Sunday, May 17, 2026

Card Of The Week May 17

There was a trade last week in NPB.  Mid-season trades are nowhere near as common in Japan as they are in MLB but they do happen.  This was a bit unusual, though, as the Baystars shipped their starting catcher, Yudai Yamamoto, off to the Hawks in exchange for a couple of their former number one draft picks - Tomoya Inoue (first pick in the 2020 draft) and Shuto Ogata (first pick in the 2017 ikusei draft).  Here are cards for all three players:

2024 Topps NPB #37

2021 BBM Hawks #H50

2023 Hawks Volume 3 #23SBH329


Friday, May 15, 2026

Topps, Team Sets, Game Cards, 2nd Version and a KBO set

Time for another round up of recently announced NPB sets...

- Topps is back for their sixth year of doing NPB sets.  I'm not exactly sure of the details of this year's edition of their flagship set though - TradingCardJournal.com says the set will be released on June 12 but Topps' Japanese website says it'll be May 29th.  Neither listing says how big the set will be but I'm assuming it'll be the usual 216 cards (18 cards per team).  There will be insert cards but it beats the hell out of me what they'll be because Topps didn't bother including that information either - other than they're going to have one that uses the 1991 design.  There'll be the usual myriad of parallels but again there are no details other than they'll exist and some of them will be serially numbered.  There will be autographed cards of active NPB players, "active players currently playing in MLB" which I assume means active former NPB players (I don't expect to see Aaron Judge cards) and retired players (which have been some of Topps' more interesting inclusions).  The big news is that Topps will include relic cards for active players with this set for the first time.

- While I'm on the subject of Topps, I should mention that there are some World Baseball Classic inserts available in the recently released Bowman set but they're pretty rare and expensive.  The 25 card "Anime" insert set features anime-style cartoon images of a number of active and retired players including Shohei Ohtani, Aaron Judge, Cal Raleigh, Paul Skenes and Bobby Witt, Jr. in their WBC uniforms.  One of the retired players in the set is Sadaharu Oh which is pretty cool and the active MLB players include Munetaka Murakami, Kazuma Okamoto and Tatsuya Imai.  There's a kanji variation of the "Anime" inserts as well that's only for the Japanese players (Ohtani, Oh, Murakami, Okamoto, Imai along with Hideo Nomo and Shotaro Morii, a farmhand in the Sacramento Athletics organization).  

- BBM has announced the final three of their "comprehensive" team sets for 2026.  As usual, each set has a base set of 81 cards, most of which are "regular" player cards featuring the manager and the players on the 70 man roster plus a couple subsets (which may not be fully defined yet) to fill out the set.  Each set also has 18 non-premium insert cards split into a variety of sets which also may not be fully defined yet (or may have title that doesn't translate to something that makes any sense).  The sets also have two or three types of premium inserts that are serially numbered - Treasure, Esperanza and Admirar.  BBM also introduced a new premium insert called "My Fave" with this year's Giants set so all four of these sets also have those available.  There will be rare parallel versions of some of the "regular" player cards that will feature photo variants or different backgrounds.

Release Date Team Regular Cards Subsets Inserts Other
Early July Buffaloes 69 Reborn(2), Samurai Soul(2), Heirloom Sword(2), Small But Amazing(2), Natural(4) Go All Together(9), Beyond The Dream That Must Come True(3), Golden Egg(3), Three Pillars(3), Treasure(24), Esperanza(9), Admirar(6), My Fave(12) Autograph cards
Mid July Marines 68 Rising Young Players(4), Veteran Players(2), Specialists(3), Early Season Highlights(4) Key Players(9), Promising Players(3), Veterans(3), Rookies(3), Treasure(23), Esperanza(9), Admirar(6), My Fave(12) Autograph & Memorabilia cards
Late July Dragons 69 Young Starting Pitchers(3), Infield Key Players(3), Tokai Heroes(6) Unstoppable(9), No Limit(3), Rise Above(3), Shine Bright(3), Treasure(24), Esperanza(9), Admirar(6), My Fave(24) Autograph & Memorabilia cards

- BBM has also announced that this year's edition of 2nd Version, the second part of their flagship set, will be released in late August.   The base set follows the pattern of almost all 2nd Version sets since 2015 - 216 player cards (18 for each team), 12 team checklists, 36 "1st Version Update" cards (three for each team), 36 "Cross Forest" cards (three for each team, numbered in continuation of the same subset in 1st Version) and a currently unspecified number of "Ceremonial First Pitch" cards.  The "Ceremonial First Pitch" cards are likely short-printed again, so the base set without them will be 300 cards.  There's six different insert sets - "The Beginning", "My Generation (Year Of The Rat)", "Hero's Theme", "Combined", "Treasure" and "Foil Picturesque".  All of these have 12 cards except for "Treasure" which has 36.  There's the usual plethora of parallels of the player cards along with the "Secret", "Ultra Secret", and "Super Ultra Secret" photo variations.  There will also be memorabilia cards and autographed cards - including autographed cards using the designs from BBM's team sets along with "buyback" autographs.

