2024 Central League Climax Series

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

DatesOctober 12–13
DatesOctober 16–21
2024 Central League Climax Series
First stage
Team (Wins) Manager Season
Yokohama DeNA BayStars (2) Daisuke Miura 71–69–3 (.507), 8 GB
Hanshin Tigers (0) Akinobu Okada 74–63–6 (.540), 3½ GB
DatesOctober 12–13
Final stage
Team (Wins) Manager Season
Yokohama DeNA BayStars (4) Daisuke Miura 71–69–3 (.507), 8 GB
Yomiuri Giants (3) Shinnosuke Abe 77–59–7 (.566), 3½ GA
DatesOctober 16–21
MVPYasutaka Tobashira (DeNA)
 2023
2025 

2024 PLCS               2024 Japan Series

The 2024 Central League Climax Series was a set of two consecutive playoff series in Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). The first stage began on October 12 and the final stage concluded on October 21. The first stage was a best-of-three series between the second-place Hanshin Tigers and the third-place Yokohama DeNA BayStars. The final stage was a best-of-six against the Yomiuri Giants, the Central League champion, being awarded a one-win advantage against the BayStars, the eventual winner of the first stage. The BayStars advanced to the 2024 Japan Series to compete against the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks, the winner of the 2024 Pacific League Climax Series.

For the fourth year in a row, JERA sponsored the naming rights for the Central League Climax Series, and it was officially known as the "2024 JERA Climax Series SE".[1]

In their 90th anniversary season, the Yomiuri Giants clinched their first Central League (CL) championship in four years and 39th overall on September 28. Shinnosuke Abe led the Giants to the pennant in his first year as the team's manager.[2] Despite struggling to score throughout the season, Yomiuri employed a defense-first style of baseball in which their pitchers and defense helped them to win the championship.[2][3] After winning seven consecutive games in July which to help power, the team found themselves in first place at the end of the first half of the season. The top four teams in the CL, however, were only separated from each other by a total of 3½ games.[2] At the end of August, the Hiroshima Toyo Carp were in first place narrowly ahead of the Giants.[2] The Carp had a disastrous September, however, losing 20 of 25 games, and by the end of the month they had fallen from first place to fourth and were eliminated from the playoff race.[4]

The Hanshin Tigers, the previous season's Japan Series winner, started slow and found themselves in fourth at the season's midpoint. At various points, Shota Morishita, Yusuke Oyama and Teruaki Sato were all removed from the active roster to spend time working on their hitting with the Hanshin's farm team. Batting improved in the second half, however, and the Tigers began closing the gap between them and first place. Two five-game winning streaks in September helped bring them within one game of the Giants.[5] Hanshin started a two-game series with the first-place Giants starting on September 22 trailing them by two games. They won the first game and, with a chance to move into a first-place tie, lost the second game. The Tigers went on to finish the season in second place.[2] In the break between the end of the regular season and the start of the Climax Series, Akinobu Okada, Hanshin's manager, announced that he would retire at the end of the season.[6]

As the season came to a close, Hiroshima continued to lose. A fourth Carp loss in a row on October 2 confirmed that the Yokohama DeNA BayStars would clinch third place and their third straight trip to the Climax Series.[7] First-year team captain Shugo Maki and eventual 2024 batting champion Tyler Austin powered the DeNA offense, while ace Katsuki Azuma led the pitching staff with thirteen wins.[8][9] From the start of the season, Azuma won eight straight games, helping the BayStars to reach second places by the end of June.[10][8] A month later, however, the team was in the midst of a nine-game losing streak and found themselves knocked down to fourth.[8] Still in fourth and outside of Climax Series qualification, Maki introduced the motto "determined to win" to the team on August 27. The BayStars immediately went on a five-game win streak and finished the next month with a September record of 11–9–1. This push along with Hiroshima's fall won DeNA a playoff appearance.[11]

First stage

Final stage

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI