Background
Ohshita was born in Sannomiya, Kobe, Hyōgo Prefecture on December 15, 1922. His father died in war when he was a child. His family moved to Gaoshun, Taiwan, where he grew up.
大下 弘
Ohshita was born in Sannomiya, Kobe, Hyōgo Prefecture on December 15, 1922. His father died in war when he was a child. His family moved to Gaoshun, Taiwan, where he grew up.
Ohshita graduated from Gaoshun Commercial High School, and was recruited by Tairiku Watanabe to attend Meiji University, a private university in Japan which was noted for its baseball program
Known for his trademark blue bat, he hit a record 20 home runs in a season and was home run king and leading hitter three times for the Toei Flyers. Ohshita was also a heavy hitter with the Nishitetsu Lions of the Pacific League during the 1950s. Meiji University belongs to the Tokyo Big6 Baseball League, an intercollegiate league with five other schools: Waseda University, Keio University, Rikkyo University, Hosei University and the University of Tokyo.
Ohshita played for the Meiji University baseball team
During World World War II, he was a second lieutenant in the Imperial Japanese Army and trained as a kamikaze pilot before the war"s end on August 15, 1945. Ohshita joined the Japanese Professional Baseball League in 1946, playing for the Senators and hitting a record 20 home runs.
Fans called him "blue-bat Ohshita" (ao batto no Ohshita), and Kawakami was known as "red-bat Kawakami" (aka batto no Kawakami). Ohshita was again leading hitter for the 1950 season, and repeated as leading hitter and home-run king for the 1951 season.
His batting average of.383 for 1951 was a long-time Japanese record.
He also holds the Japanese record of seven hits in seven at-bats in a single game. Ohshita retired as a player in 1959, with a record of 1,667 hits in 1,547 games (more than one hit per game). He was Japan"s leading hitter three times (in 1947, 1950 and 1951), and a three-time home run king (in 1946, 1947 and 1951).
Ohshita"s uniform number (3) was retired by the Lions, but he wore it again later as manager of the Tokyo Toei Flyers in 1968.
He was a hitting coach for the Hankyu Braves in 1961, before becoming a baseball commentator. When managing the Flyers, Ohshita used no signs in games and his players had no curfew.
When the team finished last in the Pacific League, he was fired by its owner after the season. Ohshita was again a hitting coach for the Taiyo Whales in 1974 and 1975.
He was inducted into the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame in 1980, the year after his death.