Contact is king? Strikeouts down in MLB as teams adjust to baseball's new eraNew Foto - Contact is king? Strikeouts down in MLB as teams adjust to baseball's new era

WASHINGTON — There may never be another season in Major League Baseball like 2019, when there were more balls flying out of ballparks – and more swings and misses - than any time in the game's history. AndGleyber Torreswas one of the cool kids. In his first full season in the big leagues, Torres ripped 38 home runs in 138 games, a power output accompanied by 129 strikeouts. Never mind that Torres struck out 21.4% of the time: He was a two-time All-Star at 22, an MVP vote recipient, about to become shortstop of theNew York Yankeesand headed, by all appearances, towardsuperstardom. Yet even then, he knew something had to change. "I hit a lot of home runs," Torres, now a Detroit Tiger, tells USA TODAY Sports, "but I struck out a lot. From my first year in the big leagues, I had a lot of conversations with the hitting coaches there. They always tell me, 'Strike two, put the ball in play.' I worked on my (two-strike approach) every year. "Last year, in the second half, I had a really good approach, saw the ball very well. I really believe in my eyes to control the strike zone. I know how important it is some days to walk and put myself on base for the guy behind me. "So far, I really, really believe in my plan and go to home plate and do what I can do." He's not the only one. While strikeouts remain a scourge to the old school eye, it may be safe to declare that the era of bottomless whiffs is over. Major league teams are striking out 8.26 times per game, the lowest rate since 2017 and a 6% decrease from 2019. That season featured the highest K rate of all time (8.61 per team game) accompanied by the most home runs – 6,776 – in major league history. The offensive environment was an outlier for many reasons – including ajuiced baseball– but it also marks the symbolic apex of the game's "three true outcomes" era, when a home run, walk or strikeout ruled the sport, with three punchouts deemed the cost of doing business for one jog around the bases. Six years later, are we in the middle of a course correction? "It's in the process of swinging back," saysChicago Cubsmanager Craig Counsell. "I think we've given pitchers a ton of credit for improving. It was a conversation four or five years ago that (pitchers') velocity has improved. I think hitters now have calibrated themselves to that. "And training them better. That's improved contact. And probably stopped giving at-bats to people who can't make contact. So, decision-makers had to adjust a little bit, too." There's endless examples of both player and franchise realizing that selling out for power isn't necessarily in their best interests. Torres is a prime case: In 2018 and 2019, his first two seasons, he hit 24 and 38 home runs, with strikeout rates of 25.2 and 21.4%. By 2024, he was 27, about to hit the free agent market and struggling at the halfway point, with a .215/.294/.333 slash line and a 24% strikeout rate. Yet he managed to make myriad mid-season adjustments, all of which trimmed his K rate down to 17.2% and the results followed: A .298/.365/.421 second half and a stellar postseason, resulting in a one-year, $15 million deal with the Tigers. Come spring training, he continued tweaking his approach and embraced a greater dedication to game-planning, heeding the counsel of Tigers hitting coaches Michael Brdar, Lance Zawadski, and Keith Beauregard and, as Torres put it, "go to the plate with my plan and try to put a little more focus on whatever I do before the game." The approach has paid off: Torres has just 40 strikeouts in 311 plate appearances, a 12.9% strikeout rate well below the league average of 21.9%, and nearly half his whiff rate in his rookie season. And his offensive profile has never looked healthier: Torres is on track for 17 homers, two more than he hit his final season in New York, but he's headed toward career highs in OBP – his .386 mark is 39 points better than his previous best – and adjusted OPS (134). While Torres was a vaunted prospect and instant All-Star, curbing whiffs can be a matter of survival for others. "I hate striking out. Don't like striking out. I want to put the ball in play," says Baltimore Orioles slugger Ryan O'Hearn, who went from waiver claim to potential All-Star. "I want to make things happen. I want to make the other team make plays. I know what it's like to play against teams that don't strike out a whole lot, and it puts stress on the infielders. "Can't get any hits unless you put the ball in play, right?" Nor can you get off the bench. O'Hearn, 31, only once played more than 100 games in five seasons with Kansas City, striking out 99 times in 105 games in 2019. In December 2022, the Royals designated him for assignment, with a .293 career OBP and annual strikeout rates that ranged from 24.1% to 28%. The Orioles gave him new life, unlocking several mechanical cleanups that, he said, "helped me make contact more consistently. Less swing and miss in the zone. "Once I realized I could put in play a lot more consistently, it definitely became a conscious thing and I didn't want to strike out a lot." The results have been startling: O'Hearn hacked his K rate exactly in half from 28% in 2021 to 2023's 14%. This year, he's struck out just 46 times in 71 games and should win the All-Star Game fan balloting at designated hitter. It's well-deserved: O'Hearn