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1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team

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1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-25
With South Korea being one of the four teams that has already qualified for this summer's Olympics (along with Japan, Israel and Mexico - the other two will be determined in two tournaments happening over the next six weeks), I wanted to do a series of posts on Korean National Team sets.  I'm not going to do posts about their Olympic teams like I have for the Japanese teams due to a lack of knowledge and a lack of cards (which is a shame since they're actually the defending Gold Medal winners) but instead concentrate on the cards I know of that depict their National team.

The subject of this first post is unique as it is to my knowledge the only set of cards showcasing the Korean National Team that was issued by a Korean card company.  In 1999 Teleca issued a high end set called "Premium" that had 100 cards in its base set.  It also included a 26 card insert set entitled "Korea Dream Team".  This insert set featured the entire 24 man roster* for Korea's team in the 1999 Asian Championship tournament, held at Jamsil Stadium in Seoul, South Korea (home of the KBO's Doosan Bears and LG Twins and the 1988 Olympic baseball venue) between September 11 to September 17, 1999.  The tournament served as a qualifier for the 2000 Sydney Olympics. 

*The other two cards in the insert set are the team photo card pictured above (which is also a checklist for the set) and an unnumbered "title" card

There were six teams in the tournament - Korea, Japan, Taiwan, China, the Philippines and Thailand.  The teams were split into two three-team brackets.  Korea was in Group A with China and Thailand while Japan was in Group B with Taiwan and the Philippines.  For the first round each team played each of the other two teams in its bracket.  As you might expect, Korea and Japan dominated their Groups.  Korea beat China 10-0 and Thailand 11-0 - both games were shortened to seven innings due to the slaughter rule.  Japan (which featured NPB players Daisuke Matsuzaka, Atsuya Furuata, Nobuhiko Matsunaka and Kenjiro Nomura) beat the Philippines 10-0 (also in a slaughter rule shortened seven inning game) and Taiwan 9-1. 

The final round featured the top two teams from each bracket - Korea and China from Group A and Japan and Taiwan from Group B (the Philippines beat Thailand 9-2 in a game to decide fifth place in the tournament).  Each team would play each of the other teams with the tournament winner being determined by whichever team ended up with the best record.  Korea and Japan each won their first two games in the round (Korea defeated China 7-1 and Taiwan 5-4 in 11 innings while Japan beat Taiwan 2-1 and China 3-0).  This set up a showdown for the final game of the tournament between the two undefeated teams.  Japan took an early 2-0 lead and led 3-1 going into the bottom of the sixth before Korea scored three runs to take the lead.  Korea added another run in the seventh and won the game 5-3.  By finishing first and second in the tournament, both Korea and Japan qualified for the Sydney Olympics.

Korea's roster included 19 players who were active in the KBO at the time along with five college players*.  Here's the roster (NOTE - with a couple exceptions, I'm using the player names as they appear on the cards in this set - which may not be how they appear in other sets.  I'm also using the birthdates listed on their cards which may or may not match the dates in Wikipedia - I think there's a Korean custom about birthdates and/or calendars that I don't understand):

*At least I think all five non-KBO players were collegiate players

PlayerDOBProfessional Teams
Cho Yong-jun3/17/1979Hyundai Unicorns 2002-05, Woori Heroes 2009
Chung Min-tae3/1/1970Pacific Dolphins 1992-95, Hyundai Unicorns 1996-00, Yomiuri Giants 2001-02, Hyundai Unicorns 2003-07, Kia Tigers 2008
Hong Sung-hoon2/28/1977Doosan Bears 1999-2008, Lotte Giants 2009-12, Doosan Bears 2013-16
Jeong Min-chul3/28/1972Binggrae Eagles 1992-93, Hanwha Eagles 1994-99, Yomiuri Giants 2000-01, Hanwha Eagles 2002-09
Jin Pil-jung10/13/1972OB Bears 1995-98, Doosan Bears 1999-02, Kia Tigers 2003, LG Twins 2004-07, Woori Heroes 2008
Joo Hyung-kwang3/1/1976Lotte Giants 1994-96, 1998-2007
Jung Soo-keun1/20/1977OB Bears 1995-98, Doosan Bears 1999-2003, Lotte Giants 2004-09
Kim Dong-joo2/3/1976OB Bears 1998, Doosan Bears 1999-2014
Kim Dong-soo10/27/1968LG Twins 1990-99, Samsung Lions 2000-01, SK Wyverns 2002, Hyundai Unicorns 2003-07, Woori Heroes 2008-09
Kim Han-soo10/30/1971Samsung Lions 1994-2007
Kim Min-ho3/19/1969OB Bears 1993-98, Doosan Bears 1999-2003
Kim Sang-hun10/27/1977Haitai Tigers 2000, Kia Tigers 2001-14
Koo Dae-sung8/2/1969Lotte Giants 1993, Hanwha Eagles 1994-2000, Orix Blue Wave 2001-04, New York Mets 2005, Hanwha Eagles 2006-10
Kyung Hun-ho7/25/1977LG Twins 2000-12
Lee Byung-kyu10/25/1974LG Twins 1997-2006, Chunichi Dragons 2007-09, LG Twins 2010-2016
Lee Seung-yeop8/18/1976Samsung Lions 1995-2003, Chiba Lotte Marines 2004-05, Yomiuri Giants 2006-10, Orix Buffaloes 2011, Samsung Lions 2012-17
Lim Chang-yong6/4/1976Haitai Tigers 1995-98, Samsung Lions 1999-2007, Yakult Swallows 2008-12, Chicago Cubs 2013, Samsung Lions 2014-15, Kia Tigers 2016-18
Mun Dong-hwan5/8/1972Lotte Giants 1997-03, Hanwha Eagles 2004-07
Park Han-yi1/28/1979Samsung Lions 2001-19
Park Jae-hong9/7/1973Hyundai Unicorns 1996-2002, Kia Tigers 2003-04, SK Wyverns 2005-12
Park Jong-tae1/27/1969Lotte Giants 1991-2004
Ryu Ji-hyun5/25/1971LG Twins 1994-04
Shin Myung-chul8/6/1978Lotte Giants 2001-06, Samsung Lions 2007-13, KT Wiz 2014-15
Yang Jun-hyeok5/26/1969Samsung Lions 1993-98, Haitai Tigers 1999, LG Twins 2000-01, Samsung Lions 2002-10

There's a couple pretty big names in this set, most notably Lee Byung-kyu and Lee Seung-yeop.  Six of the players spent time playing in Japan (the two Lees, Chung Min-tae, Jeong Min-chul, Koo Dae-sung and Lim Chang-yong) and two of them went on to play in MLB (Koo and Lim).  The five collegiate players were Cho Yong-jun, Kim Sang-hun, Kyung Hun-ho, Park Han-yi and Shin Myung-chul, all of whom eventually played in the KBO.  Park Han-yi was the last active player from the team - he retired during the 2019 season.

I'm going to show all the player cards from the set along with a KBO or NPB card of the player, if I have one.  There are three players that I don't have KBO cards of.  I don't know of any cards for Cho Yong-jun and Shin Myung-chul while the only KBO card I know of for Kyung Hun-ho is a "Rookie" insert card from the 2000 Teleca set (#R13).  I'd also like to point out that I don't have the "Korea Dream Team" cards of Park Jae-hong and Ryu Ji-hyun - I've swiped the images of those two cards from TradingCardDB.com's listing for the set.  I'm going to label each player since the "Premium" cards don't scan well due to their silver finish and not all the KBO cards have the player's name in English on them.

