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Kazuhisa Makita of the San Diego Padres

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Kazuhisa Makita, formerly of the Saitama Seibu Lions, has signed a two year deal with the San Diego Padres.  Makita was originally drafted by Seibu in the second round of the 2010 draft out of Nippon Express of the industrial leagues.  He stared 2011 in the Lions rotation but was named the team's closer by mid-season. He saved 22 games which helped him to win the Pacific League Rookie Of The Year award.  He moved back into the rotation for the next few seasons before moving into a middle relief role since 2015.  He made the All Star team four times in his seven seasons in NPB (2011, 2013, 2016-17) and played for Samurai Japan three times (2013 & 2017 World Baseball Classics and the 2015 Premier 12).

His BBM rookie cards are #013 from the 2011 Rookie Edition set and #050 from the 2011 1st Version set (although he also has cards in that year's 2nd Version and Lions team sets).  He's also in the 2011 BBM All Stars set.  He's been in every 1st and 2nd Version set since his rookie season.  His first official Calbee card isn't until 2012 (#090) although he appears on one of the 2011 checklist cards (#C-10).  He's also made appearances in Bandai, Konami, Front Runner and Epoch sets.  He doesn't appear in any of Topps's WBC sets but he has shown up in Calbee's Samurai Japan sets in 2016 and 17.  See his listing at TradingCardDB.com for a more comprehensive list.

2011 BBM Rookie Edition #013

2011 BBM 1st Version #050

2012 Calbee #T-03

2013 Front Runner Lions Rookies & Young Stars #16

2014 BBM Lions Classic - Impact Of Lions Blue #05

2015 Lions Fan Club #35

2016 Calbee Samurai Japan #SJ-15

2017 Epoch Lions #16
As you can see, all the card manufacturers like to focus on the fact that Makita's got a submarine-style delivery.

Yuji Iiyama

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Back to the retirements after almost a month and a half...

Longtime Fighters backup infielder and farm hand Yuji Iiyama announced his retirement back in September.  Iiyama was drafted out of his high school by the Fighters in the fourth round of the 1997 draft.  He spent his most of his first seven seasons with the farm team - only making it into 11 ichi-gun games between 1998 and 2004 (and all of those were in 2001 and 2003).  He was pretty much a late inning defensive replacement most of his career - he only appeared in more than 100 games once in his career (2007) and he only had 55 plate appearances that year.  The most plate appearances he ever had in a single season was 194 in 2011.  He did get to appear in four Nippon Series (2006,2007, 2009 and 2012) though.  He will be remaining in the Fighters organization as a ni-gun infield and base coach.

His BBM rookie card was #470 in the 1998 set.  He never had a Calbee card and until I looked at TradingCardDB.com's listing for him I wasn't aware that he'd ANY non-BBM cards - he had a couple Bandai and Konami cards.  He only appeared in four BBM flagship sets (1998, 2007 1st Version, 2008 1st Version and 2011 2nd Version) over the course of his career - the same number of Nippon Series sets he appeared in.

1998 BBM #470

2003 BBM Fighters #051

2006 BBM Nippon Series #S22

2007 BBM 1st Version #24

2011 BBM 2nd Version #430

2014 BBM WE LOVE HOKKAIDO #18

2017 BBM Fighters #F45

Takehiro Donoue

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Giants outfielder Takahiro Donoue retired back in October after the team told him he wasn't in their plans for 2018.  Donoue was originally the property of the Chunichi Dragons - he was their sixth round pick out of high school in the 2003 draft.  He made his ichi-gun debut in 2005.  He appears to have mostly had a pinch hitter/fourth outfielder role with the team.  His best season was probably 2012 when he got into 85 games and hit .282.  He played in three Nippon Series with the Dragons - 2007, 2010 & 2011 - I think all his appearances in the Series were as a pinch hitter.

He spent the 2006 offseason playing for the North Shore Honu of the Hawaiian Winter League along side future MLB players like Lorenzo Cain and Kenley Jansen.

The Dragons released him following the 2014 season and he attended the 12-team tryout that fall.  The Giants signed him to an ikusei contract but he was registered to the 70-man roster during spring camp in 2015.  He got into 102 games with the ichi-gun Giants in 2015 and 2016 but spent all of 2017 with the farm team.

Donoue comes from a baseball playing family.  His father Terashi pitched for the Dragons from 1971 to 1986 and his younger brother Naomichi was his teammate with Chunichi after 2007 (and is still playing in Nagoya).

Donoue's first BBM cards are #49 from the 2004 Rookie Edition set (which I don't have) and #246 from the 2004 1st Version set.  He only had four "flagship" cards ever - in the 2004, 2008, 2009 and 2012 1st Version sets.  He never had a Calbee card but he did have a couple cards in some of the Bandai and Konami collectible card game sets.  (H/T TradingCardDB.com.)

2004 BBM 1st Version #246

2007 BBM The Climax - Dragons #D27

2011 BBM Dragons 75th Anniversary #99

2011 BBM Nippon Series #S57

2014 BBM Dragons #D68

2015 BBM Giants #G70

2017 BBM Giants #G66

Tomoya Yagi

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Tomoya Yagi had a really good rookie year.  Yagi was drafted by the Fighters in the "preferred entry frame" (which I still don't quite understand) of the 2005 draft out of Soka University.  He went 12-8 with a 2.48 ERA his rookie season in 2006 and also made the All Star team.  He also threw a no-hitter in his fourth start ever (well, it was a no-hitter than went 12 innings and he only pitched the first 10 - Hisashi Takeda and Michael Nakamura pitched the other two).  And his team won the Nippon Series that year.  And he was named Rookie Of The Year.  All in all it was a great season for him.

