Sunday, March 23, 2025

Card Of The Week March 23

About a week or so ago, the Tokyo Yakult Swallows announced that Masanori Ishikawa would be the starting pitcher for their home opener on April 1st.  At 45 years old, Ishikawa is the oldest active player in NPB and is also the active NPB leader in victories with 186.  My favorite bit of trivia about him is that he is the last active member of the Japanese National Baseball Team for the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games.  He was in his third year at Aoyamagakuin University during the Olympics and would be the Swallows top pick in the 2001 draft*.

*That's really oversimplifying things - he was taken in the "free acquisition phase" of the draft which essentially meant that he and the Swallows agreed to a deal before the actual draft

Here's a team issued card from the Swallows from 2011 when Ishikawa was just 31 years old:



Friday, March 21, 2025

Wei-Yin Chen

Taiwanese pitcher Wei-Yin Chen announced his retirement a few weeks back (H/T NPB on reddit).  You'd be forgiven for thinking he had already retired as it's been three years since his last appearance in NPB and five since his last one in MLB.

Chen had signed with the Chunichi Dragons as an 18 year old prior to the 2004 season.  He had his first taste of ichi-gun in 2005, posting an ERA of 6.05 in ten games.  He spent all of 2006 on the farm and had some elbow and ligament injuries that ultimately caused him to need Tommy John surgery.  The Dragons demoted him to the ikusei roster for 2007 while he rehabbed but moved him back to the 70 man roster for 2008.

He started 2008 in the bullpen with the top team but by mid-season, he was in the starting rotation.  He'd spend the next three seasons as a mainstay of the Dragons starting rotation, going 8-4 in 2009, 13-10 in 2010 and 8-10 in 2011.  He led the Central League with an ERA of 1.54 in 2009.  He pitched for the Dragons in losing efforts in both the 2010 and 2011 Nippon Series.

He left Chunichi and Japan after the 2011 season, heading to the US and the Baltimore Orioles.  He spent four pretty good seasons in Charm City before moving on to the Marlins for 2016.  He was somewhat less successful in Miami, missing some time due to some injuries.  The Marlins released him with a year left on his contract after the 2019 season and he signed with the Mariners in early 2020.  He pitched poorly in a couple exhibition games and, with the season in limbo due to COVID, ultimately got released in June, freeing him up to return to NPB.

He signed with the Chiba Lotte Marines and debuted with the team in mid-October.  He made four starts and pitched pretty well, posting an ERA of 2.42 in 26 innings.  The Marines, however, only scored a single run in his four starts, leaving him saddled with an 0-3 record.  He started Game 2 of the Final (and only) Stage of the Climax Series against the Hawks and got lit up, giving up five runs on three home runs (two by Akira Nakamura and one by Nobuhiro Matsuda).  He took the loss in the 6-4 defeat that put the Hawks into the Nippon Series for the fourth straight year.

Within a month of the Marines elimination, he left the team as a free agent and signed with the Hanshin Tigers.  He struggled to stay healthy, making only two appearances with the top team in 2021 and a total of 13 appearances on the farm team in 2021 and 2022.  He was released mid-way through the 2022 season and returned to Taiwan.  He had surgery on his arm and spent 2023 rehabbing on his own.  He returned to action last year with the Long Island Ducks of the independent Atlantic League, going 5-5 with an ERA of 6.37 in 17 starts.   

He pitched for the Taiwan Olympic team in both the 2004 Athens games and the 2008 Beijing games.

His first baseball card was in the 2004 BBM Dragons set (#D34).  He appeared in the Dragons team sets in three of the next four years, missing only 2007 since he was a development player that season.  He appeared in a couple of Konami's sets in 2008 and made his BBM and Calbee flagship debuts in 2009.  Here's a handful of his cards:

2005 BBM Dragons #D18

2008 BBM Dragons #D11

2009 BBM 1st Version #295

2010 BBM 1st Version #449

2011 Calbee Series Three #195

2020 BBM Fusion #608

2021 BBM 2nd Version #500

2022 BBM Tigers #T03

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Cracking The Code - Konami's Baseball Collection Card Numbers Explained?

I've been involved in a discussion on Reddit over the past week or so regarding a 2021 Konami Baseball Collection "SR" (super rare) card of Roki Sasaki.  I won't rehash the discussion here - you can read it for yourself if you want* - but a lot of the discussion hinges on trying to determine when, exactly, the card was published.

