Wednesday, February 19, 2025

RIP Tsubakuro

A very sad story released by the Tokyo Yakult Swallows today - apparently the person who's worn the costume for their mascot Tsubakuro has passed away suddenly.   It appears that this person - who's not named in either the Swallows press release or the Yahoo! news story - has been wearing the suit since the Swallows debuted the mascot in 1994.  The team said that they're suspending the mascot's activities for now and there's no word on whether they'll be retiring him altogether.

I don't track cards of mascots in my database so I don't know off hand how many cards of Tsubakuro there are.  There have been a seemingly endless number of team checklists from BBM's 1st or 2nd Version sets that featured mascots as well as cards for them in BBM's team sets.  They've shown up on Calbee checklist cards from time to time and frequently have dedicated cards in Epoch's team sets.  Jambalaya lists 68 cards for Tsubakuro but I know that number is low.

I think the first card to feature Tsubakuro was the Swallows checklist card from the 1995 BBM set.  Here's that card along with some others:

1995 BBM #597

2006 Calbee Series Two #C-8

2008 BBM 2nd Version #781

2013 BBM 1st Version #400

2017 Epoch Swallows #29

2020 Epoch Swallows Rookies & Stars #36

2021 Calbee Series Three #C-12 (with Masanori Ishikawa)

2022 BBM Fusion #GR02

2024 BBM 1st Version #329

It's hard to tell but the "Great Record" card from the 2022 BBM Fusion set commemorated the mascot's 2000th appearance at a game on August 8th, 2022.

My favorite of Tsubakuro's cards isn't really a card for him - it's his cameo appearance on Alex Ramirez's card from the 2001 BBM Nippon Series set:

2001 BBM Nippon Series #S22


Monday, February 17, 2025

BBM Updates

I mentioned a while back that I had gotten curious about how often a player appeared with two different teams in BBM's flagship sets for a given year.  So basically, I wanted to know how many players had appeared with one team in either the 1st or 2nd Version set and then another in either the 2nd Version or Fusion set.  

Keep in mind that players don't change teams in NPB as often as they do in MLB and mid-season trades of big name players are almost unheard of.  So whether or not a player who gets traded shows up in the flagship set is somewhat hit or miss.

I struggled for a little bit, trying to figure out how to do this with sql queries to my database but I finally gave up and wrote a Java application to figure it out for me.  BBM had split their flagship set in the 1st and 2nd Versions in 2002, so that was the first set I took a look at.  For the first three years of the two set flagship era, the two sets were roughly the same size.  In 2005, though, the 1st Version set grew to be almost the same size as the pre-split flagship sets while the 2nd Version set shrunk in size.  For the first time, BBM added a "1st Version Update" subset to the 2nd Version set which used the same card design as the 1st Version set.  This subset has been staple of every 2nd Version set except 2008 since then and has also been included in every Fusion set since that set debuted in 2016.  My program basically looked at every player with a "regular" card in the 1st Version set and checked if that player had a "regular" or "1st Version Update" card in the 2nd Version set with a different team.  It also checked the 1st Version cards against the "1st Version Update" cards in the Fusion set* and then did the same for the 2nd Version cards.

* Limiting the comparisons to just the "1st Version Update" cards in the Fusion set greatly cut down on false positives.  For example, Daisuke Matsuzaka's in the 2019 1st Version set as a member of the Dragons but shows up in Fusion as a member of the Lions.  It's not because he changed teams though - remember that the "regular" cards in Fusion match an event that happened in the current year with an event that happened in a previous year.  Matsuzaka was included in the set because of something he'd done before he left for MLB after 2006,

I had to sanity check the results because I know there's errors in my database (for some reason, all the Giants cards in the 2016 2nd Version set got assigned to the Baystars and I've never fixed it) but I came up with a list of 26 players.  Well, it's really 24 players as two of the players were in both 1st and 2nd Version with one team and in Fusion with another.

OK, I've gone on way too much about the process.  Let's look at some cards.

