Tadano Kazuhito
Tadano Kazuhito took part in a gay porn video when he was a college student. Sitting in the Cleveland clubhouse the pitcher gave a statement hoping to put his actions in the past.
"All of us have made mistakes in our lives," Tadano said, reading a statement in English. "Hopefully, you learn from them and move on."
Shunned by Japanese baseball teams, at 23-years-old Tadano signed with the Indians.
Tadano gave few details about the video, which he made after his sophomore year at Rikkyo University.
"I did participate in a video and I regret it very much," he said. "It was a one-time incident that showed bad judgment and will never be repeated. I was young, playing baseball and going to college and my teammates and I needed money.
"Frankly, if I were more mature and had really thought about the implications of what I did, it never would have happened."
The Indians set up the press session after getting many requests from reporters to speak with Tadano. The team wanted to address the issue before spring training started. Tadano's admission certainly drew attention to homosexuality in baseball, a sensitive issue that most players prefer to not even discuss.
In 2002, all-star catcher Mike Piazza felt the need to hold a press conference to profess his heterosexuality after a newspaper gossip columnist suggested that one of the New York Mets' top players was gay.
Tadano was one of Japan's top college pitchers and expected to be a high first-round pick in 2002. But after a Japanese tabloid published photos of him in the video a month before the draft, pro teams in Japan did not select him.
"The commissioner of Japanese baseball came out and said, 'You will not draft Tadano,"' asserted the pitcher's agent, Alan Nero. "But this kid didn't assault anybody. He didn't commit murder. If anything, he is guilty of being naive."
Twice in the minor leagues, Tadano stood before his teammates and confessed to his participation in the video, which Nero said can only be obtained on the black market in Japan.
Tadano received overwhelming support from players at Kinston, N.C., where he started the season and later at Akron, the Indians' double-A affiliate. A former starter, he pitched in all three levels of the minors, going 6-2 with a 1.55 ERA and three saves. At Akron, he didn't allow a run in his first 28 innings and struck out 78 in 72 2-3 innings.
Outfielder Grady Sizemore said Tadano's speech was well received in the clubhouse.
"You could tell he was nervous," said Sizemore, a top prospect who lived with Tadano. "But I don't think it changed anybody's opinion of him. After it was said and done, nobody thought anything more of it. "He's a great guy and a great pitcher." The Indians liked Tadano enough to invite him to work out at their spring training facility in Winter Haven, Fla. Eventually, they signed him to a minor league contract that included a $67,500 US bonus. General manager Mark Shapiro said the team decided to sign Tadano despite knowing there could be backlash.
"We thought the upside was well worth the risk, energy and time to support him," Shapiro said. Tadano knows he may face fan abuse in major league parks such as Yankee Stadium, where heckling the visitors is part of the pageantry. He joked that he's ready for it.
"I don't understand English, so it doesn't really matter," he said.
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