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Broder Takahashis

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A while back I did a post on the six NPB sets that Ed Broder did in the mid 1970'sJason had asked a question in a comment about a couple players who were not completely identified in Engel's checklists for the sets.  Both the JA5 and JA6 sets list a player named "Takahashi".  Unfortunately it's not clear which of about five or six players with that family name active at the time the cards are for.  Engel does not indicate which team "Takahashi" was playing for.  Luckily there was someone selling the cards on Ebay recently and I was able to see the cards and figure out who "Takahashi" was.

The JA5 Takahashi is Kazumi Takahashi of the Giants.  This is a pretty easy id as Kazumi wore #21 and we can see the number on his uniform.


The JA6 Takahashi is a little harder.  There were three Takahashi's with the Fighters that season - Hiroshi, Naoki and Kazumi (who had been traded to Nippon Ham by the Giants for Isao Harimoto in the 1975-76 off-season).  However Naoki and Kazumi were pitchers so I'm pretty confident that this Takahashi is Hiroshi (who was one of the two other players that Nankai sent to the US in 1964 to play in the San Francisco organization along with Masanori Murakami).


I want to point out that I didn't buy either of these cards so I need to thank the Ebay seller (who of course I didn't take note of) for posting the images.

Card Of The Week March 18

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There was a trade last week in NPB - this is notable only because trades in NPB are somewhat rare.  The Hanshin Tigers sent pitcher Daiki Enokida to the Saitama Seibu Lions for pitcher Yosuke Okamoto.  Here's a card of each of the players:

2011 Bandai Owners League 02 ##086

2013 Front Runner Lions Rookies & Young Stars #24
It'll be interesting to see if either of them end up getting cards this year with their new team.  Neither of them have appeared in a flagship set for a couple years now so they will most likely only show up in team sets from either BBM or Epoch.  BBM has not announced either team set yet so it's possible that both players will end up in the set for their new team.  Epoch on the other hand has already announced their Lions set and it will be released in less than a month so it's likely that it will include Okamoto.  There's a pretty good chance that Okamoto will also be in their Tigers set (assuming they do one) and Enokida doesn't get an Epoch team set card at all.  (This happened a couple years ago when the Fighters and Giants made a trade - the two players sent from the Fighters to the Giants showed up in both team's sets but the two going the other way showed up in neither of them.)

Card Of The Week March 25

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Been a busy week - was traveling for work again and just had a lot going on - so I'm just going to show a random card this week.  The January 1957 issue of Yakyu Shonen magazine (published in December of 1956) included baseball cards issued in panels of 10.  Engel has labeled the set as JGA 134 "1956/57 Yakyu Shonen Dice Game" set.  Here's the card of Yukio Shimabara of the Lions:


The panel on the bottom of the card lists the outcomes of dice rolls.

The backs of the cards showed images of Samurai warriors:


Blog Bat Around - My Projects

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Night Owl Cards started a Blog Bat Around a couple weeks ago that asked bloggers to write about their various card collecting projects.  I'm a bit late on this but I thought I jump in on it.

My main card collecting project is the constant acquisition of various new BBM, Calbee and Epoch sets but there's a number of other things that I'm actively working on (although "actively" is a relative term).  Here's the list in order of most likely to get completed to least likely:

2000 Upper Deck Olympics Baseball Team

2000 Upper Deck Olympic Games Japanese Team Cards #216

Back in 2000 Upper Deck released a 264 card set dedicated to the Japanese team for that summer's Olympics in Sydney.  This set included a 19 card subset for the baseball team which included current NPB stars like Daisuke Matsuzaka, So Taguchi, Yukio Tanaka, Norihiro Nakamura and Nobuhiko Matsunaka as well as some corporate league players who would later star in NPB like Norihiro Akahoshi, Toshiya Sugiuchi and Shunsuke Watanabe (but unfortunately not Shinnosuke Abe).  I've been working my way through this subset ever since I first discovered it existed thanks to a post by Ryan over five years ago.  Actually in fairness - Ryan's been working my way through the subset for me and it's kind of cheating for me to include it here because he's actually found the last two cards I needed - I just don't have them in hand yet.  Ryan found my cards while completing the entire 264 set for himself which is a pretty impressive feat.

1978 Yamakatsu JY6 set

1978 Yamakatsu JY6 Sadaharu Oh

I love the cards that Yamakatsu issued in the late 1970's.  One of the more approachable sets was a set issued in 1978 that Engel labels the "JY6" set.  This set has 42 cards in it and is the only set Yamakatsu did that where the cards are close to the standard 2 1/2 by 3 1/2 inch size - all the others are either smaller or much larger.  There's a good collection of stars in the set including Sachio Kinugasa, Koji Yamamoto, Hisashi Yamada, Yutaka Enatsu, Hiromitsu Kadota, Isao Harimoto and two cards of Sadaharu Oh.  I'm down to only needing one card from the set - Koichi Tabuchi.  I've seen it once on Yahoo! Japan Auctions but I (ok, Ryan) got outbid on it.  But I'm optimistic it can be found.

2017 Topps Now WBC set

2017 Topps Now WBC #W-46

I was disappointed that Topps never really did a set for last year's World Baseball Classic so I decided that I would collect the Topps Now cards that they issued - despite the fact that they're much more expensive than I'd like.  I did a pretty good job picking up the low hanging fruit of cheap-ish cards off of both Ebay and COMC but I'm down to 12 cards that I've only been seeing at $15 apiece and above.  It'll get done eventually but it'll take some time.

2009 Konami WBC Inserts

2009 Konami Baseball Heroes WBC "All Tournament Team" #W09A002

2009 Konami Baseball Heroes WBC "Special" #W09S003

Back in 2009 Konami did an amazing set for the World Baseball Classic - a 253 card base set with two 12 card insert sets.  One insert set was for the All Tournament team and the other was simple labeled "Special" cards.  I had complete the base set a few years ago but I hadn't really planned on getting the inserts.  But the guy I used to buy cards from (including this set) had given me the Darvish and Ichiro "special" cards when I met up with him in Tokyo and I found a couple others for not terrible prices on Ebay so I decided to give it a shot.  I've got most of the "Special" cards (Ryan's got five of them waiting for me) but I still have most of the All Tournament team to get.