is batting .295 with an .854 OPS (144 adjusted) and 11 homers. His newfound aversion to Ks is a big reason why. "Mentally, it's definitely changed a lot for me the past few years," he says. "I know it's a big league defense and there's really good defenders out there. But if you strike out, it's a lot easier to kill an inning, for a pitcher stroll through a game when a team strikes out a lot. Low stress on the defenders. "I don't want that. Even if it's 0-2, weak contact, I don't care. You might get a hit. You might get lucky." Power pays, and that will always be the case in the big leagues. TheLos Angeles Dodgersand New York Mets are 1-2 in both home runs and OPS, befitting the coastal behemoths who handsomely compensate Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge, respectively. Yet the Yankees are fourth in strikeouts and the Dodgers rank 17th, a moderate vulnerability that can be greater exposed in a postseason environment. How, then, does a club generate an ideal concoction of power, patience and putting the ball in play? Ask the Arizona Diamondbacks. They are lurking just behind the Dodgers and Yankees with a .776 team OPS, and trail only the Dodgers and Chicago Cubs in runs scored. And they're fifth in home runs. But strikeouts? Just three teams whiff less often than Arizona, which has a 20.1% K rate; the Yankees rank 23rdat 23.1%. And the Diamondbacks hardly give up pop to get the ball in play: They rank eighth in hard-hit rate, with 42.3% of their balls at least 95 mph off the bat. It's no accident. Arizona manager Torey Lovullo says he and hitting coach Joe Mather are in alignment on their core offensive values: Putting the ball in play hard up the middle. Mather, Lovullo says, even keeps a running tab on how many balls reach their personal baseline of effectiveness: At least 90 mph on a line, with a launch angle between five and 25 degrees, equals success. "I'm tired of people just going out there and striking out," says Lovullo.  "It turned into a home run or strikeout league. I feel like if we get ahead of that and have an approach like the [David] Fletcher kid when he was in Anaheim, we'll be good. "Fletcher got no love in this game, and I'm like, every team needs three or four of those guys. If we can have three or four of those guys with some slug, we're going to put up some runs." Fletcher's career K rate was 9.5%, though he never managed to produce a league-average OPS over a full season. These D-backs don't have that problem. All-Star shortstop Geraldo Perdomo's strikeout rate has been vanishing a little more every year, now down to 11.7%. He pairs that with a .357 OBP and 115 adjusted OPS, along with such a strong situational feel that Lovullo says he can tell Perdomo, "I need at least a five-pitch at-bat here," and he will execute. "I've always had really good eyes and make contact with no power," says Perdomo. "As I get older, I think it's a reason I'm hitting the ball harder. I feel proud. I don't want to strike out, and the most important thing I can do is putting the ball in play, and now that I'm getting some power, I feel like I can just drive the ball with more intensity. "I'm not looking for a certain pitch, but if there's a good pitch that's close to me, I just try to drive the ball.'' While Arizona's pitching has dragged the club back toward the .500 mark, almost every contender has a contact fiend that tenderizes the opposing pitcher while also doing damage. For the Cubs, it is Nico Hoerner, who has just 22 strikeouts this season – a beyond elite 6.7% K percentage – while managing a .721 OPS despite just three home runs. He plays his role perfectly in the Cubs offense, haunting pitchers and defenses while enabling the lineup's aircraft carriers – Kyle Tucker, Seiya Suzuki and Michael Busch – to take their wallops. "He's got the perfect approach with runners in scoring position: There's gonna be contact," Counsell says of Hoerner, who's already amassed 3.3 WAR this season. "It's really hard to strike him out. It's his elite skill. "The ability to make contact is not an exciting trait as a hitter, but it's a valuable trait. It leads to runs getting scored." And while theTampa Bay Rayshave shaved just 2% off their team K rate year-over-year, the addition of rookies Jake Mangum (13.4%) and speed merchant Chandler Simpson (9.6%) have given them adynamic offensive attack. It's a decidedly postmodern look, one that might've seemed out of place in a pre-pandemic baseball world. And heck, it's not like the home run has vanished across the majors – the rate of 1.11 per team game is still 11thall-time. Perhaps what we're seeing is a generation of players realizing it's OK not to get too big at the plate, especially in an era where pitchers throw harder and nastier stuff with each subsequent season. And that the occasional shelving of the A swing can promote good habits and A+ outcomes for the team. "It's understanding who you are as a hitter and fortunately for us, I feel like we have a bunch of guys who understand their strengths when they walk up to the plate," says Ryas manager Kevin Cash. "And right now, they're doing a good job putting that to use. "Today's pitchers and today's hitters are very special, very talented. And what they do to counter each other year-to-year, game-to-game, at-bat to at-bat - you're seeing a really good product on the field." The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:MLB strikeouts are down as teams adjust in baseball's new era, stats

