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・ Tsuyoshi Ogata
・ Tsuyoshi Sekito
・ Tsuyoshi Shimamura
・ Tsuyoshi Shimoyanagi
・ Tsuyoshi Shinchu
・ Tsuyoshi Shinjo
・ Tsuyoshi Suzuki
・ Tsuyoshi Takagi
・ Tsuyoshi Takashiro
・ Tsuyoshi Tanikawa
・ Tsuyoshi Tezuka
・ Tsuyoshi Tomii
・ Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi
・ Tsuyoshi Ueda
・ Tsuyoshi Ujiki
Tsuyoshi Wada
・ Tsuyoshi Yamaguchi
・ Tsuyoshi Yamaguchi (curler)
・ Tsuyoshi Yamamoto
・ Tsuyoshi Yamanaka
・ Tsuyoshi Yanagidate
・ Tsuyoshi Yoda
・ Tsuyoshi Yoneyama
・ Tsuyoshi Yoshitake
・ Tsuyoshi Ōhashi
・ Tsuyu
・ Tsuyuharai
・ Tsuyung Airfield
・ Tsuzu Station
・ Tsuzuki


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Tsuyoshi Wada : ウィキペディア英語版
Tsuyoshi Wada


is a Japanese professional baseball pitcher for the Chicago Cubs of Major League Baseball (MLB).
Wada pitched in the 2004 Athens and 2008 Beijing Olympics as well as the 2006 World Baseball Classic for the Japanese national team. He set a Tokyo Big6 Baseball League record with 476 strikeouts during his college career at Waseda University and was the Pacific League Most Valuable Rookie in 2003.
==Early life and high school career==
Wada was born in Kōnan, Aichi Prefecture,〔(【引用サイトリンク】 script-title=ja:サウスポー論: 著者について )〕 a member of the age group often referred to as the "Matsuzaka Generation". He began playing baseball as a first grader at Kōnan Municipal Fujisato Elementary School for the Kōnan Danchi Baseball team.
In 1991, Wada and his family moved to Izumo, Shimane Prefecture, Wada's father's hometown. Wada enrolled in Shimane Prefectural Hamada High School in Hamada upon graduating from junior high,〔 leading them to the 79th National High School Baseball Championship in the summer of his second year of high school (the equivalent of eleventh grade in the United States) in 1997. His team faced Akita Commercial High School, led by current Tokyo Yakult Swallows ace Masanori Ishikawa, in the first round, but Wada walked that very Ishikawa with the bases loaded in the bottom of the ninth inning and suffered a walk-off loss.
Wada's team secured a berth in the national tournament again the following summer (1998). They defeated Niigata Prefectural Shibata Agricultural High School, whose battery consisted of right-hander Togashi Kazuhiro (who later played for the Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters) and catcher Ken Katoh (currently with the Yomiuri Giants), in their first game. They faced Teikyo High School, the East Tokyo champions, in their next game. Though Wada, who was not only the team's ace but also their cleanup hitter, gave up a home run to current Fighters outfielder Hichori Morimoto, Hamada High won 3-2, making it to the quarter-finals. They narrowly lost in the quarter-finals to Toyota Otani High School (led by current Orix Buffaloes outfielder Katsuaki Furuki) in extra innings.
Though Wada had ruptured his left triceps muscle the previous fall and struggled to even reach with his fastball during the tournament, Teikyo High players remarked after facing Wada that "(fastball ) looked like it was ."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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