Sunday, August 10, 2008

Masahiro Yamamoto

Last week, Masa Yamamoto of the Dragons got his 200th career win. You can read some more about it here.

In honor of his achievement, I thought I'd do a little baseball card retrospective here:






From top to bottom, that's his 1990 Calbee rookie card (#64), 1994 BBM All Stars (#A16), 1994 Takara Dragons, 1999 BBM Nippon Series (#S40), 2002 BBM 1st Version (#127), and his 2007 BBM 1st Version "Record Achievers" subset card (#485).

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Japanese National Team

As you might have heard, the Olympics are kicking off this Friday. This will be the final Olympics to feature baseball. Japan is sending a team made up of many players from NBP including Yu Darvish and Norichika Aoki. Baseball America has an Olympic baseball preview here. Sports Illustrated predicts that Cuba will take the Gold with Japan taking the Silver and the US taking the Bronze. Personally, I think Japan should be the medal favorites, but I thought that in 2004 also and they ended up with the Bronze after being upset by Australia in the medal round.

I haven't heard anything about baseball cards for this year's team yet. I thought I'd do an overview of the cards available from previous Japan National Teams.

As far as I know, there are no cards for teams prior to the 2000 Olympics. 2000 was the first year that professionals were allowed to play in the Olympics. Japan sent a team that featured 8 players from NPB along with a bunch of players from the industrial leagues (including Norihiro Akahoshi who is now with the Tigers). In 2001, Calbee did a subset featuring the 8 NPB players from the team - So Taguchi, Fumihiro Suzuki, Nobuhiko Matsunaka, Norihiro Nakamura, Yukio Tanaka, Masato Kawano, Daisuke Matsuzaka and Tomohiro Kuroki). Here's the Taguchi card (#J-01):


The following year, Japan sent a team to the Baseball World Cup. This team included Shinnosuke Abe, Tadahito Iguchi and Yoshinobu Takahashi among others.

BBM put out a 47 card box set in late 2001 - early 2002 to commemorate this team. I can't show you any cards from this set since I only just discovered that this set exists. However, BBM also included a 16 card subset featuring members of this team in the 2002 BBM 1st Version set. Here's Shinnosuke Abe's card (#412):


The next National team that BBM commemorated in baseball cards was the one that participated in the 2003 Asian Baseball Championship, which functioned as a qualifier for the 2004 Olympics. This was the first Japanese baseball dream team, featuring Daisuke Matsuzaka, Koji Uehara, Hiroki Kuroda, Kenji Johjima, Michihiro Ogasawara, Kazuo Matsui, Tomohiro Nioka and Kosuke Fukudome. It was also managed by Shigeo Nagashima.

BBM produced a 36 card box set in late 2003/early 2004. Here's the Nioka (#19) and Nagashima (#01) cards from the set:




In addition, BBM added a 22 card insert set to the 2004 1st Version set featuring members of this team. Here's the Kosuke Fukudome card (#AJ22):


Surprisingly, there was no set for the 2004 Olympic team. I often wondered if it was because the team had such a disappointing finish. In fact, there hasn't been any cards for any Japanese National Teams for any of the international tournements since 2003, with the exception of the 2006 World Baseball Classic.

As I've mentioned previously, the WBC had really crappy baseball cards. Upper Deck's 50 card box set had only 5 guys from Japanese team (Toshiaki Imai, Nobuhiko Matsunaka, Ichiro, Kazuhiro Wada and Shunsuke Watanabe). Here's the Matsunaka card (#30):


Upper Deck spread a bunch of insert cards (at least 3 different sets) throughout their 2006 sets. I've been trying to pick up some of these on Ebay, but I haven't been very successful. I've only managed to pick up the 30 card Inaugural Images set, which has 7 cards featuring 6 members of the team: Daisuke Matsuzaka (2 cards), Nobuhiko Matsunaka, Tsuyoshi Nishioka, Tomoya Satozaki, Ichiro and Koji Uehara. Here's the Uehara card (#II-17):


So starting next Wednesday, we'll see what happens. Hopefully, BBM or someone will put out a set of cards for what is possibly the last Japanese Olympic baseball team. And hopefully the cards for next year's WBC won't suck this time.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Hawks 70th Anniversary Set

According to their website, BBM is coming out with a set to celebrate the 70th Anniversary of the Hawks. It's a pack based set containing 99 cards (6 team history, 66 OB players, 18 current players and 9 current players in "Turn Back The Clock" uniforms) and assorted inserts.

The set also commemorates the 20th Anniversary of the Hawks moving from Osaka to Fukuoka after the 1988 season when Daiei bought the team from Nankai. Daiei sold the team to Softbank after 2004.

The set will be released on August 23.

This will be the fourth 70th Anniversary team set BBM has produced, following the Giants in 2004, the Tigers in 2005 and the Dragons in 2006.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Card Of The Week August 3

As you've probably already heard, Ichiro got his 3000th hit last week. Here's his 1997 BBM card (#283):

Monday, July 28, 2008

New Lions set?

There was a new Lions box set added to BBM's website today. I think this is some sort of combination OB Lions/active Lions set. There are 24 cards in the set - I think that breaks down to 12 cards each for OB and active. Maybe a lineup (including DH), starting and relief pitcher and manager for each? Or am I completely wrong?

Well, whatever it is, it's going to hit the stores on August 9. Oh, yeah, and it contains memorabilia cards, so it'll be expensive.

Card Of The Week July 27

Only a day late this week!

Rich Gossage was inducted into the National Baseball Hall Of Fame yesterday. A little known sidebar to his career is the 28 games he appeared in for the (then) Fukuoka Daiei Hawks in 1990 (which accounts for the missing year in his American career stats). According to NPB Tracker, Gossage now joins Larry Doby as the only players with NPB experience in the MLB Hall Of Fame.

As far as I can tell, there are no cards of Gossage in a Hawks uniform. The main sets from 1990 in Japan were Calbee, Takara and Lotte and he's not in any of those sets. I guess that's not surprising since he didn't make his first appearence for the Hawks until July 4. The first batter he faced in Japan homered off of him - former Baltimore Oriole and then Kintetsu Buffalo Jim Traber. Ironically, the two had never faced each other during Traber's 4 years with the Orioles. So since I have no card of Gossage to show, here's Traber's 1991 BBM card (#287):


I got the information on Gossage's Japanese career from Japan Baseball Daily's Data Warehouse.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Card Of The Week July 20

Late again this week. Hideo Nomo retired last week. Here's his 1993 Tomy card:



NPBTracker had a link to a YouTube video showing highlights from Nomo's first win in 1990 for Kintetsu against the Orix Braves.