Norihiro Nakamura
Norihiro Nakamura is a Japanese former professional baseball third baseman. Nakamura spent almost all of his professional career in Japan with the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes. Nakamura had a.266 career batting average, 404 home runs and 1348 RBI, and was an eight-time All-Star and four-time Golden Glove winner. Nakamura is one of only 16 players to have hit 400 or more home runs in NPB. He also played briefly for the Los Angeles Dodgers of Major League Baseball in 2005.
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Career
1992–2004: Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes
Drafted in, Nakamura began to emerge as one of the leading power hitters in Nippon Professional Baseball in. From to, he had six consecutive 40-home run, 100-RBI seasons, setting career highs in batting average homers and RBI in.2002–2005: Dalliances with MLB
In, he agreed to a two-year, $7 million contract with the New York Mets, but, after word leaked out before he could formally notify the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes management, Nakamura rejected the deal, saying that "I cannot trust such a team which leaked this information at its own Web site", and re-signed with Kintetsu over considerable controversy.In, he suffered a torn knee cartilage, and his offensive numbers began to decline. However, he hit well while participating in a spring training exchange program with the Los Angeles Dodgers in.
In, Nakamura walked away from a guaranteed $10 million two-year contract in Japan, primarily also in protest against Orix with the Buffaloes-BlueWave merger that happened the previous offseason, to sign a $500,000 non-guaranteed minor league deal with the Dodgers as a non-roster invitee to spring training. He made his Major League Baseball debut for the Dodgers on April 10,. Highly touted from his playing days in Japan, he received the opportunity to win the Dodgers starting third base role afterAdrián Beltré left the Dodgers in free agency the previous offseason. However, Nakamura managed only a.128 batting average with no home runs and 3 runs batted in. He was optioned to the Las Vegas 51s, the Dodgers Triple-A affiliate, by mid-May. He would remain with the 51s the remainder of the season, after which the Dodgers granted him his release. Just after being released, he said "If Ichiro had started his career under minor contract like me, he couldn't be called up to Major League","This year is a kind of penalties for me", and "I don't know why I played in minor league".