Discover Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/clips/1421/

Dodgers relationship with Japan

In 1956 the Brooklyn Dodgers took a trip to Japan, for a monthlong goodwill tour, and they generated so much interest I think that Major League Baseball was becoming more popular by the Japanese fans back then and then in 1966 the Los Angeles Dodgers took another trip there too which really was popular.

In 1993 the Dodgers also took a tour to Taiwan and to Fukuoka Japan to do goodwill games there too. Many history of Japan and Dodgers relationship, starting with 1965 my father-in-law Ike Ikuhara joined the Dodgers and so since then you can see from 1956 the relationship with the Dodgers and Japan has been significant and thus led, I think led us to sign Hideo Nomo because of our popularity in Japan.

And most Japanese people felt very close to the Dodgers, especially the baseball officials because the Tokyo Giants trained there five times and all the footage and all the daily newspaper articles from Vero Beach where Dodger players and Tokyo Giants players are in the photos. I think those type of thing historically has contributed to significance of Dodgers in Japan.


athletics baseball Goodwill Games Hideo Nomo sports United States

Date: March 21, 2014

Location: California, US

Interviewer: Mark Langill

Contributed by: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum

Interviewee Bio

Acey Kohrogi, formerly Director of Asian Operations for Los Angeles Dodgers and assistant to Peter O’Malley, owner of the Dodgers, for 20 years, is currently working for MVP Sports Group, serving as the firm's head of Asian operations. Kohrogi spent two decades with the Dodger organization and helped them attract the likes of Major League Baseball stars Hideo Nomo, Takashi Saito, Hiroki Kuroda, Chan Ho Park and Hong-Chi Kuo. His interview for Discover Nikkei was conducted in conjunction with Dodgers—Brotherhood of the Game, the exhibition at the Japanese American National Museum. (September 2014)

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