Unfortunately this was the highlight of his career.  A shoulder injury limited his playing time over the next two seasons although he rebounded with a 9-3, 2.88 ERA season in 2009.  He again missed a lot of time over the next two seasons but came back somewhat in 2012 with a 6-3, 3.38 ERA record.  That was the end of his time with the Fighters though - he was dealt to the Orix Buffaloes in early 2013 as part of the Yoshio Itoi deal.

Orix pretty much buried him on the farm team - he only got into six games with the ichi-gun team in 2013 and 2014 and he didn't perform particularly well.  The Buffaloes released him after 2014 and he was picked up by the Dragons after he attended the 12-team tryout.  He got into 14 ichi-gun games in 2015, the most he had appeared in since 2009, and went 4-6 with an ERA of 3.92.  He was banished back to the farm team for the last two seasons, however, only getting into four games with the top team (one in 2016 and three in 2017).  He was released at the end of the season and announced his retirement in November.  I think he will become a scout for the Dragons but I'm not sure.

He pitched in two Nippon Series - 2006 and 2009 - and won a game in each of them.  2006 was the only season he was named to the All Star team.

Yagi's first BBM cards are #35 in the 2006 Rookie Edition set and #172 in the 2006 1st Version set.  Most of his cards were BBM cards but he had a couple Calbee cards in 2006 and 2007 as well as some cards in various Konami, Bandai and Front Runner issues.  (As always I'm using TradingCardDB.com's list to supplement what I own.)

2006 BBM Rookie Edition #35

2006 BBM 1st Version #172

2006 BBM All Stars #A22

2007 BBM 1st Version #479

2007 BBM 1st Version #447

2009 BBM Nippon Series #S38

2012 BBM 2nd Version #410

2014 Front Runner Buffaloes Rookies & Young Stars #15

2017 BBM Dragons #D28

Yasuyuki Kataoka

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Yasuyuki Kataoka of the Giants announced his retirement back at the beginning of October.  Kataoka was the youngest of three brothers to play for the Utsunomiya Gakuen High School baseball team. After graduating he spent three years playing for Tokyo Gas in the corporate leagues - one of his older brothers (Shogo) was playing for JR East in the corporate leagues as well.  After four seasons with Tokyo Gas Kataoka was drafted in the third round of the 2004 draft by the Seibu Lions. 

By the middle of the 2005 season Kataoka had become the Lions starting second baseman, a position he would hold for the next six seasons.  He lead the Pacific League in stolen bases from 2007 to 2010 and in hits in 2008.  He was named to the Best 9 team in 2008 and was elected to the All Star team in 2008 and 2010.  Injuries started taking their toll in 2011 - he missed time due to leg and shoulder injuries as well as a concussion - and he lost time in 2012 and 2013 as well due to wrist and knee injuries.

He left the Lions as a free agent after 2013 and signed with Yomiuri.  He was the Giants' regular second baseman in 2014 and 2015 and played in over 100 games both seasons for the first time since 2010 but he didn't hit particularly well and he lost his starting job to Luis Cruz in 2016.  Various injuries again cost him playing time the last two seasons and he spent all of 2017 with the farm team.

He played in one Nippon Series with the Lions in 2008 and played for Team Japan in the 2009 World Baseball Classic.

His first BBM cards were #2 from the 2005 Rookie Edition set (which I don't have) and #41 from the 2005 1st Version set.  His first Calbee card was #019 in the 2006 set.  He's also appeared in various sets from Konami, Bandai, Front Runner and Epoch.

2005 BBM 1st Version #41

2008 BBM Nippon Series #S20

2009 BBM 1st Version #443

2009 Konami WBC Heroes #W09R103

2010 BBM All Stars #A52

2011 BBM Lions Classic #36

2012 Calbee #159

2014 BBM Classic #040

2015 Front Runner Giants Game Used Bat Edition #11

2017 BBM Giants #G44

Seung-Yeop Lee

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One last retirement post (for now)...

Long time Samsung Lion (and one time Chiba Lotte Marine, Yomiuri Giant and Orix Buffalo) Seung-Yeop Lee retired at the end of last season.  I did a post for Lee when he hit his 600th home run in September of 2016 so I won't repeat his biography here.  Check out Dan Skrezyna's Korean Cardboard blog for a list of Lee's cards (and a really cool team giveaway set featuring Lee's top five home runs ever).

Here's another assortment of Lee's cards:

1999 Teleca "World Sports Card Show" promo

2004 BBM 2nd Version "Opening Game" insert #OB4

2005 BBM All Stars #A29

2006 Upper Deck Ovation Nation #ON-SL

2007 BBM Home Run Chronicle #45

2008 BBM 1st Version #023

2009 BBM Nippon Series #S20

2010 BBM Giants #G126

2011 BBM Legend Of Bs #12

2014 Superstar Baseball Season Two #SBC02-004

2015 Superstar Baseball Season One #SBC1501-112-N

2016 Forever Ace #PA03-SA002

Card Of The Week January 14

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I was surprised to discover last spring when I was researching NPB players who had been loaned to the San Francisco Giants organization back in the 1960's and early 1970's that Makoto Matsubara (who had played with San Francisco's Arizona Instructional League in 1969) had spent the last season of his career as a Yomiuri Giant.  Matsubara had spent 19 seasons playing for the Whales and hit 330 home runs and accumulated over 2000 hits (making him a meikyukai member),  He was traded to the Giants in early 1981 for Masaaki Koga.