Contact is king? Strikeouts down in MLB as teams adjust to baseball's new era

Contact is king? Strikeouts down in MLB as teams adjust to baseball's new era WASHINGTON — There may never be another season in Major Le...
Leverkusen signs England Under-21 defender Jarell Quansah from LiverpoolNew Foto - Leverkusen signs England Under-21 defender Jarell Quansah from Liverpool

LEVERKUSEN, Germany (AP) — Bayer Leverkusen has replaced former captain Jonathan Tah with Jarell Quansah from Liverpool in a club-record signing for a defender. The 22-year-old Quansah signed a contract through June 2030 and will wear Tah's former No. 4 shirt, the Bundesliga club said Wednesday. The reported fee of more than 30 million euros ($35.3 million) rising to 40 million ($47 million) with bonuses corresponds roughly with what Liverpool agreed to pay Leverkusen forNetherlands right back Jeremie Frimpongin May. Liverpool reportedly secured a buy-back option for Quansah for more than 60 million euros ($70.6 million) after he has spent two seasons at Leverkusen. Leverkusen also sold star playerFlorian Wirtz to Liverpoollast month for a Bundesliga-record fee. Tah switched to league rival Bayern Munich once the season concluded after declining to extend his contract. He had spent a decade at Leverkusen and was a key part of the team which won the Bundesliga and German Cup unbeaten in 2023-24. Quansah won the Under-21 European Championship with England last week. But he was unable to establish himself as a regular starter at Liverpool ahead of Virgil van Dijk and Ibrahima Konaté. "One of the most promising English central defenders. He's fast, agile, a good footballer," Leverkusen sporting director Simon Rolfes said of Quansah. "He has already made an impressive impact in a Liverpool defense dominated by world-class players. With Jarell, our defense gains significant dynamism, pace and toughness in tackling, and he's another very important building block." Leverkusen last week also signed Abdoulaye Faye for a reported fee of 3 million euros ($3.5 million) from Swedish team BK Häcken, with the 20-year-old Senegalese defender expected to go on loan for the upcoming season. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Leverkusen signs England Under-21 defender Jarell Quansah from Liverpool

Leverkusen signs England Under-21 defender Jarell Quansah from Liverpool LEVERKUSEN, Germany (AP) — Bayer Leverkusen has replaced former cap...
Trump says Israel has 'agreed to the necessary conditions' to finalize 60-day ceasefire in GazaNew Foto - Trump says Israel has 'agreed to the necessary conditions' to finalize 60-day ceasefire in Gaza