* I should mention that I've had some somewhat less heated discussions in DMs with the OP regarding an actual 1/1 card he pulled.  I also have to always remind myself that arguing with strangers on the internet is rarely a good idea.

Let's start with a little background on the Baseball Collection cards.  Konami produced these cards for five years from 2018 to 2022.  The cards were used in an arcade game and you'd win more cards playing the game although I'm not sure if the cards were somehow available outside of the game as well.  It's not entirely clear to me if the cards were printed by the game or just dispensed - my gut feeling is that they were dispensed but the Japanese Wikipedia page for the game implies they were printed by the game.

Based on some advertising images for the game linked to by the OP on Reddit, the 2021 Baseball Collection cards were released on March 29th of that year.  But did that mean that ALL the cards were released then or just some of them?  And if it was just some of them, was the OP's Sasaki card one of them?

There were a couple things on the back of the card that I felt were clues but I wasn't sure how to interpret them.  The first was the card's number - "202117-SR-M017-00".  What did this mean?  There's a couple things that are obvious - the "2021" is obviously the year, the "SR" is obviously because it's an "SR" card and the "M017" is Marines uniform number 17.  I knew that the "17" at the end of "202117" was not for Sasaki's uniform number because I have other Baseball Collection cards where this number is not the player's uniform number but I didn't know what it meant.  The second and much more interesting thing was the copyright date for the card which was, surprisingly, 2022, not 2021.  What did this mean?

My suspicion was that the "17" digraph somehow indicated a card series of some sort and that the 2022 copyright meant that the series that the card was in was not actually published until 2022 despite having a "cover date" of 2021.  I based this on the handful of 2021 Baseball Collection cards that I own.  I have seven in all and I took a look at the backs of them all.  What I found was that I had four cards that had "00" after the year, one that had "15", one that had "16" and one that had "19".  Here's the front and back of one of the "00" cards and the other three cards:









Here's something interesting - if you look at the lower right of the card backs, you can see the copyright date for the card.  The first three (the "00", "15" and "16" cards) have a copyright date of 2021 but the last one (the "19" card) has a copyright date of 2022.  If the digraph does actually denote some sort of card series, it would appear that the change in year happened between "16" and "17".

 I looked to see if any of my other Baseball Collection cards had a copyright date that was later than the "cover date" and if its digraph was a "high" number (although "high" is kind of meaningless out of context).  I found I only had one - this 2019 Premium card of Takeya Nakamura:


Unfortunately, the digraph for this card doesn't help as it's "C9".  It looks like Konami had issued some special cards that used different digraphs than two digit numbers,  The one thing that indicates that this card was issued after the season ended is that it commemorates Nakamura winning a Best 9 award.  It has to be for 2019 because Nakamura won the award that year but didn't in 2018.

So I had a theory that fit the evidence I had but I didn't really have any facts.  It'd be great to be able to look at Konami's checklists but they basically purged everything each year from their websites and almost none of it appears to be available in the Wayback Machine.  I decided to just Google "ベースボールコレクション" and see if anything useful came up.  I was a little surprised this led me to Suruga-ya's website.  More specifically, it led me to a page listing all of their Baseball Collection cards in their inventory (or may have once had in their inventory - it's not really clear to me how many of these cards are actually available for sale).

One of the interesting things in this listing is a column that includes "発売日" which appears to translate to "release date".  Does this really mean the date the card was released or does it mean the date it entered inventory at the store?  I looked at their listings for both BBM and Epoch and their listed release dates appear to match when the sets were released.  It may be a kind of moot point - if Suruga-ya got the item in on the day it was released, the date will be the same regardless of what it actually means.

So the nice thing about the page listing all the Baseball Collection cards is that I can search by card number or, more usefully, PART of a card number.  So I can search for all the 2021 cards simply by putting "2021" in the search field.  Or, even better, I can search for all the cards that start with "202100" by entering "202100" in it. 

What I get with the last search is a list of 285 cards that all have a release date of 3/29/21 which, as the OP of the Reddit post had pointed out, was the date the 2021 Baseball Collection cards were initially released so that checks out.