I was further surprised to discover that I had a couple cards of Matsubara with the Giants from the 1981 Calbee set.  From looking at his stats that year I saw that he had only played in 36 games and hit .233 with only one home run.  I figured that he hadn't played well enough that season to have earned a spot on the Giants' Nippon Series roster that season which was a shame since the Whales never made the Series while he was with them.  I was incorrect however - he made the roster and made two pinch hitting appearances in the Series.  In fact his first pinch hitting appearance resulted in a game tying home run in the top of the ninth of Game One, making him the fifth player to ever homer in their first Nippon Series at bat and the first to do it as a pinch hitter.  (The Fighters ultimately won the game in the bottom of the ninth.)  His other pinch hitting appearance was a strikeout to end Game Three - so his only at bats in the Series were in the only two games that the Giants lost en route to winning the Series 4 games to 2.  He retired after the Series, a champion for the first time.

One of the 1981 Calbee cards I have of him (#412) shows him rounding third after hitting the home run in the Nippon Series.  As an added bonus, the third base coach congratulating him is Hall Of Famer Shigeru Makino who there are very few cards of.


2018 Hall Of Fame Class

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The 2018 Hall Of Fame inductees were announced today.  The inductees from the Players Division ballot were Hideki Matsui and Tomoaki Kanemoto.  Both players were inducted in their first year of eligibility.  Matsui is only the third member of the Hall Of Fame to have played in MLB (after Hideo Nomo and Kazuhiro Sasaki) and at 43 years and 7 months is the youngest Hall Of Famer ever elected.  Tatsunori Hara as the sole selection of the Expert Division - he had just missed being elected in 2015, his final year on the Players Division ballot.  The Special Division election selected long time high school and university manager Masao Taki.

The Hall Of Fame's English language press release is here (in pdf form).

Here are cards for Hara, Kanemoto and Matsui - I'm not aware of any cards for Taki.

Tatsunori Hara


1981 Yamakatsu Young Giants

1993 Kanebo #017

2010 BBM 20th Anniversary #224

 Tomoaki Kanemoto


1994 BBM #363

2003 Calbee #106

2012 BBM Tigers #T058 (Foil Parallel)

 Hideki Matsui


1994 Takara Giants #55

1999 Calbee #266 (Gold Signature Parallel)

2002 BBM Central League Champion Giants #YG38


Fighters In Arizona, 2018 Edition

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For the third year in a row the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters will be doing the early part of their spring training in Arizona.  After two years using the Padres' facilities in Peoria, however, the team has moved to Scottsdale to Salt River Fields at Talking Stick, the spring training home of the Diamondbacks and Rockies (not sure which team's facilities the Fighters will be using).  The team will be there from February 1st through the 14th.  Their schedule is here but the important days are the off days on the 4th and 9th, an inter-squad game on the 12th and two games against KBO teams on the 10th (KT Wiz) and 13th (LG Twins).  All three games will be at 12:30.

The roster of who's coming was published today.  I've translated it below (with a lot of help from YakyuDB).  Most of the Fighters' stars will be in Scottsdale as will their top draft pick from last fall - Kotaro Kiyomiya.



In addition to the Fighters there are four KBO teams that are also training in Arizona.  Two of them you already know - the KT Wiz and the LG Twins - since they will be playing the Fighers.  KT will be training in Tucson at the Kino Sports Complex from January 29th until February 21st.  Then they'll move to San Bernardino, California from February 22nd until March 10th.  LG is training somewhere in the Phoenix area (I couldn't figure out which ballpark) from January 30th to February 21st.  The other two teams are the Nexen Heroes who will be in Surprise from January 31st until February 19th and then in Tucson (at the Kino Sports Complex) from the 19th until March 6th and the NC Dinos who will be in Tucson (I think at Hi Corbett field) from January 30th until February 22nd and then Los Angeles from the 23rd to March 10th.

There's at least one other Asian baseball team training in Arizona this winter as well - the Chinatrust Brothers of the CPBL will be in Tucson although I'm not entirely sure when and where.  They're listed on the Kino Sports Complex's calendar on February 21st and then from February 28th to March 4th which doesn't make a lot of sense.  I don't know if they're spending time training over at Hi Corbett field also or if the schedule is just wrong.

Another KBO team, the SK Wyverns, will be training in Vero Beach, Florida from January 30th to February 22nd.

I want to thank MyKBO.nethttp://www.mykbo.net/home with the information on where the KBO teams will be training and Justin for the heads up on the Chinatrust Brothers.  I tried looking for information on the websites for the teams but I didn't find anything.

UPDATE - I was informed by @GOCPBL on Twitter that Chinatrust will be in Tucson for three weeks and they will likely be at Kino the entire time which makes more sense. 

Study Abroad - The Whales Of Montana

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The Salt Lake City Trappers were not the only Pioneer League team to have a working agreement with an NPB team in the late 1980's.  The Butte Copper Kings had one with the Yokohama Taiyo Whales between 1987 and 1989.

Like the Trappers, the Copper Kings were an independent team.  Unlike the Trappers, the Copper Kings were very bad - they went 19-50 on the season and finished 29 1/2 games behind the first place Trappers.  The Whales sent four players to the Copper Kings that season.  Two were pitchers (Katsunori Kitano and Tomoyuki Tozuka) and the others were a catcher (Yasushi Takeda) and a third baseman (Katsuya Okubo).  Both Takeda and Okubo played tolerably well - Takeda was fourth on the team in batting with a .277 average while Okubo's 11 doubles was tied for the second most on the team.  The two pitchers didn't do very well however - Kitano went 1-9 with a 6.86 ERA and Tozuka went 2-8 with a 5.11 ERA.  Keep in mind however that the staff ERA was 5.43 so Tozuka was arguably one of the better pitchers on the team.