President Donald Trump said Tuesday that Israel had "agreed to the necessary conditions" to finalize a ceasefire in Gaza, though it was not immediately clear whether Hamas would accept the terms. Two administration officials said Hamas still had to agree to the deal. In apost on Truth social, Trump said the Qataris and the Egyptians would deliver it. "My Representatives had a long and productive meeting with the Israelis today on Gaza," Trump wrote. "Israel has agreed to the necessary conditions to finalize the 60 Day CEASEFIRE, during which time we will work with all parties to end the War. The Qataris and Egyptians, who have worked very hard to help bring Peace, will deliver this final proposal. I hope, for the good of the Middle East, that Hamas takes this Deal, because it will not get better — IT WILL ONLY GET WORSE. Thank you for your attention to this matter!" CNN reported earlier that Qatari officials had submitted to both Hamas and Israel on Tuesday a new proposal for a 60-day ceasefire, which is backed by the Trump administration, according to a source familiar with the matter. The proposal was finalized after months of behind-the-scenes efforts led by President Donald Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff, the source said. It was submitted on the same day that Israel's Minister for Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer visited Washington for meetings with top Trump administration officials. Despite Trump's statement, an Israeli source familiar with the matter said Israel had not approved the new proposal, which revolves around timetables and guarantees for ending the war, the critical sticking points in previous negotiations. The source did not provide details on the updated language in the proposal about the guarantees. Netanyahu may send a delegation to participate in ceasefire talks following his meeting with Trump, they added. The new proposal comes just days after Qatar helped broker a ceasefire between Iran and Israel after US and Israeli strikes on Iran's nuclear program, and months after an initial Trump administration-backed ceasefire proposal for Gaza was rejected by Hamas. A source told CNN that the new version – which the Qataris also worked on – attempted to take into account Hamas' concerns with the earlier proposal. During the ceasefire, Israeli hostages would be released in exchange for Palestinian prisoners, the source added. The White House did not comment on the details of the proposal, which were reported before Trump's Truth Social post. Trump is scheduled to meet on Monday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who CNN has reported was weighing whether to pursue a ceasefire or intensify attacks on Gaza. On Tuesday, an Israeli military officialtold CNNthat Israel had not fully achieved all of its war goals, but as Hamas' forces have shrunk and gone into hiding, it has become more difficult to effectively target what remains of the militant group. Netanyahu said Sunday that "many opportunities have opened up" following Israel's military operations in Iran, including the possibility of bringing home the remaining hostages held in Gaza. Trump told reporters Tuesday that he would be "very firm" in discussions with Netanyahu at next week's planned White House meeting and predicted the prime minister wanted to end the war. "He wants to. I can tell you he wants to. I think we'll have a deal next week," Trump said. But even with a new proposal on the table, agreeing to a ceasefire remains a major challenge. Hamas has long pushed for a permanent ceasefire, so it is unclear if it would agree to a temporary 60-day truce. Hamas also still maintains its core demand that the war needs to end and that it would have to stay in power, which Israel will not allow, said a separate source familiar with the matter. Still, there have been some indications that Hamas is willing to show some leniency on its hardline positions, the source said. CNN's Kevin Liptak, Dana Karni, Michael Schwartz, Oren Liebermann, Eugenia Yosef and Lucas Lilieholm contributed to this report. This story has been updated with additional information. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump says Israel has ‘agreed to the necessary conditions’ to finalize 60-day ceasefire in Gaza

Trump says Israel has 'agreed to the necessary conditions' to finalize 60-day ceasefire in Gaza President Donald Trump said Tuesday ...
Trump's ceasefire statement raises hopes in Gaza as Israel presses on with attacksNew Foto - Trump's ceasefire statement raises hopes in Gaza as Israel presses on with attacks