2003-06 BBM Rookie Edition sets

2003 BBM Rookie Edition #63

2004 BBM Rookie Edition #61

2005 BBM Rookie Edition #12

2006 BBM Rookie Edition #13

I have the complete Rookie Edition base sets from 2007 to the present but I'd like to finish off the first four editions.  I've used the checklists for the sets on the Trading Card Database to determine how many I need and it's not really that many - 24 cards for 2003, 12 for 2004, 15 for 2005 and 17 for 2006.  And I think I already have all the big names (Aoki from the 2004 set and Darvish from the 2005 set) - probably the biggest name I have left is Hideaki Wakui from the 2005 set.  What I need to do is get the list online and added to my Want List.

2017 Topps TBT WBC cards

2017 Topps "Throwback Thursday" #36

Last year Topps issued six "Throwback Thursday" cards on-line for the WBC.  Each card featured a player from the tournament in their nation's uniform.  The cards used the 1988 Topps baseball design.  I had decided to try to get all of these around the time I decided to get all the Topps Now cards.  Normally I probably wouldn't mention a project this small but I've been somewhat stymied after getting four cards.  Of the remaining two cards one of them (Alex Bregman) I only see for at least $20 on Ebay and I have yet to see the other card (Carlos Correa) anywhere.  So this one may take a while.

1994-2000 BBM flagship sets

1994 BBM #363

1998 BBM #72

I have the complete BBM "flagship" base sets from 1991 to 93 and from 2001 to the present.  I'd like to attempt to complete the other seven sets but some of these would be easier than others.  I'm reasonably close on a couple sets - 1994 (a recent pickup on Ebay has left me 45 cards away) and 1998 (roughly 50 although one of them is Yoshinobu Takahashi) - but I'm a bit further away on the others.  I need anywhere from 120 to 300 cards for the other five sets.  Everything other than the 1995 set is probably do-able - I need the puzzle cards and the Late Series card of Kevin Mitchell from 1995 which pushes the cost up quite a bit.  I haven't quite put together checklists for all the sets yet so I'm not organized enough on these yet to really make an effort on them.

1999 Teleca Sets

1999 Teleca #82

1999 Teleca Premium #14

Teleca issued three KBO sets in 1999 and 2000.  I had opened boxes for two of these sets - the 1999 regular set and the 1999 Premium set.  Through help from Dan, George and Justin, I'm down to just needing one card from the regular set and four cards from the Premium set.  These aren't cards that I'm likely to come by on Ebay or anywhere else so I'll probably need to continue to rely on the Three Amigos of KBO Cards to ever complete these sets.

2000 Teleca "'99 Korea Japan Super Games" insert set

2000 Teleca :'99 Korea Japan Super Games" #KJ42

I'd love to get the 2000 Teleca base set as well but I only have about 14 cards from it so that's just not going to happen.  The 2000 set also has a 46 card insert set for the 1999 Korea-Japan Super Games which features some Japanese players as well as Korean ones.  Thanks to Dan, George and Justin I now have 15 of these cards.  Again the only way I'm going to complete the set is to rely on the kindness of the three of them.

Sports Market Report

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I was interviewed a few months back by Sports Market Report (SMR) magazine writer Kevin Glew.  The issue with his articles came out this week.  There really wasn't a lot of his interview with me in the articles - he had a lot more from Gary Engel, Robert Klevens and Rob Fitts (which makes perfect sense) and also from collector David Saba (which also make sense since David is a collector of PSA graded cards - PSA being the publisher of SMR - and I'm not).  Sean was also quoted in an article about Calbee.  Mostly my contributions are in regards to Shohei Ohtani's cards.


The articles by Glew are very comprehensive and quite interesting.  There's also an article by another writer regarding the 1967 Kabaya-Leaf set which is incredibly detailed.  Portions of the magazine will eventually be on-line I think but currently it's only available at the news stand.  The cover price is $7.00.  I assume you can buy it in hobby shops but since I don't usually go to them (I'm unlikely to find any Japanese cards at my local stores) I don't know that for sure.

Card Of The Week April 1

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The NPB season kicked off the other day.  The first (and so far only) player this season to have a multi-homer game was Seiya Inoue of the Marines who did it yesterday by hitting two home runs against the Eagles.  Here's a card of Inoue from the 2014 BBM 2nd Version "Birth Of Hero" subset (#663):


Play Ball! (2018)

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OK, Opening Day was two days ago but I've been inspired by something Night Owl Cards has been doing for the past ten years but I just saw for the first time the other day.  He's been doing a post each year that shows a baseball card from the last year each of the 30 MLB teams last won the World Series (well, make that 23 teams because seven MLB have still never won one).  I saw that and thought to myself "What a great idea that I could totally steal for NPB!"  So here we go with the NPB version:

The last time the HAWKS won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

2017 BBM 1st Version #046
The last time the FIGHTERS won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

2016 BBM 2nd Version #405
The last time the EAGLES won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

2013 BBM 1st Version #246
The last time the GIANTS won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

2012 Bandai Owners League 03 #100
The last time the MARINES won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

2010 BBM 1st Version #378
The last time the LIONS won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

2008 BBM 2nd Version #694
The last time the DRAGONS won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

2007 BBM 1st Version #221
The last time the SWALLOWS won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

2001 Upper Deck #78
The last time the BAYSTARS won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

1998 Calbee #118
The last time the BUFFALOES* won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

1996 BBM #382
The last time the TIGERS won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

1985 Calbee #33 (Randy Bass)
The last time the CARP won the Nippon Series, cards looked like this:

1984 Takara Carp #3 (Sachio Kinugasa)

*The Buffaloes were called the BlueWave in 1996

All 12 current NPB teams have won the Series at least once so there are no "Photo Not Found" teams.

My Other Blog

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I decided to start another blog dedicated to the 1988 Orioles.  The 1988 Orioles were truly a historically bad team but 1988 was a very special year for me and the Orioles, bad as they were, were part of that.  I'm going to try to do a post about every game of the season which I'm sure will end up difficult to maintain but I'm going to give it a shot.

Team Sets Galore!

