Monday, July 13, 2026

Samurai Japan: Movie review

By Ed Piper

I just watched the two-hour "Samurai Japan WBC" movie on NetFlix, consuming a very un-Japanese dish of three scrambled eggs in tortillas two-thirds of the way through, and I'm reminded of my most recent interaction with someone concerning Asian culture.

In a trip to see Shohei Ohtani (stay with me, here), I talked for three innings, standing, shielded in the shade on the Upper Deck of Dodger Stadium with a white (though culturally Jewish) American who was seeing his first Dodger game in years, having just spent six months in Taipei on an internship, I think.

He was glad to be back on American soil, having grown up in West L.A., I believe, very much in reactive mode to the "shame-based" culture of Taiwan. He called Taiwan the "Disneyland" of that part of Asia, with beaches, showy culture, very "surface" in his short experience there.

Though only 24, I believe (I'm 72), this young man has traveled to many parts of the world, including Israel (though not on a "birthright" trip, as he called it) and many countries in Europe. So he's not a newbie on travel or exposure to cultures other than his own secular Jewish upbringing.

I've forgotten his name (this visit occurred June 17, and here I am writing a month later), but he was so filled up with being around an environment in which "you don't do anything to make yourself look bad", you don't stand out, that he was done with travel for a while.

Which brings us back to the Samurai program. As you recall, the Japan team did not win this year's World Baseball Classic--Venezuela did--but the movie immerses you in a subtitle-reading mode (for two hours--my brain is tired--I don't speak Japanese except "MLB", "Acuna Jr., "meeting" (they use a lot of words from outside the culture).

What did I learn that was new? Power-hitter Seiya Suzuki of the Cubs and Ohtani are long-time friends and associates. Suzuki sported frosted tips in his hair during the WBC. He clubbed a few homers right behind Shohei's leadoff home run-hitting antics.

Ohtani has a thick, lush movie-star-type mane of hair, which flows prominently. Reinforced was the fact Japanese fans revere Ohtani and adore the other Japanese baseball players in the same manner.

Connecting to my earlier comments on my conversation with the 20-something West L.A. fan, I sensed some of the conformity Asians comply with, the military discipline their country has a history of. You don't see Asian males with long, outlandish hair, none with tattoos. I know that the film is aimed at Japanese fans, so though they show Suzuki's knee injury at the start and later in the movie--"the triumphs and tough spots" of the Samurai Japan team's WBC campaign--it is very much the fan piece, lots of puff that fans will enjoy, kind-hearted kidding and joking among team members.

There is a lot of camaraderie on the team depicted in the film. Of course, different from my experience but something I'm aware of, team members bow as they shake hands, kind of a mix of Asian and Western adaptation.

Earlier this year, a South Korean-born male who grew up in California shared his analysis that Japanese are staid, resistant to accept new ideas, in his view, compared to South Koreans, whom Japanese (he said) regard as kind of entrepreneurs, go-for-broke business people who will try new ideas. This man, whom I have known for 20-plus years, said it is very hard to get Japanese to try new things. The Confucian way says stay with the tried-and-true, tradition, don't veer another direction, off the beaten path.

Both Japanese and Korean traditional cultures are so different from my own. In those cultures, both these observers said, you don't do something that will shame your family and your ancestry. So, standing out by doing something differently from anybody else is a big risk, and carries the possible consequences that you will not only look foolish yourself, but shame your whole family line as well.

My mother was born and grew up in China until 15 years of age, but as a white American--though learning a perfect native Chinese accent from her nanny, or ama (she was called), which she retained until the day she passed away at age 64--she very much embodied the mores of Western culture. Those mores of individualistic culture were passed on to us three kids, reinforced by the modeling and teaching of her life partner, our dad, who grew up in good old Toledo, Ohio. "Go west, young man," and all that.

*  *  *

 The athletes depicted in "Samurai" are not your average human beings. When they hit home runs--Ohtani and Suzuki, especially--they make it look like a video game, like you just walk up to the plate and bash one out of the park. That is not easy, or normal.

Even Shohei's Samurai teammates watch the public, ticketed (probably cheaper than the World Cup this month!) batting practice that was held in the Tokyo Dome with wonder, as he hits shot-after-shot well up into the outfield stands.

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Amateur track: USATF All-Comers meet at CCA 7/8

Photos by Ed Piper


Steve Magers, 62 years old, clears
10'6" on his third and last try early
in the men's pole vault. A blow for
the older generation!

1600-meter girls race - the first
track event at 6 p.m. Two younger
girls on the same track club, who
are friends, chose to run together.


Leala Burbach, a junior at Pinnacle
High in Phoenix, easily clears 9'6".
She and a track club teammate
spent the week in California -
the teammate cleared 17'9" Sunday
at the former Olympic Training Center
in Chula Vista. Leala has only been
vaulting for six months. She spent
eight years in gymnastics, a key
for vaulters.

Leala, on her approach.

A USATF official goes over the procedure
before the start of the boys' high jump.










Thursday, June 25, 2026

LJ baseball: Malaika comments on new pro baseball league

By Ed Piper

Four teams will begin play August 1 in the Women's Pro Baseball League, with a 30-game season over seven weeks and rosters of 15 players each.

The WPBL will field teams hitting with aluminum bats and representing "storied sports cities" in the U.S., including San Francisco and Los Angeles, according to Justine Siegal, a co-founder of the circuit. Siegal was the first woman to coach for an MLB team with the Oakland A's in 2015.