What happens if we do the search for the "202101" cards?  We get a list of 39 cards that all have release date of 4/8/21.  What's interesting is that the cards all carry the label "SEASON 2021アペンドパック第1弾" which translates to "SEASON 2021 Append Pack 1st Edition".  So it does look like that digraph indicates the series number or the "append pack edition".

I should mention that I didn't confirm if all 285 "00" cards listed or all 39 "01" cards are unique with no card being listed more than once.  Since most NPB card issues have sizes that are multiples of 12 (because there's the same number of cards for each team), my bet is that there are cards listed more than once.  The other possibility is that not every card that was issued is listed.  To be honest, this process was tedious enough without trying to determine if there were duplicate cards in the listings.

I repeated this process for "02", "03", "04", etc up to "19".  Actually to be honest, I tried a search for "20" but got a "0 results for search" message.  What I found is what I kind of expected.  Each new "Append Pack" edition has a release date later than the one before it.  And, as my handful of cards predicted, the 16th Edition was the last one published in the calendar year of 2021 (December 9th) with the 17th Edition being the first published in 2022 (January 6th).

I searched some of the digraphs that contained letters as well.  I ultimately did searches on something like 39(!) separate digraphs.  All the cards for a particular digraph had the same release date with two exceptions.  Again, this may be the day the cards entered into Suruga-ya's inventory but why would all the cards for a given digraph have entered the store's inventory on the same day unless that was the day they were released?

The exceptions were the "R1" and "R2" cards.  There were eight R1 cards - four of which were released on August 26th with two each being released on October 14th and November 11th.  There were only three R2 cards with two of them being released on December 2nd and the other on December 23rd.  I have no idea why these and only these have different release dates.  All the "R3" and "R4" cards have the same release dates.

Here's a breakdown of all the digraphs I found along with their release dates.  I've listed the R1 and R2 cards multiple times based on their different release dates.  

Digraph Release Date Number Of Cards Description
00 3/29/2021 285
C0 3/29/2021 12 Startup Campaign
01 4/8/2021 39 Append Pack 1st Edition
02 4/22/2021 38 Append Pack 2nd Edition
N1 4/28/2021 24 Nostalgic Player Card Challenge Part 1
03 5/27/2021 36 Append Pack 3rd Edition
04 6/10/2021 38 Append Pack 4th Edition
C1 6/17/2021 12 Starting/Relief Prospect Campaign
05 6/24/2021 37 Append Pack 5th Edition
C2 7/1/2021 12 Utility Player Campaign
06 7/8/2021 37 Append Pack 6th Edition
C3 7/21/2021 12 Franchise Player Campaign
07 7/29/2021 39 Append Pack 7th Edition
N2 8/5/2021 24 Nostalgic Player Card Challenge Part 2
08 8/12/2021 39 Append Pack 8th Edition
09 8/19/2021 36 Append Pack 9th Edition
10 8/26/2021 36 Append Pack 10th Edition
R1 8/26/2021 4 Memorial Mission
C4 9/2/2021 12 Helper Campaign
11 9/16/2021 37 Append Pack 11th Edition
12 9/30/2021 38 Append Pack 12th Edition
N3 10/7/2021 24 Nostalgic Player Card Challenge Part 3
13 10/14/2021 39 Append Pack 13th Edition
R1 10/14/2021 2 Memorial Mission
14 10/28/2021 38 Append Pack 14th Edition
C5 11/4/2021 12 New World Campaign
15 11/11/2021 36 Append Pack 15th Edition
R1 11/11/2021 2 Memorial Mission
C6 11/25/21 12 Rookie Campaign
R2 12/2/2021 2 Memorial Mission
16 12/9/2021 58 Append Pack 16th Edition
K1 12/9/2021 24 Japan’s No.1 Tournament
C7 12/23/2021 24 Selection Player Card Challenge Fielder Edition
R2 12/23/2021 1 Memorial Mission
17 1/6/2022 69 Append Pack 17th Edition
R3 1/13/2022 2 Memorial Mission
K2 1/20/2022 36 No. 1 Deciding Match
18 2/3/2022 72 Append Pack 18th Edition
C8 2/10/2022 12 Pinch Hitter Trump Campaign
R4 2/10/2022 7 Memorial Mission
C9 2/17/2022 34 Title Holder Campaign
19 2/24/2022 70 Append Pack 19th Edition

I don't think this list is actually complete as the search for all the 2021 cards gives a total of 1651 cards and my list here only accounts for 1423.  My enthusiasm for this project kind of waned after a while and I felt I'd put enough effort into this to prove that my suspicions were correct.