Cho Yong-jun

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-9

Chung Min-tae

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-1

1994 Teleca #71

Hong Sung-hoon

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-11

2014 Superstar Baseball Season Three #SBC03-011-SS

Jeong Min-chul

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-2

2000 BBM #181

Jin Pil-jung

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-4

1999 Teleca #7

Joo Hyung-kwang

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-7

1999 Teleca #42

Jung Soo-keun

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-21

2000 Teleca #24

Kim Dong-joo

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-17

2014 Superstar Baseball Season Two #SBC02-022

Kim Dong-soo

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-10

1994 Teleca LG Twins #2

Kim Han-soo

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-18

1999 Teleca "Diamond Kings" #DK-2
Kim Min-ho
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-16

2000 Teleca #16

Kim Sang-hun

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-12

2012 Superstar Baseball Season One #SBC01-102

Koo Dae-sung

1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-6

2001 Upper Deck #108

Kyung Hun-ho
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-8
Lee Byung-kyu
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-20

2007 BBM Dragons #D079
Lee Seung-yeop
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-13

2004 BBM 2nd Version #558
Lim Chang-yong
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-5

2011 Calbee #139
Mun Dong-hwan
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-3

2000 Teleca #33
Park Han-yi
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-24

2017 SCC #SCC-01-SS20/N
Park Jae-hong
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-22

2010 KBO "Game" #AW-003
Park Jong-tae
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-14

2000 Teleca #40
Ryu Ji-hyun
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-15

1999 Teleca #108
Shin Myung-chul
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-19
Yang Jun-hyeok
1999 Teleca Premium Korea Dream Team #D-23

1994 Teleca #45

Card Of The Week March 1

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I was putting the cards from the 2020 BBM Rookie Edition set into my database the other night (because yes, I'm that much of a geek) when I realized that I had been mistaken last fall when I said that there were four players from the 2019 Panini USA Baseball Stars & Stripes Japanese Collegiate All Star team inserts who were taken in the NPB draft.  It turns out there were five.  In addition to Shoki Katsumata, Masato Morishita, Toshiya Sato and Takashi Umino, Yuki Tsumori of Tohoku Fukushi was taken in the third round by the Hawks (one round after they took Umino).  This brings the count of players in that set who are now in NPB to 13.  Of the remaining 11, only two of them (Kento Ogo and Teruaki Sato) are still in college.  I assume the other nine are playing in the corporate leagues although I only know that for sure for Seiya Tanaka.

Here's Tsumori's cards from the Panini (#6) and BBM (#012) sets:



Panini is apparently again including cards for the Japanese Collegiate All Stars in this year's edition of USA Baseball Stars & Stripes which is set to be released on March 11th.  I'll try to do a post about it when I learn the details.

More Baseball Women

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I got a big package of cards from Ryan in the mail today.  It's a bit of an overwhelming bunch of cards and I'll probably do six or seven posts on the cards I got.  I thought I'd start with something simple - a couple of cards of players from the Japan Women's Baseball League.

BBM issued their "Shining Venus" set back in January.  This is their annual set devoted to female athletes (It was called "Real Venus" from 2009 to 2015 and has been "Shining Venus" from 2017 to the present).  This year's edition featured two players from Saitama Astraia - Meguna Furuya and Minami (Takatsuka).  There are three cards for each player in the set - a posed shot in their uniform (the "Regular" card), an action shot (labeled "Playing Venus" in a couple of the sets) and a posed shot in street clothes (labeled "Venus Shot").  I asked Ryan to skip the "Venus Shot" cards.  There was also a "Twin Venus" card featuring both players.  Here's the cards:

2020 BBM Shining Venus #01

2020 BBM Shining Venus #02

2020 BBM Shining Venus #04

2020 BBM Shining Venus #05

2020 BBM Shining Venus #95
Both players have been featured in previous "Venus" sets although with other teams.  This is actually Minami's third appearance and third team - she was in the 2015 "Real Venus" set when she was with Tohoku Reia and in last year's "Shining Venus" set when she was with Kyoto Flora.  Furuya was in the 2018 "Shining Venus" set when she was also with Kyoto Flora.

Last May Mari Yamazaki of Saitama became the first JWBL player to hit a sayanora home run.  I came across an autographed card of hers from the 2018 Epoch JWBL set on Yahoo! Japan Auctions for just 500 yen a few months back and I asked Ryan to pick it up for me.  This is my first certified autograph card from Epoch and it confirmed something that Kenny told me - they have "on-card" autographs (as opposed to the sticker autographs that BBM does):

2018 Epoch JWBL #AG-25
The card is #35/65.

Card Of The Week March 8

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Justin of Charm City Autographs has been haunting the various spring training camps in Arizona for the past month or so, picking up autographs.  He sent me a message last week asking me if I'd ever heard of an independent team called Asian Breeze.  He was watching them play the Hanwha Eagles.  I'd never heard of them so I did a little research.  It turns out that they're kind of a traveling tryout camp, not unlike the Arizona Winter League that I saw a few years back in Yuma, Arizona, although the players seem a little more advanced.  The key similarity is that they both charge a fee for the players to participate - it's a way for players who are trying to continue to play to get some visibility.  The team's website brags that it placed 10 of its 24 2019 players on professional rosters. 

I took a look at their roster for this year and was able to figure that two of their players are former NPB players - Takaaki Yokoyama and Keisuke Tsuruta*.  In fact both players were sixth round picks by the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles - Yokoyama in 2013 out of Waseda University and Tsuruta in 2016 out of Teikyo University.  Yokoyama was released by the Eagles after 2016 but resigned as an ikusei player for the next two seasons.  He was released for good after 2018 and played for Asian Breeze last year.  He signed with the New Jersey Jackals of the Can-Am League last spring but never played for them.  He then spent about a month with the Mexico City Red Devils before signing on as a player-coach with the Fukushima Red Hopes of the Baseball Challenge League.  Tsuruta was also released by the Eagles at the end of 2018 but resigned with the team as an ikusei player.  He was released again at the end of 2019. 

*It helped that Justin had apparently seen an Eagles equipment bag with the uniform number of 61 on it - that turned out to be Tsuruta's bag.

Here are cards of both players when they were with the Eagles:

2016 BBM Eagles #E27

2018 BBM Eagles #E28

2018 Meito Central League Home Run Ice Cream Cards

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Back in 2018 the confectionary company Meito gave away baseball cards with boxes of their "Central League Home Run Ice Cream" products.  There were 36 cards in all and - as you might assume from the product name - they only featured players from the Central League.  My suspicion is that there were six cards for each team but I don't know that for sure.

I knew these cards existed (Zippy Zappy had tipped me off when they came out) but I don't think I'd ever seen any of them.  I had done some searches for them on Yahoo! Japan Auctions but never found them.  I looked around some in stores in Japan last year but came up empty then as well.

Fast forward to yesterday when I'm going through the box of stuff Ryan had sent me and I discover some cards that I didn't recognize.  It took me a little bit before I recognized the logo on the cards was the same as Meito's - Ryan had sent me five of the cards.  Here's what they look like:

#01

#17

#25

#29

#32
Here's what the backs look like:

#01
Unlike some of the other recent food issues, these don't appear to have been made by either BBM or Epoch.

Yet More Epoch One Cards

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Continuing my posts about the cards Ryan sent me...

Ryan got me another big batch of Epoch One cards both from 2018 and 2019.  Epoch One you'll recall is the NPB equivalent of Topps Now.  The cards are made available online for a limited time (3 days) and they only print up as many as are ordered.  Cards are 500 yen (a little less than $5) each including shipping.  If you miss getting them directly from Epoch they usually show up on Yahoo! Japan Auctions and card shops for resale.  Most of them end up being around 600 yen but occasionally there are cards that go for higher.

Most of the cards Ryan got for me he ordered directly from Epoch although there's a couple he got on the secondary market.  As usual a bunch of them I asked him to get so that I could fill in spaces on my uniform posts (if I ever get around to updating them):

2018 Epoch One #98

2018 Epoch One #203

2018 Epoch One #215

2019 Epoch One #496

2019 Epoch One #518 
2019 Epoch One #545



2019 Epoch One #591
Several of the other cards I asked him to get commemorate various milestones.  This card is for Tetsuto Yamada setting the record for most consecutive stolen bases with 33 (a record he eventually extended to 38):

2019 Epoch One #523
These cards commemorate the no-hitters thrown by Kodai Senga and Yutaka Ohno in September:

2019 Epoch One #596

2019 Epoch One #606
This card shows Kazuya Fukuura catching a line drive for the final out in his retirement game:

2019 Epoch One #672
Half the NPB games on September 4th ended on sayanora home runs.  They were hit by Tetsuto Yamada of the Swallows, Tatsuhiro Tamura of the Marines and Yoshitomo Tsutsugoh of the Baystars.  Yamada's blast (a grand slam) was the 200th of his career.  Epoch didn't do Epoch One cards for the Baystars so there was no card of Tsutsugoh (which was a pity because he had an epic bat flip on that home run) but there were cards for Yamada and Tamura:

2019 Epoch One #560

2019 Epoch One #568
Akira Neo of the Dragons - their top pick from the 2018 draft - made his ichi-gun debut in September:

2019 Epoch One #666
Oscar Colas, the Cuban player on the Hawks who defected back in January, had two Epoch One cards last year.  The first was when the Hawks promoted him to the 70 man roster from the ikusei squad.  The second was when he homered in his first at bat with the ichi-gun team:

2019 Epoch One #319

2019 Epoch One #505
Epoch did cards for all the 2019 draft picks by the Swallows and Dragons.  The cards were done after the teams did their introductory press conferences for the players in December.  Ryan got me all the cards (six for the Swallows and seven for the Dragons) but I'll just share the cards of the two number one picks:

2019 Epoch One #746

2019 Epoch One #752
Lastly on September 20th, Ernesto Mejia hit a two run walk off home run to lead the Lions to a 5-3, ten inning victory over the Eagles.  I fell in love with the photo on this card:

2019 Epoch One #631
I've generated checklists of all the 2018 and 2019 Epoch One cards with print runs (when I know them which isn't often).  I've added a page with them to the side bar of the blog.

