Masahiko Morino
Japanese baseball player and coach
Baseball player
Masahiko Morino | |
---|---|
![]() Morino with the Chunichi Dragons | |
Chunichi Dragons – No. 78 | |
Infield/Batting Coach | |
Born: (1978-07-28) July 28, 1978 (age 45) | |
Bats: Left Throws: Right | |
NPB debut | |
1997, for the Chunichi Dragons | |
NPB statistics (through 2017) | |
Batting average | .277 |
Home runs | 165 |
RBI | 782 |
Teams | |
As player
As coach
|
Masahiko Morino (森野 将彦, Morino Masahiko, born July 28, 1978 in Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture) is a former Japanese professional baseball infielder for the Chunichi Dragons in Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball. He also played for Team Japan at the 2008 Olympics.
Morino retired in 2017 and served as the Dragons' second team batting coach until the end of the 2019 season.[1]
References
- ^ "中日 来季2軍監督に仁村徹氏が就任" [Chunichi: Nimura unveiled as next season's 2nd team manager]. Sponichi (in Japanese). 2019-09-29. Retrieved 2019-09-29.
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference (Minors)
- Masahiko Morino at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com (archived)
- Masahiko Morino at Olympics.com
- Career statistics - NPB.jp (in Japanese)
- v
- t
- e
Chunichi Dragons current roster
- 7 Akira Neo
- 11 Shinnosuke Ogasawara
- 12 Shinji Tajima
- 13 Yūki Hashimoto
- 14 Shō Kusaka
- 16 Shō Iwasaki
- 17 Yūya Yanagi
- 18 Kōdai Umetsu
- 19 Hiroto Takahashi
- 20 Hideaki Wakui
- 22 Yūdai Ōno
- 24 Kōji Fukutani
- 26 Taisei Ishimori
- 28 Hiroto Mori
- 31 Reia Nakachi
- 33 Daisuke Sobue
- 34 Hiroto Fuku
- 36 Kōnosuke Fukuda
- 38 Takahiro Matsuba
- 41 Akiyoshi Katsuno
- 46 Yūgo Umeno
- 47 Yoshiki Sunada
- 48 Shōta Habu
- 50 Tatsuya Shimizu
- 54 Kento Fujishima
- 59 Kōki Saitō
- 64 Shōta Fukushima
- 67 Kōtarō Ueda
- 90 Shinya Matsuyama
- 91 Humberto Mejía
- 92 Raidel Martínez
- 93 Michael Feliz
- 96 Ryūma Katō
- 35 Takuya Kinoshita
- 39 Shingo Usami
- 43 Taisei Miya
- 49 Takuma Katō
- 57 Ryūnosuke Yamaasa
- 58 Kōta Ishibashi
- 2 Mikiya Tanaka
- 3 Shūhei Takahashi
- 5 Kaito Muramatsu
- 6 Shō Nakata
- 9 Hiroyuki Nakajima
- 25 Takaya Ishikawa
- 27 Keishi Tsuda
- 29 Rintarō Tsujimoto
- 32 Masami Ishigaki
- 37 Shōnosuke Hama
- 45 Ryūku
- 60 Yasuhiro Yamamoto
- 66 Dayán Viciedo
- 68 Hiroki Fukunaga
- 95 Christián Rodríguez
- 97 Seishū Higuchi
- 99 Orlando Calixte
- 00 Gōki Oda
- 1 Yūki Okabayashi
- 4 Kōsuke Ukai
- 8 Yōhei Ōshima
- 30 Hironori Miyoshi
- 42 Kenta Bright
- 44 Seiji Kawagoe
- 51 Seiji Uebayashi
- 52 Shōhei Katō
- 53 Shunta Gotō
- 55 Seiya Hosokawa
- 63 Yutaro Itayama
- 94 Alex Dickerson
- 201 Ryūshin Takeuchi
- 202 Frank Álvarez
- 204 Tsubasa Katō
- 205 Kenshin Kakigoshi
- 206 Yūta Matsukihira
- 207 Mao Hoshino
- 208 Shō Ishikawa
- 209 Yūma Fukumoto
- 210 Toshiya Okada
- 212 Tento Nonaka
- 213 Akio Moriyama
- 214 Ren Kondō
- 215 Tōki Hiwatari
- 216 Towa Kikuta
- 218 Rii Kawakami
- 220 Carlos Monier
coaching
- Manager: 73 Kazuyoshi Tatsunami
- Head coach: 88 Atsushi Kataoka
- Pitching coaches: 76 Akinori Ōtsuka, 83 Daisuke Yamai
- Battery coach: 80 Kōhei Oda
- Hitting coaches: 75 Kazuhiro Wada, 86 Yoshinori Ueda
- Baserunning/defense coaches: 71 Naomichi Donoue, 79 Takayuki Ōnishi
coaching
- Manager: 89 Kazuki Inoue
- Pitching/development coach: 77 Eiji Ochiai
- Pitching coach: 82 Takuya Asao
- Hitting coaches: 84 Nobumasa Fukuda, 78 Masahiko Morino
- Battery coach: 72 Shōta Ōno
- Baserunning/defense coaches: 81 Yūto Morikoshi, 87 Yutaka Nakamura
- Position player development coach: 85 Hiroyuki Watanabe
![]() ![]() | This biographical article relating to a Japanese baseball infielder is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e