Randy Bass
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Randy Bass | |
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In office November 2004–Present |
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Succeeded by | Incumbent |
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Born | March 13, 1954 Lawton, Oklahoma |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | Kelley Bass |
Religion | Lutheran |
Randy William Bass (ランディ・バース?) (born March 13, 1954 in Lawton, Oklahoma) is a former American baseball player and current politician. He is less notable for his career in Major League Baseball than for his success in Japan's Central League, where he had the most spectacular run of any American to ever play in Japan. Currently, Bass is a Democratic State Senator from Oklahoma, representing District 32.
Bass came up with the Minnesota Twins as a first baseman in 1977. In his six seasons in the Major Leagues (divided among five teams), he was never a day-to-day player, usually coming off the bench just to pinch hit. After his contract expired following the 1982 season, Bass signed with the Hanshin Tigers of the Central League, who made him their starting first-baseman. The Hanshin Tigers, located in the Kansai region, had the reputation of an eternal underdog as opposed to the Yomiuri Giants, still considered the king of Japanese baseball. As the devotional fans flocked to the stadium no matter how badly the Tigers played in the league, the corporate owner, Hanshin Railway, consistently underinvested in the team to milk profit.[citation needed] This resulted in decades of dismal performance. Bass is often credited as single-handedly turning the fortune of the Tigers which resulted in the team's miraculous run and eventual victory of the Japan Series in 1985.
Bass took advantage of the differences between Japanese and American styles of pitching, and immediately became the Tigers' star slugger. He won four consecutive league batting titles; in 1986, he nearly became the first player in Japan to bat .400, finishing the season with a .389 average, a record that still stands, despite Ichiro Suzuki's formidable challenges to it in 1994 and 2000. Bass won consecutive Triple Crowns (1985 and 1986), a feat no player has accomplished in the U.S. major leagues. In 1985, he was on a pace to break Sadaharu Oh's record of 55 home runs in a single season, but fell short by one, because in the last game of the season the pitcher from Oh's Yomiuri Giants threw only intentional walks (allegedly to prevent the Westerner from breaking Oh's record though Oh himself is not a Japanese national).[1] [ In Japan, his spectacular performance is a legend, and among Tigers fans, he is nearly deified.
He is also famous in Japan for the "Curse of the Colonel." Following the 1985 Series victory, revelers celebrated by calling off the names of team members one by one. At each name, a fan who looked like that player would jump into the filthy Dotonbori canal. For Bass, someone threw a life-sized model of Colonel Sanders, the mascot of Kentucky Fried Chicken and the only close-at-hand likeness of a bearded American, into the river. The statue disappeared and is said to have caused the subsequent decade-long dismal performance in the Central League. In an attempt to remove the curse, fans have made repeated attempts to find the model, but so far the attempts have failed. Instead, the fans have been making offerings to the statues of the Colonel for forgiveness. In 2003, when the Tigers returned to the Japan Series after 18 years with one of the worst records in the Central League, many KFC outlets in Kōbe and Ōsaka moved their Colonel Sanders statues inside until the series was over to protect them from rabid Tigers fans. The newly replaced Colonel Sanders statue in the Dotonbori KFC branch is bolted down to prevent a repeat of the incident. The Tigers failed to win the series, so the curse is presumably intact.
After his 1988 retirement, Bass became active in community projects to promote baseball in his native state, while continuing to make trips to Japan as a cultural ambassador. Bass was elected to the Oklahoma State Senate as a Democrat in 2004.
[edit] Trivia
- In Japan, Bass is known as Barsu (pronounced like barse). The owner of the Tigers, Hanshin Electric Railway Co., Ltd., requested the change because the company owns a subsidiary bus company (Hanshin Railway Bus and Hanshin Bus Company). Because "bus" is written exactly the same as Bass in Japanese ('basu'), the Hanshin Railways worried that Japanese media might create headlines such as "Bus unstoppable" (consecutive hits), "Bus explodes" (home run) or "Bus crash" (if he slumps), which would have a negative impact to the corporate image of the Hanshin Railway Bus.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Baseball-Reference.com - career statistics and analysis
- Oklahoma State Senate page
- The Curse of Bass
- Political Forum for Sen. Bass's district
- Sen. Bass official Bio
- City of Lawton official Webpage
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since March 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | 1954 births | Living people | Non-Japanese baseball players in Japan | Minnesota Twins players | Montreal Expos players | Kansas City Royals players | San Diego Padres players | Texas Rangers players | Major league first basemen | Major league players from Oklahoma | Oklahoma politicians | Hanshin Tigers players | People from Lawton, Oklahoma | Oklahoma State Senators