Actually, before we do, I need to mention that there was one instance of this occurring with BBM's "Late Series" cards.  Six times between 1994 and 2001*, BBM stopped printing their flagship set, replaced all the cards for one or two teams** with new cards.  The card numbers weren't reused, so the new cards were added onto the end of the set.  For example, the Swallows cards in the 1994 set were numbers 1-42 which were replaced with cards 567-608.

* Specifically 1994-96 and 1999-2001

** Swallows in 1994, Marines in 1995, Dragons in 1996, Swallows in 1999, Marines & Tigers in 2000 and BlueWave & Tigers in 2001

I'm pretty sure that every time BBM replaced a team's cards in the "Late Series", it was a one-for-one swap.  There's no case where there's a guy in the "Late Series" cards for a team who wasn't in the original set.  But in 1995, BBM did something that they didn't do with any of the other "Late Series".  In addition to updating all the Marines cards, they added five other cards.  Three of these were late signing American players - Kevin Mitchell, Terry Bross and Rich Monteleone - but the other two were cards of Tatsuji Nishimura and Masato Yoshii, who had been traded for each other earlier in the year.  Their new cards replaced their original cards in the set.  Here's the original and "Late Series" cards for each of them:

1995 BBM #161 (1), Late Series #650 (r)

1995 BBM #144 (1), Late Series #649 (r)

I was not expecting there to be any "multiple team" players in the 2002-04 sets so imagine my surprise when my program found one in the 2002 sets.  Lions pitcher Takehiro Hashimoto was traded in May of that year to the Tigers for Tom Evans:

2002 BBM 1st Version #248 (l), 2nd Version #603 (r)

Evans, by the way, didn't appear in either flagship set with either team but his trade was reflected in a couple of other BBM sets:

2002 BBM Tigers #T58 (l), Nippon Series #S47 (r)

I should note that I did not expand my searches to see if players appeared with multiple teams in BBM sets other than the flagship sets, mostly because I only have complete runs of BBM's team sets from 2015 on.  That may be a future project.  In this particular case, I just happened to check to see what cards I had of Evans and I got lucky.

With the change in how BBM was doing the 1st and 2nd Version sets that started in 2005, we started getting updates that were more like the traditional "Update" sets in the US for MLB, where a player could possibly be on two cards with the same design in the same year.  In other words, more like the 1995 examples above and not like the 2002 ones.  2005's 1st Version set saw only two players who appeared in 2nd Version on a different team and the two of them had been traded for each other:

2005 BBM 1st Version #17 (l), 2nd Version #570 (r)

2005 BBM 1st Version #331 (l), 2nd Version #560 (r)

There were three players in the 2006 2nd Version set who had been with different teams in the 1st Version set.  Two of the players were involved in the same trade but were not traded for each other - the Baystars sent Ryotaro (Doi) and Ryusuke Minami to the Marines for Shigetoshi Yamakita.  Yamakita had a card in the 2nd Version set but not the 1st.

2006 BBM 1st Version #298 (l), 2nd Version #502 (r)

2006 BBM 1st Version #319 (l), 2nd Version #506 (r)

The other player, Takuya Kimura, was traded from the Carp to the Giants for Shinsuke Yamada who did not appear in either flagship set that year (although he did appear in both the team sets for both the Carp and Giants while Kimura didn't appear in either team set):

2006 BBM 1st Version #420 (l), 2nd Version #521 (r)

Three years would pass before BBM would include another player with an updated team in 2nd Version.  It's not quite as long as it sounds, though, as the 2008 2nd Version set did not include a "1st Version Update" subset so it was really just one set (2007) without such a player.  Yasutomo Kubo was traded from the Marines to the Tigers for Kentaro Hashimoto in early March of that year.  (Hashimoto appears in the 2nd Version set but not 1st Version and, due to the timing of the set releases, doesn't appear in either team set that year.  Kubo appears in both the Marines and Tigers team sets.)

2009 BBM 1st Version #114 (l), 2nd Version #781 (r)

2010 saw four players in the 2nd Version set that were with a different team in 1st Version, none of whom were traded for each other.  Shintaro Eijiri was traded from the Fighters to the Baystars for Yuya Ishii who only appeared in the 2nd Version set.  The trade happened early enough that the two players appeared in the team sets for their new teams.