TIC Baystars "Mini Colored Paper" Cards

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Ryan included a bunch of stuff that I didn't expect in the package I got from him last week.  He included about 60 Baystars team issued cards which I'm not going to write about since he did a post on them a few weeks back before sending them to me (he kept all the Alex Ramirez cards - like with Dan, Ryan's Player Collections occasionally benefit me!).  I had bought a bunch of Baystars team issued cards when I was in Japan last year so I was pleasantly surprised to discover there was only one card in the lot that he sent me that I already had - a 2018 card of Sho Aranami.

Ryan included some other Baystars cards that I thought I'd do a post on.  For the last couple years, an outfit called something like "Hits" (although Ryan refers to the company that makes them as TIC so I'll start doing that too) has been issuing oversized cards that they refer to as "mini colored paper" or "mini shikishi" sets.  The sets are usually small - 20 cards or less - and either feature players from a particular team (mostly the Baystars, Carp and Hawks but they've done a couple for the Swallows) or just a particular player (Yoshitomo Tsutsugoh, Yasuaki Yamasaki, Daisuke Miura, Seiichi Uchiyama).

I saw some of these when I was in Japan last year but I didn't pick any up.  Ryan bought a couple boxes of TIC's "Used Ball" sets from last year - one for the Swallows and one for the Baystars - and got four free packs of the Baystars "mini colored paper" cards - two from 2018 and two from 2019.  He kept a couple of the 2019 ones and sent the rest to me (after writing a post about them).

The cards are large - 5 1/2 inches wide by 4 3/4 inches high - and are blank backed. 

The 2018 set had 12 "normal" cards along with 12 "special" cards with gold facsimile signatures.  The signature cards are parallels of the "normal" cards but I don't know if they're actually any rarer.  Of the four 2018 cards Ryan sent me, three are the signature versions:

#02SP

#03SP

#01SP

#04
The 2019 set also had 12 "normal" cards and 12 parallel gold facsimile signature cards.  Ryan's had basically the inverse with these four cards as to what he got with the 2018 cards - three "normal" cards and one signature parallel.  He kept one of the normal cards and the signature parallel, giving me two "normal" cards:

#06

#09
Thanks for the cards, Ryan!  I'm glad to get these but I probably won't go out of my way to get any others.  They're nice but I haven't figured out how I'm going to store them yet!

2020 BBM Farewell Set

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As I've mentioned, Ryan sent me a bunch of stuff last week but there was only one complete set in it - the 2020 edition of BBM's boxed set for the players who retired the previous year.  As I've said before, the official name of the set is something like "Regret At Parting Baseball Player" but I've always referred to it as "Farewell".  BBM has released this set every January since 2011 so this year is the 10th edition of it.

The base set of this year's edition contains 36 cards and features 36 players - I say that because some of the earlier editions of the set had multiple cards for players.  Most of the big name retirees from last year are included - Koji Uehara, Shinnosuke Abe, Kazuya Fukuura, Kensuke Tanaka, Toshiaki Imae, Shohei Tateyama and Kazuhiro Hatakeyama.  Probably the biggest Japanese player not included was Ichiro but I'm not sure any Japanese player who retired from an MLB team has ever been included in the set (although off hand the only other one I can think of who retired frm an MLB team since BBM started publishing this set is Hideki Matsui and he retired in December of 2012, right when the 2013 edition would have been going to press).  The set doesn't included several foreign players who retired last year (Randy Messenger, Brad Eldred and Scott Mathieson) but I think Alex Ramirez is the only foreign player who ever made one of these sets. 

Nine of the cards feature photos from the player's retirement ceremony including several who are receiving their do-age from their teammates.  All the players are depicted in their most recent NPB uniform, even if that's not particularly representative of their career.  For example, both Hayato Terahara and Itaru Hashimoto are shown in the uniforms of their 2019 teams (the Swallows and Eagles respectively) despite them both only spending that season with those teams.  Sho Aranami had spent 2019 playing in Mexico and so is shown with the Baystars, his team from 2018.  Here's a couple example cards:

#05

#19

#02

#30
As always, Ryan got me an opened set.  The unopened sets come with an autographed card.

This set is pretty much the same from year to year but for some reason I like it.  You can see all the cards over at Jambalaya.

Random Cards From Ryan

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I wanted to do a quick post on some of the cards I got from Ryan last week.  Most of these I knew were in the box but there were a couple surprises.

A couple of the cards completed sets - this card completed my 2004 BBM Lions set:

2004 BBM Lions #61
This one not only completed my 2003 BBM Rookie Edition set, it completed my run of ALL the Rookie Edition sets (2003 to 2020):

2003 BBM Rookie Edition #26
He'd picked up a bunch of cards that I needed to complete the 1996, 1999 and 2000 BBM flagship sets along with the final card I needed from 1997.  I'll spare you all of those (there's about 130 cards from the 1999 set) but he also got me a little closer on the 2004 BBM 1st Version "Asian Championship 2003" Japan National Team insert set:

2004 BBM 1st Version #AJ18
This card (that I wasn't expecting) helps complete the 2009 Konami WBC Heroes "All Tournament Team" insert set:

2009 Konami WBC Heroes #W09A006
I'd asked him to pick up these two 2019 BBM 2nd Version "Secret Version" cards because I liked the photos.  The photo on the Ginji card is from his emergency catcher stint last April.

2019 BBM 2nd Version #585

2019 BBM 2nd Version #475
There was an unexpected 2009 Konami Baseball Heroes card of Hayato Sakamoto in the package:

2009 Konami Baseball Heroes #B09C007
Lastly I had asked Ryan to bid on an auction containing a bunch of Akira Etoh cards.  The lot had about 12 cards in all but there were only six that I didn't already have.  Three of these were Calbees:

1998 Calbee #126

1999 Calbee #178

2006 Calbee "The Veterans" #V-03
The other three were BBM insert cards.  Two of these were from 1999.  The "Dream Team" card is die cut - the white lettering is actually my scanner's background visible through the holes in the card.  Don't ask me why the Best 9 card has Chiba Marine Stadium in the background.

1999 BBM #B5

1999 BBM #D6
The final card was a 2000 BBM 90's Best 9 card.  This was kind of a cool little set featuring the (obviously) the Best 9 team for the decade of the 1990's.  Not sure if it comes across in the scan well but the card is a lenticular, 3-D card.  I didn't have any examples from this insert set until now.

2000 BBM #BN5
Once again, I can't thank Ryan enough for picking these cards up for me.

Card Of The Week March 15

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I was ingesting all the BBM flagship cards from the 1990's that I got from Ryan when I came across this card that features a photo that surprised me.  See if you can guess what's unusual about it:

1999 BBM #93

The Yomiuri Giants are the NPB parallel of the New York Yankees in any number of ways - most popular team in the biggest city in the country, most championships in history, huge financial resources allowing them to buy up all the talent, etc.  One of the more obscure things they have in common is that they forbid players to have facial hair.  Which is why the above photo of Naoki Sugiyama is so surprising.  He's even got a mustache and beard in the mug-shot on the back of the card:


I took a look at the rest of the cards I had of Sugiyama and the only other card I found of him with facial hair was his 2000 BBM card:

2000 BBM #190
Although he's clean shaven in his mug-shot:


I checked his Japanese Wikipedia page to see if he had some sort of special dispensation from the team to have a beard but I didn't see anything.  However I did see that he retired from the team in late October of 2000 after some sort of incident at the Giants' fall camp in Miyazaki.  The Google translation isn't clear but it looks like it might have been some sort of sexual assault which is kind of a heavy note to end what I had intended to be a light-hearted post.  Which makes it so appropriate for 2020.