By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Alexander Cornwell CAIRO/JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Word from U.S. President Donald Trump that Israel has agreed to the conditions needed to finalise a 60-day ceasefire in Gaza raised hopes on Wednesday in the enclave, where health officials said at least 20 people had been killed in Israeli attacks. A "final" proposal would be delivered by the mediators, Qatar and Egypt, to Hamas, Trump said in a social media post on Tuesday, after what he described as a "long and productive" meeting between his representatives and Israeli officials. Gazans said even a temporary pause would bring relief. "I hope it would work this time, even if for two months, it would save thousands of innocent lives," Kamal, a resident of Gaza City, said by phone. There is growing public pressure on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to reach a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and end the nearly two-year-long war, a move strongly opposed by hardline members of his right-wing ruling coalition. Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar wrote on X on Wednesday that a majority within the coalition government would back an agreement that would see the release of the remaining hostages held by Hamas militants in Gaza. "If there is an opportunity to do so - we must not miss it!", he wrote on X. Of 50 hostages still held, around 20 are believed to be still alive. For Gazans, who have fled multiple times and face daily struggles to find food 21 months into Israel's military campaign, the statements provided a glimmer of hope. "Everyone is hopeful that it would work this time, there is no room for more failures, every day more costs us our lives," said Tamer Al-Burai, a businessman. "We are living the most difficult days. People want an end to the war, an end to the starvation and humiliation." There was no immediate official comment by either Israel or Hamas to Trump's latest statement on the progress of the plan. "Israel has agreed to the necessary conditions to finalize the 60 Day CEASEFIRE, during which time we will work with all parties to end the War," Trump's statement said, without specifying the conditions. IRAN LINK The U.S. president appeared to be seeking to use any momentum from U.S. and Israeli strikes on nuclear sites in Iran and a recently agreed ceasefire in that conflict to put pressure on Hamas, which is backed by Tehran. Israeli leaders also believe that, with Iran weakened by last month's 12-day war, other countries in the region have an opportunity to forge ties with Israel. A Hamas official declined immediate comment on Trump's statement. A source close to the group said leaders of the Islamist faction were expected to debate the proposal and seek clarifications from mediators before giving an official response. At the end of May, Hamas had said it was seeking amendments to a U.S.-backed ceasefire proposal, which Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff said was "totally unacceptable." That proposal had involved a 60-day ceasefire and the release of half the hostages held by Hamas in exchange for Palestinian prisoners and the remains of other Palestinians; Hamas would release the remaining hostages as part of a deal that guarantees the end of the war. Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid wrote on X on Wednesday that his party could provide the government with a safety net if hardline members of the Israeli cabinet opposed a deal, effectively pledging not to back a no-confidence motion in parliament that could topple the government. Gaza health authorities said Israeli gunfire and military strikes killed at least 20 Palestinians in separate attacks in north and southern areas, and the Israeli military ordered more evacuations late on Tuesday. In response to questions from Reuters about the reports, the Israeli military stated that its operations aimed to dismantle Hamas' military capabilities and mitigate civilian harm, without commenting on specific incidents. The war began when Hamas fighters stormed into Israel on October 7, 2023, killed 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and took 251 hostages back to Gaza in a surprise attack that led to Israel's single deadliest day. Israel's subsequent military assault has killed more than 56,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to the Gaza health ministry, displaced almost the whole 2.3 million population and plunged the enclave into a humanitarian crisis. More than 80% of the territory is now an Israeli-militarized zone or under displacement orders, according to the UN. (Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi and Alexander Cornwell; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Trump's ceasefire statement raises hopes in Gaza as Israel presses on with attacks

Trump's ceasefire statement raises hopes in Gaza as Israel presses on with attacks By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Alexander Cornwell CAIRO/JE...
Perez's 2-run double keys Royals over Mariners 6-3 for 2nd win in 10 gamesNew Foto - Perez's 2-run double keys Royals over Mariners 6-3 for 2nd win in 10 games

SEATTLE (AP) — Salvador Perezhit a pivotal two-run doublein the fifth inning, and the Kansas City Royals beat the Seattle Mariners 6-3 on Tuesday night for just their second win in 10 games. Perez lofted a fly ball off Emerson Hancock (3-5) thatcenter fielder Julio Rodríguez lost in the twilight skyand dropped for a two-run double. Rodríguez climbed the center-field wall, trying to rob a home run, but he misjudged the ball and it bounced to the wall as the Royals took a 5-1 lead. Ben Williamson hit an RBI double in the bottom half and scored on J.P. Crawford's singleoff Michael Lorenzen. Five relievers combined for 4 1/3 scoreless innings of one-hit relief. Lucas Erceg (3-2) entered with two on in the seventh and got a double-play grounder and a groundout, and Carlos Estévez pitched a perfect ninth for his 23rd save in 26 chances. Kansas City built a 3-0 lead on Maikel Garcia's run-scoring single in the first and a two-run second that included an RBI double by Nick Loftin, who scored when Kyle Isbel grounded into a forceout. Randy Arozarena homered in the bottom half, his 11th this season and third in four at-bats. Key moment After Angel Zerpa walked Dylan Moore starting the seventh, Cole Young grounded into a double play and Crawford grounded out. Key stat Perez moved past Alex Gordon for sixth place on the Royals hits list with 1,646. Up next Seattle RHP Logan Gilbert (2-2, 3.55) and Kansas City Noah Cameron (2-4, 2.79) started Wednesday in the third game of the four-game set. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

Perez’s 2-run double keys Royals over Mariners 6-3 for 2nd win in 10 games

Perez's 2-run double keys Royals over Mariners 6-3 for 2nd win in 10 games SEATTLE (AP) — Salvador Perezhit a pivotal two-run doublein t...
Stadium where Babe Ruth played in Tokyo is at the center a disputed park redevelopment planNew Foto - Stadium where Babe Ruth played in Tokyo is at the center a disputed park redevelopment plan

