| Hiroki Kuroda 黒田 博樹 | |
|---|---|
Kuroda with the Hiroshima Toyo Carp | |
| Pitcher | |
| Born: (1975-02-10)February 10, 1975 (age 50) Osaka, Japan | |
Batted: Right Threw: Right | |
| Professional debut | |
| NPB: April 25, 1997, for the Hiroshima Toyo Carp | |
| MLB: April 4, 2008, for the Los Angeles Dodgers | |
| Last appearance | |
| MLB: September 25, 2014, for the New York Yankees | |
| NPB: 2016, for the Hiroshima Toyo Carp | |
| NPB statistics | |
| Win–loss record | 124–105 |
| Earned run average | 3.55 |
| Strikeouts | 1,461 |
| MLB statistics | |
| Win–loss record | 79–79 |
| Earned run average | 3.45 |
| Strikeouts | 986 |
| Stats atBaseball Reference | |
| Teams | |
| Career highlights and awards | |
| |
| Member of the Japanese | |
| Induction | 2024 |
| Medal record | ||
|---|---|---|
| Men'sbaseball | ||
| Representing | ||
| Olympic Games | ||
| 2004 Athens | Team | |
Hiroki Kuroda (黒田 博樹,Kuroda Hiroki; born February 10, 1975) is a Japanese former professionalbaseballpitcher. He pitched inNippon Professional Baseball (NPB) forHiroshima Toyo Carp from 1997 to 2007 before playing inMajor League Baseball (MLB) for theLos Angeles Dodgers from 2008 to 2011 andNew York Yankees from 2012 to 2014. After the 2014 season, he chose to return to the Carp to finish out his career.
In NPB, Kuroda won theBest Nine Award in 2005 and wasNPB ERA Champion in 2006. He also won abronze medal at the2004 Summer Olympics with theJapanese national baseball team.
Kuroda was appointedUNITAR Goodwill Ambassador on 14 September 2015.[1]
Kuroda was born and lived in Osaka (Suminoe-ku, Osaka-shi, Osaka-fu). His father,Kazuhiro Kuroda, was also a professional baseball player who played for theNankai Hawks. He attended Uenomiya High School in Osaka, where he would attend classes and practices from 5 am until 10 pm.[2] He then attendedSenshu University in Tokyo.
He joined theHiroshima Toyo Carp in 1996 as a second-round draft pick. During his early career, he was overshadowed by the 1996 first-round draft pick,Toshikazu Sawazaki, who was the same age as Kuroda and won the Japanese Rookie of the Year award in 1997. However, Kuroda gradually built up his status to become a consistent part of the starting rotation while Sawazaki began to fade away. In 1999 he pitched in theInternational Cup held inSydney, and marked a win againstKorea and a complete-game shutout againstTaiwan.
Kuroda won over 10 games for three consecutive years from 2001. In 2003, he became the opening-day starter, taking over for former aceShinji Sasaoka. He pitched poorly at the beginning of the season, but improved after the all-star break to end the season with 13 wins. He marked two wins as a reliever in the2004 Summer Olympics, contributing to the Japanese team's bronze medal. In 2005, he led theCentral League with 15 wins, and won theBest Nine Award and theGolden Glove. He continued his success in 2006, ending the season with a league-leading 1.85 ERA to solidify his reputation as one of the best pitchers in Japan. The last Japanese starter to end the season with an ERA below 2.00 wasMasaki Saito in 1989. He also made his first save that year on October 16 against theChunichi Dragons, and led the league in complete games over a six-year period from 1999 to 2005.

In 2006, he was one of two players from the Hiroshima Toyo Carp selected to play in the2006 World Baseball Classic, along withTakahiro Arai. He was touted as one of the obscure but key players on the Japanese team along with, then current, MLB playersAkinori Iwamura andKosuke Fukudome, but was injured getting hit by a baseball off the bat to the right hand during a practice game on February 24, forcing him to withdraw from the competition.