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There are a bunch of upcoming team sets that have been announced in the past few weeks:

- BBM has announced their annual pack-based team sets for the Baystars, Fighters, Carp and Giants.  I've started referring to these as "comprehensive" team sets because they contain most if not all of the players on each team's 70 man roster at the time the set went to press.  The base set for each of these sets contains 81 cards. 

- There's not a lot of details available for the Baystars set other than it will have 33 associated insert cards - 15 "Phantom" cards and 18 others - and various autographed cards.  It will be released in mid-April. 

- There's a little more detail on the Fighters set (which will be released in early May).  The base set is broken into 71 "regular" cards for the manager, players and probably mascots, a three card "Fresh Breeze" subset, a four card "The Beginning" subset and a three card "Centerpiece" subset.  There's a whopping 48 insert cards available - three "Thunder & Lightning" cards, six "Future Is Born" cards, nine "Diamond Dust" cards, 18 "Phantom" cards and 12 "Royal Purple" cards.  There are jersey cards available for Hirotoshi Takanashi, Go Matsumoto, Kensuke Kondoh and Kohei Arihara as well as a bunch of autographed cards that are not fully defined. 

- The base set for the Carp set breaks down to 69 cards for the manager, players and mascot (probably), three cards for "Youngsters Of Expectation", four cards for "Main Pitchers" and five cards for "Main Hitters".  Like the Fighters set there are 48 insert cards - six "Starting Pitcher", three "Relief Pitcher", two "Main Types Of Defense", three "Hits Production Machines", four "Kinds Of Weight Bowing Line", 12 "Royal Purple" and 18 "Phantom" (most of those are probably not the real names of the insert sets).  There are jersey cards available for Akitake Okada, Yoshiharu Maru, Ryusuke Kikuchi, Kosuke Tanaka and Kazuki Yabuta as well as an undefined as of press time batch of autograph cards.  The set will be out in mid-May. 

- The Giants base set breaks down to 67 "regular" cards for the manager and players, a single checklist card that also features the mascots, a four card "New Arrivals" subset, a three card "Giant Guns" subset, a three card "High Quality Triangle" subset and a three card "Young Sinergy" subset.  There are three different parallels of each of the "regular" cards - gold leaf, holo foil and orange foil - I'm assuming these are all facsimile signature parallels but I could be wrong.  There are 66(!) insert cards - 15 "Giants Pride" (which have serially numbered parallels), three "My Generation" (which also have serially numbered parallels), 18 "Cross Foil Signing" (serially numbered to 15), nine "Super Metallic Giants" (serially numbered to the player's uniform number - so there's only six Hayato Sakamoto cards for example.  These are available via an exchange card), three "Triplex" (these are 3D cards that are serially numbered to 25) and 18 "Phantom" cards (serially numbered to 25).  There will also be memorabilia and autographed cards but what they are were not listed at press time.  There set will be out in mid-May.

- In addition to the Carp "comprehensive" team set, BBM is also releasing a "Premium" box set for the team called "Carp Invincible".  This is a 29 card box set.  Each box contains the entire 27 card base set plus one "Invincible" insert card (one of six possible) and one autographed card.  The autographed card may be of a player who is not in the base set.  This set reminds me quite a bit of the "Premium" team sets BBM did last year for the 2016 pennant winning Carp and Fighters so it wouldn't surprise me to see a similar set for the Hawks be released in the next month (and before you email me to correct me, keep in mind that in NPB the pennant winner is the team that finished first, not the team that wins the Climax Series, so the 2017 Central League pennant was won by the Carp, not the Baystars).  The set will be released in late April.

- Epoch has announced three more of their team based "Rookies & Stars" sets.  The newly announced ones are for the Swallows, Dragons and Buffaloes.  Each of these features a 90 card base set along with various insert and autograph cards.  I'm more convinced than ever that Epoch is attempting to challenge BBM in the "comprehensive" team set arena.  This is now five announced "Rookies & Stars" sets and one of these (the Buffaloes) is a team that Epoch did not do an inexpensive team set for last year.  The first of these sets (for the Carp) is due to be released this weekend and then we'll know for sure if it is a comprehensive set (potentially including the ikusei players who have not been included in BBM's team sets for the past few years).  The Swallows set will be released on April 21st, the Buffaloes set will be out on May 12th and the Dragons set will be released on May 19th.

- Hits has announced another "Mini Color Paper" team set this year - this time it's for the Hawks.  There are 12 players represented in the set and each player has two versions of a "card" - a "normal mini colored paper" and a "gold foil signed special mini colored paper".  The set comes out in early April.

Epoch One

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I used to make April Fools' jokes here on the blog.  Most of them weren't particularly clever and I ran out of ideas after a couple years.  But I still think try to think of ones and I this year I considered trying to make some joke about BBM doing a version of Topps Now.  I just really couldn't come up with anything funny to say about the idea - other than maybe BBM publishing them within 30 minutes of the game ending and each card having some ridiculous number of parallels.  As I said, I really couldn't come up with anything good - which is why I didn't do a post for it.

It turns out that it's probably good that I didn't try to joke about it because it turns out that Epoch is actually doing it!  I got a tweet from Kenny (aka Zippy Zappy) the other night telling me that Epoch had launched something called Epoch One which was their version of Topps Now.  There's a couple nice differences though - the cards are only 500 yen (about $5) and they are available for about three days.  There are discounts for ordering several cards at one - 3 cards are 1350 yen, 5 cards are 2000 yen and 10 cards are 3500 yen.  There doesn't appear to be a shipping charge.

On the negative side however - they don't ship to the US.  Kenny already sent them an email and asked.  So the only way to get them outside of Japan would be to use a proxy company (although none of them are set up to buy from them automatically so you'd need to contact them to ask if they'd do it) or have a friend in Japan who can order them for you.  They also apparently only have licenses with seven teams to do cards - the Lions, the Dragons, the Tigers, the Marines, the Giants, the Carp and the Fighters.

As of right now there's 35 cards so far through the games of April 4.  I swiped the image of the front and back of the first card from their site:



Each card has a couple numbers on the back.  The number at the upper left is the overall card number.  There's a number at the lower right that is the team-specific number.  This particular card is "NF-001".  The card will also have the number of cards in the print run on the lower left side.