- Epoch has announced another "Premier Edition" team set.  This one is for the Fighters and will hit the stores on July 18th.  The base set will contain 45 cards - 37 for active players and eight for OB players.  There's a "hologram" parallel available for each of the base set cards.  The set has the usual large batch of inserts that all the "Premier Edition" sets have- three varieties of "Regular Foil Signature" ("silver", "gold" and "hologram") (18 cards each), two varieties of "Regular Decomori Signature" ("hologram" and "hologram parallel") (18 cards each), five varieties of "Time To Shine" ("A","B","C","D","E") (six cards each) and three varieties of "Decomori Signature" ("gold","green" and "hologram") (six cards each).  I think all the inserts are serially numbered.  There are also the "GEM" and "BLACK GEM" "special insert cards" (nine cards in each) that I think are much more limited.  There are five different types of autographed cards - "Authentic" 37), "Star" (6), "Rookie" (5), "Legendary" (8) and "Combo"6).  

- Bandai is issuing updates to their "Professional Baseball FanStars" collectible card game.  The Vol. 2 Booster Packs for both the Central League and Pacific League will be released on May 30th.  Both sets will have 96 cards - 36 "Normal", 30 "Rare", 18 "Star Rare" and 12 "Super Star Rare".  In addition, Bandai will issue a set called "EX Booster Pack Vol.1" on August 1 but there's not really any more information about it than that.  

- And finally, the first KBO set for 2026 has been announced by SCC.  It's called "Festa Set" and will be released on June 6th.  As is kind of standard for KBO sets, it's a bit confusing but I think the base set is 80 cards (eight per team) with all the base cards being labeled "Sporty".  There are also 80 "Treasure" cards but I'm not sure if these should be considered inserts or parallels or just 80 more base set cards.  There are 49 autographed cards available which works out to five per team except for SSG which one has four.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Park Byung-ho

I had somehow missed the fact that longtime KBO star (and one time Minnesota Twin) Park Byung-ho had retired at the end of last season.  It was only when I saw an article about his retirement game a few weeks ago that I realized it had happened.  I thought I'd do my final retirement post for this off season about him (which takes the bad taste of finishing up with Sho Nakata out of my mouth).

Park was originally drafted by the LG Twins in 2005 but he didn't blossom as a star until he was traded to the then-Nexen Heroes in 2011.  He was the MVP of the league in 2012 and 2013 and led the league in home runs and RBIs for four straight years from 2012 to 2015.  He became the first player in KBO history to hit 50 home runs in consecutive seasons when he hit 52 in 2014 and 53 in 2015.

He left Korea for America before the 2016 season and signed a four year deal with the Twins.  He struggled at the plate in Minneapolis in his first season, hitting below .200 before being banished to Triple-A for the remainder of the season.  After spending all of 2017 in Rochester, New York, he asked for and received his release from the team to return to Korea.

He returned to Nexen for 2018 and it was like he never left, hitting 43 home runs and knocking in 112 runs.  The Heroes were sold to Kiwoom in 2019 and he responded by again leading the league in home runs.  

He left the Heroes as a free agent after 2021 and joined the KT Wiz.  He led the league in home runs one last time in 2022 but his numbers started to decline after that.  He was traded to the Samsung Lions in the middle of the 2024 season and played for them until announcing his retirement last November.  He was activated by the Heroes for his retirement game so his career record indicates that he finished his playing days with Kiwoom. 

I was kind of surprised he hadn't played for the Korean National Team more often.  He only played in three major tournaments - the 2015 and 2019 Premier 12s and the 2023 World Baseball Classic.  He hit two home runs with 15 RBIs in the 2015 Premier 12 with one of those home runs coming against Team USA in the gold medal game.