2010 BBM 1st Version #227 (l), 2nd Version #746 (r)

Yuji Yoshimi was sold by the Baystars to the Marines.  The timing of the transaction was such that he appeared in the team set for both teams.

2010 BBM 1st Version #186 (l), 2nd Version #760 (r)

Another player, Yusuke Kawasaki, was sold by the Marines to the Tigers.  He's only in the Tigers team set.

2010 BBM 1st Version #364 (l), 2nd Version #740 (r)

The final player for 2010 is a little unusual in that his 2nd Version card was a "regular" card as opposed to a "1st Version Update" card.  Masayuki Hasegawa along with Go Kida were traded from the Carp to the Buffaloes for Yuichiro Mukae.  All three players are in the 2nd Version set but Mukae is the only one in the "1st Version Update" subset as Kida has a "regular" card like Hasegawa.  All three players are with the original teams in BBM's team sets.

2010 BBM 1st Version #155 (l), 2nd Version #715 (r)

2011 had only one player switch teams between 1st and 2nd Version.  Fighters infielder Shinji Takahashi was sold to the Giants mid-season - after the Giants set was published but before the Fighters set was so he managed to miss both team sets.

2011 BBM 1st Version #092 (l), 2nd Version #443 (r)

Strange as it may seem, there'd only be one more instance after 2011 of a player appearing with one team in 1st Version and another in 2nd Version.  But BBM would introduce the Fusion set in 2016 which would give them a chance to issue cards that reflected transactions later in the season than 2nd Version did.  2nd Version typically goes to press around mid-June (if not earlier) but Fusion goes to press at the end of the regular season.  As a result, seven of the nine Fusion sets released between 2016 and 2024 contain at least one player with a different team than in either 1st or 2nd Version (or both).

The first Fusion set to include players on new teams was 2017.  Fighters middle reliever Keisuke Tanimoto would be sold by Nippon-Ham to the Chunichi Dragons in late July, just after Tanimoto had appeared in the All Star game.  Tanimoto would be the first (and I believe only so far) NPB player to change teams in the same season that he was an All Star.  Tanimoto appeared with the Fighters in both the 1st and 2nd Version sets (as well as being in the Fighters team set) but was a Dragon in the Fusion set:

2017 BBM 1st Version #005 (l), 2nd Version #377 (r), Fusion #609 (b)

Tanimoto wasn't the only pitcher the Fighters got rid of mid-season in 2017.  Luis Mendoza was waived by Nippon-Ham in late August and picked up by the Tigers.  He only appeared in 2nd Version set (as well as the Fighters team set).

2017 BBM 2nd Version #373 (l), Fusion #607 (r)

There was a single player in each of the 2018 and 2019 Fusion sets who was with a different team in 1st Version.  In 2018, that player was Hikaru Itoh, who was traded with Ken Akama from the Buffaloes to the Baystars for Shuto Takajoh and Hiroyuki Shirasaki.  Shirasaki was the only other player from the trade who also appeared in Fusion.

2018 BBM 1st Version #091 (l), Fusion #608 (r)

In 2019, Masato Matsui was traded with Yusuke Matsui (no relation) from the Dragons to the Buffaloes for Takahiro Matsuba and Kengo Takeda.  Takeda and the other Matsui were also included in Fusion.

2019 BBM 1st Version #283 (l), Fusion #606 (r)

The final (to date) occurrence of a player being with one team in 1st Version and a different team in 2nd Version happened in 2020.  Zelous Wheeler was traded by the Eagles to the Giants for Shun Ikeda just after the COVID-delayed start of the season.  Oddly enough, Ikeda did not appear in 2nd Version but showed up in Fusion (but not in 1st Version which he isn't listed here).

2020 BBM 1st Version #070 (l), 2nd Version #357 (r)

Another player whose mid-season change of scenery in 2020 was reflected on BBM's baseball cards was pitcher DJ Johnson who was sold by the Carp to the Eagles late in the season.  It was kind of an odd transaction given that Johnson was in his first (and ultimately only) season in NPB (unlike Wheeler, who was in his sixth).

2020 BBM 1st Version #251 (l), Fusion #603 (r)

2021 would see four 1st Version players appear with new teams in the Fusion set, the most since 2010.  For the first time since 2005, this would include two players who were traded for each other.  The Lions traded Fumikazu Kimura and Ryusei Satoh to the Fighters for Shota Hiranuma and Katsuhiko Kumon.  All four players were in Fusion but only Kimura and Hiranuma were in 1st Version:

2021 BBM 1st Version #074 (l), Fusion #614 (r)

2021 BBM 1st Version #125 (l), Fusion #609 (r)

Akira Niho was traded by the Hawks to the Tigers for Masahiro Nakatani.  Nakatani was not in either 1st Version or Fusion and, due to the timing of the trade, wasn't in either the Hawks or Tigers team sets that year either.  Niho, on the other hand, was in both team sets as well as the two flagship sets:

2021 BBM 1st Version #002 (l), Fusion #618 (r)

The blockbuster trade of 2021, however, was Sho Nakata being sent by the Fighters to the Giants for...nothing.  Nakata had been suspended by the Fighters in early August for assaulting a teammate at an exhibition game while the season was on hold for the Tokyo Olympics.  I'm not sure how much of the details of the incident have been made public (I'm going off this section of Nakata's Japanese Wikipedia page) but the Fighters treated it seriously enough that Nakata was banished from the team.  Two weeks after the incident in question, he was sent to Yomiuri in a "free trade" - a trade in which the Fighters got nothing in return (other than Nakata off the team permanently).  Nakata had been in both 1st and 2nd Version as a Fighter but a Giant in Fusion:

2021 BBM 1st Version #120 (l), 2nd Version #452 (c), Fusion #617 (r)

The next player with an updated team wouldn't happen for two years.  In 2023, the Fighters sent Shingo Usami and Koki Saitoh to the Dragons for Takumi Yamamoto and Yuya Gunji.  Usami was the only one of the four to appear with both teams in BBM's flagship sets although Gunji would also appear in Fusion.

2023 BBM 1st Version #147 (l), Fusion #621 (r)

And the final player with an updated team was the one that piqued my curiosity about this topic.  Gakuto Wakabayashi was traded by the Lions to the Giants last June for Seiya Matsubara.  Wakabayashi was actually in 2nd Version instead of 1st:

2024 BBM 2nd Version #570 (l), Fusion #606 (r)

I've been working on this post for the better part of a month so it's nice to finally finish it.  I'll probably revisit this topic in a couple months when I get the rest of my 2024 teams sets from Ryan - I'll have the full run of BBM team sets from 2015-24 then and I can see how many players appeared in more than one team sets in a year.

Sunday, February 16, 2025

Card Of The Week February 16

Ever since Masayuki Kakefu was elected to the Hall Of Fame last month, I've been wondering if the Tigers would retire his uniform number.  The Tigers currently have retired three uniform numbers - 10 for Fumio Fujimura, 23 for Yoshio Yoshida and 11 for Minoru Murayama - and I've always been kind of surprised they hadn't retired 31 for Kakefu.  Of course, I was also surprised that Kakefu wasn't already in the Hall Of Fame so maybe I'm just not paying attention enough.  Checking out the "uniform number history" website, I see that five players have worn Kakefu's 31 since he retired after the 1988 season with Jefry Marte being the most recent from 2019-22 (not counting Kakefu when he was farm team manager in 2016-17) so the Tigers haven't really been reserving the number in any way.  I took a quick look at the Tigers' website but I didn't see any announcements about them retiring the number (or even the Hall Of Fame vote).  So I guess we'll see.  With the recent passing of Yoshida, there's no living player with his number retired by Hanshin.  Kakefu would also be the first retired number for a Tigers player without an alliterative name. 

Here are cards for the three retired numbers along with Kakefu's card from the 2013 BBM Great Numbers set:

2001 BBM #535

2013 BBM Great Numbers #139

2001 BBM #536

2013 BBM Great Numbers #103


Friday, February 14, 2025

Mystery Solved?

