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2018 Award Winners

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NPB announced most of their major awards this week.  The league MVPs were Hotaka Yamakawa of the Lions and Yoshihiro Maru of the Carp:

2018 BBM 1st Version #042

2018 BBM 1st Version #181
I'll also mention here that Tomoyuki Sugano was named the Sawamura Award winner for the second year in a row a few weeks back:

2018 BBM 1st Version #245
Kazuki Tanaka of the Eagles and Katsuki Azuma of the Baystars were the Pacific and Central League Rookie Of The Year winners respectively:

2018 Calbee #161

2018 Calbee D-09
Calbee was the only company that had a flagship card of Tanaka this year.  He was taken in the 2016 draft so even though he was still officially a rookie this year all his rookie cards were from last year.

The Best 9 teams were announced this week as well.  Here's the Pacific League team:

2018 Epoch NPB #39

2018 Epoch NPB #51

2018 Epoch NPB #56

2018 Epoch NPB #53

2018 Epoch NPB #20

2018 Epoch NPB #55

2018 Epoch NPB #26

2018 Epoch NPB #66

2018 Epoch NPB #134

2018 Epoch NPB #160
And the Central League team:

2018 Epoch NPB #328

2018 Epoch NPB #232

2018 Epoch NPB #385

2018 Epoch NPB #410

2018 Epoch NPB #309

2018 Epoch NPB #342

2018 Epoch NPB #242

2018 Epoch NPB #245

2018 BBM Genesis #079
I had wanted to do the Best 9 teams with just the Epcoh NPB cards but unfortunately Neftali Soto was not in that set so I used his Genesis card instead. 

I thought I'd add the KBO Award Winners as well.  Kim Jae-Hwan of the Doosan Bears was named MVP:

2018 SCC #SCCR-01/046
Kang Baek-Ho of the KT Wiz was named Rookie Of The Year:

2018 SCC #SCCR-01/239



Ending The Year On A High-End Note...

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I was a little premature a few weeks back when I announced what I thought were the last of the 2018 card issues.  Turns out there were a few more coming out, all of which fall into the "ultra high end" category.

- It's been 15 years now since the Fighters abandoned Tokyo for Sapporo and Epoch is commemorating this by issuing a combination active/OB player set called "Fighters Season Achievement & 15th Anniversary Legends".  Each six card box runs around 15,000 yen.  The base set contains 57 cards - 36 active players and 21 OB players (which includes Shohei Ohtani but not Yu Darvish I think).  Each base card has at least one parallel version.  There's also a 24 card "Holo Spectra" insert set (don't know if Ohtani is included in that) that also has parallel versions.  Each box will contain 2 "special" insert cards (I think at least one of them is an autograph card).  Each player in the set has two possible autographed cards (horizontal and vertical versions).  There's also 2 possible multi-player autograph cards and six different types of memorabilia cards (uniform, patch, number, letter, foil signature with uniform) - there's six cards for each type so there's 36 different memorabilia cards total.  I assume everything's got a serial number on it but I don't know what they're limited to.  The set will be out on December 15th.

- Epoch's latest collaboration with the OB Club will also be released on December 15th.  This set is called something like "Batting Leaders" and will retail for 16,000 yen for a six card box.  The base set has 33 cards.  As you might expect from the set's name all the players included are OB batters, including Shigeo Nagashima, Katsuya Nomura and Tuffy Rhodes.  28 cards from the base set have a parallel versions.  Each box contains at least two autograph cards - there are three different types of on-card autograph card and two different types of autographed ball card.

- Epoch is releasing their fifth "Stars & Legend" set for the year - this one is for the Tigers.  A six card box retails for 15,000 yen (although Discount Niki has it for 13,300) - at least one of those cards will be an autographed card.  The base set contains 32 cards - 23 for active players and nine for OB players.  There's a parallel version of each base set card that is serially numbered to 10.  There's four or five different types of autograph cards available plus a multi-player autographed booklet.  There's also a variety of memorabilia cards available including ones featuring more than one player.  The set will be out on December 29th.

- Not to be left out, BBM is issuing their own ultra high end set.  This is the third year in a row that they have issued one of these in December and this is the second year in a row that it's being called "Glory".  Boxes retail for 15,000 yen and like the Epoch sets only contain six cards (which is guaranteed to include an autograph card and a memorabilia card).  The base set has 36 cards and of course there's a parallel version of each one.  The set only contains cards of active players.  There's two insert sets - "Golden Greats" (36 cards) and "Glorious 3D" (12 3-D cards) - and a variety of possible autograph and memorabilia cards.  The memorabilia cards include "bat grip end" cards, patch cards and multi-player jersey cards.  The set will be released in late December although the cards will be labeled as 2019 cards.

- Also not be left out, Daewoo Media is issuing a high end KBO set in the near future.  I don't have many details about the set but it's called SCC Premium.  What I do know about the set I learned from this tweet from Dan Skrezyna (who else?) - the set will have 150 "Normal" cards, 60 "Rare" cards, 30 "Holo" cards and 30 "Facsimile Autograph" cards along with 10 Jersey cards (serially numbered to 30), 10 "Hidden Holo" cards (numbered to 30) and 250(!) autograph cards (numbered to 5).

Card Of The Week December 2

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Yoshihiro Maru of the Carp was named Central League MVP last week and by the end of the week he was no longer a member of the Carp.  Maru announced that he was signing with the Yomiuri Giants as a free agent, disappointing Hiroshima fans who had hoped he would remain with the team and Marines fans who hoped he would sign with his home prefecture team (and disappointing the large number of people like myself who don't like Yomiuri).

