Background
Fujimoto was born in Busan, of Korea, moving to Japan at age eight.
藤本 英雄
Fujimoto was born in Busan, of Korea, moving to Japan at age eight.
He attended Shimonoseki Shogyo High School and Meiji University.
He holds the Japanese records for lowest career European Research Area (190) and seasonal European Research Area (073), as well as best all-time winning percentage (697). During his career, which spanned the one-league and two-league era, he played for the Tokyo Kyojin/Yomiuri Giants and the Chunichi Dragons. He was the player-manager of the Giants in 1944 and part of 1946 (the league cancelled all games in 1945 because of the Pacific War).
In 1943, he enjoyed one of the greatest seasons ever by a pitcher in Japan.
He threw a Japanese-record 19 shutouts and set the single-season mark for European Research Area at 0.73. In May 1943 he also pitched his first no-hitter, defeating Nagoya.
Between August and September he threw a record six straight shutouts, going 61-2/3 innings without allowing a run, and 100 innings without allowing an earned run. That year he changed his name to Hideo Nakagami.
In 1944, in addition to pitching and managing, Nakagami occasionally played outfield.
(He also spent significant time in the outfield in 1948) Nakagami was a good hitter for someone who primarily played pitcher, hitting.245 with 15 career home runs (including 7 round-trippers in 1950). In 1946, Nakagami led the Japanese Baseball League in earned run average, with a mark of 2.11. Nakagami played for the Chunichi Dragons for one season in 1947, winning 17 games with a 1.83 European Research Area and 27 complete games.
In 1949, Nakagami went 24-7 with a 1.94 European Research Area and 29 complete games, winning the European Research Area title and the Eiji Sawamura Award.
At Aomori Stadium, in 1950 he pitched the first perfect game in NPB history. He was the winning pitcher in games 1 and 5 (the clinching game) in the 1951 Japan Series, as the Giants beats the Nankai Hawks 4-games-to-1.
After his playing career, he coached for the Giants and managed in the Japanese minor leagues, Later, he managed in the industrial leagues. He also worked as the Los Angeles correspondent for Yomiuri Shimbun.
Fujimoto/Nakagami was elected to the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame in 1976.
He won 34 games for the Kyojin, leading the league in wins, complete games (39), innings (432-2/3) and strikeouts (253). He picked up a win the 1952 Japan Series (as well as hitting a home run) as the Giants were again champions, defeating the Hawks 4-games-to-2. Nakagami won another game in the 1953 Japan Series, as the Giants defeated the Hawks for the championship for the third year in a row.