UPDATE - Patrick Newman (@npbtracker) pointed out to me that Dan Gladden's 1994 BBM card showed him with facial hair.  Maybe foreign players are exempt.  I did see a couple Balvino Galvez cards where he's sporting a mustache.

SCM Cards From Ryan

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Ryan also picked up some cards that had originally been published inside issues of Sports Card Magazine (SCM) for me.  At my request he bid on (and won) a couple auctions for some cards from 2005 and 2006.  I wanted to do a quick post on those cards.

The first batch of cards had been published in SCM #50 which came out in March of 2005.  There were cards of five players issued with that edition of the magazine - Hisashi Iwakuma, Munenori Kawasaki, Hiroyuki Nakajima, Michael Nakamura and Ryota Igarashi.  The Nakamura card was a bonus card for the 2005 BBM Rookie Edition set and the Igarashi card was a promo for the Swallows team set.  The other three cards were an original design for SCM.  SCM cards usually have some sort of parallel version and I somehow got the gold signature parallels for all of these cards - I think the auctions were for several "hot packs" of all parallels as this wasn't the only issue that I got parallel versions of all the cards.  Here are scans of all the cards except the Nakamura card - I already had it and if you're interested, you can see it here.

SCM #47

SCM #48

SM #49

Unnumbered
If you're curious, the Nakamura card is SCM #50.

The next issue I got the cards from was SCM #51, published in May of 2005.  It included two cards commemorating the first inter-league games ever in early May of 2005 (which means the cards got turned around in just a couple weeks as the magazine was published at the end of that month).  Again I got the signature parallels for the cards:

SCM #51

SCM #52
The Chiba Lotte Marines won the 2005 Nippon Series and SCM #54 (published in November of 2005) included four cards celebrating the championship.  I only got three of them and they are not the parallel versions.  Here's the front and back of all three (you can see that the missing card is SCM #60):

SCM #58


SCM #59


SCM #61



SCM #56, published in March of 2006, contained cards for five players who had changed teams over the winter.  Three of these players were returning from North America - Norihiro Nakamura, Kazuhisa Ishii and Shingo Takatsu.  The other two were essentially traded for each other - that winter Kiyoshi Toyoda left the Lions as a free agent and signed with the Giants, who sent Akira Etoh to Seibu as compensation.  It may not be obvious at first but these cards are also parallel issues - the regular cards have white rectangles at the bottom, not yellow.

SCM #64

SCM #65

SCM #66

SCM #67

SCM #68
The final batch of SCM cards Ryan sent me were from issue #57, published in May of 2006.  These four cards celebrated the Monthly MVPs for April (and the last little bit of March) of 2006.  I did not get the parallel versions of these:

SCM #69

SCM #70

SCM #71

SCM #72

Spring Releases

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There might not be any baseball being played yet this year but that hasn't stopped the card companies from announcing new releases.  Here's a quick list of some recently announced sets.

- BBM's annual "Icons" boxed set will be released next week.  This year's theme is "Fireballers" - the pitching type, not the cinnamon whiskey - and has a base set of 36 cards (which you should assume means three pitchers per team).  The Icons set always seems to me to be a way for BBM to get cards of rookies and players who've changed teams out a little ahead of next month's 1st Version set and this year is no exception.  The set includes 2020 rookies (and 2019 1st round draft picks) Roki Sasaki, Masato Morishita, Junya Nishi and Yasunobu Okugawa.  I think the only player in the set who changed teams over the winter was Daisuke Matsuzaka.  Other players in the set include Tomoyuki Sugano, Kodai Senga, Takahiro Norimoto, Yasuaki Yamasaki, Kohei Arihara and Kyuji Fujikawa.  In addition to the base set each box includes one "special" card that could be one of 12 "foil print" cards, 6 "2020 rookie" cards, 6 "foil sign" cards or an actual autograph.

- BBM also announced two more of their annual "comprehensive" team sets.  The Hawks set will be out in mid-April and the Baystars set will be released in late April.  Both sets will have 81 card base sets.  The Hawks set has 66 "regular" cards for the manager and players along with a mascot card, a checklist card, two "Newcomer" cards and two subsets - "Your Smile" and "Splendor" - have an unspecified number of cards (although the total number of cards in the two subsets will be 11).  The set will also have 30 insert cards split between "The Best" (9 cards), "Aegis" (3 cards), "Insight" (3 cards), "Majesty" (3 cards) and "Phantom" (12 cards).    The Baystars set will have 69 "regular" cards for the manager and players, 2 "160 Club" cards, 4 "Sunshine Smile" cards, 3 "Heart & Soul" cards and 3 "Smash Hit" cards.  There are 36 total insert cards split between four sets - "Stellar Role" (9 cards), "Next Man Up" (4 cards), "Splash" (5 cards) and "Phantom" (18 cards).  The "Phantom" cards for both sets are serially numbered to 25 (I think).  Both sets will also feature a variety of possible autograph cards, including ones for Carter Stewart in the Hawks set.

- For the third year in a row Epoch is publishing a flagship set called "NPB".  At 444 cards the set is slightly larger than in previous years.  There will still be 432 cards of active players (36 per team) but there will be 12 additional cards of OB players (which I assume will be one per team).  There are three varieties of parallels for some of the cards - "regular kira" (72 cards), "silver foil" (48 cards) and "hologram foil" (24 cards).  There are also 36 GEM insert cards and 60 autograph cards (48 active players and all 12 OB players).  The set will be released on May 23rd.

- Epoch also announced the next two of their "Rookies & Stars" team sets.  The Tigers set will be released on May 9th while the Baystars set will be out on May 16th.  Both sets will have base sets of 36 cards.  There is a parallel version of each card in the base sets.  Both sets have a similar set of insert cards - "Uniform Number" (Silver, Gold or Team Color versions), "Metal Power" (Silver, Gold, Hologram), "Time To Shine Hologram" (versions A, B and C) and "Gem" (regular and Black - I think only the Tigers set has the Black ones).  A bunch of these are serially numbered.  There's also a boatload of possible autograph cards available for both sets.

- I haven't been able to find out much about it but it looks like Epoch is releasing a set called something like "Ichiro Suzuki-ORIX BlueWave Super Luxury Baseball Card Collection".  I think this is going to be a "stratospherically high-end" set along the lines of last year's "Shohei Ohtani One And Only" set.  All I know about the set is from this tweet (well, and this one announcing the set would be delayed from it's original May 1st release date) but it looks like there's only 250 boxes being produced.  I suspect it's very expensive and will have lots of possible autographs.  As the set name implies, Ichiro is only depicted as a member of the Orix BlueWave, not the Mariners, Yankees or Marlins.  In addition it looks like there aren't any memorabilia cards included.

- Epoch is also doing their Topps Now-ish on-demand cards again.  The first three Epoch One cards for 2020 were announced in the last day or so and feature Takashi Toritani signing with the Marines and two Hawks ikusei players (Shuto Ogata and Richard Sunagawa) getting promoted to the 70 man roster.  Obviously there'll be more Epoch One cards issued when (and if) the NPB regular season gets to start up.  Epoch apparently is still only doing the cards for nine teams this year although the roster changed a little.  After including cards for the Carp the past two years they are doing cards for the Baystars instead (along with the Marines, Dragons, Hawks, Tigers, Fighters, Lions, Swallows and Giants).  The cards are still 500 yen each and are available for three days only.

- And because I haven't mentioned the Baystars enough in this post, there's yet another Baystars set that's been announced.  Hits (or TIC  or whatever their name is - it's the guys who do the "Mini Colored Paper" cards) is releasing a set called "Baystars Used Ball" on May 23rd.  It has a base set of 81 cards although it will only contain cards for 16 players.  There are also a variety of parallel and authentic autographed cards available with the set.

Baseball Magazine Cards

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Every so often I get the urge to dive into the confusing mess that is Shukan Baseball cards.  These are the cards that BBM has given away in random issues of Shukan (Weekly) Baseball.  They are confusing because unlike the Sports Card Magazine cards there's no master checklist that I've ever seen nor is there a card numbering system that crosses magazine issues (again unlike Sports Card Magazine which actually took about 10 years to establish one).

