Fumiya Ono
Japanese baseball player
Baseball player
Fumiya Ono | |
---|---|
![]() Ono with the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles | |
Chiba Lotte Marines – No. 37 | |
Pitcher | |
Born: (1996-10-23) October 23, 1996 (age 27) Kurume, Fukuoka, Japan | |
Bats: Right Throws: Right | |
NPB debut | |
August 19, 2015, for the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles | |
NPB statistics (through 2023 season) | |
Win–loss record | 2–7 |
ERA | 4.16 |
Strikeouts | 158 |
Saves | 0 |
Holds | 34 |
Teams | |
| |
Career highlights and awards | |
|
Fumiya Ono (小野 郁, Ono Fumiya, born October 23, 1996) is a Japanese professional baseball pitcher for the Chiba Lotte Marines of the Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). He previously played for the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles.
Career
On December 19, 2019, he was sent to Chiba Lotte Marines as compensation for Daichi Suzuki, who signed with Rakuten as a free agent after the 2019 NPB season[1][2] He was named an NPB All-Star in 2022.[citation needed]
References
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference (Minors)
- NPB stats
- v
- t
- e
Chiba Lotte Marines current roster
- 11 Hirokazu Sawamura
- 14 Kazuya Ojima
- 15 Manabu Mima
- 16 Atsuki Taneichi
- 17 Rōki Sasaki
- 18 Kōta Futaki
- 19 Yūki Karakawa
- 20 Taiki Tōjō
- 24 Yūsuke Azuma
- 28 Riku Kikuchi
- 29 Yūji Nishino
- 30 Atsuya Hirohata
- 31 Hikaru Ohtani
- 33 Akira Yagi
- 34 Shūta Takano
- 35 Haruya Tanaka
- 36 Kōshirō Sakamoto
- 37 Fumiya Ono
- 40 Takahiro Nishimura
- 41 James Dykstra
- 42 C. C. Mercedes
- 43 Seiun Akiyama
- 46 Daiki Iwashita
- 47 Shōta Suzuki
- 48 Toshiya Nakamura
- 49 Fumiya Motomae
- 52 Naoya Masuda
- 53 Yūto Kimura
- 56 Shunsuke Nakamori
- 59 Hibiki Hayasaka
- 60 Rikuto Yokoyama
- 62 Ryōtarō Mori
- 64 Junior Fernández
- 66 Keisuke Sawada
- 69 Jimmy Cordero
- 91 Akira Niho
- 92 Yūki Kuniyoshi
- 93 Ryō Yoshida
- 2 Kō Matsukawa
- 27 Tatsuhiro Tamura
- 32 Toshiya Satoh
- 45 Shōta Ueda
- 55 Tomoya Kakinuma
- 65 Ryūsei Terachi
- 00 Raito Ikeda
- 4 Atsuki Tomosugi
- 5 Hisanori Yasuda
- 7 Yūdai Fujioka
- 8 Shōgo Nakamura
- 10 Kyūto Ueda
- 13 Taiga Hirasawa
- 39 Seichirō Ohshita
- 44 Seiya Inoue
- 57 Ryūsei Ogawa
- 67 Kenta Chatani
- 68 Yūta Kaneda
- 99 Neftalí Soto
- 0 Takashi Ogino
- 1 Kyōta Fujiwara
- 3 Katsuya Kakunaka
- 22 Gregory Polanco
- 23 Shingo Ishikawa
- 25 Hiromi Oka
- 38 Akito Takabe
- 50 Aito
- 51 Kōki Yamaguchi
- 61 Daito Yamamoto
- 63 Kōshirō Wada
- 120 Fūki Tanaka (P)
- 121 Seiya Dohi (P)
- 122 Ayumu Ishikawa (P)
- 123 Tokito Kawamura (P)
- 124 Takurō Furuya (P)
- 125 Kirato Nagashimada (P)
- 127 Yūto Yoshikawa (P)
- 128 Kaiki Shirahama (P)
- 133 Ryōta Takeuchi (P)
- 126 Ryōsuke Murayama (C)
- 137 Kōnoshin Tomiyama (C)
- 129 Rui Katsumata (IF)
- 130 Kaisei Kurokawa (IF)
- 134 Shinya Matsuishi (IF)
- 131 Tsuyoshi Sugano (OF)
- 135 Hikaru Kōno (OF)
- 136 Kazuki Fujita (OF)
coaching
- Manager: 21 Masato Yoshii
- Head/Batting coach: 70 Kazuya Fukuura
- Pitching coaches: 84 Tomohiro Kuroki, 82 Shingo Ono
- Batting coach: 71 Shūichi Murata
- Battery coach: 73 Takeshi Kanazawa
- Strategy coach: 88 Makoto Kaneko
- Infield defense/base running coach: 87 Shunichi Nemoto
- Outfield defense/base running coach: 80 Akira Ōtsuka
- General coach/Coordinator: 90 Hidekazu Mitsuyama
coaching
- Manager: 86 Saburō
- Chief pitching coach: 85 Tomohisa Ōtani
- Pitching coach: 78 Kenji Ōtonari
- Batting coaches: 75 Kōichi Hori, 77 Kenta Kurihara
- Battery coach: 76 Naoya Emura
- Infield defense/base running coach: 72 Ryō Miki
- Outfield defense/base running coaches: 83 Kenji Morozumi, 81 Shōta Ishimine
- Development/pitching coach: 79 Takahiro Matsunaga
![]() ![]() | This biographical article relating to a Japanese baseball pitcher is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e