This is the third time in the past 20 years that the Giants have picked up a reigning MVP as a free agent.  Kimiyasu Kudoh won the 1999 Pacific League MVP after helping the Hawks win their first Nippon Series in 35 years (and their first in Fukuoka) and signed with the Giants that off season.  He subsequently helped the Giants beat his former team in the 2000 Nippon Series.  In 2006 Michihiro Ogasawara helped the Fighters win their first Nippon Series since 1962 and picked up the PL MVP award in the process.  He signed with the Giants that offseason and, like Kudoh, helped Yomiuri defeat his old team in the Nippon Series, although it wasn't until 2009 (and again in 2012).

BBM used to include a subset in their flagship set each year that featured the statistical leaders and award winners from the previous year.  They stopped doing this in 2013 - they've included a statistical leader subset in the Fusion set they've released in November of the past few years but that set goes to press too early to include the award winners.  Here are the cards commemorating the MVP awards for Kudoh and Ogasawara from the following year's BBM set along with their regular player cards from that set showing them with the Giants:

00 BBM #1 ("Readers" error version)

2000 BBM #185

2007 BBM 1st Version #445

2007 BBM 1st Version #338
There was only two other times in NPB history* that a reigning MVP did not return to his team the following season.  Hiromitsu Kadota won the 1988 PL MVP while playing for the Nankai Hawks.  1988 was the Hawks' final season in Osaka as Nankai sold the team to Daiei who moved them to Fukuoka.  Kadota didn't want to leave Osaka and convinced the Hawks to trade him to the Orix Braves who played in Nishinomiya.  Masahiro Tanaka won the PL MVP award in 2013 and moved to MLB and the Yankees the following season.  Maru is the first CL MVP to switch teams for the following season.

*NPB history starts in 1950 - I didn't look at the Japanese Baseball League (JBL) MVPs between 1937 to 1949

More Asian Players In The 2018/19 Australian Baseball League

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As I expected when I did my post a few weeks ago about Asian players in the Australian Baseball League this winter, I missed a few.  I got a message from Steve Smith on Twitter updating me on some of the guys I had missed.

Former MLB and KBO pitcher Byung-Hyun Kim is with the Melbourne Aces.  Kim pitched for the Diamondbacks, Red Sox, Rockies and Marlins between 1999 and 2007, most famously blowing saves against the Yankees on consecutive nights in the 2001 World Series.  After being released by the Pirates in spring training of 2008 I think he was out of baseball altogether for the next two seasons.  He spent 2010 with the Orange County Flyers of the independent Golden Baseball League and 2011 with NPB's Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles although he never made it off the Eagles' farm team.  He moved on to Korea and spent 2012-13 with Nexen and 2014-15 with Kia (actually I think he spent 2016 with Kia as well but never got off the farm team). 

2014 Super Star Baseball Season 2 #SBC02-112
Former Tokyo Yakult Swallows pitcher Shogo Nakashima is on roster of the Sydney Blue Sox.  Nakashima was the first (and only) pick of the Swallows in the ikusei portion of the 2014 NPB draft out of Fukuoka University.  He made Yakult's 70-man roster in 2016 and made his ichi-gun debut that season.  He only got into 5 games with the top team over the next two seasons however (3 in 2016 and 2 in 2017) before the Swallows released him.  He spent 2018 with De Glaskoning Twins of the Dutch Major League (Honkbal Hoofdklasse).

2017 BBM Swallows #S35
Steve also mentioned that the Adelaide Bite have a couple corporate league pitchers on their rosters - Tohru Kikue and Ryo Takeuchi.  He thinks both of them play for the Honda team.  The Auckland Tuatara have a Shikoku Island League player - Yuki Harada of the Kagawa Olive Guyners.  There's also a couple Mainland Chinese (aka the Peoples' Republic of China) players in the league - Gui Yuan Xu (Auckland) and Bruce Wang (Adelaide) - Xu is from the Orioles organization.

About a week and half ago Geelong-Korea announced that it had signed three new former KBO players - Joon-Suk Choi, Dong-Gyun Woo and Geon-Yeop Heo.  Choi is the most famous of these three, known for his prodigious bat flips as well as his prodigious belly.  He hit 31 home runs a few years ago for the Lotte Giants but was released after a poor season this past year with the NC Dinos.  Woo was the top pick of the Samsung Lions in the 2008 draft (which was actually held in 2007 I think) who was released by the team after the 2017 season - he spent some time this past season with Kagawa of the Shikoku Island League.  Heo was the fourth round pick of the SK Wyverns in the 2012 KBO draft - he got into just 11 games with them over the past few seasons and was released after this past season.  There are baseball cards for Choi and Woo but I don't know of any for Heo. (H/T MyKBO for the news story.)

2010 KBO "Game set" #AD-007

2016 Diamond Winners #PA02-SA008 (Woo)
In addition to the players there are a couple guys of interest on the sidelines.  First and foremost is Geelong-Korea manager Dae-Sung Koo.  Koo is a veteran of the KBO (Binggrae/Hanwha Eagles 1993-2000, 2006-10), NPB (Orix BlueWave 2001-04) and MLB (New York Mets 2005).  He also spent five winters pitching for the Sydney Blue Sox.

2000 Teleca #78

2003 Calbee #165
He's not listed on the Ace's roster but according to Steve Eiji Kiyokawa, the roving pitching coach for Seibu, has accompanied Lions pitchers Hiromasa Saitoh and Hayato Takagi to Melbourne.  Kiyokawa had a 15 year career with the Hiroshima Toyo Carp and Kintetsu Buffaloes between 1984 and 1988.

1994 BBM #423
I suspect that there are Japanese coaches accompanying the Marines players with Auckland and the Baystars players with Canberra but I haven't been able to find out who they are.

Takahiro Arai

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Back to the posts for retiring players...

