Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

Sunday, July 20, 2025

Japanese Baseball Cards Checklist and Price Guide Vintage Edition 4.0


The fourth edition of Gary Engel's "Japanese Baseball Cards Checklist and Price Guide Vintage Edition" was just released last week.  Like the previous editions, it covers cards issued between 1929 and 1990.  The new version contains updated checklist and prices and (I assume) includes previously uncataloged sets.

It's available only as a pdf file and costs $35.  You can buy it here.

Monday, February 3, 2025

Who Are The Japan Breeze?

The 2025 Caribbean Series started the other day and there's an unusual team playing in it.  For the first time ever, a team from Japan is taking part.  Unlike the other teams in the tournament, however, the Japanese team is not the most recent NPB champion (which, of course, would be the Baystars).  Instead, a team called the Japan Breeze in playing.  

Who are the Japan Breeze?  I took a look at the team's roster, did some digging and I think I figured out who 27 of the 28 players are.  I couldn't find anything out about outfielder Jin Yamamoto, but most of the rest of the players are from various independent league teams in Japan.  The Ibaraki Astro Planets, Oita B-Rings (which I'm not positive still exist), Ishikari Red Phoenix and Kochi Fighting Dogs have all contributed multiple players.  There's also three players who spent last year with the Kufu Hayate Ventures Shizuoka, the independent team that played in NPB's Western League farm league.  I think there's only one player from the corporate leagues - Tatsuhiko Sato who at one time was with Honda.  I'm not positive he's still with Honda, however, as the roster I got for the team at the industrial league tournament I went to last May didn't have him on it.  A couple of the other players have also played for corporate league teams but were most recently with independent teams.

I'm not going to list all the players with the teams that they've played on but I do want to highlight some of the more interesting ones.  Catcher Mitsuki Fukuda spent two seasons with the Ottawa Titans of the Frontier League and will be returning to Canada this season with the Chatham-Kent Barnstormers of the Intercounty Baseball League (the league that will also feature Ayami Sato and Fernando Rodney).  Outfielder Ren Tachioka has spent the past three seasons playing for Southern Indiana University.  Two pitchers - Isaki Ninomiya and Rintaro Hirama - played in the Venezuelan Winter League this winter.

There are five players on the roster who have spent time in NPB although none of them are currently the property of any NPB team.  The best known player is 44 year old Munenori Kawasaki who is also the only former MLB player on the roster.  Kawasaki's been out of NPB since 2017 and has spent the last few seasons with the Tochigi Golden Braves of the independent Baseball Challenge League.

2006 Hawks Team Set #52

The remaining four players all are former Yokohama DeNA Baystars which makes some sense since the team is managed by former Baystar player and manager Alex Ramirez (although only one of the players was on the team when Ramirez managed them).

2016 Baystars Team Set #80

That player is Shuto Sakurai, who was DeNA's fifth round pick in the 2017 draft.  He was with the Baystars until last year when he moved to the Eagles in the Active Player draft.  He had a pretty lousy year in Sendai, posting an 8.44 ERA in eight appearances.  (In fairness, those numbers were inflated by the game I saw him pitch in - the 21-0 thrashing the Hawks administered to the Eagles in Fukuoka.  Sakurai gave up six runs in one inning.)  The Eagles released him after the season ended.

2024 BBM Eagles #E015

The other three players were all development players with DeNA.  Dai Kato was the team's second round pick in the ikusei phase of the 2020 draft and spent three seasons on their farm team.  He spent last year with the Kanagawa Future Dreams after DeNA let him go after the 2023 season.

2021 Epoch Baystars Rookies & Stars #19

Takeru Ohashi came to the Baystars from Ibaraki as their third round pick in the 2021 development player draft.  Like Kato, he was released by the team following the 2023 season and he spent 2024 with the Quitana Roo Tigers of the Mexican League.

2022 BBM Rookie Edition #057

Aki Watanabe was another Ibaraki Astro Planet who ended up with the Baystars as an ikusei player.  He was their fourth pick in the 2022 development player draft and parted ways with the team after last season.