I think this is a cool idea and I wish there was an easy way for me to get some of them.  I don't want to get all of them - I mean even at 350 yen a card we're already looking at over 10,000 yen for what they've put out just in the first week of the season.

Card Of The Week April 8

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I wasn't going to feature Shohei Ohtani this week.

I really wasn't.  I knew he had a good week.  His first MLB start as pitcher last Sunday went pretty well - he went six innings against Oakland and gave up three runs on three hits and a walk while striking out six.  The only real blemish was the three run home run he gave up to Matt Chapman.  Then as a batter this week he homered in his first three home games - Tuesday vs the Indians (in his first at bat at Angel Stadium), Wednesday against the Indians again and then Friday against the A's.  But I wasn't going to feature him this week.

I've probably featured Ohtani in Card Of The Week more than any other player.  Frankly I'm not sure how many cards I have of Ohtani that I haven't already shown on the blog.  And there were others to consider.  Takahiro Norimoto got his 1000th career strikeout on Friday.  The Lions have won their first 8 games of the season.  And 300+ pound Japhet Amador stole a base yesterday - his first steal ever in NPB.  So I was going to go with Amador.

And then Ohtani had his second start as a pitcher today.

He was perfect for the first 6 1/3 innings of the game.  He ended up going 7 innings, giving up one hit and one walk while striking out 12.  And it seemed he was pitching effortlessly, at least until the seventh inning.  He struck out the side twice - in the first and fifth innings - and it didn't seem like any ball got hit particularly well off him.  It was one of the best pitching performances I've ever watched on TV.

The 2018 season is now 11 days old and Ohtani is 2-0 with a 2.08 ERA.  He's given up four hits and two walks in 13 innings while striking out 18.  As a batter he's hitting .389 with an OBP of .421 and a slugging percentage off .889.  He's 7 for 16 with three home runs and seven RBIs.  He's walked once and struck out four times.  It's early but so far it doesn't look like Ohtani is having issues adjusting to MLB.  Now obviously MLB will be adjusting to him and how successful he continues to be will depend on how he adjusts to the league's adjustments (and so on) but he's doing well for now.

I thought I'd show off a subset that BBM included in their 2014 Fighters which commemorated Ohtani's first three wins and first three home runs of the 2013 season (he went 3-0 that year with four home runs).  I've shown two of these cards before but here's all six:

2014 BBM Fighters #F76

2014 BBM Fighters #F77

2014 BBM Fighters #F78

2014 BBM Fighters #F79

2014 BBM Fighters #F80

2014 BBM Fighters #F81

Sports Market Report Follow Up

Card Of The Week April 15

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I've got three hours before Shohei Ohtani's start against the Royals today makes me change my mind about what I'm posting about...

The Marines and Hawks were tied 5-5 going into the ninth inning in their game today in Kagoshima.  Softbank brought Dennis Sarfate to hold off Lotte in the ninth but he ended up giving up the go-ahead run.  In the bottom of ninth though, Yuki Yanagita came up with a runner on and did this:




Yanagita said after the game that "Safe-chan and Ls don't go together".

Here's Yanagita's rookie card from the 2011 BBM 1st Version set (#024):


Study Abroad - The Dragons And The Dodgers

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The Chunichi Dragons made some big changes during the offseason between the 1986 and 1987 seasons.  The Dragons had won the Central League pennant in 1982 but had finished fifth three times in the following four seasons.  Kazuhiro Yamauchi, their manager at the beginning of 1986, was forced to resign during the season due to health issues and Morimichi Takagi ran the team the second half of the season (the first of three separate times he was Dragons manager).  For 1987 the team decided to go in a different direction and instead of letting Takagi continue with the team, they brought in former Dragons pitcher Senichi Hoshino as manager.  Their other big personnel move of the offseason was the trade with Lotte that brought 1986 Triple Crown winner Hiromitsu Ochiai to the team (at the cost of four players).

But their other move of the offseason was to form a partnership with the Los Angeles Dodgers.  This was a bit of a coup as the Dodgers had for years been associated with the Yomiuri Giants with the Giants having done spring training with the team in Vero Beach, Florida five times between 1961 and 1981.  I'm not sure what all the parameters of the partnership with the Dodgers was or how long it lasted but it manifested itself in three obvious ways.  The first is that the Dragons uniforms closely resembled those of the Dodgers for the next 17 years (really until Ochiai became manager in 2004).  The second is that the Dragons did spring training with the Dodgers in Vero Beach in the spring of 1988.  The third is that 10 players from the Dragons played in the Dodgers organization between 1987 and 1989.

The first two players Chunichi sent to America were teenagers Tetsuo Arakawa and Takeshi Yamasaki who were assigned to the Dodgers team in the Gulf Coast League.  Neither one played a whole lot - Yamasaki got into 10 games (5 in the field at first base) and went 0-10 with 3 walks and 4 strikouts.  Arakawa got into only four games (three in the field at shortstop) and went 0-3, striking out in all three at bats.

The Dragons sent five players to the Dodgers organization in 1988.  Again two players were sent to the Dodgers' entry in the Gulf Coast League - outfielders Kazuyoshi Kohyama and Yasuharu Fujio - but this time they got more of an opportunity to play and made the most of it.  Kohyama (whose NPB stats are listed separately at Baseball-Reference under Kazuyoshi Koyama) hit .311 in 61 games.  Fujio only got into 16 games in the GCL but his .375 average with one home run earned him a mid-season promotion to the Dodgers' Short Season Low A Northwest League team in Salem, Oregon where he hit .200 in 19 games.  Fujio joined third baseman Hiroyuki Maehara (who's name is mispelled "Maebara" in Baseball-Reference) in Salem, who hit .196 in 54 games.  Maehara also pitched in one game, giving up two hits in two innings while striking out two.  The best performances by Dragons players in the US that year however were in Vero Beach of the Florida State League where two pitchers - Masahiro Yamamoto and Hidetsugu Nishimura - put up impressive numbers as members of the team's rotation most of the season.  Yamamoto went 13-7 with a 2.00 ERA and 105 strikeouts in 148 2/3 innings.  He had six complete games and three shutouts.  He was named to East team for the mid-season Florida State League All Star game as well as the post-season league-wide All Star team.  Nishimura went 11-3 with a 3.34 ERA and 124 strikeouts in 148 1/3 innings.  He had three complete games and two shutouts.