Takahiro Arai of the Carp announced his retirement back at the beginning of September.  I'm going to cheat a little here because I'd already done a retrospective post on Arai in mid-2016 when he got his 2000th hit so I'm just going to show some more cards here:

2001 BBM #351

2006 BBM 1st Version #BN13 (Gold Parallel Version)

2007 BBM Draft Story #142

2008 SCM #99

2011 Calbee #OP-08

2016 BBM Carp Autographed Edition #19

2018 Calbee #ES-07
The card showing Arai and Tomoaki Kanemoto commemorates the game on April 12th 2008 in which Kanemoto got his 2000th career hit and Arai got his 1000th.

Arai's brother Ryota retired after last season.  The two of them were teammates with Hanshin from 2011 to 2014.

Masahiro Araki

RIP Jose Castillo

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Tragic news out of Venezuela yesterday - former major league baseball players Jose Castillo and Luis Valbuena were killed in a car accident that was apparently caused by bandits who then robbed them.

Castillo came up in the Pirates organization and played for them from 2004 to 2007.  He split 2008 between the Giants and Astros and spent 2009 in Taiwan playing for the Uni-President Lions.  He spent 2010 in Japan playing for the Yokohama Baystars.  He began 2011 in Mexico playing for the Diablos Rojos del Mexico but made a mid-season return to Japan, landing on the other side of Tokyo Bay with the Chiba Lotte Marines.  He spent the next five years in the Mexican League and has been playing winter ball in his native Venezuela since at least the 2006-07 season (the earliest season Baseball-Reference has player rosters and stats for that league).

Castillo had a number of baseball cards with the Baystars in 2010 but I only know of one of him with the Marines from 2011 - it's from BBM's set celebrating the 20th Anniversary of Lotte's move to Chiba and being renamed the Marines.

2010 BBM 1st Version #205

2010 BBM 2nd Version #613

2011 BBM Marines 20th Anniversary #30

Card Of The Week December 9

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Hisashi Iwakuma is returning to Japan after seven years of playing in MLB with the Seattle Mariners (although he missed much of the past two seasons due to injuries).  It was up in the air for a while what team he would sign with but it was announced last week he'd be joining the Yomiuri Giants.  He's 30 wins away from the 200 win milestone and Yomiuri might provide him the best path to reach it (although I don't have any insight into his decision making process or what his other options were).

Here's a Jersey card of Iwakuma from the 2011 Touch The Game set from BBM (#M11) - 2011 was the last year he played in Japan and the last year BBM issued the Touch The Game set:



Card Of The Week December 16

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I picked up this card of Jim Lefebvre a little while ago.  The card is uncatalouged although it looks very similar to a set Engel has labelled "JGA 14 - 1976 Doyusha Hiroshima Carp Trump Cards Set".  Lefebvre spent four years in Japan (1973-76) so it certainly could be 1976.  Lefebvre doesn't have many cataloged contemporary cards from Japan - a game set given away with a magazine (JGA 154),  one of the Broder sets (JA 6) and an odd tin set from 1975 (JCM 166).  (It didn't help that Calbee wasn't doing cards of Lotte players during his time in Japan.)  All of these are quite rare so I jumped at this card when I saw it on Ebay.  But when I saw the back of the card I knew I needed to get it:


Yup, that's Hall Of Fame pitcher, 400 game winner and Lotte Orions manager at the time Masaichi Kaneda who is apparently doing the can-can.

2018 BBM Fusion

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BBM's final baseball set of 2018 (well that has a cover date of 2018 anyway) is the Fusion set which was released about three weeks ago.  This is the third edition of this set and it's similar to the two previous ones - which is pretty much what you'd expect from BBM lately.

The 144 card Fusion set basically operates as a season summary set.  The players who are included in the "regular" cards are selected due to them achieving some notable feat during the 2018 season - I'll touch on this more in a moment.  There's also a 24 card subset highlighting the statistical leaders for the 2018 season.  There's also a 10 cards "1st Version Update" subset and a 14 card "Ceremonial First Pitch" subset.

There are 96 "regular" cards in the set.  Half of these (48 cards) highlight an achievement by a player this season.  The other 48 cards feature a player that has a relationship with those achievements.  Confused?  Let me attempt to explain with an example.  Kenta Uehara of the Fighters hit a home run on June 18 of last season. Uehara thus became the seventh pitcher to hit a home run in the 14 seasons of interleague play.  Uehara is card #037 in the set.  Card #038 is Tsutomu Iwamoto, a Fighters pitcher who homered during interleague play back in 2005.

#037

#038
Now normally I'd refer to the "other" 48 players as OB players but this time around BBM included players who are still active in these cards.  For example on June 29th of this year Hitoshi Masui of the Buffaloes notched a save against the Fighters, his old team.  He therefore became just the fourth pitcher in NPB history to record saves against all 12 teams.  The third player to have done that was Dennis Sarfate, who got the last save he needed (against the Carp) in 2014.  Despite missing much of this season with a hip injury, Sarfate is still an active player.  Other players active in 2018 who appear in these cards include Daisuke Matsuzaka, Takuya Asao, Hitoki Iwase, Yohei Ohshima and Tetsuya Yamaguchi.

As with the two previous sets it's not always entirely obvious to English speakers what the achievement being celebrated on each card is (although I know that Shun Yamaguchi's no-hitter is one of them).  One thing I need to point out is that the obvious milestones like Seiichi Uchikawa's 2000 hits are not covered here but rather in the "Great Record" insert set.  These cards only cover the regular season so Tomoyuki Sugano's no-hitter against the Swallows in the Climax Series is not included.  The cards are not evenly distributed per team - there's six cards each for the Tigers and Lions but only one Eagle.  Most of the big names are included - Yuki Yanagita, Shogo Akiyama, Yoshitomo Tsutsugoh, Hayato Sakamoto, Yoshihiro Maru and Tetsuto Yamada.  The biggest omissions are Sugano, Takahiro Norimoto and Seiya Suzuki (although Sugano and Norimoto both show up in the Leader subset).  Norichika Aoki has two cards - one for something he did on May 3rd and the other for something on June 14th.  The sole Eagle is Kazuki Tanaka who was named PL Rookie Of The Year - Tanaka did not appear in either the 1st or 2nd Version set this year.