I picked up a 1975 NST card recently that I hadn't actually been looking for, breaking my new rule of not buying anything that wasn't already on my want list, but, if you'll indulge me for a minute, you'll see why I got it.

I've written a lot about what I call the "Florida Project" - a series of 22 cards from the 1974/75 Calbee set that feature photos of the Yomiuri Giants from spring training in 1975 which they spent in Vero Beach, Florida, as guests of the Los Angeles Dodgers.  I've been working on picking up all the cards in the series and I'm down to only needing one.

I was aware that the 1975 NST "Mr. Baseball" set also included cards of the Giants in Florida although I've been less interested in getting them.  It's somewhat unclear to me how many there are and NST cards can be difficult to find.  There's a couple gems in the set, though, that I've been happy to find - one shows Tsuneo Horiuchi pitching to Ron Cey and the other shows Shigeo Nagashima with Gene Mauch.  I know from looking at Gary Engel's "Japanese Vintage Baseball Card Checklist & Price Guide" that there are also cards showing Nagashima with Stan Wasiak (the manager of the Dodgers' Triple-A team in Albuquerque at the time) and possibly Kansas City Royals manager Jack McKeon.  I had not seen either of these cards until the other day when the Wasiak card showed up in an Ebay search:

1975 NST #188

My eyes lit up when I saw the number on the back of Wasiak's uniform - it looks like it's 75.  Why do I care?  Because it may solve the mystery of who the Dodger's coach on this Calbee card is:

1974/75 Calbee #710

I want to stress that neither the Calbee card nor the NST album (the NST "card" is actually a stamp that is meant to be pasted into an album) identifies Wasiak by name.  The back of the Calbee card talks about shortstop Kazumasa Kohno (#29) although the Google translation appears to say something about Kohno getting training "by the coach of the 3A team himself":


The text of the NST album appears to imply that the other person on both card #188 (Wasiak) and #189 (Mauch) are Walt Alston who was Dodgers manager at the time:

But Alston's number was 24, not 75 so it's not him on card #188 and he wouldn't have been wearing an Expos hat so it's not him on card #189 either.  Engel's guide is the only place where Wasiak is mentioned by name (and only for the NST card).  I don't know how Gary determined who it was but I don't see any reason to doubt him.

So to recap the clues - Gary Engel's listing for 1975 NST card #188 says it's Stan Wasiak on the card with Nagashima.  Wasiak is wearing uniform number 75 which is the same number someone (who may have been referred to as the "coach of the 3A team") is wearing on the back of 1974/75 Calbee card #710.  Wasiak was the Dodgers' Triple-A manager at the time.  Assuming Gary's identification of Wasiak is correct, that's also Wasiak on the Calbee card.

Wasiak's an interesting figure that I didn't know anything about before writing this post.  He played in the Dodgers' organization in the 1940's, missing four years due to the War, and never made the majors.  He became a minor league manager in 1950 and managed at least one game every year for 37 years (he missed some time in the early 80's with some health issues but was able to keep his streak intact by managing one game in 1982).  He finished his career in 1986 with 2,530 career victories, the most ever by a minor league manager.

Sunday, February 9, 2025

Card Of The Week February 9

I found out a couple interesting pieces of trivia a while back while I was researching my post about BBM's cards for the previous year's Best 9 and Golden Glove award winners.  The first was that the Golden Glove awards weren't always called the Golden Glove awards.  When they were first introduced in 1972, they were called the "Diamond Glove" awards.  It wasn't until 1986 that the name changed to "Golden Glove".  I think it had something to do with a change in who sponsored the awards but the machine translation of the Japanese wikipedia page on the award is unclear.

The second and perhaps more interesting thing is that there have been four players to win both a Gold Glove in MLB and a Diamond/Golden Glove in NPB.  Clete Boyer was the first, having won the MLB award with the Atlanta Braves in 1969 and the NPB award with the Taiyo Whales in 1973 and 1974 (he shared the 1973 award with Shigeo Nagashima).  