Kuroda became afree agent as early as May 2006, but announced that he would remain with the Carp for the 2007 season. During the off-season, he traveled to the United States to receive cleaning surgery in his right elbow at the suggestion of managerMarty Brown.
Kuroda pitched as the team's opening-day starter for the fifth consecutive year in 2007. He marked his 100th career win on July 14, 2007, against theYomiuri Giants at the Tokyo Dome (his first professional win was also at the Tokyo Dome). Though Kuroda had been most effective during the summer in past years, he struggled to makequality starts during the later half of the season, perhaps due to the surgery he had received during the off-season. He ended the season with a 12–8 record, with a 3.56 ERA.
Along withShinobu Fukuhara,Daisuke Miura, andShingo Ono, Kuroda was known for receiving very poor run support in Japan. In 2005, he was the starter for a 12 inning pitching relay in a game that ended in a scoreless tie (April 15 against theYokohama BayStars; the opposing starter was Daisuke Miura). In 2006 against theHanshin Tigers, he left the game with a 2–1 lead after pitching 8 innings, but failed to get the win when closerKatsuhiro Nagakawa let up a tying home run with two outs in the 9th inning. He was also recognized as a "Giants Killer", as he seemed to pitch exceptionally well against the Yomiuri Giants.
Kuroda obtained free agency on May 31, 2006, and announced that he was willing to hear offers from other teams. The Hiroshima Toyo Carp had a staunch policy against free agency because it would lead to higher salaries which the team would not be able to provide due to lack of financial structure. The team's management traditionally never attempted to re-negotiate with players of their own team who declared free agency (for example, the team ignored outfielderTomoaki Kanemoto's offers to reconsider staying on the team because he had already declared free agency). Numerous teams showed interest in Kuroda, including theSeibu Lions and Hanshin Tigers, who had lost their key startersDaisuke Matsuzaka andKei Igawa to theposting system. The well-financedFukuoka SoftBank Hawks aggressively pursued Kuroda, while the Chunichi Dragons and Yomiuri Giants, who had been in pursuit of free agentMichihiro Ogasawara, were also thought to have interest.
Despite the team's anti-free agent policy, the Carp was facing serious problems with its weak pitching staff, which had kept them in the bottom half of the standings since 1997. The prospect of losing Kuroda, by far the most effective and consistent pitcher on the team, forced them into negotiations. On October 15, 2006, the team offered a 4-year, 1 billionyen deal with post-retirement benefits, showing that they were absolutely intent on retaining Kuroda. In terms of base salary, Kuroda had been paid 200 million yen in 2006, and this contract would only give a 50 million yen increase for 2007, with no further increases over the next three years. However, this was a major step-up for the Carp management considering that only two other players on the team (Tomonori Maeda and Tomoaki Kanemoto) had ever been paid more than 200 million yen per year. On November 6, 2006, Kuroda agreed to a 4-year 1.2 billion yen deal (250 million yen base salary+bonuses) to remain in Hiroshima. This new contract included a provision that Kuroda would be able to negotiate withmajor league teams as a free agent at any point during the 4-year deal. At the same time, Kuroda announced that he would play for no other Japanese teams besides the Hiroshima Toyo Carp. Although the deal ultimately concluded with a salary increase, Kuroda's negotiations showed a rare instance where free agency did not inflate salaries to ridiculous amounts.
Kuroda's response was received favorably by both the fans and the media, and in Kuroda's final start of the season, fans filledHiroshima Municipal Stadium, old holding red cardboard cutouts of the number 15 (Kuroda's jersey number). However, Kuroda had repeatedly expressed a desire to win a championship, and there was a high possibility that he would leave for the major leagues if the team continued to play poorly. The team ended up struggling to escape from last place in the league throughout the season; far removed from the third-place finish that would have enabled the team to participate in the newly createdClimax Series playoffs.