It seems that for the Fusion sets BBM departs a little more than normal from their standard "pitchers pitching, batters batting" photos so a lot of these cards have great photos.  Here's some good ones:

#007

#013

#025

#061

#075
The "other" 48 cards include a number of NPB greats including Sadaharu Oh, Shigeo Nagashima, Koji Akiyama, Keishi Suzuki, Nobuhiro Matsunaka, Manabu Kittabeppu, Michihro Ogasawara, Joe Stanka, Makoto Matsubara, Kihachi Enomoto Kazuhiro Sasaki, Tatsunori Hara and Hideki Matsui.  I'm always surprised when BBM pulls out a photo of Nagashima that I haven't seen them use before (considering that I have something like 200 different Nagashima cards) but this one is really nice, showing him (I think) as a 22 or 23 year old in his first or second season.  The Suzuki picture is pretty good as well and again one that I hadn't seen before considering Suzuki's been in about a billion OB sets over the past 15 years or so.  On the other hand the photo used for Oh's card is a pretty generic batting shot that's in black and white to boot.  Here's a couple of the better cards:

#052

#070

#054

#088
The "regular" player cards are numbered from #001 to #096.  Nine of the cards (all for the "2018" players) have "secret" versions.

The "Leader" subset features the 2018 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 Tomoyuki Sugano led the Central League in both ERA and Strikeouts and therefore has two cards in the subset.  However he tied for the league lead in victories with Daichi Ohsera of the Carp and so the two share a card.  The Leader cards are numbered #097 to #120.

#102

#114
The biggest change in this year's Fusion set compared to the previous two year's sets is that they reduced the number of "regular" player cards from 102 to 96 and increased the final two subsets ("1st Version Update" and "Ceremonial First Pitch") from 9 to 10 and 9 to 14 cards respectively. 

The numbers for the "1st Version Update" cards pick up where this year's 2nd Version set left off - they're numbered #601 to #610.  The cards use this year's 1st Version design.  The players include three players who were traded this season - Hiromi Oka who was traded from the Fighters to the Marines, Hikaru Itoh who was traded from the Buffaloes to the Baystars and Hiroyuki Shirasaki who was traded from the Baystars to the Buffaloes (for Itoh).  Itoh is the only one of the three who had a 1st Version card with his original team.  Two of the other players were foreign players who signed in July - Ariel Miranda of the Hawks and Kyle Martin of the Lions.  Four of the players were ikusei players who were registered to the 70-man roster and played for their ichi-gun team - Kotaro Ohtake of the Hawks, Geronimo Franzua of the Carp and Samuel Adames and CC Mercedes of the Giants.  That's nine of the ten players.  The tenth player I'm actually very annoyed at BBM for including.  It's Duente Heath of the Lions and the reason I'm annoyed about it is that BBM included a "1st Version Update" card for Heath in the 2nd Version set.  They could have included any number of other players - there was a large number (for NPB) of mid-season trades as well as a bunch of guys moving from the ikusei squad to the 70-man roster of various teams.  Hell they could have actually had a "1st Version Update" card of Kazuki Tanaka.  But for some reason they choose a second card of Heath.  Nothing against Heath - just don't know why they'd do an extra card for him.

#608

#603
The final subset is the 14 card continuation of the "Ceremonial First Pitch" subset from this year's 2nd Version set.  The cards are numbered #FP19 to #FP32 (since the 2nd Version ones were #FP01 to #FP18).  As always these cards feature a number of Japanese celebrities.  There are several Idols - Akari Suda (from SKE48), Yumiko Takino (from STU48), Ao Ueshita, Ruriko Kojima and all four of the current members of Momoiro Clover Z - Kanako Momota, Shiori Tamai, Ayaka Sasaki and Reni Takagi.  Five of the remaining celebrities are either actresses or models - honestly they may be considered Idols as well - Nao Matsushita, Rika Izumi, Asuka Hanamura, Misato Tsuboi and the ubiquitous Ami Inamura.  The final celebrity is professional darts player Mayuko Morita who will be included in BBM's upcoming Shining Venus set, their annual set dedicated to female athletes.  Kojima, Momota and (of course) Inamura have appeared on "Ceremonial First Pitch" cards before - this is the second time for Momota, the fourth time for Kojima and the fifth BBM set Inamura appears in although since she had a "secret" version in last year's 2nd Version set and six SCM bonus cards plus cards in the two Epoch JWBL sets this is her 14th card showing her throwing out a first pitch:

#FP22
As usual you can see all the cards over at Jambalaya.

Yuichi Honda

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Yuichi Honda of the Hawks was another player who announced their retirement at the end of the season.  Honda was the fifth pick of the Hawks in the college/corporate league portion of the fall 2005 draft - he had been playing for Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Nagoya which is obviously a corporate league team, not a college.  An injury during spring training in 2006 (Kazuhisa Ishii of the Swallows broke his wrist with a pitch) delayed his debut with the Hawks for half a season but he rapidly won the job as the regular second baseman for Softbank which he did not relinquish until a hand injury in mid-2014 cost him the remainder of the season.  Various injuries cut into his playing time over the next few seasons and he finally decided to retire.  He will be the Hawks ichi-gun infield coach next season.

Honda led the Pacific League in steals twice (2010 and 2011) and had 342 for his career which is the 21st most in NPB history.  His best season was 2011 when he hit .305, made his only All Star team, won his first Golden Glove award (he'd win another in 2012) and was named to the Best 9 team.  The Hawks have played in five Nippon Series during Honda's career but I think he only actually played in two of them - 2011 and 2014 (mostly as a pinch hitter).  He was on the team's roster in 2015 and 2017 but didn't play and wasn't on the roster in 2018.  He played for the Japan National Team in the 2013 World Baseball Classic.

