Writer’s note: This blog might sometimes seem sequentially challenged – chalk it up to watching too many Tarantino flicks. With that in mind, the following tale details some of Gary’s trip in Japan before his time as Manny Ramirez’s hitting coach which we touched on in the last post. This article, now edited for our site, appeared in its original form on Fangraphs.com. Special thanks to David Laurila who originally helped get this piece edited and published.
- Lars Anderson, June 2020

Midway into the second month of the Kochi Fighting Dogs season, Birdman Bats’ fearless leader, Gary Malec, made the long trek to visit me in Japan. Having flown into Osaka from San Francisco, he took three trains in order to meet the team for our game in the northern part of Shikoku Island against the Kagawa Olive Guyners. As the Fighting Dogs arrived at the stadium on the team bus, I saw my dear friend standing there wearing a Birdman t-shirt and board shirts with his trademark chicken legs sticking out. By his side was a box of bats and a suitcase; on his face was an impossibly large smile.
The bats he was lugging around Shikoku Island were not promotional; they were orders being filled by my teammates. At the time, about ten players on the team were swinging Birdman Bats, and I imagine it was fulfilling for Gary to see his bats being used in professional games. The task of carrying 50 pounds of bats on his shoulders throughout the humid foreign land, however, was less desirable, and once he dropped the boxed bats on the ground and gave me a sweaty hug, he exhaled, ‘Never again…I am never flying with that many bats anywhere ever again!’



Since it was a night game, we played under the lights. Well, most of the lights. Before the contest started, my English-speaking teammate, Zak Colby, quipped, ‘You’re going to enjoy this. They don’t turn the lights on in right-center field here.’ ‘What now?’ I asked, equal parts dread and curiosity, knowing that the novelty in Japan was everlasting. ‘Well, since the ocean is so close and the commercial fishing boats here fish right off the coast at night, they keep lights in right field off so that the boats don’t cast a shadow in the water and scare away the fish.’
We played the entire game without 20% of the field’s lighting capacity so that the fishing would stay good. Fortunately, the other 80% was more than enough to see the ball, and I homered in my second at-bat. After I touched home, the obligatory promotional sign was forced into my hands for me to hold up, promoting God-knows-what. The signs, after all, do not even hint at anything in the English alphabet. I held the sign up for the crowd to see, only to be yelled at by the coaching staff that I was holding it upside down.
After the game, I asked Gary what his take on the game was. ‘I really liked the bat flips. It seems like they bat flip on everything.’
Two days later, we arrived at another away game where the Pacific Ocean glistened only a few hundred yards beyond the field’s left-field fence. Given that Gary was not part of the team and thus not allowed to ride the team’s bus, the Fighting Dogs graciously had one of their staff members drive us to the game.
It proved fortunate for Gary and me. The team’s bus driver overslept, making the rest of the guys late. As we waited for them to arrive, we walked down to the shore to have a look at the beach and ocean. It wouldn’t be the last time that day.

Once the team did arrive, we took batting practice. Once finished, Zak suggested that we go jump in the Pacific before the game. It was an easy answer, and we changed out of our ball threads, threw on some trunks, and took off for the water. The water was warmer than I’ve ever experienced in the Pacific Ocean, and we swam for about 15 minutes. It was my first (and now that I’m retired, the only) time preparing for a ballgame by bodysurfing.
The field itself was reminiscent of a high-school or small-college field. There was no seating for fans other than a set of bleachers and a grassy berm down the right-field line, but that didn’t detract from the many locals who came out to enjoy some udon, sake, and mediocre baseball. It felt like ‘small town Americana’ with welcomed Japanese twists along with a damn ocean as the backdrop.





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