Malaika Underwood, a La Jolla High Baseball Hall of Fame inductee and 1999 CIF Female Athlete of the Year, was asked for her comments on the upcoming league.

"I am not involved with the league, but, as you can imagine, I know many of the people who are," said Underwood, who serves on the staff of the U.S. Women's National Team in baseball. "And believe it or not, as old as I am (about 43 years old, at this point), I played with some of the players. Ha."

Malaika, who started at second base for the Vikings during her high school career and who once batted leadoff against her boy friend, which totally unraveled him and helped win the game for La Jolla, went on: "I really hope it takes off, but my biggest concern is sustainability without a stronger pipeline.

"Without high school and collegiate (at least club) opportunities for girls to play baseball, I worry that it will be difficult for the league to sustain and grow over time."

Another note on the former Viking star: She was named the CIF Girls Volleyball Player of the Year in 1998-99, her senior year, and went on to star in volleyball at the University of North Carolina on an athletic scholarship. As if that wasn't enough, Underwood filled in her winter sports season playing for the Viking girls basketball team, where her former coach said a couple of years ago, "My whole game plan was give the ball to Malaika. She'll know what to do with it."

Underwood on the WPBL: "Regardless, I hope it is a meaningful and progressive step in changing the social barriers that continue to exist for women playing baseball. And maybe if you build it, the investment in the pipeline will come."

In comments on the day she was inducted into the La Jolla High Baseball Hall of Fame two years ago, Malaika told a reporter that the key was having girls play baseball, not softball, if their participation in the sport was going to grow.

It was reported in various media outlets that the new league will include Mo'ne Davis, who starred in the Little League World Series in 2014. The four teams will play two seven-inning games per week Thursdays through Sundays, at Robin Roberts Stadium in Springfield, Illinois. The other cities represented by the teams include New York and Boston.

Tryouts were held in August 2025 at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C. Players representing 10 different countries took part: besides the U.S. and Canada, Japan, South Korea, and the Dominican Republic, as well as others. Over 600 players were whittled down to 120, who moved on to the league draft in November 2025.

Other picks represented Mexico, Curacao, Australia, France, and England. Players range in age from 18 to 37 years old.

The WPBL is the first such pro league since the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League ended play in 1954. The latter circuit was depicted in the movie "A League of Their Own".

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

LJ FB: Workout 6/23 and newbies

Photos by Ed Piper

Freshman Christian Hobson (front) successfully
defends against a pass intended for fellow
9th-grader Zakai Jackson (see loose ball
peaking out from behind Jackson, rear left).
The drill came during a workout June 23.

Soph Jack Riesenberg
(pronounced "reason-berg")

Junior Carsen Boman
slot receiver/free safety

Junior Sean Bannon
MLB/WR

Soph Preston Armstead
WR

Junior Kali Deberry
MLB/RB

Freshman Matias Frye
G/DT

Blake Alexander
Sophomore MLB

Jager Kideys ("kiddies")
Senior WR/CB
Moved from Florida

Freshman Zakai Jackson
WR/SS

Cornerback/wide receiver
Christian Hobson






Friday, June 19, 2026

LJ FB: USD 7-v-7 tourney - pool play - 6/19

Photos by Ed Piper

Viking Zakai Jackson (L) tries to slow down
South Hills (West Covina) receiver at the line.

Junior Carsen Boman makes a leaping catch
against Notre Dame Prep (NDP, Scottsdale) that leads
to a touchdown. QB Brody Bukich delivered
the pass.

Senior Joseph Crudo (R) of La Jolla goes out,
defended by Rancho Christian opponent (3).
Rancho Christian won the pool contest, 6-0.

Junior Kali Deberry (far right)

LJ QB Brody Bukich goes through
his reads as he waits for a receiver
to get open. The junior is coming back
from a fractured nose (note bandage).

Long double-braid
on St. Xavier (Palm
Desert) player.

Preston Armstead (big hair) of LJ moves toward
South Hills receiver as he runs after the catch.

Captains meeting: LJ's Ty Tortorice (white uniform)
and Rancho Christian's (Temecula) QB (12).

NDP (black uni) scores two
extra points to win 14-8.


Interception by NDP's Landon Stych (3) ends a
La Jolla possession on the first throw.

Soph returner Ty Tortorice at QB

Carsen Boman reception - 3rd game

LJ freshman cornerback Christian Hobson (L)
makes the two-hand touch stop.


Viking players and coaches move toward the
main field at Westview for game 3.



Sophomore AJ Lennan


Joseph Crudo goes into motion
as QB Ty Tortorice (rear left)
calls out the cadence.


Preston Armstead (left) and
Emerson Rota (right) defend
on pass in Rancho Christian game.

































Wednesday, June 17, 2026

LJ FB: 7-v-7 vs. Steele Canyon, Mission Bay, Granite Hills - 6/16

Photos by Ed Piper


LJ reception vs. Steele Canyon
in the first rotation.

Rising soph Ty Tortorice, after a three-step
drop, launches a pass to  the right against
Mission Bay in an 18-12 loss,
unofficially.

Offense vs. Mission Bay (MB = black)



Rising soph Ty Tortorice
handled all of the Vikings'
QB duties, with junior Brody
Bukich out with a broken nose.


Chris Macy (L), 4th-year Vikings QB coach,
huddles with transfer Brody Bukich. The junior,
coming over from Mt. Carmel, was out with
a fractured nose. He started at QB for the
Sun Devil JV and freshman teams.

Viking completion vs. Steele Canyon.

Pre-workout pep talk by Coach Tyler Roach.
Junior Chase Weise is wearing red gloves,
third from left.