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Induction of Ichiro has Cooperstown fretfully preparing
Induction of Ichiro has Cooperstown fretfully preparing

Japan Times

time22-07-2025

  • Business
  • Japan Times

Induction of Ichiro has Cooperstown fretfully preparing

Mom-and-pop apparel and memorabilia stores have long lined picturesque Main Street here in the town that is home to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. When visitors for this year's induction ceremony arrive in the coming week, they might find something new: Japanese-speaking interpreters to help them shop. The headliner of this year's Hall of Fame class is outfielder Ichiro Suzuki, who amassed 3,089 hits in MLB and will soon become the first Japanese player enshrined in the game's hallowed museum. The number of visitors to Cooperstown, a town of a couple thousand, fluctuates with the star power of a given year's inductees. But this year presents a new wrinkle: The area has never anticipated an influx of fans from so far away. "The biggest issue I was thinking about over the winter is, like, how do we communicate?' said Vincent Carfagno, owner of the memorabilia store Seventh Inning Stretch, which is in its 31st summer and will have interpreters available Friday to Sunday. "I know we all have phones, and you can do Google Translate, but it's just easier in person if someone wants to talk about a certain piece.' Cooperstown is not home to a sizable Japanese American population. Across from Carfagno's store on Main Street is the only sushi restaurant in town. To find interpreters, Carfagno took to Facebook. "A couple of my friends knew some people,' he said. "There's a Japanese teacher and her husband that have never been here, and wanted to come anyway.' Cassandra Harrington, president of an organization that promotes tourism in the area, is printing 3,000 village and museum maps that are translated into Japanese. But she said that as far as other planned changes for new clientele, business owners do not want to make too many assumptions about what foreign visitors may seek. A confectioner was considering making fudge with sake in it, but was not sure how that would be received. "They're trying to remain culturally sensitive,' Harrington said. The National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum two years ago started preparing for Ichiro's induction, said the institution's president, Josh Rawitch. That work culminated this month when the Hall opened an exhibit celebrating the ways Japanese and American baseball are intertwined. Displays in "Yakyu / Baseball: The Transpacific Exchange of the Game' honor not only Ichiro, but pitcher Hideo Nomo — the second Japanese player to reach the majors — and Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers, the most prominent player in either country today. With a budget of roughly $2.5 million, it is one of the most expensive exhibits that the nonprofit has created, Rawitch said. On a bronze cast of a baseball, fans can place their hand on the same spots that Nomo would grip the ball when throwing his signature forkball. A video-and-audio installment later shows what it is like to be in the stands for games in both countries. In one clip at Yankee Stadium, fans in the outfield seats who are known as the Bleacher Creatures chant the names of the Yankees' starters — "roll call,' the tradition is called. Then the viewer is transported to Japan, where Rakuten Eagles fans release balloons into the sky. Several items were sourced from Japan, such as a happi coat presented to Hall of Famer Lefty Gomez during a 1934 tour of the country, making for a more complicated procurement process than the Hall usually encounters when seeking artifacts on loan. But even amid the preparations, there is an air of mystery in Cooperstown in the lead-up to next Sunday's ceremony: How many fans will actually make the trek from Japan? "There's a good degree of uncertainty,' said Vincent Russo, who runs another Main Street shop, Mickey's Place, where an interpreter will be available. "Is it 5,000? Is it 10,000? Is it 1,000?' The cost to fly across the Pacific is not the only concern for travelers from Japan. After landing at one of the major airports in the New York metropolitan area, a four-hour-or-so drive awaits, some of it on back roads. "The opportunity of having the first-ever Japanese baseball player and somebody who was just so uber-popular in Japan is going to drive people here,' Rawitch said. "But I also think we have to be realistic about the fact that it is not easy to get from Tokyo to Cooperstown. And so do I imagine there's going to be tens of thousands of Japanese fans here? Probably not. But there's going to be tens of thousands of fans here, and we want to make sure that we're welcoming regardless of where they're coming from.' Most identified with the Seattle Mariners, Ichiro is not the only attraction this year. He is going into the Hall as part of a five-player class that includes CC Sabathia, a longtime New York Yankees pitcher who should attract plenty of visitors. But other forces are at play. This year's inductees were revealed Jan. 21, one day after U.S. President Donald Trump was inaugurated. That is significant because while everyone long expected Ichiro would receive enough votes to be inducted, most induction weekend reservations come after the announcement, according to Jay Smith, whose company Sports Travel and Tours sells licensed packages through the Hall. U.S. tourism has dropped this year, a topic at a tourism conference Smith recently attended. "The international markets that I had meetings with, they are very well aware of the downward trend of interest for people coming to the U.S. at this point,' Smith said. In the final week of June, Smith said he had about 75 people signed up for an induction package from Japan. "We thought that there would be more,' he said. The National Baseball Hall of Fame Museum in Coopesrtown, New York | USA TODAY / via Reuters Meanwhile, the Hall of Fame expects more than 60 media members representing about 20 Japanese news outlets to cover Ichiro's induction. But even when the Hall is trying to figure out how many U.S. attendees will arrive, a lot of guesswork is involved. The induction ceremony is not a ticketed event, and plenty of people book their trips independent of travel agencies. The Japanese American Association of New York and Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry of New York offer a one-day tour bus from New York City on induction day at a cost of $305. But that amount, too, can be hefty, said Koji Sato, president of the association. "Because Ichiro is being inducted, that makes it very desirable to go,' said Sato, who plans to attend. "The average Japanese, let's say restaurant worker, in New York might not want to spend that much money for a day. But it all depends.' Induction weekend is not the only game in town for local businesses, which have a busy summer season with youth baseball teams playing tournaments there. But they do feel the impact of turnout, and the induction weekend headliner genuinely matters. Russo said that the year Cal Ripken Jr., the Baltimore Orioles great, went into the Hall, about 8% of his annual revenue came from induction weekend. Last year, when Adrian Beltre, Todd Helton and Joe Mauer led the class, it was under 5%. Shopkeepers here still talk about Derek Jeter's ceremony, which was supposed to be in 2020 but was delayed by the pandemic until after Labor Day in 2021. In a typical summer setting, a Yankees superstar like Jeter would have driven eye-popping sales. COVID-19 made that a painful missed opportunity. Mickey's Place has not moved many Ichiro caps yet, but Russo expects that will change over induction weekend. The greater question, he said, is how many Ichiro caps will sell after that. Will Ichiro's enshrinement draw new fans to the area? A new development nearby might help. In a few years, Hoshino Resorts, a Japanese hospitality company, is planning to open its first continental U.S. location in Sharon Springs, New York, about a half-hour away. The Hall is hoping that dovetails with its own efforts; Rawitch expects the Hall will display its new exhibit for at least five years. "Regardless of how many people show up this July, whoever does is going to go back home and say, 'Man, did you see that incredible exhibit they did in Cooperstown, and you can go see Ichiro's plaque, and there's this town that's just for baseball?'' Rawitch said. "All of that is a five- to 10-year play. It's not just about July 27.' This article originally appeared in The New York Times © 2025 The New York Times Company

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