Jun Misawa

From BR Bullpen

Jun Misawa (三沢 淳)

  • Bats Left, Throws Right
  • Height 6' 0", Weight 187 lb.

BR register page

Biographical Information[edit]

Jun Misawa pitched for 15 seasons in Nippon Pro Baseball.

After high school, Misawa pitched briefly for the industrial leagues' Shin Nittetsu Hirohata. He won Silver with the Japanese national team in the in the 1971 Asian Championship. The Chunichi Dragons selected him in the third round of the 1970 NPB draft. Debuting in 1972, he held opponents to a .211 average and was 3-5 with a 3.69 ERA in 33 outings, 7 of them starts. Active mostly in relief again in 1973, the 20-year-old went 10-8 with a 2.56 ERA and .216 opponent average. He was 9th in the Central League in ERA, just ahead of Yutaka Enatsu, in what would be one of his best seasons. Misawa started 27 games in 1974 but still relieved in 18, going 11-9 with a 3.45 ERA. Opponents hit just .228 but he surrendered 30 home runs in 200 2/3 IP. He also hit 12 batters, leading the CL. He allowed one run in 3 2/3 relief innings in the 1974 Japan Series, which Chunichi lost to the Lotte Orions.

In 1975, Jun had a career-high 13 wins, losing 7 while posting a 3.21 ERA. He tied Hiromu Matsuoka for 7th in wins. Misawa imploded in 1976, going 9-12 with a save and a 5.35 ERA. He allowed a .322 average and 34 homers in 176 2/3 IP, and he led the CL with 12 hit batsmen. Misawa only started 9 games in 1977, going 4-4 with a save and a 5.15 ERA. He went 12-9 with a save and a 3.40 ERA in a resurgent 1978, surrendering 28 gopher balls while starting 22 games and relieving in 33 others. He placed 7th in the Central League in ERA (between Shigeyuki Takahashi and Tsuneo Horiuchi), and he was 10th in wins (tied with Horiuchi).

The right-hander had a 13-11, 3.72 record in 1979. He was .05 from making the CL's top 10 in ERA, and he tied Kimiya Fujisawa and Masaji Hiramatsu for 4th in wins. He made his only CL All-Star team, and he completed three shutout innings in the 1979 NPB All-Star Game 2. On June 8, he was one out away from a no-hitter when Masahiro Yanagida singled. Misawa fell to 8-12, 4.09 in 1980, and he tied Egawa and Senichi Hoshino for 8th in losses. He went 7-10 with two saves and a 3.35 ERA in 1981, and he was 9th in the league in ERA (between Manabu Kitabeppu and Fumitaka Ito). In 1982, the veteran posted a 8-7, 3.56 record. He allowed 7 runs in 10 1/3 IP in the 1982 Japan Series but only 3 of them were earned; at the plate, he was 1 for 3. He started games 4 and 6 of the Series against the Seibu Lions, who took the Series in six contests.

Misawa had a 4-8, 5.77 record and .329 opponent average in 1983. He was only 3-3 with a save, 5.95 ERA and .317 opponent average in 1984. Leaving Chunichi after 13 years, he was 1-0 with a 2.06 ERA in 15 games for the 1985 after being traded to the Nippon Ham Fighters for cash. He allowed one run in 8 2/3 IP for the 1986 Fighters with a 1-1 record. Misawa later was a commentator for Tokai Radio and Chukyo TV. In 1996, he ran for the Japanese Diet with the New Progressive Party and claimed the seat; he served one term.

Overall, Misawa was 107-106 with a 3.81 ERA, struck out 914 and pitched 1,860 1/3 innings in 15 seasons in NPB. As of 2024, he was 99th in appearances in NPB history (tied with Tokuji Kawasaki and Ritsuo Yamashita).

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