacArthur staffer Cappy Harada, the project was turned over to Lefty O’Doul, who had fallen in love with Japan on a 1931 tour with other major leaguers and played a key role in helping convince Ruth to join the 1934 tour.
O’Doul, manager of the San Francisco Seals, brought his Pacific Coast League squad to Japan after the 1949 season to tour the country. The Seals were welcomed with a parade and, over the course of four weeks, helped boost the morale of a struggling nation. One evening before a game, for the first time, the flags of the United States and Japan were raised together, bringing many fans to tears.
Japanese journalist and historian Tadao Kunishi sees the O’Doul tour as one of the turning points in the evolution of Japanese baseball, especially in its gradual move toward becoming more like the American game.
“During that time, Japan was still doing the rebuilding,” Kunishi said. “We did not have much entertainment, and baseball is outside. So many movie theaters were burned down, so they cannot play, but baseball is outside, and anybody can go there. And really [Lefty] O’Doul brought the joy of watching baseball.”
A veritable baseball Forrest Gump, O’Doul always seemed to be in the middle of baseball history. He pitched for John McGraw. He converted to hitting and one year batted .398 in the National League. He managed and mentored life-long friend Joe DiMaggio, whom he brought along on a later, much-celebrated tour of Japan. He saw the potential of Japan as a baseball nation from the start.
“He said it was just a matter of time that Japanese ballplayers are going to be playing in America,” said Tom O’Doul, Lefty’s cousin. “And they’re going to be playing American baseball because they’re good and they respect the game. And that’s what happened.”
Though you don’t need to attribute the eventual boom in Japan — baseball and beyond — entirely to Lefty O’Doul and baseball, those tours proved to be a turning point in the ongoing exchange in the sport between Japan and America, which had seemed hopelessly severed.
THE THIRD CENTERPIECE of the yakyu exhibit, along with Nomo and Ichiro, as you probably have guessed, is the display for Shohei Ohtani, who is in the midst of a Hall of Fame career, and thus years away from joining Ichiro in the Japanese and the American plaque rooms. But he will get there.
Ohtani’s display looms in the back of the room behind Ichiro and indeed, from a certain angle as you stand there and look upon Ichiro’s uniform and bat and shoes and batting glove, a little lower to the left and against the wall behind him, you see an image of Decoy, the most famous dog — and literary muse — in all of baseball.
As for the player himself, Ohtani’s display is a stunning piece of museum technology. Depending on which angle you take to look at his image, you might see him pitching or hitting for the Los Angeles Angels, doing the same for the Dodgers, or celebrating the end of Japan’s victory in the 2023 World Baseball Classic, which he clinched by fanning Mike Trout for the last out.
The rise of Ohtani is also a chief part of the legacies of Oh and Nagashima and Nomo and Ichiro. By now, 74 players have made the transition to the major leagues — not all with resounding success, but many have reached All-Star status. All you have to do is look in the financial ledgers and the contracts that have been dolled out to the likes of Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Roki Sasaki to know how Japanese stars are valued today.
For his part, Ichiro does think that the differences between yakyu and MLB have softened, but they still exist — and they should.
“It usually takes a few years for Japanese baseball to pick up the things that happen in major leagues,” Suzuki said. “It’s definitely getting closer.
“I don’t think that Japan should copy what the MLB does. I think Japanese baseball should be Japanese baseball in the way they do things, and MLB should be the way they are. I think they should be different.”
And yet in so many ways, Ichiro himself was the bridge. He was yakyu and he was baseball.
Ichiro, who will generally give frank answers about himself and his thoughts about baseball, almost always deflects when asked about the thoughts or impressions of others. He still does it.
When asked about his role or his sense of how Japanese fans are reacting to his induction to Cooperstown, he says he doesn’t know. When asked about his relationship to the current Japanese stars in the major leagues, he says that he sees them at the ballpark when they come through Seattle.
He doesn’t get any more detailed when asked about the path that he has opened up for other Japanese stars, but he does open up a little when discussing his role in spreading knowledge to the next generation of players on both sides of the Pacific.
“The players need to tell the younger players about the game,” Ichiro said. “That’s a responsibility that those who have played this game have. I’m not sure if I’ll be able to help in that aspect, but it’s something I’d really like to do.”
As much as anything, Ichiro’s legacy is helping to bring the paths of two different baseball cultures together.
“We used to say that yakyu and baseball are different games with the same rules,” Kunishi said. “Now yakyu and baseball is the same game and the same rules.”
As far as legacies go, that’s not bad, even if the process remains ongoing. In the meantime, Ichiro will be there, connected with Cooperstown and Japan alike, making sure that no aspects of all the history he has been a part of will be lost.
