Skip to main content
Come Fan with UsFriday, July 3, 2026

Hideki Irabu Death: Japanese Righthander Was Pioneer, But Had Troubled Life

When Japanese righthander Hideki Irabu first came to pitch in the USA, he was widely considered the best pitcher in Japan. But the deal that originally sent him from the Chiba Lotte Marines, his Japanese team, to the San Diego Padres set the wheels in motion for the modern posting system, according to the Wall Street Journal:

Set on playing for the Yankees, Mr. Irabu refused to go to San Diego.

Robert Whiting, author of several books about Japanese baseball, wrote in his 2004 book about Seattle Mariners outfielder Ichiro Suzuki, “The Meaning of Ichiro,” that Mr. Irabu compared the San Diego deal to the “slave trade” and said he was being treated like a piece of meat. San Diego caved and traded Mr. Irabu to the Yankees in 1997.

“He will go down in history for fighting for players’ rights in Japan, by refusing to accept the Lotte trade to San Diego. Because of him and [Alfonso] Soriano, the posting system was born,” said Mr. Whiting in an e-mail.

But Irabu, after a sensational debut, had a rough career in MLB; his failure to cover first base during a spring training game in 1999 got Yankees owner George Steinbrenner to call him a “fat toad”; he was eventually traded to the Montreal Expos and wound up his MLB career as a reliever for the Texas Rangers.

He last pitched for the Long Beach Armada of the independent Golden League in 2009 and was living in southern California, where his personal life became troubled:

Mary Feuerlicht said she was about to go pick up her son on Wednesday morning when a man came running down the driveway from Irabu’s large two-story home, perched atop a hill with views of the harbor and downtown Los Angeles, pleading with her to call police.

Feuerlicht said she was later told by sheriff’s deputies and the man who asked her for help that Irabu’s wife had left him, taking their two young daughters. She hadn’t seen Irabu’s wife and children for two months, but said the family regularly left town for the summer.

“When I saw him for the past month or so he seemed kind of down,” she said. “He wasn’t kind of perky like I’ve seen him before.”

The Los Angeles County coroner’s office is investigating Irabu’s death as a suicide and will perform an autopsy Friday or Saturday.

See More:

More in General

From SBNationExternal Link
LeBron, Jaylen, and more offseason news and opinion in the NBA Feed!LeBron, Jaylen, and more offseason news and opinion in the NBA Feed!
From SBNationExternal Link
News, analysis, opinions to get ready for this weekend’s British Grand PrixNews, analysis, opinions to get ready for this weekend’s British Grand Prix
GeneralFromPosting and Toasting
An SB Nation New Yorker needs our helpAn SB Nation New Yorker needs our help
GeneralFromPosting and Toasting
General
Sabastian Sawe breaks 2-hour barrier, shatters marathon world recordSabastian Sawe breaks 2-hour barrier, shatters marathon world record
General

The mythical two-hour mark was broken at the London Marathon.

By Bernd Buchmasser
A Huge Dog
THE HISTORY OF CHARGING THE MOUND, EPISODE 1THE HISTORY OF CHARGING THE MOUND, EPISODE 1
Play
General
Super Bowl 60 coin toss resultsSuper Bowl 60 coin toss results
General

The Seahawks and Patriots will open the Super Bowl with the coin toss to determine who starts with the ball. We have the full coin toss results for Super Bowl 60.

By David Fucillo