The Shukan Baseball cards have changed over the years.  In the 00's they were a combination of promo cards for BBM sets and original cards.  For the last 10 years or so they've pretty much only been promos.  The original cards in the 00's had an unusual card number scheme.  Each card was numbered something like "n-x/y" where "n" was the "volume" ( I'll explain in a minute), y was the total number of cards with the particular issue and x was the card number itself.  By "volume" I don't mean the actual issue number but the number of magazines so far that year that had cards in it.  So the first magazine in a particular year to have cards in it would be "volume" 1 even if that issue was the seventh to be published that year.  So let's say that volume 1 had three cards with it - they'd be numbered "1-1/3", "1-2/3" and "1-3/3".  If the first magazine to have cards in it the following year had three cards in it as well then they'd be numbered exactly the same.  As I said, it's confusing as all get out.

Ryan had recently picked up a big lot of Shukan Baseball cards (roughly 200 cards!) and offered them to me as part of the package he sent me a few weeks back.  I've been trying to make sense of all the cards he sent and update the checklist I've been half-heartedly working on for the last five years.  But once again I got very confused because I kept coming across cards that had the same numbers in the same years.  For example I had two 2004 cards that were labelled "1-1/3" and "1-1/4" respectively.  That would seem to indicate that there were two issues in 2004 that were the first one to have cards - one had three cards and the other had four.  This didn't make any sense to me.

I had an epiphany last Sunday night.  I realized that the Shukan Baseball cards all had the magazine's logo (which is a stylized version of "週刊ベースボール") on them but not all the cards I was looking at had the logo.  Some of them said "ベースボールマガジン" instead.  I used the Google Translate app on my phone to translate the back of these cards and discovered that those cards said "Baseball Magazine".  It took me a second to realize that this didn't refer to Baseball Magazine Sha, publisher of both BBM baseball cards and Shukan Baseball, but the actual publication called Baseball Magazine.  So the two 2004 cards made more sense now - the 1-1/3 card was a Shukan Baseball card and the 1-1/4 card was a Baseball Magazine card.

Ultimately there were 25 cards in the lot that were from Baseball Magazine.  From those 25 cards I've been able to infer that there were at least 36 cards given away in the magazine from 2004 (I think the Fall 2004 issue to be exact but I'm not sure) until the July 2008 issue (the magazine went from being published quarterly to bi-monthly starting in July of 2007).  I've put a checklist together and added a page for it on the upper right side of my blog.  I'll update the checklist as I discover more cards.

Here are the cards I got.  These are the earliest ones I know of:

#1-1/4

#1-4/4
The first four cards (of which I only have two) had a theme of "Disbanded Club Players".  These cards are unique in that they are the only ones that don't identify the issue that the cards were published with.  Here's the back of Fukumoto's card to show you what I mean:


You can see on the bottom left of the card the Japanese text for "Baseball Magazine" that I mentioned.  All the cards after this one have a couple extra characters to identify the issue.  Until mid-2007 these would be "winter", "summer" or "autumn" (for some reason the spring issue never had cards) and then they were the month.  So I don't know for sure which issue from 2004 these cards were given away with.  However the magazine's Japanese Wikipedia page lists the theme of each issue since the 1980's and the autumn 2004 issue's theme is "History of the baseball team" which sounds about right for the theme of the cards.

I do not know who the other two cards from this group are.  This was the only group that had four cards.

The next cards were a little confusing.  Here they are:

#2-1/2

#2-2/2
Here's the back of Matsuzaka's cards so you can see how the issue the cards came from was identified:


The "冬" character is "winter" - the two characters to the right of it mean "issue" I think.  What gets confusing is that the cards are labeled as 2005 cards but there is another batch of 2005 cards labeled as from volume 2 and yet another batch that are from the 2005 winter issue!  Given that these cards celebrate the "Most Impressive Players" from 2004 I figure that these were came out with what essentially was the 2004-05 Winter Issue of the magazine.  So the autumn 2004 issue was the first volume with cards in 2004 and this was the second one, even though the year on the cards changed.  Did I mention these are confusing?

This is one of only two groups that I have all the cards for.  It's the only one that has only two cards.

The next group is from the summer 2005 issue.  BBM reset the "volume" count to one with this issue:

#1-1/3

#1-2/3
The magazine's theme was professional baseball in the 1970's.  I don't know who the other card from the group is.  I'll point out that the win totals for Suzuki and Yamada are only their totals from 1970's.

#2-1/3

#2-3/3
I don't know if the fall 2005 issue's theme was 80's baseball but it was the theme of the cards.  Once again I don't know who the third card is for.

#3-1/3

#3-3/3
The winter 2005-06 issue's theme was 90's professional baseball and the cards given away with the issue reflect this.  I only have these two but I do know who the other card is for.  Not surprisingly, it's Ichiro.  Also not surprisingly, Collecting Ichiro has images of the front and back of the card.

#1-1/3

#1-2/3
The next issue with cards was the autumn 2006 issue.  Since this was the first (and only) edition with cards in 2006, it got assigned volume 1.  I again don't know who the third card is.  I also don't know what "Henkakyu" means.

#1-1/3

#1-3/3
There was a little weirdness with the cards in the winter 2006-07 issue.  While the previous two winter issues had continued the volume count from the previous issue (the 2004-05 issue was volume 2 and the 2005-06 issue was volume 3), BBM reset the volume count with this issue so it's volume 1.  Once again I don't know who's on the third card.

#2-1/3

#2-2/3

#2-3/3
Baseball Magazine switched to a bi-monthly schedule with their July 2007 issue.  The theme of it had something to do with managers so the cards celebrate the Nippon Series championships of a couple active managers.  This is the only group of three cards that I have all of.

#3-2/3

#3-3/3
The September 2007 had another three cards.  I again don't know who the third card is of.

#4-1/3

#4-2/3
The November 2007 issue featured a theme of something like "the aesthetics of team love".  The cards have the phrase "The Man Loving Tigers" which I suspect isn't a very accurate translation of whatever the original phrase was.  I again don't know who the third card is of although I'd be willing to be it's either Akinobu Mayumi or Randy Bass.

#1-1/3 (Kazuhisa Iano)

#1-2/3 (Shigeru Kobayashi)
BBM reset the volume number again for 2008.  The first issue with cards was the March edition.  I had originally thought that these might be memorial cards as Inao had passed away in November of 2007 and I knew that Kobayashi had also died.  But after doing a little checking I discovered that Kobayashi didn't pass away until January of 2010 so that's not the case.  The text on the cards says "Uniform was loved by everybody" so maybe the theme was just the uniforms.  The back of Inao's card does mention his passing.  What's odd about these cards is they're slightly wider than normal cards - measuring 2 11/16 inches wide instead of 2 1/2 inches.  Their height is the standard 3 1/2 inches.

Not to sound too repetitive but once again I don't know who the third card is of.

#2-2/3

#2-3/3
The final group of cards that I know of were issued with the July 2007 edition of the magazine.  The magazine's theme was "dream record" and the cards are labelled "The Record Breaker".  I don't know what record Hiramatsu broke and while Kanemoto holds a number of records, the photo on his card was from when he got his 2000th hit (April 12th, 2008 in Yokohama) which was not a record.

You've probably already guessed that I don't know what player is on the third card from this group.

It's a shame that BBM seems to have stopped issuing cards with Baseball Magazine after 2008 as I find the 2008 cards to be the most attractive ones they did (I'm very partial to borderless photos on cards).

Weekly Baseball Cards 2003-05

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I mentioned the other day that I had gotten a big lot of Shukan (Weekly) Baseball cards from Ryan in the package I got from him a couple weeks ago.  I've updated checklist I've been working on for these cards for some years and finally added a page for it in the upper right part of the blog.

I wanted to show off the cards that I didn't already have but there's a lot of cards (around 130-ish) so I'm going to split it up into multiple posts.  This post is just for cards from 2003 to 2005.  I don't have a lot to say about them so I'll pretty much just show pictures.  I'll list the cards from each year more or less in the order they were published although I'm going to list the original (not a promo) cards first and then the promos.

A quick comment about the card numbers.  The original cards all have a number that looks like "n-x/y" where n is the "issue number" or volume, x is the number of the card and y is the number of cards included in the magazine the card was given away in.  So a card with the number "1-2/3" means that this card was #2 out of the three that were included in the first magazine of that particular year to have baseball cards in it.  I know, clear as mud, right?

