Another player who announced his retirement at the end of last season was Yomiuri Giants and Hiroshima Toyo Carp outfielder Hisayoshi Chono. Chono had been a star at Nihon University, hitting over .400 in both the spring and fall seasons of his senior year of 2006 and winning a Best 9 award. He was named to the collegiate national team in 2006 and also joined a hybrid team of college and corporate league players for the Asian games late that year.
He was drafted by the Fighters in the fourth round of the College and Corporate League player portion of the 2006 draft. He refused to sign with them, however, as he wanted to join the Giants. His college coach Hiroshi Suzuki infuriated Fighters fans by saying that Nippon-Ham was the team that Chono hated the most.
Instead of signing with the Fighters, Chono instead joined Honda of the corporate leagues. NPB's rules are that if a college player goes to the industrial leagues instead of joining an NPB team, they have to wait for two years before they can go into the draft again (it's a three year wait for high school players) so Chono was committed to playing for Honda until 2008.
The Giants had told Chono that they would draft him in the first round in 2008 but changed their plans, selecting Taishi Ohta instead. They had intended to take him in the second round but the Chiba Lotte Marines, under the impression that Chono was willing to sign with a team other than the Giants, took him first. He again refused to sign and spent a third year with Honda. Finally in the 2009 draft, the Giants took him in the first round and he, of course, signed with them.
Finally with the team he wanted to be with, Chono made the most of his opportunity. He hit .288 with 19 home runs in 128 games in 2010 and was named Central League Rookie Of The Year*. He followed that up in 2011 by batting .316 to lead the league in batting. He hit over .300 again in 2012 and lead the Central League in hits with 173. He capped the season by winning the MVP of the Nippon Series that fall when the Giants beat the Fighters.
* It was the third straight year that a Giant was named Rookie Of The Year, following Tetsuya Yamaguchi in 2008 and Tetsuya Matsumoto in 2009
He was named to the Japanese team for the 2013 World Baseball Classic, the only time he would suit up for them in one of the major tournaments. During the regular season, he led the league in games played (144) and at bats (590), made the All Star team and won Best 9 and Golden Glove awards for the third straight year but his overall offensive numbers declined somewhat. His performance over the next few seasons was kind of up and down and he moved in and out of the starting lineup. He worked through knee and elbow injuries in 2014 and his batting slump in 2015 made his manager, Tatsunori Hara, order him to get his eyes examined.
The Giants signed free agent Yoshihiro Maru following the 2018 season and the Carp, Maru's old team, were able to select one player from the Giants roster as compensation. Thinking that the Carp were more likely to want younger players, Yomiuri left the 34 year old Chono unprotected. To their surprise, the Carp took him and Chono was Hiroshima-bound.
He would spend four seasons in western Honshu, playing about as well as he had in his last couple season in Tokyo for the first two years. His offensive performance fell off significantly in his last two seasons with the Carp and, following the 2022 season, the Carp sent him back to the Giants in what's called "free trade" - essentially just giving him to Yomiuri. His offensive decline continued and he announced his retirement at the end of the season. He signed a contract to be an advisor for the Giants and also announced his intent to go to grad school the study sports management.
His first baseball card was #001 in the 2010 BBM Rookie Edition set. He also had rookie cards in both the 1st (#032) and 2nd Version (#527) sets from BBM as well as the Rookie Edition Premium (#RP01), Touch The Game (#008) and Giants team (#G059) sets. His first Calbee card was also from 2010 - #97 in Series Two. Here's a handful of his cards:
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| 2010 BBM Rookie Edition #001 |
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| 2010 BBM 1st Version #032 |
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| 2010 Giants Winning Game Card #44 |
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| 2010 Shukan Baseball Season Memorial #4/4 |
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| 2011 BBM Tohto 80th Memorial #71 |
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| 2013 BBM 1st Version #387 |
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| 2014 Front Runner Giants Stars & Legends #11 |
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| 2017 Epoch Giants #32 |
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| 2019 Calbee Series Three #182 |
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| 2022 BBM 1st Version #097 |
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| 2023 Calbee Series Two #106 |