Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Akinori Otsuka. Akinori Otsuka (大塚 晶則, Ōtsuka Akinori) (born January 13, 1972) is a Japanese former baseball pitcher who coaches for the Chunichi Dragons in Nippon Professional Baseball. He was formerly the set-up man for the San Diego Padres and the Texas Rangers. He was also the closer for Japan 's 2006 World Baseball Classic winning ...

  2. How tall is Akinori Otsuka? Akinori Otsuka is 6-0 (183 cm) tall. How much did Akinori Otsuka weigh when playing? Akinori Otsuka weighed 200 lbs (90 kg) when playing. How many seasons did Akinori Otsuka play? Akinori Otsuka played 4 seasons. Is Akinori Otsuka in the Hall of Fame? Akinori Otsuka has not been elected into the Hall of Fame. What ...

    • January 13, 1972
  3. Akinori Otsuka...he and wife Akemi have one son, Toranosuke (8), and one daughter, Hikaru (5)...attended Yokoshiba High School and Tokai University...joined Los Angeles' Kazuhisa Ishii and Seattle's Ichiro Suzuki as just the third Japanese player to sign with a Major League team under the U.S.-Japan Protocol posting system...hobbies include golf and ping pong...signed by Padres scout Randy Smith.

  4. View the profile of Texas Rangers Relief Pitcher Akinori Otsuka on ESPN. Get the latest news, live stats and game highlights.

  5. Akinori Otsuka was born on Thursday, January 13, 1972, in Chiba, Japan. Otsuka was 32 years old when he broke into the big leagues on April 6, 2004, with the San Diego Padres. His biographical data, year-by-year hitting stats, fielding stats, pitching stats (where applicable), career totals, uniform numbers, salary data and miscellaneous items ...

    • Akinori Otsuka
    • 01-13-1972 (Capricorn)
    • Chiba, Japan
    • None
  6. Complete career MLB stats for the Texas Rangers Relief Pitcher Akinori Otsuka on ESPN. Includes games played, hits and home runs per MLB season.

  7. Akinori Otsuka had some family turmoil when he was young as his parents separated when he was in 9th grade and he lost his mother due to cancer. Out of college, he was the second-round pick of the Kintetsu Buffaloes in the 1996 NPB draft. Joining Kintetsu in 1997, he had a great rookie year at 4-5, 2.07 with seven saves in 52 games, allowing ...

  1. People also search for