Pitching carries Hawks to third straight win
NAGOYA — For three nights, the Fukuoka Softbank Hawks were extremely rude house guests to the Chunichi Dragons.
Now that their first Japan Series title since  2003 is within  reach, the Hawks won't exactly be rolling out the red  carpet when they  get back home either.Hiroki Yamada threw six shutout innings, and a  three-run  eighth put the game out of reach, as the Hawks beat the  Dragons 5-0 in  Game 5 of the Japan Series on Thursday to sweep all  three games at  Nagoya Dome and move within a win of the title.
"I was very nervous before the game but got more  and more  comfortable as the game moved along, especially since I was  working with  a lead," Yamada said after his first Japan Series  appearance. "I am  very happy to have won my first Japan Series game. It  is something I  will never forget."
The Hawks lead the series 3-2 and can finish  things off  with a victory in Game 6 in Fukuoka on Saturday. That is, if  they can  manage to win at home in a series where thus far, the  visiting team has  won every game.
"You never know in baseball," Hawks manager Koji  Akiyama said. "This is one series where home field has so far not been  an  advantage, but I hope that changes in the next game."The Dragons are hoping things stay the same when the teams meet at Yahoo Dome.
"This is very disappointing and embarrassing to  lose all our  home games," Chunichi manager Hiromitsu Ochiai said. "We  are obviously  at a disadvantage now and will do our best to win the  last two in  Fukuoka. That is all we can do."Softbank's triumph spoiled Ochiai's final  home game. Ochiai was informed in September that he would not be  retained after his  contract expires at the end of the season.
Hitoshi Tamura drove in a pair of runs with a  single in the  eighth, while Nobuhiro Matsuda and Toru Hosokawa also  recorded RBIs.Softbank had trouble turning their hits into runs early on, which left it up to Yamada to keep the Dragons at bay."I appreciate that I was given the opportunity to  be on the  mound in such an important game like this," Yamada said. "I  tried to  enjoy it as well, I heard the loud chants for the opponents  while I  pitched, but I tried to look at it as a good thing for me and  got them  out."
The 23-year-old lefty limited Chunichi to  three hits and  struck out five without walking a batter or allowing a  runner past  second.For the third straight game, the Dragons couldn't  overcome  their shortcomings at the plate. They were shut out and  managed just five  hits. Masahiro Araki's sixth-inning double  represented the only time Chunichi put a runner in scoring position.Dragons starter Chen Wei-yin took the loss, and was charged with five runs on nine hits over seven-plus innings.- http://www.japantimes.co.jp










 
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