The New York Mets had a special surprise visitor at Spring Training on Friday and he paid a visit to ace Kodai Senga.
The rotation needs to be prepared to carry the Mets' load and a healthy Senga can take a big part of it on his shoulders.
“I am not worried at all,” Senga said through his interpreter to reporters, via the New York Post. “I just need to ramp up ...
While it didn't compete with the Juan Soto sweepstakes, Japanese phenom Roki Sasaki's decision on which team he was going to ...
Various injuries limited Senga to 10 1/3 innings last season, and he said he didn't feel fully healthy until early January.
Senga later made two appearances in the playoffs, one of which was fine, but the other was disastrous. He spent about half of his offseason doing a rehab protocol before moving to a more normal ...
Kodai Senga spent part of his winter at home in Japan in rehab mode, with the goal of arriving at spring training ready for a normal buildup toward the season. On that count, the Mets right-hander is ...
During a roughly 10-minute chat with reporters on Tuesday, the day before the first official workout for pitchers and ...
The Race, Ethnicity and Education Special Interest Group challenges systems of oppression that demean and threaten to erase educators and learners of Global South heritage, through discussion and ...
Kodai Senga is a right-handed starting pitcher for the New York Mets, and he was also a massive star in Japan. Senga is just one of many Japanese stars to find success in Major League Baseball ...
The 23-year-old joined Kodai Senga and Yoshinobu Yamamoto in the train of top Japanese right-handed starting pitchers that have crossed over from the NPB to the MLB over the past few years.
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