Chunichi dispatched three pitchers to North America for 1989.  One of them, Koji Takaheshi, started the season with the GCL Dodgers (going 1-0 with a save in three appearances with 11 strikeouts in 12 1/3 innings and a perfect 0.00 ERA) before he was promoted to Vero Beach where he didn't perform quite as well (0-4 with an ERA of 5.18).  He joined fellow Chunichi players Masaaki Kamanaka and Yasuhiro Kawabata in Florida.  Kamanaka went 3-3 with 3 saves in 33 games mostly in relief.  He had an ERA of 3.91 and 52 strikeouts in 92 1/3 innings.  Kawabata went 5-3 with a 3.00 ERA in 11 games as a starter.  He threw one complete game (a shutout) and struck out 47 in 69 innings.

Here's a summary of the 10 players and their NPB careers:

YearPlayerTeamsDraft RoundNPB Career
1987Tetsuo ArakawaGCL Dodgers1986 4thDragons 1987-89
1987Takeshi YamasakiGCL Dodgers1986 2ndDragons 1987-2002, BlueWave 2003-04, Eagles 2005-11, Dragons 2012-13
1988Yasuharu FujioGCL Dodgers/Salem1983 1stDragons 1984-89, Hawks 1990-92
1988Kazuyoshi KohyamaGCL Dodgers1984 6thDragons 1985-97
1988Hiroyuki MaeharaSalem Dodgers1985 5thDragons 1986-95, Lions 1996-2000
1988Hidetsugu NishimuraVero Beach Dodgers1986 3rdDragons 1987-89, Hawks 1989-92
1988Masahiro YamamotoVero Beach Dodgers1983 5thDragons 1984-2015
1989Masaaki KamanakaVero Beach Dodgers1987 2ndDragons 1988-95, Buffaloes 1996
1989Yasuhiro KawabataVero Beach Dodgers1984 2ndDragons 1985-91, BlueWave 1995-95, Dragons 1996
1989Koji TakaheshiGCL Dodgers/Vero Beach1987 6thDragons 1988-92

Masahiro Yamamoto and Takeshi Yamasaki were the most successful of the players the Dragons sent to the Dodgers organization.  Yamamoto played with the ichi-gun Dragons in parts of 29 seasons between 1986 and 2015.  I did a summary of his career when he retired a few years ago so won't go into a whole lot of detail.  He did return to Chunichi from Vero Beach in 1988 and went into the Dragons rotation for September where he went 5-0 helping the Dragons win the Central League pennant.  He also started (and lost) Game Three of the Nippon Series that year.  There are many Japanese baseball cards of Yamamoto available.

2015 Calbee "Exciting Scene" #ES-10
Yamasaki spent parts of 25 years with the top level teams in NPB.  He was with the Dragons until they traded him to Orix after the 2002 season.  After two years in Kobe he moved north to Sendai and spent the next seven seasons with the Eagles.  He came back to the Dragons for the final two years of his career in 2012-13.  Like Yamamoto I wrote a summary of his career when he retired and like Yamamoto there are quite a few Japanese baseball cards of Yamasaki out there.

2001 Upper Deck #62
Hiroyuki Maehara had the longest career of the remaining players.  He made the All Star team in 1992 and was traded to the Lions in 1996 along with Masaji Shimizu for Katsuyoshi Murata and Kazuaki Yamano (who had played in the US with San Jose in 1986-87).  He was player/coach for two years with an industrial league team (Showa Concrete) after the Lions released him and later coached for the Mie Three Arrows indy league team and the Dragons.  He had a handful of Japanese baseball cards (although oddly enough he did not make the 1992 BBM All Stars set).

1994 BBM #299
Kazuyoshi Koyama played in the Dragons organization until 1997 but he spent most of his time with the farm team.  The only year he had more than 100 at bats with the ichi-gun team was 1990.  He has only two Japanese cards I'm aware of - both from 1991.

1991 Takara Dragons #44
Yasuhiro Kawabata had spent parts of three seasons with the top team before going to Vero Beach in 1989.  He returned to the Dragons that season in time to get in 20 games with them, going 7-1.  He was traded to Orix for Toyozo Minamimure early in the 1991 season.  He spent a couple of years in their bullpen but only played for the farm team in his last couple seasons - including a final season when he returned to the Dragons.  He apparently is currently an official scorer for the Buffaloes.  There are a handful of Japanese baseball cards of him.  

1990 Takara Dragons #53
Yasuharu Fujio was the first pick of the Dragons in the fall 1983 draft out of Kyoei High School in Nagoya.  It was hoped that he would become a power hitting third baseman for his hometown team but he never really developed into this role.  Following the 1989 season Chunichi traded him and Yoshihisa Komatsuzaki to the Nippon Ham Fighters for "the other' Yukio Tanaka (the pitcher obviously) and Kazuo Hayakawa.  He spent three years with the Fighters but his numbers never really improved and he retired following the 1992 season.  He has a number of Japanese baseball cards but I don't have any of them.

There are no Japanese baseball cards of the remaining four players that I am aware of.

Despite putting up good numbers in Vero Beach in 1988, Hidetsugu Nishimura didn't have a lot of success in NPB.  He had gone 0-1 with an ERA of 9.00 in four games with the Dragons in 1987.  In mid-1989 the Dragons capitalized on his success in Florida by packaging him with Koichi Emoto in a trade to the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks for Takayuki Shirai and Hiromichi Nakamura (Emoto would be sent by Daiei to Salinas in the California League in 1990).  He went 0-1 in 16 games with the ichi-gun Hawks over the next three and a half years and retired following the 1992 season.

Masaaki Kamanaka's Dragons career lasted until 1995 but he spent almost the entire time with the farm team - he made two appearances with the top team in 1992 where he gave up 3 hits (including two home runs) and three runs in two innings.  He spent 1996 with the Kintetsu Buffaloes' farm team before retiring.  Koji Takaheshi only played in six games with the ichi-gun Dragons (in 1990) while Tetsuo Arakawa never made it off the farm team.