So to sum everything up, it appears that the Baseball Collection cards were issued in multiple series or editions, at least for the 2021 edition (and probably for the other four as well).  Which edition a particular card is from is identified by the digraph after the year in the card number.  Cards were issued from the end of March of the year on the "cover date" on the card into the following year with the copyright date on the card indicating the year it was published - so the 2021 cards were issued from March of 2021 until February of 2022.

Sunday, March 16, 2025

Card Of The Week March 16

The Dodgers and Cubs are in Tokyo right now, preparing for their regular season games on Tuesday and Wednesday this week.  They spent this weekend playing exhibition games against the Hanshin Tigers and the Yomiuri Giants.  Neither MLB team had too much difficulty with the Giants - the Dodgers beat them 5-1 on Saturday and the Cubs beat them 4-2 today.  But Hanshin was a different story.  The Tigers beat the Cubs 3-0 on Saturday and repeated that score against the Dodgers today.  All the runs today came on one swing of the bat by Teruaki Sato against Blake Snell:



Here's a card of Sato from the 2022 BBM Tigers set (#T48):



Saturday, March 15, 2025

2000 Upper Deck Ovation Rising Stars

I had mentioned a few months back that, thanks to Scott Kaneko, I had completed the "Rising Stars" subset from the 2000 Upper Deck Ovation set.  Now that I have the full subset, I decided to take a deeper look at who was in the set and decided to make a post out of the research.

The 2000 Ovation set was the one of the four NPB sets that Upper Deck did in 2000 and 2001.  It had a 60 card base set that was numbered from 31 to 90.  Why such an odd numbering?  Because cards 1 through 30 were the "Rising Stars" subset.  Each of these card was serially numbered to 2000 which seemed like a small number at the time (it was certainly less than the /150,000 for the 1990 Classic Draft Picks set).

I'm not going to lie - I'm not a big fan of this set.  It made my list of my least favorite sets a few years back.  I find it kind of ugly and, to be completely honest, I think the "Rising Stars" cards are kind of ugly as well.  I don't much like cards that have the player's photo superimposed over a background (as opposed to the original photo's background) and the player's name is difficult to read on the front of the card.  (I know I'm really selling you all on continuing to read this post, aren't I?)  But I think my OCD was bothered by the fact that my "complete" Ovation set was missing cards 1 to 30 so I decided to get all the cards.  (Which suggests that if Upper Deck had simply made this a separate insert set, I wouldn't have wanted them.)  I had considered not collecting them all a couple of times over the past few years but I kept at it until I was down to just the one that Scott sent me.

With all that said, let's take a look at who all is in this set.  Here's the list of included players with their team, draft position and career summary - at least all the NPB and MLB organizations they played in.

