
WALLY YONAMINE
(Born 1925)
Japan baseball player and manager.
Wally Yonamine, who was born in Olowalu, Maui, made his mark in
Japanese baseball with a 38-year career as player, manager and coach. He was the
"Oriental Jackie Robinson" said Robert Whiting in his definitive book about
Japanese baseball, "The Chrysantheumum and the Bat." He had a lifetime batting
average of .311, mostly with the Yomiuri Giants, winning three batting titles. He was the
Central Leagues Most Valuable Player in 1957 and made the all-time Japan baseball
team. He was inducted into the Japan Baseball Hall of Fame in 1990.
Yonamine also was a pioneer in football. In 1944, he led Farrington
High School to its first-ever ILH crown. Yonamine toured with the Hawaiian Warriors in the
late 1940s and so impressed professional football scouts at a game in Oregon, he was
signed by the San Francisco 49ers the first player of Asian descent to do this.
After a football injury, Yonamine decided to concentrate on professional
baseball. While under contract to the Pacific Coast Leagues San Francisco Seals, he
was encouraged by the Seals manager (a pioneer in bringing baseball to Japan) to
consider playing baseball there. He later signed a two-year contract with the Yomiuri
(Tokyo) Giants and was an instant success. In the process, he opened the door for other
American athletes to seek their fortunes in Japan. |