In the late 1980's it was still kind of hit or miss whether or not a minor league team would have a team set of baseball cards and of the five teams that the Dragons players were part of, only Vero Beach had cards (although even today I wouldn't expect a Gulf Coast League team to have a card set).  Both of the Vero Beach team sets were produced by Star.  Four of the five Japanese players who played in Florida ended up having cards - Yamamoto and Nishimura from 1988 and Kamanaka and Kawabata in 1989.  Here are images of the front and back of all four cards, swiped either from TradingCardDB.com or Ebay:









In addition, Yamamoto also appeared in the 1988 Florida State League All Star set (also from Star).  I swiped these images from TradingCardDB.com as well:



Kamanaka and Nishimura both have American minor league baseball cards but do not have Japanese cards.  These are the earliest cards for both Yamamoto and Kawabata.

In addition Chunichi apparently sent a coach to at least Vero Beach in at least the 1989 season.  The 1989 team set included a card of Jun Irisawa who I have not been able to identify at all.



2018 Epoch "Rookies And Stars" Team Sets

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I wanted to do a quick post about the "Rookies And Stars" team sets that Epoch is publishing this year.  I don't know for sure if they are planning these sets for all 12 teams but they have already released sets for two teams (the Carp and the Lions) and have announced three others (the Buffaloes, the Dragons and the Swallows).  From the size of the base sets (90 cards) for these sets I suspected that Epoch was doing a "comprehensive" team set for each team - by that I mean that there would be a card for every player on the team's 70 man roster plus the manager.  BBM's annual pack based team sets are "comprehensive" team sets (as opposed to their smaller team box sets).  Epoch's team sets from last year were also not comprehensive.

I was curious about something with the sets though - since typically the 70 man roster for each team doesn't actually have 70 players on it, how were they getting a base set of 90 cards out of it?  BBM for the last 4 years has done their team sets with 81 card base sets - 70-ish cards for the players and manager and 11-ish cards for the mascots and various subsets.  There was no indication on the pre-sell information on Epoch's sets that explained how the sets would be made up (or at least nothing that I understood).  So I was going to have to wait until the sets got released.

The Carp set got released the weekend of April 7th and Jambalaya had the cards on-line as usual.  And I had my answer - the set only features 69 individuals - 67 players plus manager Koichi Ogata and the mascot.  The set is numbered 1-69.  However there are 15 players who have multiple cards in the set - 9 "Stars" (Daichi Ohsera, Kris Johnson, Shogo Sakakura, Kosuke Tanaka, Takahiro Arai, Ryosuke Kikuchi, Ryoma Nishikawa, Yoshiharu Maru and Seiya Suzuki) who each have two cards and six "Rookies" (2017 draftees Makoto Kenma, Sho Yamaguchi, Atsushi Endoh, Takato Hiraoka, Shosei Nakamura and Atsushi Nagai) who each have three cards in the set.  As far as I can tell, none of the multiple cards are short printed "variants" like Epoch did last year.  Each card for a player has the same number along with the letter "a", "b" or "c" - so Shosei Nakamura's three cards are numbered 36a, 36b and 36c.  The Carp currently have six players on their ikusei squad (including three players taken in that portion of last fall's draft) that I wondered if Epoch would include in the set (BBM regularly included ikusei players in their team sets until 2015) but they did not.

Epoch released the Lions set last weekend and it's very similar to the Carp set.  The set also only features 69 individuals - 67 players plus manager Hatsuhiko Tsuji and farm team manager Tetsuya Shiozaki.  Once again the set is numbered 1-69 and there are 21 players with multiple cards.  There are four big differences between this set and the Carp set.  Number 1 - each of the 21 players who have multiple cards only have 2 cards each (which you could have probably figured out from the math - 90 minus 69 equals 21).  Number 2 - only the top three 2017 draft picks (Hiromasa Saito, Manaya Nishikawa and Sho Itoh) have multiple cards - the remaining ones have only one card each.  The other 18 players with multiple cards are all "Stars" - Neil Wagner,Yusei Kikuchi, Hayato Takagi, Fabio Castillo, Brian Wolfe, Tomoya Mori, Ginjiro Sumitani, Hideto Asamura, Shuta Tonosaki, Sosuke Genda, Hotaka Yamakawa, Takeya Nakamura, Ernesto Mejia, Takumi Kuriyama, Kazuo Matsui, Yuji Kaneko, Fumikazu Kimura and Shogo Akiyama.  Number 3 - there's no card for the Lions mascot(s).  Number 4 - there are cards for the two Lions ikusei players - Masato Saito and Wataru Takagi. 

Interestingly the Lions had made a trade during spring training where they sent Yosuke Okamoto to the Hanshin Tigers for Daiki Enokida.  Neither Okamoto or Enokida appear in this set so I'm betting the set went to press right around the time of the trade - Epoch had enough time to remove Okamoto (and replace his card in the set so they still had 90 cards) but not enough time to get a card done of Enokida.

Epcoh assigned the card numbers in the sets in the same style that BBM uses - first the manager, next coaches (if any) in order by uniform number, then pitchers by uniform number, catchers by uniform number, infielders by uniform number and finally outfielders by uniform number.  What this means is that it's likely that some teams will have identical checklists between the Epoch and BBM team sets.

The fact that the "Rookies And Stars" team sets look like they do further confirms to me that Epoch is really challenging BBM's place at the top of the Japanese baseball card market.  It will be interesting to see how this plays out the rest of the year.  Will Epoch possibly bring back the All Star or Nippon Series box sets?  Will they release a draft pick set to rival BBM's Rookie Edition?  Maybe one with something other than the standard "guts' poses for all the draftees?  I think it will be fun to see how this all plays out.

New Releases

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I wanted to do a quick round up of some newly announced and newly released sets.

- BBM doesn't have anything about it on their website yet but they will be releasing their annual pack-based Lions team set on May 29.  As has been standard for the past couple years the base set will have 81 cards which include 68 "regular" player cards, 6 "Catch The Moment" cards, 3 "Accelerator" cards and 4 "Reign Men" cards.  There are 30 insert cards split between "Sparkling" (3 cards), "Rocket Arms" (3 cards), "Big Bangs" (3 cards), "Pride Of Lions" (9 cards) and the ubiquitous "Phantom" (12 cards).  There will also be randomly inserted autograph cards.

