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| 2006 BBM Rookie Edition #32 |
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| 2008 BBM Fighters #F49 |
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| 2014 BBM Speed & Smart #07 |
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| 2006 BBM Hawks #H034 |
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| 2013 Topps Tribute WBC #55 |
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| 2013 Topps Tribute WBC #6 |
An English Guide To Baseball Cards From Japan
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| 2006 BBM Rookie Edition #32 |
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| 2008 BBM Fighters #F49 |
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| 2014 BBM Speed & Smart #07 |
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| 2006 BBM Hawks #H034 |
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| 2013 Topps Tribute WBC #55 |
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| 2013 Topps Tribute WBC #6 |
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| 2023 BBM Baystars #DB30 |
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| 2020 Epoch NPB #071 |
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| 2019 BBM 1st Version #166 |
The Cubs announced that they had signed a Japanese pitcher named Kippei Mikawa this week and I have been obsessed with answering one simple question:
A former Rikkyo University pitcher, Mikawa, briefly retired from Baseball only to leave CyberAgent 3 a few months ago to pursue a dream in American Baseball. That dream has officially become a reality, as Mikawa is joining the Cubs and will await his system placement. Before his brief retirement, Mikawa was part of the Yomiuri Giants Jr. squad, which is equivalent to a Minor League affiliate in the U.S.
There were a couple interesting events last week, both in MLB and NPB. On Monday night, three Astros pitchers combined to no-hit the Texas Rangers. One of those pitchers was Tatsuya Imai, who started the game and went six innings. Imai had also been part of a combined no-hitter last year in Japan. I had briefly thought that Imai was the first pitcher to have taken part in a no-hitter in both NPB and MLB but I had forgotten that Shota Imanaga had thrown a complete game no-hitter in Japan and been part of a combined no-hitter in MLB. In fact, Imanaga's combined no-no was the most recent no-hitter in MLB before the Astros' one last week. Fun fact - the final pitcher of the night for Houston, Alimber Santa, was making his big league debut in that game. He's the second player in history to debut in a no-hitter, after Bumpus Jones in 1892.
On Tuesday, the news broke that Shinnosuke Abe, manager of the Yomiuri Giants, was stepping down after having been arrested under suspicion of assaulting his teenaged daughter. I'm not sure all the details have been established but apparently he intervened in an argument between his daughters and may have thrown the older one to the ground. The daughter contacted child consultation services who then got the police involved. The whole thing is quite serious and disturbing and it's not what I want to focus on. With Abe stepping down, the Giants have named Hideki Hashigami as interim manager. Hashigami had a 12 year career playing for the Swallows (1988-96) and the Fighters (1997-99) - and notably did not play for the Giants. He's coached for numerous teams since retiring as a player. Yomiuri is stressing the "interim" part of his job title as the team hasn't replaced a manager mid-season since 1949 and they've never had a manager who didn't play for them. In fact, they've never had an "official" manager who ever played for another team (at least not before he managed the team). There's a lot that will still play out in the story but I doubt Hashigami will have the job after the season ends.
Here are cards of both Imai and Hashigami:
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| 2024 Calbee Series Two #114 |
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| 1994 BBM Late Series #594 |
Bob Horner passed away yesterday at the age of 68 years old. Horner was a star player at Arizona State in the 1970's, winning the first ever Golden Spikes award in 1978. He was the number one overall pick in the MLB draft that year and was immediately put on the Atlanta Braves' major league roster, skipping the minor leagues entirely. He'd hit 23 home runs in just over half a season and was named National League Rookie Of The Year. He'd would team up with with Dale Murphy to be a deadly middle of the lineup combination for much of the next nine seasons in Atlanta, hitting 215 home runs over that time span. And then, in 1987, Bob Horner went to play in Japan.
Horner had become a free agent following the 1986 season and wanted a contract for $2 million. No major league team would offer him that but the Yakult Swallows did. Horner signed and headed overseas.