TOKYO (AP) — Plans to demolish a historic baseball stadium where Babe Ruth played and an adjacent rugby venue are at the heart of a disputed park redevelopment in Tokyo that critics say trades history and greenery for commercial space. The plan to remake the Jingu Gaien park area was approved 2 1/2 years ago by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government. Work clearing land has begun but opponents are still trying to stop the project, which could take a decade to complete. A coalition on Wednesday presented an open letter to Toshiko Abe, the minister of education, culture, sports, science and technology, asking the project be reassessed. It's signed by 368 experts — urban planners, architects and environmental scientists — and 1,167 others. Ode to an emperor The park area was established a century ago through public donations to honor the Meiji Emperor. At the heart of the issue is citizens' control of public space, and a potential conflict of interest with private developers and politicians deciding how valuable parcels are used. The stadium oozes history and critics saybuilding skyscrapersin the park space would never be allowed in Central Park in New York or Hyde Park in London. Ruth and Lou Gehrig played at the stadium on a 1934 barnstorming tour. Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami was inspired to write his first novel while drinking beer and watching a game there in 1978. The stadium is still home to the Yakult Swallows baseball team and hosted a concert this week. Lofty plans in place Plans call for developers to build a pair of 200-meter (650-feet) towers and a smaller tower. The stadiums are to be rebuilt in the reconfigured space with the baseball stadium going where the rugby stadium now stands. The open letter is critical of so-called private finance schemes that give private developers access to park space. Hibiya Park is Tokyo's oldest public park, another example of this approach. Opposition to the Jingu redevelopment hasincluded novelist Murakami, a conservancy group, and botanists and environmentalists who argue the sprawling project threatens100-year-old gingko treesthat grace the area's main avenue. Aglobal conservancy bodyICOMOS, which works with the United Nations body UNESCO, has said the development will lead to "irreversible destruction of cultural heritage" with trees and green space being lost. Strong lobby for the development Opposition groups are pitted against powerful real-estate developer Mitsui Fudosan, the Shinto religious body, and Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike. "The problem is that many Japanese citizens are not so much interested in democratically regulating their own city and are used to demolishing buildings," Kohei Saito, a Japanese political economist at Tokyo University, wrote to The Associated Press. He said "companies with political power try to maximize their short-term profits without consideration of Tokyo's attractiveness (history, culture), inhabitants' well-being and future generations." Zoning changes to allow high-rise buildings in the area were made around 2013 by the Tokyo government when the city won the bid for the 2020 Olympics. Many of those changes permitted building the neighboring National Stadium but also applied to the park area. "The process of rezoning the area lacked transparency and democratic procedure and constitutes an illegal abuse of the governor's discretion in urban planning decisions," the open letter said. The Jingu district was considered "common property" until after World War II when the government sold it to Shinto under a promise it would remain a common space. The national government comes into play because therugby venueis the property of the Japan Sport Council, a national government affiliated body. The rugby venue represents about 30% of the Jingu Gaien area. Forthcoming election might help Opponents hope the timing later this month of a national election might aid their cause with Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba heading a minority government. Former Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori has ties to the rugby venue. In addition to serving two decades ago as prime minister, he is the former president of the Japan Rugby Football Union and also served as the president of the 2020 Olympic organizing committee until he wasforced to resignafter making sexist comments about women. Opened in 1926, developers argue the baseball stadium is too old to save. However, Fenway Park in Boston dates from 1912 and Wrigley Field in Chicago from 1914. Both have been refurbished and are among the most venerated in the United States. Meiji Kinenkan, a historic reception hall in Jingu Gaien, dates from 1881 and is still widely used with no calls for its demolition. Mitsui Fudosan's headquarters building in Tokyo dates from 1929. Koshien Stadium, located near Osaka, was built in 1924 and has been in use since a refurbishment. The new rugby stadium would be an indoor venue with plastic grass, which players view as the least desirable surface for the sport. ___ AP sports:https://apnews.com/sports

Stadium where Babe Ruth played in Tokyo is at the center a disputed park redevelopment plan

Stadium where Babe Ruth played in Tokyo is at the center a disputed park redevelopment plan TOKYO (AP) — Plans to demolish a historic baseba...
The Dalai Lama signals China should stay out of divine succession processNew Foto - The Dalai Lama signals China should stay out of divine succession process