Sports
Alcantara: Uncertainty at trade deadline ‘hard’
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8 hours agoon
August 2, 2025By
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Associated Press
Aug 1, 2025, 07:40 PM ET
MIAMI — Sandy Alcantara admitted that Thursday was one of the hardest days of his career.
It has been thought all season that the Miami Marlins could move on from Alcantara amid their rebuilding project, which has included shipping out established players for prospects.
And as Thursday’s 6 p.m. ET trade deadline approached, the Marlins’ ace could not hide his nerves.
He sat in front of his television watching baseball programming with his family for most of the day, repeatedly checking his phone to see if he had been traded.
“It was hard, man,” Alcantara said Friday. “Every time I get on my phone, I see my name. I thought that I was leaving.”
Miami opted not to trade its 2022 NL Cy Young Award winner. In their only trade Thursday, the Marlins sent their longest-tenured position player, outfielder Jesús Sánchez, to the Houston Astros for right-hander Ryan Gusto and two prospects, infielder Chase Jaworsky and outfielder Esmil Valencia.
The rest of the team, which has won five straight series and went 15-10 in July, remains intact. Marlins president of baseball operations Peter Bendix said Friday that the club’s recent success, in part, factored into its approach at the deadline.
And manager Clayton McCullough said if there weren’t trade scenarios that “moved the needle for us in the near and the long term,” the Marlins were happy to continue competing with the group they have.
Amid what was expected to be a season of finding out which of its relatively inexperienced pieces Miami could build around in the future, the Marlins are third in the National League East at 52-55 and entered Friday seven games behind San Diego for the National League’s third wild-card spot.
Bendix declined to say how close Miami was to finalizing a trade for Alcantara but noted that the team “felt really comfortable” with its ultimate decision.
“All of the things that go into building a sustainably successful team were taken into consideration,” he said, “at a deadline where you have all of these decisions in front of you. It’s our job to be disciplined. Disciplined means listening, means having conversations, and then means trying to figure out the best decision to make for every decision point that we have.”
Alcantara has played most of his eight-year career in Miami, going 47-64 with a 3.64 ERA in 159 starts while becoming the first Miami player to win the Cy Young Award after a 2022 season in which he pitched a league-high 228 innings and six complete games.
Alcantara, 29, missed the 2024 season recovering from Tommy John surgery and hasn’t yet returned to form in 2025. He is 6-9 with a 6.36 ERA, and despite being known as one of MLB’s most durable starters, has pitched only seven innings once.
He said it has taken a new level of mental toughness to play through a season not knowing if he would finish the year with the Marlins.
“It was a little hard because everywhere you go, every time you grab your phone, you see your name on the media,” Alcantara said. “But you [can’t] think too much about it. Just stay focused on everything you can do. I just came here, and if something happened, it just happened.”
Alcantara’s most recent two starts have been his best, an indicator to both the player and the Marlins that he might be close to returning to his All-Star caliber play.
He allowed one run and four hits in a season-high seven innings against the San Diego Padres on July 23, then pitched five shutout innings in a win at St. Louis on Tuesday.
“Sandy is continuing to trend,” McCullough said. “And we’re going to continue to be the beneficiaries of having Sandy for the rest of the season, continuing to get back to the pitcher that we all know Sandy is.”
Sports
Rays place 1B Aranda on IL with fractured wrist
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8 hours agoon
August 2, 2025By
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Associated Press
Aug 1, 2025, 07:47 PM ET
TAMPA, Fla. — The Tampa Bay Rays placed All-Star first baseman Jonathan Aranda on the 10-day injured list Friday with a fractured left wrist.
Aranda was injured Thursday in a collision with New York Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton.
Aranda said the injury did not feel “catastrophic” and he’s hopeful he’ll return this season, although the Rays cautioned he won’t be able to use the wrist for approximately three weeks.
Aranda’s wrist has been immobilized in an air cast and he’s scheduled to undergo more imaging at the three-week mark. At that point, the Rays will reassess his return timetable.
“Let’s see how the bone heals,” manager Kevin Cash said before Friday night’s series opener against the Los Angeles Dodgers. “I think he has re-imaging in about three weeks, but we will continue to remain optimistic.”
Stanton hit a soft grounder in the fifth inning to third baseman Junior Caminero, who charged in on wet grass to field the ball. Aranda reached for Caminero’s wide toss that sailed into the runner, and his left wrist appeared to hit Stanton’s left shoulder.
Aranda, a first-time All-Star, is batting .316 with 12 home runs, 54 RBI in 103 games this season. He has a .394 on-base percentage, and an .872 OPS, making him one of the majors’ most dangerous hitters.
Cash shifted Yandy Díaz to first base in Aranda’s absence.
The Rays reinstated Ha-Seong Kim from the IL and recalled Tristan Gray from Triple-A Durham.
Trade deadline acquisitions Griffin Jax and Hunter Feduccia were active for Friday night’s game.
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