A major league star at the peak of his career signing with a Japanese club was unheard of at the time (and pretty much still is). These were the days of Japan's global economic dominance and it seemed like it was just another example of the Japanese buying up everything. Robert Whiting used Horner's signing and experience playing in Japan as the opening chapter in his 1988 book "You Gotta Have Wa" and put the signing in context:
Japan was at the height of its economic muscle. Japanese interests owned 54 percent of all the cash in the world's banks, 65 percent of all Manhattan real estate, and 3 percent of the entire U.S. national debt. A staid Japanese insurance company had paid 39 million dollars for Van Gogh's painting Sunflower.
And now, in what one TV commentator had called the piece de resistance, a Japanese baseball team had outbid the American major leagues for a prime American player: James Robert Horner.
What Whiting didn't know or account for at the time was that the main reason the Swallows were able to sign Horner was that the major league owners were illegally conspiring to not sign each other's players. Almost no free agents changed teams that winter. What he also couldn't know was that the Japanese economy would stagnate starting in 1990. Horner's signing by the Swallows was not a harbinger of things to come but basically a one-off due to unique circumstances - Japan's economic clout and MLB collusion.
The Swallows issued Horner uniform number 50 with the implication that he'd hit that many home runs, despite not joining the team until mid-April. For the first few weeks, it looked like that was a possibility. He homered in his first game and hit several more in his next games. But inevitably the league adjusted to him and and pitchers stopped challenging him. He finished 1987 with a .327 average, 31 home runs and 73 RBIs in 93 games.
The Swallows offered him a three year contract for $10 million dollars but Horner had had enough of Japan after one season. He returned to MLB and signed a one year deal with the Cardinals. He was invited to spring training with the Orioles in 1989 but retired instead.
Horner was one of only two Golden Spikes winners to play in NPB (with Trevor Bauer being the other) and one of only four number one overall picks to do so (along with Danny Goodwin, Floyd Bannister and Bryan Bullington).
As far as I can tell, he only had six cards showing him with the Swallows that came out in 1987. Five of these were in that year's Calbee set, numbers 101, 111, 121, 201 and 319. The other was from the Play Ball set which was an unlicensed set issued in the United States, possibly to capitalize on Horner's presence on the Swallows. He's only appeared in two OB sets since he retired - the 2013 BBM Legendary Foreigners and the 2020 Epoch OB Club Career Achievements sets. Here are the cards I have of him:
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| 1987 Calbee #101 |
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| 1987 Calbee #111 |
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| 1987 Calbee #121 |
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| 1987 Play Ball #1 |
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| 2013 BBM Legendary Foreigners #35 |
In rereading Robert Whiting's book when doing research for this post, I saw that he mentioned a commercial Horner had done for Suntory beer. I went spelunking through YouTube and found this, although I'm not positive it's the one Whiting meant:
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| 2003 Calbee Series One #082 |
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| 2006 BBM Nippon Series #S08 |
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| 2013 BBM 1st Version #171 |
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| 2024 Epoch Fighters Premier Edition #29 |
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| 2023 Topps Samurai Japan #10 |
Taisei Irie of the Baystars tied a dubious record yesterday when he threw 60 pitches in the first inning of his start against the Swallows. He faced ten batters and gave up six earned runs on six hits (including three doubles) and a walk. Incredibly, he gave up all the hits (and the walk) after having gotten the first two batters of the game out. It was the only inning he pitched and the six runs were the only runs scored in the entire game.
The record he tied was set 29 years ago by Bob Milacki of the Kintesu Buffaloes, who gave up 10 runs int the first inning against the Seibu Lions on June 27th, 1997. Milacki's stint with Kintetsu was fairly short-lived, going 0-2 with an ERA of 7.30 in six games (including five starts). Irie was the Baystars first pick in the 2020 draft so I suspect he'll be given a longer rope than Milacki was.
Here are cards of the two players:
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| 2021 BBM 1st Version #265 |
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| 1997 BBM #166 |