Kuroda declared his intention to play in the major leagues next season on October 18, 2007. It was briefly rumored that he would use theposting system to move to the major leagues, giving the poorly financed Hiroshima team some monetary benefits from the process, but he ended up declaring free agency, which enabled him to negotiate freely with any of the major league teams. TheTexas Rangers,Seattle Mariners,Kansas City Royals,Arizona Diamondbacks, andLos Angeles Dodgers showed varying degrees of interest in signing Kuroda, and he signed a three-year, $35.3 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers on December 12, 2007.[3]
In his first start for the Dodgers, Kuroda pitched seven innings against theSan Diego Padres, holding them to 1 run and getting the first win of his American baseball career. Kuroda went 3–6 with an ERA of 4.04 before going on the DL with mild tendinitis.
Upon his return, he pitched seven shutout innings against theHouston Astros. However, his next start was even more impressive. On July 7, 2008, Kuroda pitched seven perfect innings in a game against theAtlanta Braves before allowing a double toMatt Stairs to lead off the eighth inning. Despite the double, he shutout the Braves on one hit with no walks over nine innings, Teixeira was the only baserunner Kuroda would allow in a 91-pitch complete game one-hit shutout.[4] He became the first Dodger to throw a one-hitter sinceDerek Lowe threw one against theChicago Cubs on August 31, 2005. He became the first rookie pitcher sinceOrel Hershiser in 1984 to take a perfect game into the eighth inning.[5]

On September 15, 2008, Kuroda was deprived of the opportunity to become the first Dodgers pitcher since Hideo Nomo to throw 3 complete game shutouts in a single season. After pitching 7 innings in which he allowed only 3 hits and no walks, Kuroda was taken out of the game, with an 8–0 lead, so that the Dodgers could giveBrad Penny andTakashi Saito some live practice. The Dodgers would go on to win that game 8–2.[6]
On October 4, 2008, Kuroda made his first postseason appearance in the major leagues as the starting pitcher for Game 3 of the Dodgers' first playoff series against theChicago Cubs, in which the Dodgers led two games to none. He gave a remarkable 61⁄3 shutout inning performance, winning the game and helping the Dodgers complete the sweep of the Cubs to advance to the next roundNational League Championship Series.[7] On October 12, 2008, Kuroda started Game 3 against thePhiladelphia Phillies in the2008 NLCS with the Dodgers down two games to none. He pitched effectively again, giving up two runs in six innings (plus three batters faced in the seventh inning), and went on to notch his second postseason victory.
Kuroda was named the Dodgers opening day starter in 2009 and picked up the win, allowing only one run in six innings. However, he suffered an injury during a bullpen session soon afterwards and did not rejoin the rotation until June 1.
On August 15, 2009, while pitching in the bottom of the 6th inning against theArizona Diamondbacks, Kuroda was hit on the side of his head by aline drive off the bat ofMatt Stairs.[8] He had to be taken off the field on a stretcher and spent the night at the hospital. ACT scan was negative and he was released the next morning.[9]
Despite missing much of the season while battling numerous injuries, Kuroda made 20 starts in 2009 and finished with an 8–7 record and 3.76 ERA. He was named the Game 3 starter in theNLCS against the Phillies even though he had missed the first round of the playoffs with a "bulging disk in his neck".[10] However, he pitched poorly in the NLCS, failing to get out of the second inning and allowing six runs to score.
On August 30, 2010, Kuroda took a no-hitter into the 8th inning against the visiting Phillies; with one out,Matt Stairs broke up the Dodger hurler's "no-no" with a line drive single to right field. Kuroda received a standing ovation from the home crowd.[11]
In 2010, Kuroda made 31 starts for the Dodgers, finishing the season with an 11–13 record and 3.39 ERA. He had a career best 196.1 innings pitched and 159 strikeouts. He became a free agent at the conclusion of the season, but was re-signed by the Dodgers to a one-year $12 million contract.