Butte would turn it all around in 1988.  The team became a Texas Rangers farm team that year and ended up going 44-26 and finishing first in the league's South Division before losing to Great Falls in the playoffs.  The Whales sent only two pitchers that season - Denney Tomori and Kenichi Shiozaki.  Both pitchers worked out of the bullpen and put up decent numbers - Tomori went 5-0 with a 2.51 ERA and Shiozaki went 1-0 with an ERA of 3.32.  The staff ERA was 5.45 so both pitchers were among the team leaders in ERA.

In many ways 1989 was a repeat of 1988 for Butte.  The team again won the South Division crown (going 41-25 this time) and again lost in the playoffs to Great Falls.  The Whales again sent two pitchers - Takaaki Matsumura and Koji Sugiura - but this time neither pitcher made much of a contribution to the team.  Matsumura appeared in four games and had an ERA of 9.35 while Sugiura appeared in six games with a 11.42 ERA.  The team was managed that year by Bump Wills who had spent two seasons with the Hankyu Braves in 1983-84.

The Whales and Butte parted company after the 1989 season.  As usual I don't know what happened - if the working agreement was only supposed to last three years or whether the Rangers didn't want to give up roster spots.  Butte would remain a Rangers farm team through 1992 before spending the next three years as an independent team again.  They were a Rays farm team in 1996 (two years before Tampa Bay fielded their major league team) and then an Angels farm team from 1997 to 2000.  The team moved to Casper, Wyoming in 2001 and became affiliated with the Rockies.  The franchise moved again for the 2012 season - this time to Grand Junction, Colorado where they still are today (and still are affiliated with the Rockies).

Here's a summary of the players the Whales sent to Butte:

YearPlayerDraftPlayed For
1987Katsunori Kitano4th round 1985Whales 1986-89, Dragons 1990-98
1987Katsuya Okubo6th round 1985Whales 1986-90
1987Yasushi Takeda5th round 1982Whales 1983-90
1987Tomoyuki Tozuka5th round 1983Whales 1984-88
1988Kenichi Shiozaki5th round 1986Whales 1987-92
1988Denney Tomori1st round 1986Whales/Baystars 1987-96, Lions 1997-02, Baystars 2003-04, Red Sox 2005, Dragons 2006-07
1989Takaaki Matsumura3rd round 1986Whales 1987-90
1989Koji Sugiura5th round 1984Whales 1985-91

Denney Tomori obviously was the most successful of this group of players.  He spent most of his career working out of the bullpen and was a very good middle reliever for the Lions in the late 1990's.  He made the All Star team in 1998 and pitched in the 1997 and 1998 Nippon Series (both in losing efforts).  He returned to North America in 2005 and spent the season in the Red Sox organization - he appeared in 19 games with AA Portland and 15 games with AAA Pawtucket.  He is now the pitching coach for the Chunichi Dragons (and was the guest on the Japan Baseball Weekly podcast a few weeks back).  There are many Japanese baseball cards of Tomori including cards from BBM, Calbee, Takara and Broccoli.

1989 Takara Whales #30

1999 Calbee #116

2004 BBM Baystars #YB25

2007 BBM Dragons #D036
Kitano had the longest career of the rest of the players.  He spent four seasons working out of the Dragons bullpen in the mid-90's.  All in all he pitched in 178 ichi-gun games between 1988 and 1997 and racked up a 3.62 ERA.  There are a small handful of Japanese baseball cards of him - almost all from BBM but he made one Takara set.

1994 BBM #61
Of the remaining six players only Kenichi Shiozaki and Koji Sugiura ever played at the ichi-gun level and they each only appeared in three games.  None of the other six players had any Japanese baseball cards.

There was no team set issued for Butte in 1987 so there were no American minor league cards for Kitano, Okubo, Takeda or Tozuka.  Sports Pro issued a set for the 1988 team however so there are Butte cards for Shiozaki and Tomori.  Shiozaki is one of those rare players who has an American baseball card but not a Japanese one.  I don't have the 1988 set but I was able to track down the image of the front and back of Shiozaki's card on COMC.com:



"Kenny" is actually from Ehime Prefecture and not Yokohama.

Not only is Tomori in the 1988 Butte set but he also has cards in the 2005 team sets for both Portland (Grandstand Update) and Pawtucket (Choice).  The only one of the three cards I could find an image for online is the Portland card:


Neither Matsumura nor Sugiura appear in the 1989 Butte team set issued by Sports Pro.

New Stuff From BBM

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BBM has recently announced three sets that will be released in the next month or so.

- The annual "Retirement" or "Farewell" box set will be released in late January.  I never really know what to call this set since its Japanese title translates to something like "Regret at Parting Ball Players" but this set is dedicated to the players who retired in 2017.  Each box contains 34 cards - a 33 card base set plus one special insert card that could be an autographed card.  Players appearing in the set include Masahiko Morino, Tadahito Iguchi and Ryoji Aikawa.

- BBM's annual set dedicated to the other end of the player career spectrum - Rookie Edition - will be released in mid-February.  As usual this set is dedicated to the players who were taken in last October's draft.  This is a pack-based set that has a 126 card base set - 114 cards for the 2017 draftees and a 12 card "Early Days" subset (which if it's like the similarly named subsets from the past few years will feature one draftee per team paired with an OB or active player).  There are two insert sets - a 2 card "Rookie Of The Year" set (that I assume features Sosuke Genda and Yota Kyoda) and a 12 card "Next Generation" set.  There will also be various parallel issues for the cards of the draftees and autographed cards available.  Not completely sure if the autographs will be inserted into pack or available via some sort of redemption process (or both).  And looking at the sample cards I can now answer the question I asked last year about the shapes on the card.  After the 2016 set had the players in circles and last year's set had them in triangles, I wondered if this year would be squares, trapezoids or hexagons.  It turns out that they are pentagons.

