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Teenager pitching star offers hope for 2008

By Yu Yilei (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-11-14 11:32

Team China lost all three games at the Tokyo Dome in the Konami Cup Asia Series 2006, but scouts may have uncovered a major pitching talent.

Zhu Dawei, 18, is the son of a couple from Shanghai. Zhu moved to Japan aged 11 with his parents, and the high school student was signed by Japanese Pacific League baseball team Seibu Lions on September 25.


Zhu Dalei.[China Daily]
The significance of Zhu is not only about his awesome 145-kilometre-per-hour pitching speed, rarely seen among players his age, but also how he could help China realize the dream of winning a baseball medal at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.

"I see great potential in him," said Shen Wei, secretary-general of China Baseball Association. "I have been looking for a talent like him for a long time."

Competing on home soil, the Chinese baseball team is targeting a historic breakthrough in 2008, aiming to win a medal at the eight-team tournament.

The team has never participated in the Olympic Games before qualifying as hosts.

However, the lack of talent due to the sport's low popularity in China has become a headache for officials trying to build a competitive Olympic team.

Like previous Olympic hosts Greece, China is now looking overseas for eligible young talent produced by strong baseball nations like Japan and the United States.

Zhu is the most exciting discovery so far. An imposing presence on the mound at 1.85m tall and 85kg, he gets his sporting talent from his parents, both former volleyball players.

Before signing with the Lions, he was one of the top high school players in Aichi prefecture in central Japan, helping his school reach the final 16 at the 188-team local high school league this summer.

Zhu, who retains his Chinese nationality, is eager to play for his national team in the 2008 Games.

"He has a great body and a bright future," Shen said. "And he will get better after training with a professional Japanese team."

A powerful pitcher like Zhu is badly needed at the moment: During the Konami Cup, the pitchers were the team's weak link, giving up more than ten hits per game.

"China would be a better team if their pitchers could throw faster," said Zhu, who travelled to Tokyo to watch the tournament. The maximum speed thrown was 149kph, slow by international standard.

Zhu's idol is Lions team-mate Daisuke Matsuzaka, the MVP of inaugural World Baseball Classic who US Major League teams are ready to shell out megabucks to sign.

But for Zhu, his priority is winning a place at the national team.

"I think I am capable of pitching for China next year," he said.

If possible, China is considering fielding Zhu during next year's Konami Cup so that he can get acquainted with the team.

"If he stays healthy and keeps improving, I think it will be very likely for him to represent China at the 2008 Olympic Games," Shen said.