His earliest BBM cards are #16 from the 2006 Rookie Edition set and #72 from the 2006 1st Version set.  His first Calbee card is #132 from the 2007 set.

2006 BBM Rookie Edition #16

2006 BBM 1st Version #72

2008 BBM Hawks 70th Anniversary #97

2011 BBM 1st Version #335

2011 BBM All Stars #A24

2012 BBM 1st Version #380

2013 Topps Tribute #71

2011 BBM Hawks 75th Anniversary - Fukuoka Legacy #22

2015 Calbee #091

2018 BBM 2nd Version #386

Takuya Asao

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Another player who retired at the end of the season was Chunichi Dragons pitcher Takuya Asao.  Asao was drafted out of Nihon Fukushi University by his home prefecture Dragons (he was born in Chita, Aichi) in the third round of the college/corporate league portion of the 2006 draft.  He debuted with the ichi-gun Dragons in 2007 but was hampered by shoulder injuries late in that season.  He bounced back the following season and was the Dragons Opening Day starter in 2009 before manager Hiromitsu Ochiai moved him into the middle relief role that he ended up excelling in.  He got into 72 games in 2010, going 12-3 with an ERA of 1.68 ERA.  He ended up being runner up to teammate Kazuhiro Wada for the Central League MVP award that year.  In 2011 he got into 79 games, going 7-2 with an ERA of 0.41.  He only gave up 4 earned runs all season in 87 1/3 innings while striking out 100 batters.  He won the CL MVP award that year. 

Unfortunately his career went into a tailspin after 2011 due to shoulder injuries.  He only got into between 22 and 36 games a year with the top team between 2012 and 2015 and spent all of 2016 on the farm team.  He was limited to just 4 ichi-gun games in 2017 and only 10 in 2018 (including his retirement game).  He'll be one of the Dragons' farm team's pitching coaches in 2019.

In addition to his MVP award, Asao also won a Golden Glove in 2011, becoming the first relief pitcher to ever win one.  He lead the Central League in "hold points" in both 2010 and 2011 and made the All Star team both of those seasons.  He pitched in two Nippon Series with the Dragons - 2010 against the Marines and 2011 against the Hawks.

His first BBM cards are #49 in the 2007 Rookie Edition set and #248 in that year's 1st Version set.  His first Calbee card was 2007's #276.

2007 BBM Rookie Edition #49

2007 BBM 1st Version #248

2010 BBM All Stars #A12

2011 BBM Nippon Series #S36

2012 BBM 1st Version #326

2013 Calbee #086

2015 Epoch Dragons X Mizuno #17

2016 BBM Classic #062

2018 Epoch NPB #372
I used Asao's biography at Baseball-Reference's Bullpen as one of my sources for this post.

Card Of The Week December 23

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As I've previously mentioned Shota Imanaga of the Baystars is spending much of this offseason in Australia pitching for the Canberra Cavalry.  Yesterday he threw six perfect innings against Geelong-Korea while striking out seven in a game that Canberra won 6-0.  The Cavalry's pitching staff only gave up one hit the entire game - a single by Han-Gyeol Joh in the seventh inning off Imanaga's DeNA teammate Yuki Kuniyoshi.  You might be less impressed with Imanaga's outing if you knew that Geelong-Korea was having an absolutely miserable season - after today's loss they are now 4-20 on the season*.  However Imanaga is having an outstanding stint Down Under.  This start against Geelong-Korea was his fifth of the season and he actually had his fewest strikeouts in this game (his previous totals were 10, 10, 9 and 8).  He's 3-0 in those five starts, having struck out 44 batters in 29 innings.  He's only given up 13 hits, two earned runs and one walk in those 29 innings.

*The ABL added two new teams this year and the established teams have been feasting on them - the Auckland Tuatara, the other new team, is 7-16 but three of those wins came against Geelong-Korea.  The other six teams in the league are all over .500. 

Here's a card of Imanaga from the "First Draft Pick" subset of the 2017 BBM Baystars team set (#DB77).  The subset featured the Baystars top pick in the 2014-16 drafts - Yasuaki Yamasaki (2014), Imanaga (2015) and Haruhiro Hamaguchi (2016).


"Ando" Revisited

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Recently Marc Brubaker who writes the Remember The Astrodome blog had an amazing find at an antique mall near him in Houston.  He was paying for an Ebay transaction in person with the seller who had a booth at the mall and noticed the seller had a stack of early 60's Japanese menko cards in a plastic box.  Marc ended up buying the entire stack for $10(!) and discovered it contained 84 cards - 14 1963 Marusho Flag Back (JCM 13c) cards, 30 1963 Marukami Bat On Right (JCM 14f) cards and 40 1964 Marukami Bat On Right (JCM 14g) cards.  You can read Marc's post about his find here - it was a truly amazing haul for the price.

Marc contacted me with a couple questions about the lot.  I was able to help him out some but one of his questions was about something I've been wondering about for a while - who is "Ando"?

Let me explain - there's an entry in the checklist for the JCM 14g set in Engel for a guy named "Ando" who wore uniform #23 on the Tokyo Orions.  The problem is that there is no one named "Ando" on the 1964 Tokyo Orions roster.  To further confuse the issue the player on the card is wearing a helmet with #8 on it.  So who is this?

I did a couple posts on this about 10 years ago - one that shows the front of the card and one that shows the back.  My conclusion at the time was that it was most likely Kazuhiro Ishiguro who wore #23 with the Orions that year although it was possible that it was Kazuyoshi Nishiyama who wore #8.  Once Marc asked me about it I decided that maybe it was time to revisit this issue and see if I could learn anything more definitive about the issue.