- BBM is celebrating Shohei Ohtani's departure to MLB with a set called "Grateful Days".  This is a 20 card box set that will be released in mid-February.  The 19 card base set will highlight key events in Ohtani's five years in NPB including his signing with the Fighters, the Fighters' championship in 2016 and his farewell press conference on Christmas Day 2017.  The other card in the set will either be a 3D card, a memorabilia card or an autographed card.  The set will be limited to 3000 and will retail for 5000 yen.

Card Of The Week January 21

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BBM has issued three Anniversary sets for the Chunichi Dragons - a 70th Anniversary set in 2006, a 75th Anniversary set in 2011 and an 80th Anniversary set in 2016.  The most prominent player who was missing from the first two sets was the late Senichi Hoshino although he did show up in the last one (his two stints as Dragons manager was the theme of BBM's other OB team set for the Dragons - Dragons Legend).

Now when I say he was missing from the sets, what I mean is that there's no "regular" card for him that lists his name on the front and his biographical and statistical information on the back.  But technically Hoshino's in both sets - he's featured prominently on a couple pictures in the subsets from each set commemorating the history of the team.  In the 70th Anniversary set you can see him being tossed in the air on the card showing the do-age celebrating the team's 1988 Central League pennant.  In the 75th Anniversary set he can be seen on the far right of the card showing the team celebrating the 1974 Central League pennant - he's wearing uniform number 20.

2006 BBM Dragons 70th Anniversary #06

2011 BBM Dragons 75th Anniversary #04

RIP Shinsaku Katahira

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Former Hawk, Lion and Whale Shinsaku Katahira passed away today from pancreatic cancer.  Katahira was the fourth round pick of the Nankai Hawks in the fall 1971 draft out of Tokyo Agricultural University.  He spent the first 10 years of his career with the Hawks although I don't think he really became a regular until the late 70's.  He was traded along with Masahiro Kuroda to the Seibu Lions after the 1981 season for Ritsuo Yamashita and Yoshinori Yamamura.  He had a couple good years with the Lions - helping them to win the Nippon Series three times in the next five seasons - before they traded to the Yokohama Taiyo Whales along with Tamotsu Nagai for Shintaro Hirose after the 1986 season.  He spent three years with the Whales (the final one as a player-coach) before retiring at the end of the 1989 season.  He made the All Star team in 1980 and won a Golden Glove (at first base) in 1983.  He played in five Nippon Series - with Nankai in 1973 and with Seibu in 1982-83 and 1985-86.  He played mostly a backup role in those Series although he did have a home run in the deciding Game 6 of the 1982 Series.

After retiring he coached with the Lions from 1990 to 1997 and again from 2008 to 2009.  He was also a TV commentator.  In 2013 he managed the East Astraia team in the Japan Women's Baseball League.  He returned to manage the team (now called Saitama Astraia) again in 2016.

1981 Calbee #36

2010 BBM Lions 60th Anniversary #33

1988 Takara Whales #2

2016 Epoch JWBL #40
H/T to Graveyard Baseball for their obituary which was the only English language source I've seen on his passing so far.

Tatsuyuki Uemoto

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I decided to do a couple more retirement posts.  This one was requested by the guys over at Graveyard Baseball.  (I feel like a DJ..."Here's a long distance dedication to Christian and Wes...")

Longtime Lions back up catcher and farmhand Tatsuyuki Uemoto announced his retirement back in October (OK, technically his wife who's a model announced he was retiring on her blog).  Uemoto was a sixth round draft pick of the Lions from the Kyowa Hakko Kirin team of the corporate leagues in 2002.  He didn't debut with the ichi-gun team until 2005 and never got a lot of playing time with the top team - there were only three seasons where he got more than 100 at bats.  He made the Lions' roster for the last two games of the 2008 Nippon Series after Toru Hosokawa got hurt but he didn't appear in either game.  He'll be the Lions bullpen catcher next year.

As you might expect, Uemoto doesn't have a whole lot of baseball cards.  His BBM rookie cards were #54 in the 2003 Rookie Edition set and #217 in the 2003 1st Version set.  He only appeared in two other BBM flagship sets - the 2010 and 2011 1st Version sets.  He had one Calbee card - #272 from the 2010 set (which I don't have).  He also appeared in a handful of Konami and Bandai sets but the majority of his cards were in BBM's annual Lions team sets.

2003 BBM Rookie Edition #54

2003 BBM 1st Version #217

2017 BBM Lions #L41
He made an appearance in one of BBM's "Historic Collection" sets for a kind of odd reason.  The 2011 edition of BBM's annual historic sets was entitled "Hometown Heroes" and attempted to feature at least one player from each prefecture in Japan.  Uemoto was the only active player at the time from Yamaguchi prefecture in far western Honshu and so was included in the set:

2011 BBM Hometown Heroes #131
I only have 16 cards of Uemoto total but for some reason six of those cards are Lions team issued cards:

2006 Lions Original Player Card #49

2012 Lions Winning Game Card #18

2012 Lions Winning Game Card #25

2013 Lions Fan Club #49

2014 Lions Fan Club #49

2015 Lions Fan Club #49

Package From Alex

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I've been writing this blog for over 10 years now and the one thing I've discovered is how amazingly generous card collectors can be.  I got an email a couple weeks back from Alex who told me he had a couple of the short printed KBO cards from the 2014 Superstar Baseball Season 1 set that were listed on my want list and he would just send them to me if my address was still the same.  We had some back and forth and I ended up sending him a handful of vintage cards I had doubles of - a couple "tobacco" menko from the early 60's, some Yamakatsu cards from the late 70's and some late '80's Calbee cards.  I got his package the other day and he'd included some cool extras as well.