I thought I'd share all the cards I have of him.  These aren't all his cards - I haven't gotten much in the way of KBO cards since 2021 and TCDB lists 557(!) total cards for him although I'm sure a good many of those are parallels - but I do have 14 of him.  Here they are in roughly the order they were published:

2014 Superstar Baseball Season One #SBC01-043

2014 Superstar Baseball Season Three #SBC03-057-AS

2015 Superstar Baseball Season Two Unnumbered Sticker

2015 Superstar Baseball Hell's Fireball #PA01-NE001

2015 Superstar Baseball Gold Edition #SBCGE-079-N

2016 Topps Chrome #RA-BP

2018 SCC KBO Collection #SCCR-01/156

2018 KBO Collection 2 Red #SCCR-02R/057

2019 SCC KBO Collection #SCCR1-19/077

2019 SCC Premium #SCCP1-19/083

2019 SCC KBO Collection 2 #SCCR2-19/077

2020 SCC Premium #SCCP1-20/H16

2021 SCC Rainbow #SCC-21/H17

2021 SCC Golden Premium #SCC-21/H15


Sunday, May 10, 2026

Card Of The Week May 10

Last week the SSG Landers of the KBO announced the signing of another Japanese pitcher, Ginjiro Hiramoto.  Hiramoto is not being signed as an "Asian Quota" player but rather as a "short term injury replacement" for Mitch White.  

Hiramoto has had a bit of an interesting baseball career so far.  He was the ace pitcher at Koryo High School, starting (and losing) the final game in the 2017 Summer Koshien Tournament.  His battery-mate at Koryo, Shosei Nakamura, was taken in the first round of that fall's draft by the Carp but Hiramoto decided to go to college instead of going pro and spent the next four years at Hosei University.  Instead of declaring for the 2021 draft, he joined Nippon Express of the corporate leagues and spent the next four years with them.  He signed with the Gunma Diamond Pegasus of the independent Baseball Challenge League this past winter, apparently to increase his possibility of getting drafted by an NPB team this fall, a possibility that will be further increased if he does well in Korea.  Of course, the downside is that he'll be 27 when this fall's draft rolls around so it'll be interesting to see what kind of interest he draws.

I was a bit surprised to discover that I had a baseball card of him.  As it turned out, he has at least three cards in the JABA sets for the corporate leagues - #14 and #59 from the 2024 set and #19 from the 2025 set.  He is definitely not in the 2022 set but I've never been able to put a checklist together for the 2023 set so it's possible he's in it.  Here's the card I have:

2024 JABA #24JP059


Wednesday, May 6, 2026

RIP Isami Okamoto

I haven't been very diligent in monitoring the list of the dead over at Japanese Wikipedia lately so I didn't realize that former Nankai Hawk infielder Isami Okamoto had passed away on April 15th at the age of 95.

Okamoto had signed with Nankai as a "test player" in 1949 and made his debut with the team in 1950.  By 1952 he had established himself as the Hawks starting second baseman, a role he'd keep for the rest of the decade (with the exception of 1954 which he spent as an outfielder).  His best season was 1953 when he won the Pacific League batting title with a .318 average and the league MVP award.  He was the first player born in the Showa Era to win a batting crown or an MVP award.  He won five Best 9 Awards (1952, 1953, 1955, 1957 and 1959) and made four All Star teams (1953, 1955, 1956 and 1959).  He along with first baseman Tokuji Iida, shortstop Chusuke Kizuka and third baseman Kazuo Kageyama formed what was known as the "Million Dollar Infield" in the mid-50's.

He homered twice off of Hall Of Famer Takehiko Bessho in Game One of the 1959 Nippon Series which was pretty much his last hurrah.  He lost his starting position to Carlton Handa the next season and missed the entire 1961 season due to injury.  He retired as an active player at the end of 1963.  He coached for the Hawks for the following two seasons before switching to the Sankai Atoms for 1966-67.  He returned to Nankai in 1968 and coached for them through 1972.  He switched teams again then, staying in Kansai with the Hanshin Tigers for 1973 and 1974 before becoming a commentator for Fuji TV for the next seven years.

He returned to coaching with the Kintetsu Buffaloes under manager Seiji Sekiguchi in 1982 and took over as manager when Sekiguchi retired after the 1983 season.  Okamoto managed the team for the next four seasons, going 239-242-39.  He led the team to a second place finish in 1986 but was let go when the team finished sixth (and last) in 1987.  He became a baseball commentator again after parting ways with Kintetsu and later was the director of the OB Club (aka the All Japan Baseball Foundation and the Japan Baseball Promotion Association) for a number of years.

