uniquebaseballcards
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- Nov 12, 2008
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Technically:
"Oh is the son of a Chinese father and a Japanese mother and was born in , Tokyo, Japan. He had Japanese citizenship when he was born because Taiwan, his father's home, was part of the Empire of Japan. After the end of World War II, control of Taiwan was given to the Republic of China . Taiwanese people were converted from Japanese citizenship to ROC citizenship. Until January of 1985 the children of a Japanese father inherited Japanese citizenship, but if the father was not Japanese, the child was not Japanese. This changed on January 1 1985. This was a big problem for Oh as a youth: he speaks and has lived in Japan all his life. He and his three daughters hold Republic of China passports."
This is relevant IMO because it is generally well-known how much importance the Japanese place on citizenship. Didn't mean to take away/digress from the rest of the story.
"Oh is the son of a Chinese father and a Japanese mother and was born in , Tokyo, Japan. He had Japanese citizenship when he was born because Taiwan, his father's home, was part of the Empire of Japan. After the end of World War II, control of Taiwan was given to the Republic of China . Taiwanese people were converted from Japanese citizenship to ROC citizenship. Until January of 1985 the children of a Japanese father inherited Japanese citizenship, but if the father was not Japanese, the child was not Japanese. This changed on January 1 1985. This was a big problem for Oh as a youth: he speaks and has lived in Japan all his life. He and his three daughters hold Republic of China passports."
This is relevant IMO because it is generally well-known how much importance the Japanese place on citizenship. Didn't mean to take away/digress from the rest of the story.
Therion said:Oh was Chinese. He was born in Japan but he was born a Chinese citizen.
Now, to try to address some of the points brought up. "Oh isn't great because his defense wasn't solid."
On what are you basing this? Back it up with numbers.
"Oh doesn't deserve to even be in this conversation."
Why not? Realize that Oh put up these impressive numbers in much shorter Japanese League seasons.
"Oh could have played in the US and chose not to."
This is dubious at best. Name ten Oriental players from 1959-1980 in the MLB. The problem is that Orientals were greatly discriminated against in America until WELL after the end of the Vietnam War.
Holding the league against Oh is unfair. He had little choice in the matter. Sure, it is possible he would have come here and sucked. It is equally possible that he could have come here and been legendary. Discounting facts because of conjecture is just a little strange.
My whole point is that there are great players that deserve to be in this conversation that we never even consider.