- Hits has announced a new "Mini Color Paper" set.  Instead of a team this time the set is to commemorate Yasuaki Yamasaki's 100th career save.  There are 16 possible "cards" - 8 normal ones and 8 "gilded print signed special" ones.  The set will be released May 25th.

- The Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles have released their annual team set.  This is available in boxes of 20 packs of six cards.  The base set contains 98 cards - 81 "regular" player cards (including 14 ikusei players), 10 "New Uniform" cards, and single cards commemorating the Eagles rookie class, Takahiro Norimoto's 8 straight 10+ strikeout games last year, Ryo Hijirasawa's 1000th game played, Koji Aoyama's 500th pitching appearance, Ginji Akaminai's Golden Glove award and Ginji and Zelous Wheeler's Best 9 Awards.  There are also 10 "Tohoku Pride" insert cards (which I think are die-cut), two possible jersey/patch memorabilia cards and 40 possible autographed cards.  Jambalaya has all the cards online here.

- @lovelovemarines gave me a heads up the other day that Lotteria, a convenience store chain in Japan that I think is owned by Lotte, has some promotion going on that involves a 10 card set of Chiba Lotte Marines baseball cards.  I did a little searching on the internet and found a news release about it but unfortunately it's a scanned in version of the press release so I can't have Google translate it.  I think the cards are given away with a meal from the store that comes in a box that features the Marines "mysterious fish" mascot.  The 10 cards include cards for 8 players (Takashi Ogino, Katsuya Kakunaka, Daichi Suzuki, Shogo Nakamura, Shohei Kato, Chihaya Sasaki, Tatsuhiro Tamura and Kota Futaki), manager Tadahito Iguchi and the Marines' 2018 rookie class.  I believe that the meals with the cards are available from Opening Day (March 30) until the end of the season (October 2).  I'm not sure if there are available at all Lotterias, only Lotterias in Chiba or only at the Marines' ballpark.  This is the picture of an ad for the set that @lovelovemarines shared with me:


- For the third year in a row Nippon-Ham is releasing a Fighters' team set with their "Home Run Sausage" productThe checklist for their first series is on-line - there's 74 cards that includes a card for manager Hideki Kuriyama, four cards for their mascots and 69 cards for the Fighters' players.

- After SMG lost their KBO license early last year there have been no KBO cards beyond a couple team issued sets.  That will change later this week when a new company, SCC, releases their first set.  It will be available in boxes of 20 packs of 7 cards.  The base set will have 224 cards.  In addition there will be 50 "rare" cards, 22 "rookie" cards, 10 Jersey cards, 50 "limited" cards, and 63 autographed cards.  George broke the news on this and has all the details here.  The boxes are retailing for 60,000 won (~$56) but can be found on-line for a little less than that (54,000 won or ~$51).

Card Of The Week April 22

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Kotaro Kiyomiya, the Fighters 1st round pick in last fall's draft has been having a slow start to his professional career.  He came into last Friday's ni-gun Fighters game batting just .111 in his first 7 games.  On Friday however he hit his first two professional home runs (both three run jacks off of Yuji Nishino of the Marines and followed that up today with a solo home run off of Lotte's Kazunari Abe.  He's raised his average up to .219 with his big weekend.

Here's the videos of the home runs (courtesy of Pacific League TV of course):





I've got both the new Calbee Series One and BBM 1st Version sets in the mail the other day.  I've been in-processing both sets (along with the BBM Hawks 80th Anniversary set) for the last couple days.  I should get to posts for all three sets in the next few days.  In the meantime, here's Kiyomiya's cards from the Calbee and 1st Version sets:

2018 Calbee #D-05

2018 BBM 1st Version #129

RIP Sachio Kinugasa

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Hall Of Famer Sachio Kinugasa has passed away from colon cancer at age 71.  Kinugasa played for the Hiroshima Toyo Carp for 23 seasons between 1965 and 1987.  He is best known for breaking Lou Gehrig's consecutive games played streak but he also hit over 500 home runs in his career.  His Baseball-Reference Bullpen biography goes into a lot of detail about his career so I won't repeat it here.

There were many baseball cards of Kinugasa issued, both during his career and after.  Here are a handful:

1975/76 Calbee #972

1977 Yamakatsu JY4

1979 Calbee Nippon Series

1984 Calbee #18

1985 Calbee #200

1985 Calbee #200 (Back)

2001 BBM #541

2011 Epoch 1987 #49

2014 BBM The National Honor #07

2018 Calbee Series One

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Calbee's first set for the year, Series One, was released about a month ago.  Well I say their first set but it's really just the first part of their set this year.  Assuming no typhoon-induced potato shortages in Japan this year, this is just the first third of Calbee's 2018 set.  Series Two should be out in June and Series Three is expected to be released in September.

Calbee's sets are pretty consistent from year to year and there's not a whole lot of surprises this year.  The biggest change this year is that the text on the front of the card is in Japanese rather than English.  This is only the second time since 1989 that there's no English on the regular cards - the 2016 cards also had no English text.  The other "surprise" this year is that the subset/non-premium insert set with Series One is not the "Title Holders" subset that it's been the past two years, instead it's a 12 subset featuring the first round picks from last fall's draft.  More about that in a minute.

Other than that, this is a pretty standard Calbee set.  There's 72 "regular" player cards (six per team) which has been the usual the past few years.  I had noticed the last two Series One sets were kind of lacking in star players and I figured it was because they were in the "Title Holder" subsets.  But as I mentioned this year there's no "Title Holder" subset and the set still is missing most of the big names.  Tetsuto Yamada, Yoshitomo Tsutsugoh, Takehiro Norimoto, Yuki Yanagita, Hayato Sakamoto, and Tomoyuki Sugano are not in the set.  It's not a big deal because they will all be in at least one of the other two Series but it's still kind of disappointing.  On the other hand, the set does include guys like Seiya Suzuki, Sho Nakata, Kosuke Tanaka, Kazuo Matsui (who is the only player who switched teams this winter included in the set), Ryosuke Kikuchi, Randy Messenger, Seiichi Uchikawa, Dennis Sarfate, Takeya Nakamura, Hotaka Yamakawa, Wladimir Balentien, Jose Lopez, Zelous Wheeler, Eigoro Mogi and Yasuaki Yamasaki.  Calbee's photos are usually a strength for them and there's some good looking ones in the set but they do fall into the rut of having too many generic shots of pitchers pitching and batters batting.  There's a couple cards of players celebrating milestones though - Shinnosuke Abe (2000 hits), Masahiro Araki (2000 hits) and Nobuhiro Matsuda (200 home runs).  Here's some example cards:

#005 (Dennis Sarfate)

#009 (Kazuo Matsui)

#024 (Kenya Wakatsuki)

#029 (Taishi Ohta)

#041 (Ryosuke Kikuchi)

#057 (Shinnosuke Abe)
In addition to the 72 "regular" player cards there are two subsets - the afore-mentioned 12 card 1st Round Draft pick subset (called "Dora-Ichi) and four checklist cards.  The "Dora-Ichi" cards are just what you'd expect - a card for each team's 1st round draft pick.  The biggest names so far from the subset are Kotaro Kiyomiya of the Fighters and Shohei Nakamura of the Carp.

#D-07
Each of the four checklist cards feature scenes from late last season - the Hawks celebrating their Nippon Series championship on November 4th, the Carp celebrating clinching the Central League pennant on September 18th, the Lions 13 game winning streak last August and Takeshi Toritani getting his 2000th hit on September 8th.  Not sure why Toritani is on a checklist card while Abe, Araki and Matsuda got player cards but that's what they did.

#C-4
All 86 cards of the base set can be seen over at Jambalaya along with the insert cards (3 "Legend" and 24 "Star" cards) and the "Special Limited Edition" box set that I think it available via a mail-in redemption of "Lucky Cards".  Sean's done some posts about the set as well.

2018 BBM Hawks 80th Anniversary

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The Hawks are celebrating their 80th Anniversary this year.  The team was founded in Osaka in 1938 as Nankai and took on the Hawks moniker in 1947 (with the team known as Kinki Nippon and Kinki Great Ring for a few years during the war and right after).  Nankai sold the team to the supermarket chain Daiei in 1988 and the team moved to Kyushu to become the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks.  Daiei sold the team in 2005 to Softbank and the team was renamed the Fukuoka Softbank Hawks.

This is the third Anniversary set BBM has done for the Hawks - they did a 70th Anniversary set in 2008 and a 75th Anniversary set in 2013 (they also did a set in 2015 celebrating the 10th Anniversary of Softbank buying the team but that only covered the years since 2005 obviously).  Those sets had 99 cards each in their base sets but the base set for this set is only 90 cards (which is 9 cards larger than the last couple 80th Anniversary team sets BBM has done - the 2015 Tigers and the 2016 Dragons sets).  The 90 cards breaks down to 9 "Hawks History" cards, 48 cards of OB Hawks players and managers (and player-managers) and 33 cards of current Hawks players.

The "Hawks History" cards are odd for a couple reasons.  The first is that they are numbered separately from the rest of the set - #HH1 to #HH9.  The second odd thing is that instead of covering the entire range of the team's history, the subset only covers until 1968.  I think but I don't know for sure that this has something to do with the Hawks legendary manager Kazuto Tsuruoka ending his 23 year tenure at the helm of the team that year.  It would be the 50th anniversary of his stepping down this year.  Each card covers anywhere from 1 to 7 years during this time.  Each of the two years that Nankai won the Nippon Series during this period has a card to itself - like this one for 1959:

#HH5
The OB player section is a little different from the previous two Hawks Anniversary set.  For one thing at 48 cards it's almost 20 cards smaller than the other sets had.  For another all the players in the subset are actually retired,  The previous sets included players who were still active but playing for other teams either in NPB or MLB.  Off hand the only significant player I can think of who would be excluded because of this is Toshiya Sugiuchi of the Giants.  The players who show up in this subset are pretty much everyone you'd expect - Tsuruoka, Sadaharu Oh (as manager of course), Katsuya Nomura, Tadashi Sugiura, Hiromitsu Kadota, Hiroki Kokubo, Tatahito Iguchi, Kenji Johjima, Nobuhiko Matsunaka, Kimiyasu Kudoh, Koji Akiyama and Yoshinori Hirose are all in the set.  As is typical for a set like this there are very few players from before 1970.  The only gaijin player in the set is Joe Stanka which is a bit odd as the previous sets had included Don Blasingame (who managed the team in the early 1980's), Julio Zuleta, Rod Pedraza, Tony Bernazard and Clarence Jones.  Masanori Murakami and Yutaka Enatsu are probably the most significant Japanese players not included in the set after being in the previous sets (although Enatsu was only in the 2008 set and hasn't been in a BBM set since late 2013).  One player I just realized is missing not only from this set but the other two is Kent Hadley, who hit 131 home runs for the Hawks between 1962 and 1967.

#01

#40

#07

#18

#30
 The 33 cards of active (as of 2017) Hawks players is the largest active player subset in any BBM Anniversary set.  It includes all the major players for the Hawks (as you would expect from the size) - Yuki Yanagita, Seiichi Uchikawa, Kenta Imamiya, Dennis Sarfate, Munenori Kawasaki, Tsuyoshi Wada, Nobuhiro Matsuda, Alfredo Despaigne and Seiji Uebayashi.  Actually the only guy I can think of who I'm surprised is not in the set is Rick Van Den Hurk.  What's interesting about this subset is none of the players are wearing Softbank uniforms.  With one exception they are wearing "Turn-Back-The-Clock" throwback uniforms from various years.  Most of these are from 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2017 although the Daiei Hawks throwbacks are from 2008 (there's a notation on the lower right of the back of each card indicating the month and year that the photo is from).  The exception is the card of Wada which is from 2003 when the Hawks actually wore those uniforms.

#51

#62

#75

#63

#67

#55
I really like this set a lot.  It's very attractive and while it's probably missing enough significant players to not truly be a comprehensive history of the Hawks, it complements the other two sets pretty well without being redundant (which is how I felt towards the 80th Anniversary sets for the Tigers and Dragons).  It's easily the most attractive Anniversary set BBM has done since the 2014 Giants 80th Anniversary set and one of the best they've ever done. 

Ryan did a post about this set yesterday.  You can see all the cards (including the insert sets) over at Jambalaya.
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