Takayoshi Noma
Japanese baseball player
Baseball player
Takayoshi Noma | |
---|---|
Noma with the Hiroshima Toyo Carp | |
Hiroshima Toyo Carp – No. 37 | |
Outfielder | |
Born: (1993-01-28) January 28, 1993 (age 31) Miki, Hyōgo, Japan | |
Bats: Left Throws: Right | |
debut | |
March 27, 2015, for the Hiroshima Toyo Carp | |
NPB statistics (through 2021 season) | |
Batting average | .261 |
Home runs | 10 |
Runs batted in | 88 |
Stolen Bases | 61 |
Teams | |
|
Takayoshi Noma (野間 峻祥, Noma Takayoshi, born January 28, 1993 in Miki, Hyōgo, Japan) is a Japanese professional baseball player for the Hiroshima Toyo Carp of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB).
On February 27, 2019, he was selected for Japan national baseball team at the 2019 exhibition games against Mexico.[1]
He uses Dragostea Din Tei by Moldovan pop group O-Zone as his walk-up song, because "Numa Numa" in the lyrics sounds like "Noma Noma" to Japanese people.[2]
References
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference (Minors)
- NPB.com
- v
- t
- e
Hiroshima Toyo Carp current roster
- 11 Aren Kuri
- 12 Haruki Ohmichi
- 13 Daisuke Moriura
- 14 Daichi Ohsera
- 16 Shōhei Mori
- 17 Hayato Tsunehiro
- 18 Masato Morishita
- 19 Yusuke Nomura
- 20 Ryoji Kuribayashi
- 21 Shota Nakazaki
- 26 Takehisa Masuda
- 28 Hiroki Tokoda
- 29 Makoto Kemna
- 30 Kazuki Takita
- 34 Kōya Takahashi
- 36 Atsuya Horie
- 39 Ginji Hasebe
- 41 Takuya Yasaki
- 42 Thomas Hatch
- 43 Sotaro Shimauchi
- 45 Ryūya Matsumoto
- 46 Kei Kawano
- 47 Yūta Saitō
- 48 Makoto Aduwa
- 49 Chiaki Tone
- 53 Tatsuto Kobayashi
- 65 Shogo Tamamura
- 66 Atsushi Endoh
- 67 Yuta Nakamura
- 70 Atsumi Hidaka
- 93 Akitake Okada
- 98 Robert Corniel
- 27 Tsubasa Aizawa
- 31 Shogo Sakakura
- 32 Tomoki Ishihara
- 40 Yoshitaka Isomura
- 57 Taiki Mochimaru
- 62 Kanato Shimizu
- 64 Shōto Takagi
- 00 Kaisei Sone
- 0 Takashi Uemoto
- 2 Kosuke Tanaka
- 7 Shota Dobayashi
- 33 Ryosuke Kikuchi
- 35 Takumi Miyoshi
- 44 Kōta Hayashi
- 45 Tatsuki Kuwahara
- 51 Kaito Kozono
- 54 Yūya Nirasawa
- 61 Masaya Yano
- 63 Shōdai Uchida
- 69 Ryutaro Hatsuki
- 94 Yusuke Satoh
- 95 Jake Scheiner
- 99 Shōichi Futamata
- 9 Shogo Akiyama
- 37 Takayoshi Noma
- 38 Koki Ugusa
- 50 Kento Nakamura
- 55 Ryuhei Matsuyama
- 56 Shū Kubo
- 59 Minoru Ohmori
- 60 Shunsuke Tamura
- 96 Shosei Nakamura
- 97 Takahiro Nakamura
- 120 Takeru Sugita
- 122 Rei Sakata
- 125 Taiga Tsuji
- 126 Sō Shinya
- 128 Mirai Sugikawa
- 129 Reira Fujii
- 127 Seita Maekawa
- 121 Norihiko Nabara
coaching
- Manager: 25 Takahiro Arai
- Head coach:
- Outfield defense/base running coach: 93 Masato Akamatsu
- Infield defense/base running coach: 89 Tetsuya Kokubo
- Hitting coaches: 83 Toyo Asayama, 91 Yuichiro Mukae
- Pitching coaches: 86 Tsuyoshi Kikuchihara, 82 Ryuji Yokoyama
- Battery coach: 81 Yoshiyuki Ishihara
coaching
- Manager: 71 Shinji Koh
- Outfield defense/base running coach: 75 Jun Hirose
- Infield defense/base running coach: 72 Akihiro Higashide
- Hitting/base running coach: 85 Kazuki Fukuchi
- Hitting coach:
- Pitching coaches: 87 Ken Takahashi, 74 Katsuhiro Nagakawa
- Battery coach: 76 Yoshikazu Kura
coaching
- Gereral coach: 78 Tatsumi Une
- Pitching/strengthening coach: 73 Kanei Kobayashi
This biographical article relating to a Japanese baseball outfielder is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e