Here's scans of the front and the back of the card:



The text on the front of the card identifies the player as "Ando", his position as "infielder" and his team as "Tokyo Orions".  The kanji across the top of the back repeats the team name. Starting from the left, the columns indicate that he bats and throws right, his weight and height (don't know the values), his school (Keio University), his uniform number (23) and his position (infielder).

All of this information corresponds to Ishiguro.  In 1964 Ishiguro was a rookie shortstop for the Orions having just graduated from Keio University.  Nishiyama on the other hand was an outfielder who had just joined the Orions from the Hanshin Tigers who he had played for since graduating from Kansai University.  So the biographical information on the card clearly is for Ishiguro.  The only reason to question if the photo is Nishiyama is because of the #8 on the helmet.  But I noticed something in the photo while talking to Marc that I hadn't noticed before - the bat in the player's hands has "23" on the knob of it.  So either it's Nishiyama holding Ishiguro's bat or Ishiguro wearing Nishiyama's helmet.  I'm inclined to believe it's the latter.

But I still have no idea why the card is mislabeled "Ando".  I reached out to Larry Fuhrmann, a memorabilia dealer based in Kobe (who also was instrumental in the advent of the modern Japanese baseball card hobby).  Larry had a couple interesting things to say.

First he confirmed that it was probably Ishiguro - "Ishiguro was a 3x Best Nine shortstop in the Tokyo Big Six League for Keio so he was a well-known and highly regarded rookie in 1964. On the other hand, Nishiyama had just come over to the Orions after spending his first 5 years with the Hanshin Tigers where he was mainly used for his outfield defense. He was a lifetime .237 hitter and had over 200 at bats in a season only once in his career. So it was far more likely that the maker intended for Ishiguro to appear on the menko than Nishiyama."

Larry added some details about how the menko cards were made - "The production of menko was somewhat haphazard back then. Usually the makers just lifted photos from magazines. I am sure there are other old menko of lesser known players where the name and picture do not match.  Don't know if you are aware of this, but the most famous is the menko picturing Jackie Robinson but the name on the card is Barbon. The picture used of Jackie was lifted from Baseball Magazine and was taken during the Dodgers 1956 Japan Tour. His cap has the Brooklyn "B" on it. Chico Barbon (who is also black) played for the Braves.  Another one is a menko picturing Larry Raines (black player who played for Hankyu) but the name is also Barbon. "

Larry included a photo of the Barbon/Robinson card (from the 1958 Doyusha "Team Name Back" set - JCM 30a):


He also included photos of the magazine that the photo was lifted from (December 1956 Baseball Magazine):



This tendency to swipe photos from other sources continues to this day.  I have a cards from an uncataloged 70's menko set and a 1988 bromide set that reused images from Calbee cards.  Ryan from This Card Is Cool has told me that there are unlicensed bromide cards for J-Pop groups that use photos from magazines as well as the internet.

So to sum up - the card is most likely Ishiguro.  The menko card manufacturer identified the player as "Ando" for no reason probably other than that they were being sloppy.

I want to thank both Marc and Larry for their assistance with this post.  Marc's already updated the Trading Card Database listing for the JCM 14g set to acknowledge the card is really Ishiguro - it had previously identified the player as Junzo Ando who never played for the Orions.

Yoshifumi Okada

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Yoshifumi Okada of the Marines announced his retirement at the end of the 2018 season.  Okada was the sixth pick for the Marines in ikusei portion of the 2008 draft from the All Ashikaga Club, a club team in Ashikaga in Okada's home prefecture of Tochigi.  He wasn't on the development squad for long however as he was registered to the 70-man roster at the end of training camp in 2009.  He spent 2009 and the first half of 2010 with the farm team before making his debut with the ichi-gun team on June 1, 2010 and becoming Lotte's starting center fielder.  He hit .320 against the Dragons in a winning effort in the Nippon Series that year.  He played in all 144 games for the Marines in 2011 which I believe was the first time a former ikusei player played in every one of a team's games in a season.  He won Golden Glove awards in 2011 and 2012.  He was a regular for the Marines through 2016 but his playing time on the top time dropped dramatically - after playing in 121 games in 2016 he only got in 31 games in 2017 and 55 in 2018.  I'm not sure of the reason - he didn't appear to be injured and his offensive numbers in 2016 seem in line if not better than the rest of his career.  He's going to be an outfield/base coach for the Tochigi Golden Braves of the Baseball Challenge League next season.

His first BBM card was #029 from the 2009 Rookie Edition set.  Since he was ikusei he didn't have a card in the 2009 1st Version set but since he moved to the 70-man roster in late March of that year his flagship rookie card was included in the later 2nd Version set.  His first Calbee card didn't come until 2011 (#93).

2009 BBM Rookie Edition #029

2009 BBM 2nd Version #774

2010 BBM Nippon Series #S32

2012 BBM 1st Version #383

2014 Calbee #105

2016 BBM Marines #M63

2018 Epoch NPB #210


2001 BBM Tigers Box Break

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I had yet another surgery recently (hip replacement this time) and I picked up an unopened box of BBM's Tigers team set from 2001 about a month or so earlier to give me something fun to open while I recovered.  I thought I'd do a quick post with a box break and a description of the set.