TheDalai Lamasaid on Wednesday that the ancient Tibetan Buddhist institution he leads will live on after he dies, putting an end to speculation that he would be the last person to hold the role as he plans to reincarnate. As part of celebrations marking his 90th birthday, the Nobel Peace laureate also signalled thatChina, which Tibetan activists accuse of suppressing their language, culture and religion, should stay out of the process of choosing the next Dalai Lama. The 14th Dalai Lama's rareremarkscame as anxiety mounts over who will follow him as the spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism. "I am affirming that the institution of the Dalai Lama will continue," said the Dalai Lama, who has spent almost 70 years living in exile in India after fleeing Tibet, an autonomous Himalayan region of China. "I hereby reiterate that the Gaden Phodrang Trust has sole authority to recognize the future reincarnation," he said, referring to an organization he founded. "No one else has any such authority to interfere in this matter." The Chinese government responded`to the comments swiftly, with a Foreign Ministry spokesperson saying that any succession planning must comply with laws and regulations, according to Reuters. The Tibetan spiritual leader made the announcement days ahead of his 90th birthday on July 6, after a conference of representatives of the four major traditions of Tibetan Buddhism in the Indian city of Dharamsala, the seat of the Tibetan government-in-exile. It's unusual for a living Dalai Lama to talk about his successor, the search for whom begins only upon his death because it involves reincarnation. But as the 14th Dalai Lama grows older, there is growing worry that a gap in leadership could be taken advantage of by the Chinese government. "I think His Holiness feels the need to reassure people by basically letting them know that he is thinking about the succession," Thupten Jinpa, his English translator of four decades, said in a phone interview from India last week. Identified as a baby in 1937, the 14th Dalai Lama was formally recognized two years later. In addition to his role as spiritual leader, he served as temporal leader of Tibet starting in 1950, when he was 15 and China began annexing the region. In 1959, when he was 23, the Dalai Lama and thousands of other Tibetans fled to India after a failed uprising against Communist rule, eventually settling in Dharamsala. Since the 1970s, the goal of the movement has shifted from Tibetan independence to achieving genuine autonomy within China. In recent years the Dalai Lama has also stepped down from his political role, which is now a democratically elected position. In March, the Dalai Lamasaid in a new bookthat his successor would be born in the "free world" outside China, so that the traditional mission of the Dalai Lama could continue. According to theCentral Tibetan Administration, there are about 130,000 Tibetan exiles around the world, mostly in India and Nepal. The Dalai Lama had previouslysaidin 2011 that the institution of the Dalai Lama did not necessarily have to continue at all, and that he would leave it up to the Tibetan Buddhist community. Since then he has received appeals from a variety of constituencies, and the "unanimous" response, Jinpa said, has been that there should be a 15th Dalai Lama. "For the Tibetan people, his name has come to symbolize the nation," said Jinpa, who has assisted the Dalai Lama with a number of books including the recent "Voice for the Voiceless." There is also concern that if they don't select a new Dalai Lama, China could name one who goes unchallenged. "Sadly, the PRC government probably will want to play a role, just as it inserted itself in the process of the recognition of the Panchen Lama," Jinpa said, referring to the second-highest spiritual leader in Tibetan Buddhism. In 1995, the Dalai Lama recognized a 6-year-old boy in Tibet as the 11th Panchen Lama, after the previous one died six years earlier. The boy was forcibly disappeared by the Chinese government three days later, rights groups say, and has not been seen in public since. China then chose its own Panchen Lama, imposing him on the six million people in Tibet. The Tibetan government-in-exile does not recognize the Beijing-appointed Panchen Lama, who rarely appears in public but pledged loyalty to the Chinese Communist Party in a closed-door meeting last month with PresidentXi Jinping, state media reported. If Beijing also tries to name a Dalai Lama, "Tibetans would not be surprised," Jinpa said. "They would be disappointed and annoyed, but I don't think they would be surprised." The Chinese government says Tibet has prospered under its rule, and that it has improved infrastructure and social conditions and promoted economic development. It says the Dalai Lama is "a political exile engaged in separatist activities under the guise of religion," and that the reincarnation of Tibetan lamas should be controlled by Beijing. Reincarnation "must comply with Chinese laws and regulations" and "follow the process that consists of search and identification in China, lot-drawing from a golden urn, and central government approval," foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said in March.

The Dalai Lama signals China should stay out of divine succession process

The Dalai Lama signals China should stay out of divine succession process TheDalai Lamasaid on Wednesday that the ancient Tibetan Buddhist i...

 

MARIO VOUX © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com