Okamoto had a number of cards issued for him during his playing career - Gary Engel's latest "Vintage Edition" of his "Japanese Baseball Card Guide" lists 23 menko, bromide, game and gum cards.  There's a bit of an odd dichotomy in his OB player cards - they're all from BBM until Epoch paired up with the All Japan Baseball Foundation in 2009 to produce sets.  After that, he only had cards from Epoch in sets they did with the organization.  I guess it makes sense since he was their director for a while but it also meant that he only appeared in BBM's set for the Hawks' 70th Anniversary, not the ones for their 75th (in 2013) or 80th (in 2018).  Here's all the cards I have for him:

1958 Yamakatsu JCM 33b

2000 BBM 20th Century Best 9 #051

2000 BBM 20th Century Best 9 #171

2000 BBM 20th Century Best 9 #291

2000 BBM 20th Century Best 9 #411

2002 BBM All Time Heroes #112

2006 BBM Nostalgic Baseball #046

2008 BBM Hawks 80th Anniversary #12

2009 BBM Kintetsu Memorial #48

2009 Epoch All Japan Baseball Foundation 15th Anniversary #45

2011 Epoch All Japan Baseball Foundation Managers #43

In addition to these cards, TCDB lists a couple cards that I don't have - 2003 BBM Sluggers (#14), 2012 Epoch JBPA History Of Best 9 (#28), 2015 Epoch OB Club MVP Of The Year (#13) and 2018 Epoch OB Club Batting Leaders Holographica (#15).

Actually, I'll slightly correct something I said above - Okamoto DOES appear in BBM's 2018 Hawks 80th Anniversary set although he doesn't have a player card in the set.  There's a card in the set dedicated to the "Million Dollar Infield":

2018 BBM Hawks 80th Anniversary #HH3

I'm pretty confident that's him in the upper right part of the card.  I'm assuming the players' positions in the photo reflect their infield positions so that would mean that's Chusuke Kizuka to the left of Okamoto with Kazuo Kageyama in the lower left and Tokuji Iida in the lower right.  I'm going to guess that that's manager Kazuto Tsuruoka in the center but I don't know that for sure.

Monday, May 4, 2026

Yet More Cards From Kenny

Hot on the heels of the last envelope I received from Kenny (Zippy Zappy) in Japan was yet another one.  I got this one last Friday, just three days after the previous one, but I was away all weekend so I didn't have a chance to write about it before now.

Kenny's envelopes usually have only a small number of cards but this one had more than usual.  The main part of the package was this:


"This" is an unopened pack of the Fan Stars Pacific League Vol. 1 set, the new collectible card game set from Bandai.  Now, I am completely incapable of not opening a pack of cards for a set that I don't have all the cards for and since I had no cards from this set, I had to go ahead and open it.  The pack contained seven cards in all - five "normal", one "rare" and one "super rare".  Here's all seven cards with the "normal" ones first, then the "rare" one (it has a "chrome-ish" finish on it) and then the "super rare" one (which will be obvious):

#BBP01-015

#BBP01-035

#BBP01-054

#BBP01-077

#BBP01-098

#BBP01-110

#BBP01-004

The pack also included a promo card for the game:


The back of this card looks like this - I don't know if it's somehow used for game play or not:


There were four other cards in the pack as well.  The first one is another Fan Stars card but this is from the Central League Vol. 1 set:

#BBC01-017

I will continue to mention that the Fan Stars cards may be the most attractive CCG cards I've ever seen for NPB.

The remaining cards were all Topps cards from last year:

2025 Topps NPB #36

2025 Topps NPB #89

2025 Topps NPB #193

Kenny has let me know that there's another envelope that's en route so I'll be doing another one of these posts shortly.  Thanks once again for the cards, Kenny!

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Card Of The Week May 3

I started watching the documentary "Beyond the Game: Samurai 2026 World Baseball Classic" last week on Netflix and I noticed something a little subtle at one point.  It was during Samuri Japan's game against Korea and Seiya Suzuki had just hit his second home run of the game to put Japan up 4-3.  There's a couple shots of the dugout where, if you watch closely, you'll see someone slip in to stand next to Shohei Ohtani.  The next shot shows both Ohtani and that someone raising their right arms in unison.

That someone was Samurai Japan coach Nobuhiro Matsuda, long time Fukuoka Softbank Hawk (and brief Yomiuri Giant).  Matsuda had a post-home run routine of thrusting his right arm in the arm and yelling "Atsuo!" or "Hot Man!".  He and Ohtani were doing the same routine to celebrate Suzuki's home run.

Here's a card for Matsuda's schtick from the "Nickname Catchphrase" insert set from the 2024 BBM Professional Baseball 90th Anniversary set (#NC12):