The 2001 BBM Tigers set had a base set of 99 cards that were broken down into several subsets.  There were 68 "regular" player cards (which included cards for manager Katsuya Nomura and coach Akinobu Okada), four "Best Result" cards (which appear to be team leaders from 2000 but with an odd selection of categories - wins, ERA, saves and triples), eight "Memorial" cards featuring milestones from the 2001 season (Nomura's 1200th managerial win, Takashi Yoshida's 1000th game, Keiichi Yabu, Shoji Tohyama and Tomochika Tsuboi making the All Star team), 1 card for the Tigers' 2001 rookie class (i.e. players taken in the 2000 draft), nine OB Tiger player cards (including Minoru Murayama, Koichi Tabuchi, Fumio Fujimura and Tadashi Wakabayashi), seven "New Wave" cards featuring young Tiger players and two checklist cards.  18 of the "regular" player cards have a purple facsimile autograph parallel.  Nine player cards have an "R. C." parallel which uses a different sepia tinged photo.  Six player cards have both types of parallel which means there are 12 that only have the facsimile signature parallel and three that only have the "R. C." parallel.  (And I don't know what "R. C." stands for although it wouldn't surprise me if it was "Rare Card".)

There were also two 9 card insert sets.  One of these was the "Specialist" set which highlights a skill of a player (Nobuyuki Hoshino's curveball, Shinobu Fukuhara's fastball, etc) and the other is a nine card set dedicated to Tigers legend Masayuki Kakefu.  There were two premium chase cards available as well - a Kakefu autographed card (numbered to 31) and a Keiichi Yabu Glove card (numbered to 50).

Each box contained 20 packs that contained 8 cards each, so there was a total of 180 cards available in a box.

I'll hit the highlight of the box first - I pulled a Yabu Glove card in the very first pack I opened:



The last guide Engel did that had values for BBM cards lists this as a $500 card.  However that guide was issued when Yabu was actually pitching in the US so that's a very inflated value.  The last Sports Card Magazine with a price guide for BBM cards (SCM #116) lists the card at 3000 yen and trending downward.

Here's how all 160 cards I got in the box panned out:

139 base - 88 unique, 51 doubles
3 Kakefu Special inserts
3 Specialist inserts
5 "R. C." parallels
9 Purple facsimile autograph parallels
1 Yabu Glove card

Not too bad - I got almost 90% of the base set in the box.  (Actually since I already had a handful of cards from the set I'm only about six cards from completing it.)  And obviously the Yabu card is a nice pull, even if it isn't worth $500.

Here's some sample cards.  First up Yabu's regular, purple facsimile autograph parallel and "R. C." parallel cards (all #T7):




Next up is a sample card from each subset.  I included both checklist cards because I liked how they went together:

#T72

#T73

#T81

#T88

#T93

#T98 & #T99
Here's cards from each insert set:

#SP4

#KS5
Here's what a pack looked like:


Each box also contained a poster:


Card Of The Week - December 30

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I picked up this bromide card off of Ebay recently.  It's of Masao Nishimura of the Hankyu Braves and I believe it's uncataloged.  It is similar in a lot of ways to a set Engel has called "JBR 109: 1947 Marui Decorative Small Image" although at 1 5/16" by 2 1/8" this card is smaller than those (which are 1 3/4” x 2 5/8”).  It is blank backed.

There's a couple clues to help try to narrow down when the card is from.  The uniform Nishimura is wearing was used by Hankyu between 1946 and 1949.  I don't know what the vertical text on the right side of the card says but I do understand all the rest of the text.  The kanji in the top left I think says "Hankyu" although it doesn't quite match "阪急".  The "ブレーブス" at the bottom is "Braves".  "西村 正夫" is Nishmura's full name.  The really useful piece of information is the "監督" under his photo - this says he was manager.  Nishimura actually had three separate stints as manager for Hankyu - 1943-mid 1947, 1954-56 and 1978 (as an interim manager when Toshiharu Ueda missed time with pneumonia).  Between that and the uniform I figure the card's from either 1946 or 1947.

2018 In Review - BBM

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BBM issued 32 sets in 2018 which I think is the fewest they've done in one year since 2008.  As usual I'm counting the cards that have "2018" as their cover date even though a couple of the sets were actually issued in late 2017.

25 of these sets are the ones that BBM issues each year (and that I outlined in this post last May).  This includes the "flagship"1st and 2nd Version sets, the high end Genesis set, the season summary Fusion set, comprehensive team sets for all 12 NPB teams, the ultra high end Glory set, the Rookie Edition (draft pick) set, the "Farewell" set for players who retired in 2017, the Rookie Edition Premium set, the two cheerleader/dance squad sets ("Hana" and "Mai"), the "Icons" box set (entitled "Fanfare" this year), the "Time Travel 1989" set and the "Infinity" multi-sport set. 

I will mention here that after having issued a set for one particular team's cheerleader/dance squad every year from 2014-17 (Hawks in 2014, Dragons in 2015, Giants in 2016 and Fighters in 2017), BBM did not issue a similar set this year.

After issuing nine team box sets in each of the last two years, BBM only did five this year.  Three of these were "Premium" box sets for the Carp ("Invincible"), Fighters ("Ambitious") and Tigers ("Marvelous").  They also issued a box set for the Hawks that was tied into their 80th Anniversary ("Celebration") as well as another box set for the Carp celebrating their third consecutive Central League Championship ("Three-Peat").

The "Celebration" box set wasn't the only set BBM did in conjunction with the Hawks' 80th Anniversary.  They also issued a pack based Hawks 80th Anniversary set in March that featured OB as well as current players (the "Celebration" box set had mostly current players).  They also took a unique approach to chronicling the history of the Hawks - they created a 27 card "Hawks History" subset that was spread across three sets.  The first nine cards were in the Hawks 80th Anniversary set and covered 1938-68.  The second nine cards were in the Hawks comprehensive team set and covered 1969-88.  The final nine cards were included in "Celebration" and cover 1989 to the present.

The other set BBM did this year was a box set for Shohei Ohtani called "Grateful Days".  This was the first "single player" set they had done in two years.