He sent me three bromide cards from the late 1940's/early 1950's.  The only one card I was able to determine the set for was this card of Shigeaki Kuroo of the Tokyu Flyers.  I'm pretty sure it's from the 1948 Maruhaku "Small Sepia Photo Bromides" (JBR 10) set.


The other two cards are of Makoto Kozuru of the Chubu Nippon Dragons and Kaoru Bettoh of the Mainichi Orions.  As far as I can tell both cards are not cataloged.  The Koruru card has to be from 1946 or 1947 as those were the only years the team wore the uniform he's wearing (and the only post-war years Kozuru was with the Dragons).  The Bettoh card is probably from 1950 or 1951 - it can't be from before 1950 since the Orions didn't start until then.  It could be from as late as 1957 but the bromide cards were less common by then.




He also sent me Tsutomu Wakamatsu's card from Ed Broder's 1975 "Top Stars" set (JA 4).  Beyond always being happy to get a Wakamatsu card I was also happy to get this card since I didn't have any cards from this set.  Here's the front and back of it:




And finally of course he included the two 2014 Superstar Baseball Season One cards that had been on my want list:

2014 Superstar Baseball Season One #SBC01-059 (Jae-Gyun Hwang)

2014 Superstar Baseball Season One #SBC01-067 (Sung-Bae Kim)
Alex is planning on sending me some more vintage cards in the near future in exchange for me forwarding cards for him to the UK (where he lives) so I'll be doing another post soon on some more really cool cards.  Thanks so much Alex!

Card Of The Week January 28

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Marines pitcher Hideaki Wakui had been testing the international free agency waters this off season but he's apparently not received an offer from an MLB team that he's willing to take.  He's expected to resign with Lotte this week.

Wakui has pitched in the US previously in his career though.  He was a member of both the 2009 and 2013 Japanese World Baseball Classic teams and appeared in two games in San Diego in the 2009 tournament and in the semi-final game in San Francisco in 2013.  Here's a card of him from the 2009 Konami WBC Heroes set (#W09R088):


2017 BBM Fusion

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I'm finally getting around to writing about this set - it was issued a little over two months ago in late November but I didn't get my set until about a week ago.  There's a bunch of reasons for that - most of which have to do with the new Time Travel set so I'll wait until I do the writeup on that set before I go into the reasons.  Or not - my tribulations getting cards are probably not something anyone else cares about.

Anyway, onto the set.  This is the second year that BBM has issued a set called Fusion and this set is very similar to the one they issued last year.  The set has 144 cards which break down into four distinct groups - a nine card "1st Version Update" subset, a nine card "Ceremonial First Pitch" subset, a 24 card "Leader" subset and 102 "regular" player cards.

The nine "1st Version Update" cards are numbered 601 to 609 so they pick up right where this year's 2nd Version set left off.  Four of the players in the subset are late signing foreign players (Wily Mo Pena, Roel Santos, Chris Marrero and Carlos Rivero), three of the players were traded during the season (Luis Mendoza, Toshiaki Kurobane and Keisuke Tanimoto) and the other two were foreign ikusei players who were promoted to the ichi-gun team during the season (Xavier Batista and Livan Moinelo).

#603

#607
The only difference I can see between these cards and the 1st Version cards (beyond the set name on the front) is that the backs of the cards include the player's stats for the 2017 season.  Here's the back of Chris Marrero's card where you can see that he played in the majors for the San Francisco Giants this season as well as for Orix:

Back of #605
The "Ceremonial First Pitch" cards are numbered FP14 to FP23 which is a continuation of the card numbering for the "Ceremonial First Pitch" cards in the 2nd Version set.  As usual these cards feature Japanese celebrities throwing out the first pitch at a game.  A couple of these celebrities have been on these cards before - Ayame Goriki and Ami Inamura (who's been on about a dozen of these cards now).  The other seven are actress Airi Eino, actress/singer Aya Hirano, gravure idol Ren Ishikawa, actress/singer (and former AKB48 member) Tomomi Itano, Momoiro Clover Z leader Kanako Momota, actor Tatsuya Nakadai, and Super Girls singer Kome Watanabe.

#FP19

#FP14
The "Leader" subset features the 2017 statistical leaders for 12 categories for each league - Batting Average, Home Runs, RBIs, Hits, OBP, Stolen Bases, ERA, Winning Percentage, Wins, Saves, Hold Points and Strikeouts.  If a player led the league in multiple categories then he has multiple cards - for example Alfredo Despainge led the Pacific League in both Home Runs and RBIs and therefore has two cards in the subset.  If there's a tie for a category then there's multiple players on one card.  For example, Marcos Mateo and Kentaro Kuwahara of the Tigers tied for the Central League Hold Points title with 46 and therefore share the card.  This subset is numbered as part of the Fusion set itself (#103-126) (which is the same range of numbers that this subset had last year).

#105

#124
I don't know if Despainge is goose-stepping, being a one-man chorus line or warming up for a field goal attempt in that photo.