On July 27, 2011, Kuroda lost to theColorado Rockies 1–3, becoming the first Dodger starting pitcher to have two consecutive seasons of at least 13 losses sinceOrel Hershiser in1992 and1993.
There was speculation that Kuroda would be traded at thetrading deadline in 2011, but he chose not to waive the "no-trade clause" in his contract because he wanted to remain with the Dodgers for the rest of the season.[12]
Kuroda finished the 2011 season with a 13–16 record, posting career highs in both wins and losses. His final ERA was 3.07, the best of his career and he struck out 161 batters on the season. He became a free agent at the end of the season.

On January 13, 2012, Kuroda agreed to a one-year, $10 million contract with theNew York Yankees.[13] He was added to the Yankees roster on January 26, 2012.[14]
After a successful first year with the Yankees which featured a 16–11 record with a 3.32 ERA in 219.2 regular season in IP and a 2.81 ERA in 16 post-season innings, the Yankees re-signed Kuroda to a 1-year deal worth $15 million on November 20, 2012.[15] At the end of the 1st half in 2013, Kuroda led the AL in earned run average with 2.65. After the All-Star Break, Kuroda's velocity began to weaken as he went 3–7 with a 4.25 ERA in 13 starts. Overall in 2013, Kuroda went 11–13 with a 3.31 ERA in 32 starts. The next year he would go on to finish 11–9 with an ERA of 3.71 in 32 starts. Following the 2014 season, he would return to Japan – Kuroda would never post an ERA higher than 3.76 in his MLB career.[16]
On December 26, 2014, it was reported that Kuroda had decided to return to Japan for the 2015 season and would sign with his old team, the Hiroshima Toyo Carp, on a one-year $3.3 million contract.[17][18]
Upon rejoining the Carp at age 40 after seven seasons in the MLB, Kuroda recorded one of his finer seasons as a professional. Despite an 11–8 record, Kuroda made 26 starts (topped only three times in his 12 other NPB season), recorded a 2.55 ERA (a full 1.04 below his NPB average), and finished with a 1.102 WHIP (topped only twice). By allowing just 8 home runs all season, Kuroda's HR/9 of 0.4 was easily a career best. Kuroda was named the Central League starting pitcher in the 2015 All-Star Game, his fifth overall selection. His opponent on the mound representing the Pacific League,Shohei Ohtani, was 19 years Kuroda's junior (40 and 21).
After some deliberation,[19] Kuroda signed a contract to return to the Carp in 2016. The contract is worth a reported $4.9 million, making Kuroda the NPB's highest-paid player at age 41.[20] Kuroda had a 10–8 record and a 3.09 ERA in 2016. Hiroshima reached the2016 Japan Series. Kuroda announced that he would retire following the series' conclusion.[21]
Kuroda threw a mix of five pitches. His lead pitch was ashuuto—similar to asinker and labeled as such byPITCHf/x—which he threw between 90 and 94 mph. Kuroda's shuuto topped out at 97 mph when he pitched for the Los Angeles Dodgers.[22] Although Kuroda's shuuto velocity declined in his later career, the pitch still made him an effective ground-ball pitcher.[23] His main off-speed pitch was aslider in the 83–85 range. Kuroda rounded out his repertoire with afour-seam fastball (90–94), asplitter (86–88), and an occasionalcurveball (76–78). Nearly 90% of the pitches Kuroda threw to right-handed batters were shuutos or sliders, split about evenly. Against lefties, he added considerable variety and drew on his splitter as a strikeout pitch. Kuroda was prone to leave a slider low and away against righties in two-strike counts.[24]
Kuroda and his wife, Masayo, have two daughters, Hinatsu Kuroda (born November 18, 2002) and Wakana Kuroda (born August 13, 2005).[25]
| Preceded by | Los Angeles Dodgers Opening Day Starting pitcher 2009 | Succeeded by |