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Ichiro Becomes First Japanese-Born Hall of Famer

 Yuri Karasawa  |    Jan 21st, 2025 8:11pm EST

Following his induction to the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame last week, Ichiro Suzuki is officially Cooperstown-bound.

The legendary right fielder received 99.7 percent of votes by the Baseball Writers Association of America, falling just one vote shy of joining Mariano Rivera as the only other unanimous Hall of Famer. CC Sabathia, who played alongside Ichiro on the New York Yankees from 2012 to 2014, and Billy Wagner will join Ichiro in the 2025 class.

Ichiro is the first Japanese-born and Asian-born player elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Venezuela and the Netherlands also have just one representative in Cooperstown, while Panama and Canada have two, the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico have five, and Cuba has six. He is the first player with multiple World Baseball Classic titles (2006, 2009) to enter the hall.

When the Orix Blue Wave drafted Ichiro Suzuki in the fourth round of the 1991 NPB Draft, the notion of him one day reaching Cooperstown seemed unthinkable. At that time, he was just starting his professional career in Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB), and only one Japanese player had ever appeared in Major League Baseball. Yet, over the next nine seasons, everything changed.

On the field, Ichiro amassed 1,278 hits, 118 home runs, and 199 stolen bases, boasting a .353/.421/.522 slash line. Along the way, he took home seven batting titles and three MVP awards. Off the field, the controversial cases of Hideo Nomo, Hideki Irabu, and Alfonso Soriano spurred the creation of an NPB-MLB posting system — one that would eventually help pave Ichiro’s path to the major leagues.

With the pipeline open, Ichiro moved stateside in 2001, signing with the Seattle Mariners and becoming the first Japanese-born position player in the league’s history. His debut season was nothing short of remarkable, as he awed fans with his extraordinary hitting style and defensive prowess, leading the league in batting average (.350) and stolen bases (56), earning both the AL Rookie of the Year and AL Most Valuable Player awards.

Throughout his 19-year MLB career, Ichiro won two batting titles, three Silver Slugger awards, and ten Gold Glove awards. He recorded 117 homers, 509 steals, and 3,089 hits. In 2004, he set the MLB single-season record with 262 hits, surpassing George Sisler’s 84-year-old record. Additionally, he put up 10 consecutive seasons with at least 200 hits from 2001 to 2010, a feat that will likely never be matched.

Combining his NPB and MLB statistics, Ichiro accumulated 235 home runs, 708 stolen bases, and 4,367 hits, the most in baseball history, over 28 seasons. He slashed .322/.373/.434 and amassed approximately 111.2 WAR (51.2 in NPB, 60.0 in MLB), a testament to his elite hit tool, on-base ability, and superb defense. He retired from professional baseball in March 2019 after playing his final game with the Mariners during their Japan tour in Tokyo.

Post-retirement, Ichiro has been honored for his contributions to the sport on both sides of the Pacific, including his induction into the Seattle Mariners Hall of Fame in August 2022 and the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame last week. Now, he enters the National Baseball Hall of Fame for his MLB achievements.

Ichiro’s legacy remains profound, as evidenced by the next generation of left-handed hitters — such as Ryuki Watarai of the DeNA BayStars and Steven Kwan of the Cleveland Guardians — who admire him and model their games after his. Indeed, his induction is the culmination of maximizing talent through unwavering dedication to the craft, tireless work, and mental fortitude, proving all who doubted his ability to succeed wrong.

International-Born Players Inducted Into the National Baseball Hall of Fame

Cuba (6 Inductees)

Martín Dihigo (1977)

José Méndez (2006)

Tony Pérez (2000)

Tony Oliva (2022)

Minnie Miñoso (2022)

Cristóbal Torriente (2006)

Dominican Republic (5 Inductees)

Juan Marichal (1983)

Pedro Martínez (2015)

Vladimir Guerrero Sr. (2018)

David Ortiz (2022)

Adrián Beltré (2024)

Puerto Rico (5 Inductees)

Roberto Clemente (1973)

Orlando Cepeda (2000)*

Roberto Alomar (2011)

Iván Rodríguez (2017)

Edgar Martínez (2019)

Canada (2 Inductees)

Ferguson Jenkins (1991)

Larry Walker (2020)

Panama (2 Inductees)

Rod Carew (1991)

Mariano Rivera (2019)

Netherlands (1 Inductee)

Bert Blyleven (2011)

Venezuela (1 Inductee)

Luis Aparicio (1984)

Japan (1 Inductee)

Ichiro Suzuki (2025)

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Yuri Karasawa