Card Player Team Draft Career
1 Daisuke Matsuzaka Seibu Lions 1998 Lions 1st Seibu Lions 1999-2006, Boston Red Sox 2007-12, Cleveland Indians 2013, New York Mets 2013-14, Fukuoka Softbank Hawks 2015-17, Chunichi Dragons 2018-19, Saitama Seibu Lions 2020-21
2 Koji Uehara Yomiuri Giants 1998 Giants 1st Yomiuri Giants 1999-2008, Baltimore Orioles 2009-11, Texas Rangers 2011-12, Boston Red Sox 2013-16, Chicago Cubs 2017, Yomiuri Giants 2018-19
3 Kosuke Fukudome Chunichi Dragons 1998 Dragons 1st Chunichi Dragons 1999-2007, Chicago Cubs 2008-11, Cleveland Indians 2011, Chicago White Sox 2012, New York Yankees 2012, Hanshin Tigers 2013-20, Chunichi Dragons 2021-22
4 Hidetaka Kawagoe Orix BlueWave 1998 BlueWave 2nd Orix BlueWave/Buffaloes 1999-2009, Chiba Lotte Marines 2010-11
5 Tomohiro Nioka Yomiuri Giants 1998 Giants 2nd Yomiuri Giants 1999-2008, Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters 2009-13
6 Shinobu Fukuhara Hanshin Tigers 1998 Tigers 3rd Hanshin Tigers 1999-2016
7 Yuhki Tanaka Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes 1997 Buffaloes 5th Kintetsu/Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes 1999-2001, Orix BlueWave/Buffaloes 2002-2008, Tokyo Yakult Swallows 2009-10
8 Ryota Igarashi Yakult Swallows 1997 Swallows 2nd Yakult Swallows/Tokyo Yakult Swallows 1998-2009, New York Mets 2010-11, Toronto Blue Jays 2012, New York Yankees 2012, Fukuoka Softbank Hawks 2013-2018, Tokyo Yakult Swallows 2019-20
9 Akihiro Higashide Hiroshima Toyo Carp 1998 Carp 1st Hiroshima Toyo Carp 1999-2015
10 Yoshihiro Tateyama Nippon-Ham Fighters 1998 Fighters 2nd Nippon-Ham Fighters/Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters 1999-2010, Texas Rangers 2011-13, New York Yankees 2013-14, Hanshin Tigers 2014
11 Naoyuki Shimizu Chiba Lotte Marines 1999 Marines 2nd Chiba Lotte Marines 2000-09, Yokohama BayStars/DeNA Baystars 2010-12
12 Shogo Akada Seibu Lions 1998 Lions 2nd Seibu/Saitama Seibu Lions 1999-2009, Orix Buffaloes 2010-12, Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters 2013-14
13 Soji Tanaka Fukuoka Daiei Hawks 1999 Hawks 1st Fukuoka Daiei Hawks 2000-04
14 Naoki Matoba Fukuoka Daiei Hawks 1999 Hawks 3rd Fukuoka Daiei/Softbank Hawks 2000-09, Chiba Lotte Marines 2010-12
15 Hisashi Takayama Seibu Lions 1999 Lions 1st Seibu/Saitama Seibu Lions 2000-13, Hanshin Tigers 2013-14
16 Kazuo Yamaguchi Orix BlueWave 1999 BlueWave 1st Orix BlueWave/Buffaloes 1999-2009
17 Kaoru Takahashi Chiba Lotte Marines 1999 Marines 1st Chiba Lotte Marines 2000-03
18 Itsuki Shoda Nippon-Ham Fighters 1999 Fighters 1st Nippon-Ham Fighters/Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters 2000-06, Hanshin Tigers 2007-08, Tokyo Yakult Swallows 2012-13
19 Kensuke Tanaka Nippon-Ham Fighters 1999 Fighters 2nd Nippon-Ham Fighters/Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters 2000-12, San Francisco Giants 2013, Texas Rangers 2014, Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters 2015-19
20 Daisuke Miyamoto Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes 1999 Buffaloes 1st Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes 2000-04, Orix Buffaloes 2005-09
21 Fumitoshi Takano Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes 1999 Buffaloes 6th Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes 2000-04, Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles 2005-08
22 Kenta Asakura Chunichi Dragons 1999 Dragons 1st Chunichi Dragons 2000-15
23 Kenshin Kawakami Chunichi Dragons 1997 Dragons 1st Chunichi Dragons 1998-2008, Atlanta Braves 2009-10, Chunichi Dragons 2012-15
24 Hisanori Takahashi Yomiuri Giants 1999 Giants 1st Yomiuri Giants 2000-09, New York Mets 2010, Los Angeles Angels 2011-12, Pittsburgh Pirates 2012, Chicago Cubs 2013, Yokohama DeNA Baystars 2014-15
25 Kazunori Tanaka Yokohama BayStars 1999 BayStars 1st Yokohama BayStars 2000-06
26 Atsushi Kizuka Yokohama BayStars 1999 BayStars 2nd Yokohama BayStars 2000-10
27 Yoshiyuki Noguchi Yakult Swallows 1999 Swallows 1st Yakult Swallows/Tokyo Yakult Swallows 2000-14
28 Takaya Kawauchi Hiroshima Toyo Carp 1999 Carp 1st Hiroshima Toyo Carp 2000-15
29 Tetsuto Tomabechi Hiroshima Toyo Carp 1999 Carp 6th Hiroshima Toyo Carp 2000-06
30 Kanichi Matoba Hanshin Tigers 1999 Tigers 1st Hanshin Tigers 2000-05

30's kind of a weird number for an NPB set (or subset or insert set) since it's not a multiple of 12 and usually an NPB set has the same number of cards per team.  For this set, though, half of the teams (Dragons, Carp, Fighters, Buffaloes, Lions and Giants) have three cards while the other half (Marines, Hawks, Tigers, BlueWave, Swallows and Baystars) only have two cards.