The remaining 102 cards in the set are the "regular" player cards.  These are split evenly between active and OB players.  Like last year's set, each of the active players (and manager) featured had some achievement that the card is commemorating and then there's a corresponding OB player who had accomplished some sort of related achievement.  For example, on April 7th of last season Takuya Katoh of the Carp nearly pitched a no-hitter in his first start.  This is featured on card #007.  Card #008 features OB player Shinichi Kondoh who threw a no-hitter in his first start in 1987.

#007 & #008
Honestly I'm not sure of the achievements on most of the cards - obviously not being able to read Japanese is a bit of a drawback here (and I'll point out that most of the obvious milestone achievements like 2000 hits were featured on the "Great Records" insert set).  But the cards themselves are attractive (even if the design is very similar to last year's set) and BBM uses a lot more interesting photos in this set then in their other sets.  The active players featured include pretty much all the big names in NPB last season - Shohei Ohtani, Tetsuto Yamada, Tomoyuki Sugano, Yusei Kikuchi, Dennis Sarfate, Yuki Yanagita, Yoshiharu Maru and Seiya Suzuki.  Three of the players in the "1st Version Update" subset also have regular player cards - Pena, Batista and Marrero.  Noticeably absent from the set however are Yoshitomo Tsutsugoh and Shogo Akiyama (who is in the Leader subset however).

#055

#061

#067
The OB players include Shigeo Nagashima, Katsuya Nomura, Isao Harimoto, Keishi Suzuki, Hiromitshi Kadota, Alex Ramirez, Koji Yamamoto, Gene Bacque, Masahiro Yamamoto, Atsuya Furuta and Tsutomu Wakamatsu.  It looks like BBM did a lot of searching for photos that haven't been used a lot of times before on cards.  There's also a couple players who haven't appeared on very many OB sets previously - Shinya Sasaki (only two other cards I know of in the last 15 years) and Takashi Suzuki (no other OB cards that I know of).

#046

#100

#039

#088
Because this is practically a flagship set, BBM did "secret versions" of nine of the regular player cards in the set - four active players and five OB players.  The active players were Shohei Ohtani, Hayato Sakamoto, Randy Messenger and Chris Marrero.  The OB players were Isao Harimoto, Koji Yamamoto, Katsuya Nomura, Keishi Suzuki and Gene Bacque.  The only card I have so far is Ohtani's:

Regular and Secret Versions of #097
I like this set a lot but I think I'd like it a little better with fewer OB cards and a larger "1st Version Update" subset.  You can check out all the cards over at Jambalaya and Ryan did a post on the set back when it came out.

2017 Calbee Samurai Japan

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For the second year in a row Calbee issued a 36 card Samurai Japan set late in the year.  This year's set has cards for 35 players plus a checklist card and covers almost all the players who played for the professional version of the Japanese National Team in the four friendlies against Mexico and The Netherlands in November of 2016 as well as the World Baseball Classic last March.  I believe that the only two players not included were Norichika Aoki (who I assume was not included due to licensing since he played in MLB last year) and Ginjiro Sumitani (who was a late addition to the WBC roster replacing the injured Motohiro Shima).  I'm actually kind of curious why Calbee decided to include the checklist card rather than add a card for Sumitani.

In case you don't remember off hand who was on the roster of the late 2016 to early 2017 version of Samurai Japan, the set includes most of the top names in NPB including Shohei Ohtani, Tomoyuki Sugano, Hayato Sakamoto, Tetsuto Yamada, Takahiro Norimoto, Yoshitomo Tsutsugoh, Seiya Suzuki, Shogo Akiyama and Sho Nakata.  All three of the MLB imports from Japan this winter - Ohtani, Kazuhisa Makita and Yoshihisa Hirano - are in the set as well.  The checklist card shows a post-game victory lineup.

Like last year's set the cards resemble Calbee's high end "Star" insert cards but unlike last year's set the cards are much more attractive this year.  I think the sepia colored backgrounds look better than the dark blue ones from last year and the kira finish this year doesn't make it look like the player's engulfed in a snow storm.

#SJ-36

##SJ-21

#SJ-25

#SJ-22

#SJ-10

As usual you can see all the cards (including the parallel version) over at Jambalaya and as usual Ryan has already blogged about the set.

Card Of The Week February 4

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Daisuke Matsuzaka had a try out with the Chunichi Dragons a few weeks back and did well enough to merit a place on the team's ichi-gun roster for spring training.  Matsuzaka has been fighting injuries ever since returning to Japan from MLB three years ago.  He spent the past three seasons with Softbank but only made one start with the top team during that time.  His making the team probably says more about the state of the Dragons' pitching than anything else but I hope he gets it together for one last good season.  Here's a card of him back in his glory days with the Lions in the 00's:

2005 BBM Glorious Stars "Active Star" #AS2

2018 BBM Time Travel 1989

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BBM's first set labeled as a 2018 set was actually released in late December of 2017.  The set is entitled "Time Travel 1989" and is the second retro set BBM has issued highlighting a past season - the first was last year's "Time Travel 1975" set.

The underlying idea of the set is to look like a set actually issued in 1989 - the stats on the back of the player cards only include 1989 and previous seasons.  The photos on the cards all could have been taken that year as well.  The cards have a matte finish rather than BBM's standard glossy finish and the backs are monochrome rather than full color.