2018 In Review - Calbee

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2018 was a return to normalcy for Calbee.  From 2003 to 2015 Calbee issued their flagship set in three separate Series and that was all they put out each year.  In 2016 they issued two other sets - an All Star set in January and a Samurai Japan set in November - along with the three Series,  In 2017 the Hokkaido Potato Crisis forced Calbee to limit their flagship set to just two Series although they did also issue a Samurai Japan set.  For 2018 though it was back to a three Series flagship set with no other sets.

As usual Series One was released in March.  It had 88 cards in its base set - 72 player cards (six per team), a 12 card "Dora-ichi" subset featuring the first pick for each team from the fall 2017 draft and four checklist cards.  There were two insert sets - 24 "Star" cards and 3 "Legend" cards (featuring three players who retired after the 2017 season - Tadahito Iguchi, Yuya Andoh and Masahiko Morino).  The "Lucky Card" box set (available as a mail-in redemption) was a 12 card set called "AVG Leader".

Series Two came out in June and followed a similar pattern.  The 88 card base set broke down into 72 player cards, a 12 card subset featuring the managers for all the teams and four checklist cards.  The only insert set was 24 more "Star" cards and the "Lucky Card" box set was another 12 card set - this one was called "Wins Leader".

Series Three hit the shelves in September and continued the same pattern as the first two Series.  Once again there was an 88 card base set split into 72 player cards, a 12 card "Exciting Scene" subset and four more checklist cards.  The "Star" insert set was rounded out with 24 more cards (for a total of 72 across all three Series) and there was yet one more 12 card set available through "Lucky Card" redemption - this one was called "RBI Leader".

Across the three Series there were 216 player cards.  24 players had more than one card so the total number of players represented in the set was 192.  There are a couple big name players who did not have regular player cards and only appear in the "Exciting Scene" subset in Series Three - Tomoyuki Sugano, Norichika Aoki and Daisuke Matsuzaka.

2018 In Review - Epoch

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Epoch significantly upped their game in 2018.  They issued 27 sets (although one of them technically should have been a 2017 set but it was delayed until February) which was four more than they issued in 2017.  It wasn't the amount of sets they issued that indicated them upping their game however - it was the fact that a number of the sets they issued were a direct challenge to BBM's dominance in the Japanese card market.

The most significant challenge Epoch made to BBM was in issuing an actual flagship set.  Epoch's set was called "NPB" and featured 432 cards, over 50 more than BBM's 1st Version set.  All the cards were player (or manager) cards and were split evenly between the 12 teams so there were 36 cards per team.  That was nine more players per team than 1st Version had for a total of 108 more players in the set.  Unlike many of Epoch's offerings, this set was reasonably priced. 

Epoch also released "comprehensive" team sets for seven NPB teams - the Carp, the Lions, the Swallows, the Buffaloes, the Dragons, the Baystars and the Tigers.  The sets were all labelled "Rookie & Stars", were reasonably priced and contained 90 cards each.  They featured each team's entire 70 man roster along with the manager and in some cases coaches and ikusei players.  These are the first "comprehensive" team sets I know that were not either a team issue or a BBM set.  I don't know why Epoch didn't do all 12 teams and I don't know if they are planning on issuing these team sets (or the flagship) set again in the future.

Epoch did one additional reasonably priced set this year.  In October they issued a set for the Japan Women's Baseball League (JWBL).   This was the second time they had done a set for the JWBL - the first one was two years ago in 2016.

They also issued a box set called "Pacific League Rookies" which featured the 2017 draft picks for all the Pacific League teams (so essentially half of the 2018 BBM Rookie Edition set). 

The remaining 17 sets Epoch issued were all expensive high end and ultra high end sets which typically featured a box containing four to six cards for over 10,000 yen.  Each box is guaranteed to contain at least one autograph card.

Three of these sets were done in conjunction with the Japan Baseball Promotion Association (JBPA) which is also known as the OB Club - "Award Winners", "Career Achievements" and  "Batting Leaders".  These sets feature only retired (OB) players.  Epoch also issued several other sets that featured OB players from specific teams - "Tigers Glorious Players", "Legend Of Yokohama" (which celebrated the 40th Anniversary of the Whales/Baystars being in Yokohama) and "Seibu Lions 40th Anniversary" (which obviously celebrates the 40th Anniversary of the Lions being sold to Seibu and moving to Tokorozawa from Fukuoka).  The latter two sets are another challenge to BBM as previously team anniversary sets such as these were issued by BBM.

They issued five "Stars & Legend" team sets that contained both active and OB players for each team - these were for the Dragons, Swallows, Buffaloes, Tigers and Carp.  There were a couple other team sets that featured both active and OB players for the team - a "Season Achievement and 15 Anniversary Legends" set for the Fighters (which celebrates the 15th Anniversary of the team's move to Hokkaido) and another Tigers set called "Footprints Of The Tigers" which was a tie-in to an exhibit going on at the Koshien Museum.

The remaining sets all feature active players only.  Three of these were "Season Achievements" sets for the Lions, Baystars and Tigers (although the Tigers set was really a 2017 set but it didn't come out until February of 2018).  The other set was the "Pacific League Premier Edition" set (which has now been issued by Epoch for three years in a row) which only contained players from the six Pacific League teams.

In addition to all these sets, Epoch also started doing something similar to Topps Now called Epoch One.  Epoch started offering cards on-line for a limited time for 500 yen apiece.  Like the Topps Now cards these cards are tied into actual on (and off) field events.  They only did cards for seven of the 12 teams (oddly enough they aren't the same seven teams they did "Rookie & Stars" sets for) - the Lions, the Dragons, the Tigers, the Marines, the Giants, the Carp and the Fighters.  They ended up issued 680 cards total this year.  I found it interesting that the final cards for the year featured the Dragons 2018 draft picks - the photos are from the team's rookie introduction ceremony held on December 8th which will also be the source of the photos for BBM's Rookie Edition set coming out next month.
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