American Valor Quarterly Issue 11 - Fall 2014 | Page 9

professional league continued to play until August 1944. Just as in the United States, the game served as a major morale booster to civilians and servicemen, and despite being at war with the nation that introduced them to baseball, the Japanese people could not curb their insatiable appetite for the game. “Professional teams such as Kyojin (Tokyo) and the Hanshin (Osaka) Tigers played 80-plus games a season between 1940 and 1943. However, the draw on manpower reduced teams to a 35-game season in 1944, playing one game every four days. By 1945 nearly all professional players from Japan’s eight teams were in military service and 69 of them were killed, including national superstars Eiji Sawamura and Shinichi Ishimaru.” Not only were the Japanese passionate fans of their own teams, they followed the American game closely as well and many American baseball stars such as Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig toured Japan and received wildly enthusiastic receptions. ballparks where they faced a tough year of readjustment. Even those who went on to great success had lost several years of prime playing time. A Seattle computer specialist, Ralph Winnie, did an analysis of the data on the major leagues and published a projection of what their stats would have been if they had not served during the war. Bill Gilbert in his book, They Also Served, summed up the findings: “Winne discovered that (Ted) Williams would have become the