There are 99 cards in the set.  78 of these are the "regular" cards of players (but no managers) who were active in 1989.  This breaks down to six cards per team except for the two pennant winners - Kintetsu and Yomiuri - who have nine cards each.  There are some big names in the set - Koji Akiyama, Norihiro Komada, Hiromitsu Kadota, Masahiro Yamamoto, Takehiro Ikeyama, Tatsunori Hara, Hiromi Makihara and Masaki Saitoh - and a handful of gaijin - Boomer Wells, Larry Parrish and Ralph Bryant.  There are also "Rookie" cards of several players who's rookie season was 1989 - Kenjiro Nomura, Yasuaki Taihoh, Yukinaga Maeda, Terushi Nakajima, Tsutomu Sakai, Tomio Watanabe, Kenji Tomashino and Motonobu Tanishige.  Each of their cards has a "Rookie" icon on it.  There's also a couple cards of players who played in MLB later in their career - Masato Yoshii and Masumi Kuwata.

I felt like last year's set did a pretty good job representing 1975 with only a handful of "important" players left out.  Not so this year.  Central League MVP Warren Cromartie (who also lead the league in batting and made the Best 9 team) isn't in the set.  Choji Murata, Pacific League ERA leader, isn't in the set.  Central League Best 9 third baseman Hiromitsu Ochiai isn't in the set.  Actually these three aren't a big surprise as Cromartie's only been in four BBM sets since he returned to MLB in 1991; Murata hasn't appeared on a baseball card since 2009 and Ochiai hasn't been on a card since 2011.  But there's a whole bunch of gaijin who also don't appear in the set - Cecil Fielder, Jim Paciorek, Wade Rowdon, Carlos Ponce, Matt Keough, Tony Brewer, Mike Diaz, German Rivera, Willie Upshaw, Tony Bernazard and Mike Easler.  Additional Japanese players who are missing include Takayoshi Nakao (CL Best 9 and Golden Glove at catcher), Masahiro Kawai (CL Golden Glove winner at shortstop), Hiromi Matsunaga (PL Best 9 and Golden Glove at third base), Satoshi Nakajima (PL Golden Glove catcher), Atsuhiro Motonishi (PL Golden Glove outfielder), Tsutomo Itoh and Kazuhiro Kiyohara (although Kiyohara's legal issues have caused BBM to not include him in any sets for the past three years).

On the plus side though - the cards look really good:

#27

#15

#72

#30

#51

#17
Here's what the back of the cards looks like:

Back Of #64 (Makoto Sakaki)
The remaining 21 cards in the set are split into four subsets.  The first of these is the "1989 Retirement Players" subset that features six cards of players who retired at the end of that season - Kenji Awaguchi, Shigeru Kurihashi, Masayuki Matsunuma, Kiyoshi Nakahata, Takamasa Suzuki and Tsutomu Wakamatsu.  Here's the Nakahata card:

#79
There's a five card "1989 Highlights" subset.  After the 1988 season Nankai sold the Hawks to Daiei who moved them from Osaka to Fukuoka.  At the same time Hankyu sold the Braves to Orix.  The debut of the two teams are the first two cards in this subset.  The remaining three cards commemorate Sadaaki Yoshimura's return to the Giants lineup in early September after missing most of the season due to injury; Ralph Bryant's four home runs in four at bats in a double header on October 12th and the Giants comeback victory in the Nippon Series after being down 3-0.  Here's the card for Byrant:

#88
There's a four card "Pop Culture" subset featuring pop culture "things" from the year.  The four "things" are Mr Malick's "Super Magic" TV show(?), Nejime Shoichi winning the Naoki Prize (a literary award) for the novel Kōenji Junjō Shōtengai, the manga series Obatarian winning the Bungeishunjū Manga Award and Yoshiharu Habu winning a major shoji tournament at age 19.  Here's the Habu card:

#93
The final subset is the six card "Born In 1989" subset which features six current players who were born in 1989 (obviously).  The six players are Hikaru Itoh, Yuki Karakawa, Yoshihrio Maru, Tomoya Mikami, Akira Nakamura and Yoshinori Satoh.

#94
I like the set, even if I feel it left a lot of players out.  I'll be curious to see if and how BBM does future editions of this set.  Will they stick with years before they started to make cards (1991)?  I'd love to see a set for 1950 (first year of the two league system) but I doubt that would ever happen - they'd only be able to have maybe three OB players signing autographs.  Moving earlier than the late 70's will make it more difficult to have active players in a "Born In..." subset.  I guess we'll know in the fall.

You can see the entire set (including the insert sets) at Jambalaya and Ryan did a post back in December for the set as well.

I teased this the other day so I will tell the story about the obstacles I had getting this set.  The set came out right around Christmas and I kept searching Yahoo! Japan Auctions for complete sets but I kept not finding any.  Finally after about a week I realized that the search term I was using ("2018 1989") wasn't finding much because most of the sellers had the set listed as a 2017 set.  So once I changed the search terms I finally found a complete set.  But when I went to bid on the auction via Noppin I discovered that they had closed for about five days for New Years.  Since I already had the Fusion and Samurai Japan sets waiting for me with Noppin I didn't want to use JAUCE or kuboTEN to get it.  Luckily the set was still available when Noppin reopened a few days later and I was able to buy the set.  Now obviously before Noppin can ship the set to me, they have to receive the set from the seller.  Usually this only takes a couple days - this time it took a week.  Once they got it, I sent a packing request to them.  They got back to me a day later telling me how much it would cost to ship all three sets (Fusion, Samurai Japan and Time Travel 1989) and I immediately paid it.  Noppin promises that they will ship the next business day after you pay for it.  Of course I paid on a Friday so they didn't ship until Monday.  But finally it had been shipped and I should get it in a couple days, right?  Well, not quite.  Tracking showed that it reached customs in New York - and then the US government shutdown for three days.  I don't know if that actually had any impact on my shipment but it took a whole week to clear customs.  It finally arrived at my house about a week and half ago - 12 days after Noppin shipped it.  But all's well that ends well and these are all first world problems so enough whining.
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