First up the cards from 2003:

#1-2/4

#1-3/4

#2-2/4

#2-3/4

#3-1/2

#3-2/2

#4-1/4

#5-3/5

#5-4/5

#6-1/4

#6-3/4

#7-1/4

#7-4/4

#P7
Next up is 2004:

#1-1/3

#1-3/3

#2-2/2

#3-2/2

#4-1/2

#5-2/2

#WB1

#WB3

#WB6

#WB7
And obviously if I've shown the cards from 2003 and 2004, the next ones will be from 2005:

#2-1/3

#2-3/3

#3-2/4

#3-3/4

#4-3/3

#5-2/3

#5-3/3

#6-3/3

#2/3

#3/3

#1/4

#3/4

#WB5

#WB6
A couple notes:


- You'll notice that the numbers for the "Building Our Dream" and "2005 Season Memorial" cards don't follow the format that the other cards did.  I think those were published with special issues of "Weekly Baseball".  The Marines cards were in the "Early Winter Issue" and the Season Memorial cards were in the "Season Memorial" issue (obviously).

Card Of The Week March 22

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I got about 120 1999 BBM cards from Ryan in the package he sent me a couple weeks ago and a thought occurred to me while I was putting them away.  I noticed that there were several players in the set - Kosuke Fukudome, Daisuke Matsuzaka and Kyuji Fujikawa - who were still active in NPB.  I got to thinking that it was likely that the 1999 set was the oldest BBM set that featured any active players.  I did some quick research on it, expecting to confirm what I thought.

I was wrong.

The oldest BBM set featuring a currently active NPB player is the 1998 set as Swallows pitcher Ryota Igarashi was a rookie that season.  Here's his card (#289):


This isn't anything I've thought about tracking until now but it's only recently gotten all that  interesting.  Until (and including) 2015, the oldest BBM set with an active player was 1991, BBM's inaugural season.  Once Satoshi Nakajima retired, it became 1994 for the next four years.  Now that Kazuya Fukuura has retired it's jumped to 1998. 

Weekly Baseball Cards 2006-10

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Here's another batch of Shukan (Weekly) Baseball cards.  These are all from between 2006 and 2010 although the bulk of them are from 2006 and 2007.  I'm not sure if I don't have many cards from 2008-10 is just luck of the draw or because Weekly Baseball didn't include many cards in those years.

A reminder about how the cards are numbered - The cards that aren't promo cards from 2006-09 all have a number that looks like "n-x/y" where n is the "issue number" or volume, x is the number of the card and y is the number of cards included in the magazine the card was given away in.  So a card with the number "2-1/4" means that this card was #1 out of the four that were included in the second magazine of that particular year to have baseball cards in it.

Here are the 2006 cards:

#1-3/3

#2-1/3

#2-3/3

#2-1/4

#2-3/4

#4-2/3

#5-3/4

#5-4/4

#6-1/3

#WB3

#WB6

#WB7
You probably noticed there's two issue #2's in the list.  I suspect that the "Golden Rookie" cards were supposed to be issue #3.

Here's the 2007 cards:

#1-1/5

#1-3/5

#2-3/4

#3-1/3

#3-3/3

#4-1/3

#4-2/3

#5-1/3

#5-3/3

#6-2/3

#7-1/3

#7-2/3

#8-1/4

#8-4/4

#9-2/3

#9-3/3

#WB2

Unnumbered
I've only got a couple 2008 cards and I haven't seen many other ones:

#1-4/5

#1-5/5
I also only have a couple 2009 cards.  I still wonder if the 2009 BBM Legend Players set was actually issued in Weekly Baseball issues.

#1-1/3

#1-3/3
Weekly Baseball celebrated their 3000th issue in 2010 with a 12 card set that was issued over a three week stretch.  Cards 1-4 were included in the August 2nd issue, cards 5-8 were in the August 9th issue and cards 9-12 were in the August 16th issue.  I don't know which of those three magazines were the actual 3000th issue.  These cards appear to have been the turning point for the Weekly Baseball cards - almost all the cards that have been included with the magazine since then have been promo cards for BBM sets.

#1/12

#2/12

#3/12

#4/12

#5/12

#6/12

#7/12

#8/12

#9/12

#10/12

#11/12

#12/12

Weekly Baseball Postcards

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Lurking in the package that Ryan sent me a few weeks back were a bunch of postcards.  I wasn't sure what they were at first but a little investigation showed that they were published with issues of Shukan (Weekly) Baseball magazine.  A little more investigation showed that most of the cards were published in 2006 - it was the first year that the Swallows were the "Tokyo Yakult Swallows" and the last year Michihiro Ogasawara was with the Fighters.  Each of the 2006 postcards have a "60th Anniversary" logo on them - 2006 was the 60th Anniversary of Baseball Magazine Sha, the magazine publishing house responsible for BBM baseball cards and Weekly Baseball magazine.

Before I show you the fronts of the postcards, let me show you the back of one:


The line on the bottom right of the card says that the postcard was a Weekly Baseball issue and gives the cover date of the magazine that the postcard was published with (April 17th in this case).  I have two postcards for each date on the backs of the postcards I have but I don't know if they were issued in pairs - I've seen other postcards for sale on Yahoo! Japan Auctions that have similar designs to some of the ones I have so it may be that there were more than two published at a time.

The February 13-20th issue had these two postcards:



These were included in the April 17th issue:



The June 12th issue had these two postcards:



The September 11th issue had postcards for "stoppers":



These two postcards came out with the November 13th issue - Ogasawara was no longer a Fighter at this point, having signed with the Giants on November 5th:



Ryan also included a couple of post cards from the December 29th, 2008 issue, wishing all their readers Season's Greetings:



Weekly Baseball Cards 2011-14

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This is the last batch of Shukan (Weekly) Baseball cards that I got from Ryan.  As I've mentioned before, most of the cards included with the magazine since 2010 have just been promos for BBM sets.  All of the cards in this post are promos. 

I don't really have any comments about these cards so I'm just going to show them.  If you're interested in which issues they came out with, which sets they are promos for or what their card numbers are, go to my Weekly Baseball Insert page and check out the checklist:



































1992 Japanese Olympic Baseball Team

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The Olympics might have been delayed a year but I'm going to keep publishing these like I had originally planned.

The 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain were the first games to feature baseball as an official medal sport.  Once again there were eight teams participating and for the first time, one of those teams was Cuba.  The host country Spain also made their Olympic debut that year and were joined by Japan, the US and Taiwan (who had played in all the Olympics so far) as well as 1984 participants Italy and the Dominican Republic and 1988 participant Puerto Rico.  South Korea did not qualify for the tournament.

For the first time the games would be split between two venues - Estadi La Feixa Llarga in L'Hospitalet de Llobregat and Estadi Olimpic de Viladecans in Viladecans (hometown of Enrique Cortés Pes of the Spanish team).  The two venues were only about eight miles apart.  The ballpark in L'Hospitalet de Llobregat has been converted to a football stadium but the one in Viladecans is still configured for baseball and is the home ballpark for CB Viladecans of the División de Honor de Béisbol, the highest level of baseball played in Spain.

Despite the decision to allow professionals to participate by the international organizations for other sports (such as basketball - the Barcelona Olympics saw the first US "Dream Team" completely dominate the competition), baseball once again was limited to amateurs.  As a result Japan's 20 man roster was again made up of corporate league and college players.  Well, actually, it was almost entirely corporate league players as there was only one collegiate player - Hiroki Kokubo of Aoyamagakuin University.  The coaching staff was made up entirely of corporate league coaches, led by Masatake Yamanake of Sumitomo Metal, who had been the pitching coach for the 1988 team.  The other two coaches were Nobuhisa Arai of Kobe Steel and Hiroo Nobata (at least that's how Google Translate is rendering 野端啓夫 - not sure if that's correct) of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Mihara.  For the first time the roster featured a player who had previously played in the Olympics as Masafumi Nishi of Osaka Gas had also been on the 1988 team.  Here's the roster:

NumberPositionPlayerBirthdateTeamDraft
18PitcherItoh, Tomohito10/30/1970Mitsubishi Motors Kyoto1992 Swallows 1st
28OutfielderKawabata, Shinichiro12/5/1966Sumitomo MetalN/A
17PitcherKohiyama, Masahito5/7/1969Nippon Oil1992 Baystars 1st
7InfielderKojima, Hirotami3/3/1964Mitsubishi Heavy Industries NagasakiN/A
8InfielderKokubo, Hiroki10/8/1971Aoyamagakuin University1993 Hawks 2nd
23CatcherMiwa, Takashi12/1/1969Kobe Steel1993 BlueWave 2nd
26OutfielderNakamoto, Hiroshi8/22/1966Matsushita ElectricN/A
4InfielderNishi, Masafumi11/25/1960Osaka GasN/A
16PitcherNishiyama, Kazutaka8/28/1970NTT Shikoku1992 Giants 3rd
1InfielderOhshima, Koichi6/17/1967Nippon Life1992 Buffaloes 5th
9OutfielderSakaguchi, Hiroyuki8/2/1965Nippon OilN/A
25OutfielderSatoh, Shinichi8/7/1965Takugin1992 Hawks 4th
12PitcherSatoh, Yasuhiro7/25/1967Prince HotelN/A
19PitcherSugiura, Masanori5/23/1968Nippon LifeN/A
14PitcherSugiyama, Kento12/12/1968Toshiba1992 Lions 1st
10CatcherTakami, Yasunori1/6/1964ToshibaN/A
6InfielderTogo, Akihiro2/18/1967Nippon LifeN/A
5InfielderTokunaga, Koji9/3/1968Nippon OilN/A
3InfielderWakabayashi, Shigeki12/24/1966Nippon OilN/A
15PitcherWatanabe, Katsumi5/16/1962Daishowa Paper HokkaidoN/A

The format for the tournament changed for these games.  Instead of having the teams split into two groups for the first round, this time all eight teams played games against each of the other seven teams in the first round.  The top four teams after this round would go on to the medal rounds.  The semi finals would pit the first place team against the fourth place team and the second place team against the third place team.  The winners would meet in the gold medal game while the losers would play for the bronze medal.

Japan went 5-2 in the first round.  They absolutely dominated in the games they won, defeating Puerto Rico 9-0, Spain 12-1, the Dominican Republic 17-0, Italy 13-3 and the US 7-1.  They lost to Cuba 8-2 and Taiwan 2-0.  Their record put them in a three way tie with Taiwan and the US for second best record after Cuba's undefeated 7-0.  Japan was awarded second place overall on the basis of the "runs allowed" tie breaker with Taiwan in third place and the US in fourth.

Japan lost to Taiwan 5-2 in their semi-final matchup which meant for the first time in Olympic baseball history (all three Olympics of it) Japan would not be playing in the gold medal game.  Team USA lost to Cuba 6-1 in their semi-final game so for the first time in Olympic baseball history the US would not be in the gold medal game either.  The two teams squared off in the bronze medal game which saw Japan take an early 4-0 lead in the second inning.  The US made it a close 4-3 game by the end of the fifth but Japan scored another four runs in the sixth and held on for an 8-3 victory.  Cuba defeated Taiwan 11-1 to win the gold medal game.

Surprisingly only eight members of the Japanese Olympic baseball team went on to play professionally in NPB.  This is the smallest number from any of the four amateur Olympic team rosters (1984, 1988, 1992 and 1996) and half the number who went pro from the 1984 roster.  Here's a card and a blurb of each of the future professionals:

1994 BBM Late Series #572
Tomohito Itoh was picked by three teams in the first round of the 1992 NPB draft - the Carp, the BlueWave and the Swallows.  Yakult won the lottery and he had an outstanding half season for them in 1993 - pitching in 14 games (12 starts) and going 7-2 with a 0.91 ERA and 126 strikeouts in 109 innings.  He threw five complete games and four shutouts.  He tied an NPB record by striking out 16 Giants in a game although he ultimately lost the game.  Unfortunately he went down with an injury in early July and didn't pitch anymore the rest of the season.  His numbers were still impressive enough that he won the Central League Rookie Of The Year award that year.  Elbow and shoulder issues kept him sidelined for two more seasons - he didn't pitch again until 1996.  He was fully healthy again in 1997, going 7-2 with a 1.51 ERA and 19 saves out of the bullpen for the Nippon Champion Swallows.  His performance won him the 1997 Comeback Award.  He was back in the rotation in 1998, going 6-11 with an ERA of 2.72.  Injuries cost him about half of each of the next two seasons and he only threw four innings with the top team in 2001.  He retired following the 2003 season and was a coach for the Swallows for the next 14 years.  He spent 2018 as the manager of the Toyama GRN Thunderbirds of the independent Baseball Challenge League and has been the pitching coach for Rakuten since 2019.

2000 BBM #204
Masahito Kohiyama was a highly regarded prospect coming out of Keio University in 1991 but he wanted to play in the Olympics so he joined Nippon Oil rather than going pro.  He threw a complete game shutout against Puerto Rico in the opening game of the tournament.  He was taken in the first round of the 1992 draft by Yokohama (who were in the process of changing their name from Whales to the Baystars).  He started 1993 in the Baystars' rotation but was moved to the bullpen midway through the season.  That was his best season, going 3-9 with a 2.99 ERA.  His numbers declined the following year and an elbow injury cost him playing time after that.  He ultimately missed the entire 1998 season recovering from Tommy John surgery.  He had a decent comeback in 1999, going 4-1 with a 3.77 ERA in 20 games, mostly out of the bullpen, but he only got into 11 games with the ichi-gun squad over the next two seasons and he was released following 2001.  He joined another team called the Whales for 2002 - the China Trust Whales of the CPBL - but he re-injured his elbow in mid-season and retired.  He's worked for TBS radio ever since.

1999 Calbee #132
Not only was Hiroki Kokubo the sole collegiate player on the 1992 roster, at 20 years old he was also the youngest.  He was only in his third season at Aoyamagakuin University when he was selected for the team.  He homered twice in the tournament, once against Spain and once against the Dominican Republic.  He was the second round pick of the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks in the 1993 draft and spent 1994 as a backup player with the top team.  He played for the Kauai Emeralds of the Hawaiian Winter League that fall, leading the league in batting (.370), hits (74) and doubles (21).  He had 9 home runs, second only to his teammate David Kennedy, and was named MVP.  His home run in the last game of the season helped clinch the league championship and was witnessed by Sadaharu Oh, who would the new Hawks manager in 1995.  He must have made an impression on Oh as he ended up becoming the Hawks starting second baseman that season.  He led the Pacific League in home runs that season with 28.  He led the league in RBIs with 114 in 1997.  He missed most of 1998 due to his involvement with a tax evasion scandal.  He was convicted and sentenced to one year in prison although instead of going to jail he instead served a two year suspended sentence (H/T to Sean for explaining his sentencing to me) He was also fined 7 million yen.  He was suspended for 8 weeks and fined another 4 million yen by the league.  He moved to the corner infield positions when he returned in 1999 and was the team's regular third baseman by 2000.  He had perhaps his best season in 2001, hitting .290 with 44 home runs and 123 RBIs.  He missed the entire 2003 season due to an knee injury he suffered during spring training and then bizarrely was traded to the Yomiuri Giants for...nothing.  The speculation has always been that Daiei was preparing to sell the Hawks and sent Kokubo to the Giants to make sure Yomiuri approved of the sale but I don't know if that's true or not.  However, Daiei did sell the Hawks to Softbank following the 2004 season.  Kokubo bounced back in 2004 with another great season, hitting .314 with 41 home runs and 96 RBIs, winning the Comeback Award.  The Giants named him team captain in 2006 but he left the team as a free agent after the season and returned to Fukuoka.  His numbers started to decline each year as age caught up with him.  His last big hurrah was in the 2011 Nippon Series when he hit .320 and won the Series MVP award - at 40 years and one month he was the oldest player to ever win the award.  He got his 2000th hit in 2012 and retired at the end of the season.  He was the last active player from the 1992 Olympic baseball team.  He ended his career with 413 home runs, 3 Best 9 awards, 3 Golden Glove awards and was selected for the All Star team 13 times (although he only played 11 times).  He was the manager for Samurai Japan from 2013 to 2017, leading the team to a second place finish in the 2015 Premier 12 and a third place finish in the 2017 World Baseball Classic.

1995 BBM Orix Team Set I #15
Like Kohiyama, Takashi Miwa was a star in the Tokyo Big Six league - although he was at Meiji as opposed to Keio.  He joined Kobe Steel after graduation and was eventually drafted by Orix in the second round of the 1993 draft.  He spent most of 1994 with the farm team but was the primary back up to catchers Makoto Takada and Satoshi Nakajima over the next couple seasons.  He was the starting catcher in 1997 but he also was involved in the same tax evasion scandal that Kokubo was involved in.  He ultimately was also sentenced to one year in prison (he served a three year suspended sentence instead of going to jail) and a 5 million yen fine and was suspended for seven weeks and fined 2 million yen by the league.  While he still got into 77 games in 1998, he lost his starting role to Takeshi Hidaka.  He remained Hidaka's backup for the remainder of his career.  Oddly enough, he made the 2003 All Star team while Hidaka did not.  He retired following the 2004 season and has been a coach with Orix ever since with the exception of a four year stint with Rakuten from 2011 to 2014.