2023 Bowman NPB #BP-6

Some of the other players may have baseball cards but it's difficult to track cards for independent league teams.  However, I do have cards for two of the other players.

Pitcher Rintaro Hirama spent most of the four seasons between 2020 and 2023 with the Kochi Fighting Dogs (except for a few months in 2022 that he played in Mexico) and had a baseball card in their 2020 set:

2020 Kochi Fighting Dogs #04/31

I had previously mentioned Tatsuhiko Sato from Honda in the corporate leagues.  He is in both the 2021 and 2022 JABA sets although I only have his 2021 card:

2021 JABA #21JP081

Sato is the son of former Hawks and Swallows outfielder Shinichi Sato who was the MVP of the 1990 IBAF "World All Star Game" in Atlanta.

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Japanese Players In the Australian Baseball League (And Other Winter Leagues)

The 2024-25 Australian Baseball League season will start later this week and, as has been standard for most of the league's current incarnation, several NPB teams are sending players Down Under for the first half of the season.  As usual I'm relying on the WinterLeagueJP website for most of the following information.

Three members of the Yomiuri Giants will become Adelaide Giants for six weeks - Yuto Akihiro, Makoto Kyomoto and Ryusei Yamada.  

2023 Epoch One #216

2022 BBM Rookie Edition #028

2022 Epoch NPB #103

In addition to those three players, Adelaide will also have former Hiroshima Toyo Carp pitcher Oscar Nakaoshi on their roster.  This will be the second straight season Oscar's been with Adelaide and his third season in the ABL - he was with Auckland for the 2022-23 season:

2016 BBM Carp Autographed Edition #10

The Perth Heat will host Fumiya Kurokawa of the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles:

2020 Eagles Team Set 1st Version #72


The Melbourne Aces will have three players from the Orix Buffaloes on their roster - Taiki Ono, Kyosuke Saitoh and Taito Takashima:

2023 BBM Buffaloes #B27

2023 Epoch NPB Luxury Collection #03

2024 Epoch NPB #194

The Yokohama DeNA Baystars are loaning Atsushi Katsumata to the Canberra Calvary:

2019 BBM 1st Version #268

Canberra will also have another Japanese player - Ryo Kohigashi.  As far as I can tell, he never played in NPB.  His listing on Baseball-Reference indicates his only pro experience was with Auckland two years ago (with Oscar) and with Quebec in the Frontier League this past summer.

The Chiba Lotte Marines will send five players to the Sydney Blue Sox - Shinya Matsuishi, Hikaru Ohtani, Ryusei Terachi, Daito Yamamoto and Yuto Yoshikawa:

2024 BBM Rookie Edition #074

2024 BBM Marines #M14

2024 BBM 1st Version #216

2023 BBM Marines #M67

2023 Bowman NPB #BP-41

The Brisbane Bandits will be the only one of the six ABL teams to not have any NPB players (although they will have several CPBL and KBO players).

In addtion to Australia, a couple NPB teams have sent players to the Western hemisphere for the winter.  Four teams in the Puerto Rican Winter League are getting players from Japan.  The Fukuoka Softbank Hawks have sent two players to the Gigantes de Carolina - Haru Matsumoto and Fuga Ohtake:

2023 Epoch Hawks Premier Edition #13

2022 Epoch NPB #360

Those two Hawks players will have an additional Japanese teammate as Shintaro Fujinami, currently a free agent after spending this past season in the Mets farm system, is also on Carolina's roster:

2021 Epoch One #144

The Dragons have sent Koji Fukutani to Leones de Ponce:

2021 Calbee #OP-09

Junpei Azuma of the Baystars is spending his second straight off season abroad.  He was with the Canberra Calvary last winter and he'll be with the Senadores de San Juan this year:

2024 BBM Baystars #DB41

The Giants have sent Teppei Mataki and Yuhi Nishidata to Cangrejeros de Santurce:

2024 Epoch NPB #112

2024 BBM 2nd Version #428

The Baystars are also sending players to a third league and country this winter - the Mexican Pacific League.  Haruhiro Hamaguchi and Taiga Kamichatani will spend part of the season with Algodoneros de Guasave.  Hamaguchi spent last winter with Santurce in Puerto Rico:

2023 Baystars Official Fan Cluib #26

2020 Konami Baseball Collection #20200-N-DB027-00

And finally, Taiki Sekine will be returning to the Yaquis de Obregon for the third straight year (and fourth year since 2019):

2024 Topps NPB #133

Saturday, March 30, 2024

NPB Expansion Is Real (But Not What You're Thinking)

I've been following Japanese baseball for about 24 years now and one of the topics I've see bantered around every so often is "when is NPB going to expand?"  This is probably the second most discussed topic, behind "when are we going to get a real World Series between the MLB and NPB champions?" (and I would echo Jim Allen's answer to that - it'll happen as soon as MLB figures out how to make a buck out of it).

Funny thing though - NPB actually has already expanded for this season but you may not have noticed.  That's because the expansion happened at the farm team level, not at the top level.

Let me take a minute to explain the NPB farm system.  Unlike MLB teams which each have four farm teams, NPB teams only have one farm team.  Each farm team plays in one of two leagues - the Eastern League and the Western League.  The Eastern League includes the farm teams for the Marines, Fighters, Lions, Eagles, Swallows, Baystars and Giants while the Western League includes the farm teams for the Dragons, Hawks, Tigers, Carp and Buffaloes.  Each farm team plays relatively close to their parent club with the exception of the Fighters who play in Kamagaya, Chiba.  (The Fighters had heavily invested in their facility in Kamagaya in the late 90's while they were still playing in Tokyo so they kept the team there.  Plus the Eastern League's travel expenses would have skyrocketed with having to have the teams travel to Sapporo - most of the teams are in Kanto and are a relatively short train or bus ride apart).

Now if you're paying attention to the make up of the two leagues, you can see there's a problem - each league has an odd number of teams.  The Eastern League has seven and the Western League has five.  The problem, of course, with a league with an odd number of teams is that all the teams can't play at the same time - one team has to be idle.

The two leagues used to each have six teams until 2004.  The Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes were merged into the  Orix BlueWave and the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles were added to replace them.  Kintetsu's farm team had been in the Western League but it made more geographical sense for Rakuten's farm team to be in the Eastern League so the leagues have had an odd number of teams ever since.

Until this season, that is.  NPB has "expanded" the two farm team leagues by adding what are essentially independent teams to each league.  The Eastern League has added the Niigata Albirex, a team that has been playing in the independent Baseball Challenge (BC) league since 2007 while the Western League has added a brand new team - the Hayate Ventures - which will play in Shizuoka.

It's kind of a weird situation where neither team really gets any benefit from playing in the "affliated" minors as opposed to the indy ones.  They're not allowed to participate in the NPB draft so they're really not going to able to develop any talent that they could sell off to NPB teams.  They're basically in the same situation that all the other indy minor league teams are in - they can sign former NPB players and sell those players to NPB organizations but any draft eligible players they sign will still have to go through the draft to join an NPB team.  Really the only benefit they're getting is being in a league with more visibility and better players.  Of course, the "better players' part of that equation means both teams will probably be the doormats of their respective leagues (and two weeks into the season that started on March 15th, that is indeed the case - Niigata is 2-7-1 and Hayate is 1-10-1, good enough for dead last in both leagues).

As far as I know, there's no intent that these team should someday become full-fledged NPB teams.  In fact, if I remember correctly when the teams were announced, it was expressly said that they would not ever be top-level teams.  I do think it's interesting that the locations of the two teams - Niigata and Shizuoka - are frequently mentioned as places that NPB could add top level expansion teams.  It's probably just a coincidence though.

Personally I think NPB should have basically run these two teams as co-op teams like affiliated minors in the US used to have before they got a little more streamlined back in the 1990's.  The roster for each team could have been made up of guys on the 70 man rosters for the other teams in their league that their parent team wanted a chance to get some more playing time.  I've always assumed that with 35-40 players on the farm team roster that it can be difficult for some players to get playing time although I could be wrong about that.