1975/76/77 Calbee #374 (w/Daisuke Yamashita)

Wes Parker won six Gold Gloves between 1967 and 1972 with the Los Angeles Dodgers.  He sat out the 1973 season before joining the Nankai Hawks for 1974.  He won a Diamond Glove award for his one NPB season which gave him seven consecutive awards across the two leagues (with a gap for the one year he didn't play).  

1975 Broder JA4

Davey Johnson was another player with multiple Gold Glove awards, having won them in three consecutive years as a member of the Baltimore Orioles between 1969 and 1971.  He won a Diamond Glove award in 1976, his second and final year with the Yomiuri Giants.

1975/76/77 Calbee #1067

It'd be 25 years before another player joined this club.  Ichiro won Golden Gloves his last seven years in NPB with the Orix BlueWave between 1994 and 2000 and then won Gold Gloves in each of his first ten seasons in MLB with the Seattle Mariners.  He's the only player on the list with multiple NPB awards and he basically won one or the other award every year for seventeen years.

2000 BBM #G7


Saturday, February 8, 2025

Zippy Zapped Again!

I was greeted upon my return home from work one day last week with a package from Kenny - aka Zippy Zappy  I've been the beneficiary of Kenny's generosity a number of times over the past few years and it's continued even though he's now moved to Japan.  I don't know what I've done to make him so nice to me - we've never met in person (although we were both at Rob Fitts' Masanori Murakami event at the Barnes & Noble in Manhattan ten years ago) - but I'm always grateful for whatever goodies he decides to send my way.

I'm also always amazed at how he manages to send me stuff I don't already have.  I mean, I have a LOT of Japanese baseball cards.  Like, over 80 thousand.  So for him to send me 50-ish cards and there only be eight that I don't already have is unbelievable.  I thought I'd do a...well, I was going to say "quick post to show some of the cards he sent" but with almost 40 cards to talk about, it probably won't be all that quick.  So let's dive into what he sent (although I'm skipping the cards he sent that I already have):

First up are some cards of the late Shigeru Sugishita.  This first card is from the 2000 DigiCube set which is pretty rare - I've only seen a handful of singles from it (and one of them was this one when Kenny posted about it):

2000 DigiCube #118

Here's a couple inserts from the 2006 BBM Dragons 70th Anniversary set:

2006 BBM Dragons 70th Anniversary #DB1

2006 BBM Dragons 70th Anniversary #DR6

These next two cards are parallel versions of insert cards from the 2016 BBM Dragons 80th Anniversary and 2021 BBM Dragons History 1936-2021 respectively.  I have the base version of each card.  Both cards are serially numbered with the "Dragons Heroes" card being /100 and the "Team Records" card being /120:

2016 BBM Dragons 80th Anniversary #DH01

2021 BBM Dragons History 1936-2021 #TR7

The "Dragons Heroes" card has a shiny "kira" finish that doesn't scan well.  The last Sugishita card is another one that unfortunately doesn't scan well.  It's a "shadow box" card from the 2015 Epoch MVP Of The Year set.  

2015 Epoch MVP Of The Year #S-DSS

It's hard to tell from the scan but the card is hollow with the white background being the back of the card and the photo and facsimile signature being on a transparent front of the card.  The card is /10.

This next batch of cards come from various Epoch and BBM sets.  Here's another card with a shiny "kira" finish that doesn't scan well - a kira parallel version of a "Ceremonial First Pitch" card of Nozomi Sasaki from the 2015 BBM 2nd Version set.  Once again, I have the base version of this card:

2015 BBM 2nd Version #

A 2018 Epoch One card of Masami Ishigaki, commemorating his winning the MVP at the 2018 Fresh All Star game (the farm team all star game):

2018 Epoch One #387/CD-043

A "Printed Signature" insert card of Hiroto Takahashi from the 2023 Epoch Dragons Premier Edition set (/70):

2023 Epoch Dragons Premier Edition #PV01

Here's a couple numbered parallel versions of insert cards from BBM Dragons' team sets.  The "Boost Phase" card of Shinnosuke Ogasawara is from 2020 and is /150 while the "D's Legacy" card of Masahiko Morino and Akira Neo is from 2022 and is /70:

2020 BBM Dragons #BP1

2022 BBM Dragons #DL4

That 2022 card doesn't scan well - it looks a lot nicer in person.