It's a kind of interesting collection of players.  The first three cards were probably the biggest "prospects" in NPB in 2000 - Daisuke Matsuzaka, Koji Uehara and Kosuke Fukudome.  Matsuzaka and Uehara had been the 1999 Rookies of the Year for the Pacific League and Central League respectively.  Those three were the only players in the subset to also have "regular" cards in base set.  Kenshin Kawakami was the 1998 Central League Rookie Of The Year.  Oddly enough though, the 1998 PL Rookie Of The Year - Tatsuya Ozeki - is not in the subset.  Like any other old set of "prospects", it has guys who had really stellar careers, guys who were average players and guys whose careers were pretty short.

Eight of the players spent some time in MLB organizations - Fukudome, Matsuzaka, Uehara, Kawakami, Kosuke Tanaka, Hisanori Takahashi, Yoshihiro Tateyama and Ryota Igarashi.  That's not including Itsuki Shoda who went to spring training with the Red Sox in 2011 (and pitched in the Can-Am League for the Shikoku Island All Stars in 20152016 and 2019) or Kazunori Tanaka who spent 2007-08 with the York Revolution of the Atlantic League.

The oldest player in the set was Hidetaka Kawagoe who was 26 when the 2000 season opened (and would turn 27 on June 8th).  The youngest player was Takaya Kawauchi who was about 18 and three months on Opening Day that year.  Fukudome was the last player in the set to be active in NPB - he retired after the 2022 season (although Shoda was active with the Ehime Mandarin Pirates of the Shikoku Island League the following season).  On the other end of the career length spectrum, arm injuries ended Kaoru Takahashi's career after just four years with him never making any appearances with the top team.

Eighteen of the players were "rookies" in the NPB card sense that year (as opposed to the "NPB rookie eligibility" sense), meaning that they had been drafted in the 1999 draft.  This includes all twelve of the first round picks that year.  Nine of the players had been taken in the 1998 draft, including four first round picks - Matsuzaka, Fukudome, Uehara and Akihiro Higashide.  The remaining three players were 1997 draftees although only one of them - Kawakami - was a first round pick.

Here's each "Rising Stars" card along with a card of the player from later in his career.  I tried to pick cards from the player's final season but it proved difficult in a couple cases since I didn't start getting the complete BBM team sets for all 12 teams until 2015.  And Kaoru Takahashi's final year corresponds to the first year that BBM did a comprehensive team set for the Marines so with the exception of his 2003 BBM Marines card (which I don't have), all his cards are from 2000.  So I picked cards from their last season when I could (or from the following year's BBM Retirement sets) and the latest cards I had for them otherwise:

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #1

2021 Epoch Lions Rookies & Stars #05

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #2


2019 Calbee Series One #053

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #3


2022 Topps NPB #158

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #4


2012 BBM Farewell #05

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #5


2013 BBM Fighters 10th Season With Hokkaido #17

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #6


2016 BBM Classic #051

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #7


2011 BBM Farewell #23

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #8


2020 Epoch Swallows Rookies & Stars #15

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #9


2016 BBM Farewell #18

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #10


2014 SCM #282/BBM 2nd Version #707

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #11


2012 BBM Baystars #DB09

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #12


2013 Bandai Owners League 02 #078

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #13


2002 BBM Hawks #101

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #14


2011 BBM Marines 20th Anniversary #23

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #15


2014 BBM Tigers #T65

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #16


2009 BBM 2nd Version #045

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #17


2000 BBM Late Series #585

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #18


2013 BBM Swallows #S29

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #19


2019 Epoch NPB #091

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #20




2006 BBM Buffaloes #Bs26

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #21




2008 BBM 1st Version #351

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #22


2015 BBM Dragons #D05

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #23

2015 BBM 25th Anniversary #099

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #24

2015 BBM Baystars #DB25

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #25

2005 BBM 1st Version #482

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #26

2010 BBM 1st Version #185

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #27

2015 BBM Farewell #28

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #28

2015 BBM Carp #C13

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #29

2003 BBM 2nd Version #570

2000 Upper Deck Ovation "Rising Stars" #30

2005 Konami Baseball Heroes Old White Edition #B05W090