2002 Giants Team Issued Card #26
Kazutaka Nishiyama was a highly regarded pitcher with Kochi High School in the late 80's and was selected by the Lotte Orions (who were managed at the time by Kochi-alum Michio Arito) in the fifth round of the 1988 draft.  Nishiyama decided he wasn't ready to turn professional yet and instead joined NTT Shikoku of the corporate leagues.  He appeared regularly with the Japanese National Team in various tournaments in the early 1990's but he only made one appearance in the 1992 Olympics - he apparently hurt his arm pitching against the Dominican Republic.  He was a third round pick of the Yomiuri Giants in that fall's draft and spent most of the next two seasons recovering from his Olympic injury.  He was fully healthy by the middle of 1995 and put together a great half season, going 5-1 with an ERA of 0.55 and 7 saves in 20 games out of the bullpen.  His numbers declined somewhat the next couple years as he got more regular work although he pitched in the 1996 Nippon Series.  He put together another good season in 1998 (4-3 with an ERA of 2.48 in 49 games).  but the drop off in his numbers continued in 1999 and his playing time got less and less as a result.  He retired after spending the entire 2003 season with the Giants' farm team.  He's either been an advance scout or an official scorer for the Giants ever since.

1999 BBM #442
Koichi Ohshima was another former Tokyo Big Six star,  making the league's Best 9 team three times while playing for Hosei University.  He joined Nippon Life after graduating from college in 1990 and spent a couple seasons playing for them before being drafted by Kintetsu in the fifth round of the 1992 draft.  For his first couple seasons with the Buffaloes he was mostly the backup second baseman behind Daijiro Ohishi alhough he played some at short and third as well.  He hit in the .280s his first two years but his average dropped to .192 in 1995 and the Buffaloes traded him and Mitsuhiro Kubo to the Orix BlueWave for Toru Takashima and Kenji Horie after the season.  He found a home in Orix and helped them win the Nippon Series in 1996.  He took home some hardware after the season as well, being named to the Pacific League Best 9 team at second and winning a Golden Glove.  He established himself as a solid performer, winning a second Golden Glove in 1997.  He had his best season in 2000, hitting .283 with 35 sacrifices and 90 walks.  He made his only All Star team that season and was again named to the Best 9 team and won his third Golden Glove award.  By 2004 he was 37 and injuries were cutting into his playing time.  He left Orix after that season and signed on with the expansion Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles for their inaugural season of 2005,  He retired after that season and became a coach for Orix, a position he continued in until 2015.  He became the first manager of the Eat Factory corporate league team last season (Eat Factory is a company that manages restaurants and bars in Osaka).

1999 Future Bee Swallows #026
Shinichi Satoh was 26 years old when he played in the Olympics, making him the oldest of the players on the team who went professional.  He had spent a couple years playing for Takugin after he graduated from Tokai University.  He had 3 home runs and 11 RBIs in the Olympics, second most on the team in both categories (behind Koji Tokunaga who had 4 home runs and 13 RBIs).  He was taken in the fourth round by the Hawks in the 1992 draft.  He had a poor first season with the Hawks in 1993, hitting just .180 in 107 plate appearances.  His numbers didn't improve the next two seasons and he was traded along with Kazuya Tabata to the Swallows for Shikato Yanagita and Ryo Kawano.  His numbers weren't a whole lot better his first couple seasons with Yakult and he didn't get a lot of playing time, although he did play in the 1997 Nippon Series, hitting a two run home run in Game Four.  Tsutomo Wakamatsu, who took over from Katsuya Nomura as manager in 1999, saw something in Satoh, however, and installed him as one of his regular outfielders along with Mitsuru Manaka, Mark Smith, and Satoshi Takahashi.  Satoh responded with unquestionably the best season of his career - hitting .341 with 13 home runs in 113 games.  He set a Swallows team record with a 25 game hitting streak that season.  He tore his right elbow ligament in May of 2000 and ended up missing most of the next season and a half recovering.  He returned to the ichi-gun Swallows in 2002 and had decent numbers in limited playing time in 2003 and 2004.  He retired after the 2005 season and became a coach for Yakult until 2014.  He also coached for Orix in 2015.

1994 Takara #29
Kento Sugiyama pitched for Toshiba for a few years after graduating from Senshu University.  He was the first round pick of the Lions in the 1992 draft.  He got into Pacific League leading 54 games in his rookie year of 1993, mostly out of the bullpen.  He went 7-2 with a 2.80 ERA and 5 saves and 82 strikeouts in 74 innings, good enough numbers to earn him the Rookie Of The Year award that year - with Itoh winning the Central League award that season both of the 1993 Rookies Of The Year had been on the 1992 Olympic squad.  Like Itoh, however, injuries would take a toll on his career.  The 74 innings he threw in his first season ended up being the most he would ever pitch in a season.  He had a decent 1994 campaign, going 4-2 with an ERA of 3.56, six saves and 63 strikeouts in 60 and 2/3 innings over 54 games, making the All Star team and ending the season with a couple appearances in the Nippon Series against the Giants.  He had shoulder issues the following year which cut his playing time roughly in half.  Due to his injury he was pretty much forced into a "lefty one out guy" (LOOGY) role for the remainder of his time with the Lions.  He pitched in both the 1997 and 1998 Nippon Series in a losing effort for the Lions.  He was traded to the Hanshin Tigers in the middle of the 1999 season for Katsuhiro Hiratsuka.  Hanshin made the odd decision to take a guy who had been used in a one or two batter at time role and turn him into a starter, having him start nine games.  The results were pretty much what you'd expect - Sugiyama went 2-4 with a 5.08 ERA in 16 total games with the Tigers in 1999.  He was banished to Hanshin's farm team in the first half of 2000 before being dealt to the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes in May for Takashi Yoshida and Shinichi Nishikawa.  The Buffaloes moved him back into the LOOGY role but his ERA climbed to 6.14.  He started 2001 with Kintetsu's farm team before being traded mid-season for the third consecutive year.  This time he was sent to the Yokohama Baystars for Iori Sekiguchi.  The Baystars released him after the season and he announced his retirement after not attracting any interest in that fall's 12 team tryout.  He was a batting practice pitcher for Yokohama for a few years after he retired and then became a coach for the Eagles from 2006 until 2009.  In 2013 he managed North Leia of the Girls Professional Baseball League (which was renamed the Japan Women's Baseball League in 2014).  He was back coaching with the Eagles in 2015-16, coached for the Lamigo Monkeys of the CPBL in 2017 and had been a coach with the Lions since 2018.

I want to also mention that the head coach and one of the corporate league players have some baseball cards, despite never appearing in NPB.

2017 BBM Infinity #043
I had mentioned earlier that head coach Masatake Yamanaka had been the pitching coach of the 1988 squad.  I discussed his career in the Tokyo Big Six league and the corporate leagues in my post for the 1988 team along with showing a baseball card of his from the 2011 BBM Legend Of The Tokyo Big Six set.  He also had a card in BBM's Infinity set from 2017 where they showcased a trio of significant players who never played in NPB.

2000 Upper Deck Sydney Olympic Games Japanese Team Cards #223
 Msanori Sugiura joined Nippon Life of the corporate leagues after graduating from Doshisha University in 1991.  He went 2-1 in the 1992 Olympics, beating the US twice (including in the bronze metal game) and losing to Taiwan in the semi-final game.  He would play for the Olympic Team two more times - in 1996 and 2000 - before he retired as a player following in the 2000 season. 

Card Of The Week March 29

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I've been working from home for most of the last two weeks and today I finally picked up my desk enough so that I can put my work laptop on it next to my home computer.  I've been sitting on the couch in our family room to work and it's not been great for my back.

While cleaning the desk I came across this odd little item that Ryan had given me last May when I met up with him in Tokyo.  It's a plastic frame containing a card of Kenji Johjima back when he played for the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks.  The card is lenticular so there's actually two images of Johjima on it - one batting and one catching.  Here are photos of it - I changed the angle to be able to see each image separately:



The whole thing comes apart so I took a scan of the card itself without the lenticular part on it:

Other than guessing that this is from 2004 or earlier (since the Hawks were sold to Softbank in 2005) I don't know anything about this thing.  Ryan didn't know anything about it either.  The back is blank and the text in the lower right corner just says "Fukuoka Daiei Hawks" (top line) and "Johjima Kenji Catcher #2" (bottom line).
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