One of Kenny's favorite players is Hiroki Kuroda so it was no surprise to see this card in the lot (another shiny card that doesn't scan well):

1999 BBM Diamond Heroes #83

Here's an insert and a parallel card from two different BBM sets from 2010:

2010 BBM 1st Version #GG08

2010 BBM Giants #G062

Kenny included a brand new Dragons Starter Deck from the 2024 Bushiroad Dream Order collectible card game set.  Like the Lions one I got last May, the set contains 12 unique playing cards but has three copies of each card.  There's also six (five unique) photo-less "Tactics" cards, a "team" card and five identical "time" cards showing the team logo.  The sticker price on the front of the set was only 440 yen rather than the 1500 yen I paid for the Lions set.  Here's a couple of the cards from the set - the Shinnosuke Ogasawara card was the "cover" card for the set and has a foil finish with gold embossed text:

2024 Bushiroad Dream Order Dragons Starter Deck #CSD06-D01 Shinnosuke Ogasawara

2024 Bushiroad Dream Order Dragons Starter Deck #CSD06-D03 Raidel Martinez

2024 Bushiroad Dream Order Dragons Starter Deck #CSD06-D10 Seiya Hosokawa

2024 Bushiroad Dream Order Dragons Starter Deck #CSD06-D09 Ryuku Tsuchida

Moving onto some more interesting fare...Kenny threw in a couple memorabilia cards:

2009 BBM Dragons #DM2

2013 Dragons #DM2

2017 BBM Genesis

The Morino and Ogasawara cards are /300 while the Ohsima card is /200.

The remaining cards are all autographed cards, the bulk of which are from various Dragons team sets - both "comprehensive" and smaller box sets - from BBM:

2010 BBM Dragons

2015 BBM Dragons

2015 BBM Dragons Autographed Edition

2016 BBM Dragons

2016 BBM Dragons

2016 BBM Dragons

2016 BBM Dragons

2016 BBM Dragons

2016 BBM Dragons

2016 BBM Dragons Dash

2019 BBM Dragons

All of the BBM Dragons autographed cards are /60 except Takuya Kinoshita which is /50.  The two Takeshi Kaneko autographed cards are /30.  It's kind of funny* that Kenny ended up with the same player as the premium card for both box sets, especially since Kaneko doesn't appear in either base set.

*Kenny might not have thought it was funny after spending all the money on an unopened box set

There was also an autographed card from an Epoch set:

2022 Epoch Dragons Premier Edition #AA-03

As you can tell, this card was /17.  This and all the BBM autographed cards are sticker autographs.

The last autographed cards that Kenny sent were ones that he got signed TTM.  Here are three for Gosuke Katoh when he was a Yankees farmhand:

2013 Bowman Draft Picks & Prospects - Chrome Draft Picks #BDPP37

2014 Bowman - Prospects #BP56

2014 Grandstand Charleston RiverDogs

The final card needs a little backstory.  In 2013, pitcher Takumi Numata dropped out of Nagoya Sangyo University to play for a club team called the Edion Aiko University OB BLITZ.  By the end of the season, however, he had signed a contract to play for the Los Angeles Dodgers.  He spent all of 2014 with Dodger's rookie league team in Arizona and was assigned to the Ogden Raptors of the short season Pioneer League the following year.  He was released by the team before the season started and returned to Japan.  He spend a couple years in the independent Baseball Challenge League (two with Gunma and one with Ishikawa) before being taken by the Swallows in the 2017 draft.  Yakult released him after two seasons and he retired as a baseball player after one year with the Ryukyu Blue Oceans.

Kenny had found an on-line image of a 1987-ish Topps card of Numata and printed it out.  Numata signed the card via a TTM request:


Thank you again, Kenny, for all the cards!