Like I mentioned, one of the pools of players available to these two teams is former NPB players and a glance at their rosters show that they've been dipping into that pool quite a bit.  I thought I'd do a post showing cards of the ex-NPB players on each roster as well as each team's manager.  First up is Niigata, which is managed by former Swallow, Fighter and Tiger Hideki Hashigami:

1994 BBM Late Series #594

Keisuke Kobayashi, Buffaloes 2017-20, Tigers 2020-23:

2023 BBM Tigers #T27

Tomoya Mikami, Baystars (2014-22), Giants (2023):

2021 BBM Baystars #DB18

Shota Nakayama, Swallows (2019-22):

2022 BBM Swallows #S59

Keita Sonobe, Buffaloes ikusei (2022-23):

2022 BBM Rookie Edition #066

Shun Takayama, Tigers (2016-23):

2022 BBM Tigers #T61

Shunta Tanaka, Giants (2018-20), Baystars (2021-23):

2021 BBM 1st Version #258

Kazuki Yabuta, Carp (2015-23):

2021 Epoch Carp Rookies & Stars #09

Daikan Yoh, Fighters (2006-16), Giants (2017-21):

2021 Epoch NPB #241

Kazumasa Yoshida, Buffaloes (2014-21):

2021 BBM Buffaloes #B05

It's kind of an interesting roster.  There's three former first round picks (Takayama, Yoh and Yoshida).  Yoh has played on the Taiwan National Team for the 2006 and 2013 World Baseball Classics and the 2015 Premier 12 and has spent the past two seasons playing indy ball in the US.  Yabuta played on the Samurai Japan team that won the 2017 Asian Professional Baseball Championship.  This is Yoshida's third season with Niigata.

Hayate is managed by former Kintetsu Buffaloes pitcher Motoyuki Akahori:

2001 BBM #257

Here's Hayate's former NPB players:

Yoshiaki Fujioka, Hawks (2006-13), Fighters (2014-16), Baystars (2016-20):

2020 BBM Baystars #DB32

Shuhei Fukuda, Hawks (2007-19), Marines (2020-23):

2023 BBM Marines #M60

Sota Ikeya, Baystars 2021-23:
2023 BBM Baystars #DB29

Shoma Itani, Hawks ikusei (2021-23):

2021 BBM Rookie Edition #011

Toshihiko Kuramoto, Baystars (2015-22):

2019 Baystars Team Set #5

Ryosuke Nishikawa, Marines (2021-23):

2021 Epoch Pacific League Rookies #10

Yusei Nishihama, Buffaloes ikusei (2023):

2023 BBM Rookie Edition #006

Koki Orishita, Giants ikusei (2018-20):

2018 BBM Rookie Edition #097

Kenjiro Tanaka, Baystars (2008-23):

2023 Epoch NPB #265

Yuito Tanigawa, Marines ikusei (2021-23):

2021 BBM Rookie Edition #019

Hayate's roster includes two first round picks (Fukuda and Tanaka) as well as two first picks from the ikusei portion of the draft (Nishihama and Tanigawa).

I discovered that I had another card of a player on Hayate's roster - one who had never played in NPB.  Pitcher Rintaro Hirama has spent most of the past four seasons with the Kochi Fighting Dogs of the Shikoku Island League (other than some time in 2022 that he spent in the Mexican League).  Since I have most of the 2020 Kochi team set, I have a card of Hirama:

2020 Kochi Team Set #04

Speaking of team sets, it's not yet known if there will be any baseball cards for either team.  As fas as I have been able to tell, Niigata has never had any baseball cards (other than an oddball card for manager Naoyuki "Gyaos" Naito that was a giveaway at a BBM event a few years back).  Since they're new, there's no way to predict whether Hayate will publish a team set - although I'm surprised that their website doesn't have a store yet.  I'm hoping to see Hayate play when I'm in Japan in May - I've wanted to see a game in Shizuoka since I stopped by the stadium in 2019 - so maybe I'll find out for myself.