Quantcast
Channel: Japanese Baseball Cards
Viewing all 2492 articles
Browse latest View live

Tomohiro Nioka

$
0
0
It's been about 10 days since the announcement but I'm just now getting around to writing about it:  Tomohiro Nioka of the Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters has decided to retire.

Tomohiro Nioka was taken in the second round of the 1999 draft (held in the fall of 1998) by the Giants (their first round pick that year was Koji Uehara).  He was immediately installed as starting shortstop in 1999 and would remain there until giving way to Hayato Sakamoto in 2008.

Nioka's rookie cards were #330 in the 1999 BBM set and #087 in the 1999 Calbee set.

1999 BBM #330

1999 Calbee #087

Nioka remained with the Giants until the end of 2008.  He had a number of productive years but was only able to win one Best 9 award (it was difficult to dislodge either Takuo Ishii or Hirokazu Ibata from that award).

2000 BBM Yomiuri Shimbun Giants "Victory Road" #08

2004 BBM 1st Version Best 9 insert #BN16

After a 2008 season that saw him have drastically reduced playing time due to Hayato Sakamoto and Michihiro Ogasawara having much better seasons, an ankle injury and a scandal in his personal life (he was caught cheating on his wife), the Giants traded him to the Fighters in a deal that brought Michael Nakamura  to the Giants.  He rebounded somewhat his first two years with Nippon Ham only played a little over a full season's worth of games at the ichi-gun level his last three years.

2009 BBM Rookie Edition #123

2013 BBM 1st Version #179
Over the course of his career, Nioka made the All Star team seven times - 1999, 2000, 2003, 2004 and 2006 with the Giants and 2009 and 2010 with the Fighters.  He appeared in four Nippon Series - winning with the Giants in 2000 and 2002 (in which he was Series MVP) and losing with Fighters in 2009 and 2012 (against his old team both times).  He also played for the Japan National Team in the 2003 Asia Championship, the qualifier for the 2004 Olympics.

2006 BBM All Stars #A58

2012 BBM Nippon Series #S56

2003 BBM Japan National Team #19


Card Of The Week January 19

$
0
0
A Noburo Aota Fan's Notes had an excellent post recently on Hiroshi Arakawa, the coach who turned Sadaharu Oh into the superstar that we know today.  Arakawa was on the Hall Of Fame's Expert Division ballot for the first time this year but was not elected.  He only received 18 votes, 55 less than the 73 needed for induction.  (Actually no one got enough votes in the Expert Division - the top vote getter was former Whales pitcher Masaji Hiramtsu with 50.)

There doesn't seem to be a huge number of Arakawa cards out there.  He had a fairly undistinguished nine year career as an outfielder with the Mainichi/Daimai Orions between 1953 and 1961 and he managed the Swallows from 1974 to 1976 before being replaced mid-season by Tatsuto Hirooka.  (In fact he was the first manager of the Yakult Swallows as they were the Yakult Atoms in 1973.)  I don't know for sure if there were any cards produced for him during his playing career - a did a quick search through Engel and didn't see any.  He has a card in the 1975 NST set (#165) which probably shows him as manager of the Swallows.  He has not shown up in any of BBM's OB sets.  The only card I have for him is from the 2011 Epoch/OB Club/All Japan Baseball Foundation Manager set (#22):


Fittingly, he does show up on a card in the 2009 BBM Sadaharu Oh memorial set (#26):


Card Of The Week January 26

$
0
0
Picked up an odd card off of Ebay a couple weeks back - there was a set put out by Comic Images in 1995 called something like "Phil Rizzuto's Baseball - The National Pastime".  It was a set of cards that appears to have been built out of public domain images, then coated with a silver finish to make them difficult to scan.  The card I picked up displays a poster from Japan in the 1950's showing two Nishitetsu Lions players (#47):



The text on the back of the card says:

This 1950s poster advertised a game in the Japanese major leagues' Pacific Division.  The game was played between the teams of Nishitetsu and Mainichi at Heiwadai Stadium outside of Tokyo.  The history of baseball in Japan dates back to the 19th century, as does America's baseball tradition.
A couple comments:

- It's "Pacific League" not "Pacific Division"
- I think it's actually advertising two games between the teams, on March 30 and 31.
- Heiwadai Stadium was indeed outside of Tokyo.  350 miles outside of Tokyo.  The ballpark was in Fukuoka, which isn't even on the same island as Tokyo.
- The Lions wore those uniforms between 1954 and 1959.  The Mainichi Orions existed from 1950 through 1957 (after which they merged with Daiei Unions to become the Daimai Orions).  So the poster is from between 1954 and 1957.

Masahiro Tanaka of the New York Yankees

$
0
0
As you probably already know, last week former Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles pitcher Masahiro Tanaka decided to take his talents to the South Bronx and signed a 7 year, $155 million deal with the Yankees (or as I call it, "the worst case scenario").  I had done a post for Tanaka about a month ago, so I'll just show off a couple other cards here:

2007 Konami Baseball Heroes 3 Highlight #B07H006

2008 BBM Eagles #E088

2009 Topps Ticket To Stardom #TSP-66 
2011 BBM Hometown Heroes #115

2011 Calbee #111

RIP Kazuhiko Sakazaki

$
0
0
Former Giants and Flyers outfielder Kazuhiko Sakazaki passed away earlier this week.  Sazazaki strikes me as someone who had unfortunate timing.  He joined the Giants out of high school in 1956, just after the Giants had won four of the previous five Nippon Series.  He left the Giants for the Toei Flyers just before the 1965 season, the year the Giants embarked on their streak of nine consecutive Nippon Series championships.  He did win championships with the Giants in 1961 and 1963, however, so he didn't completely miss out.  He retired following the 1967 season.

I believe the only modern card of Sakazaki is from the 2004 BBM Giants 70th Anniversary set.  He had a number of menko and game cards during his playing career.

1958 Marukami JCM 31b

1958 Marumatsu JCM 32a

2004 BBM Giants 70th Anniversary #023

Card Of The Week February 2

$
0
0
Picked up a card off of Ebay a few weeks back that it the new "oldest card in my collection" (at least oldest card that depicts a particular player).  This is a card of Kazuto Tsuruoka from the 1947 Marutoku bromide set (JBR 73).  According to Engel, the cards in this set show the players in their uniforms from 1946 but it is considered to have been released in early 1947.  It is the earliest checklisted post-war baseball card set.  (I'm assuming that means Gary Engel knows of other 1946 sets but doesn't know of enough cards yet to make a checklist, but I could be wrong.)


There's a couple things I find interesting about this card.  I'm pretty sure that the top line of text says "Hawks" but the team was known as the Kinki Great Ring in 1946, hence the "Great Ring" lettering on Tsuruoka's uniform.  The bottom line of text says that the player's name is "Yamamoto" - for reasons that I've never seen explained, Tsuruoka went by the surname of Yamamoto until the late 1950's.

BBM Pack Busting

$
0
0
I don't buy a lot of unopened material as I like to collect complete sets and it's been frustrating in the past to attempt to build BBM sets via packs and boxes.  I also don't usually buy BBM's team sets - mostly because I have to draw the line somewhere (I can't get EVERYTHING).  A couple of weeks ago, however, I noticed a guy on Ebay selling some 2013 team set packs at about half of face value (~$2 for a pack with a face value of 420 yen) and decided to pick some up.  With my first order, I picked up two packs each for the Hawks, Marines and Lions.  A couple of days later, he put up some Fighters packs and I bought five of them, trying to maximize my Shohei Ohtani rookie cards.  I got the Fighters cards yesterday and discovered that the seller had thrown in a bonus Marines pack as well.  (He'd also included some 2011 & 2013 1st Version cards in both orders.)  I thought it might be fun and instructive to show off the packs and what I got in them.

First the Hawks:

Unopened Hawks Pack

Contents of pack 1

Contents of pack 2
Each pack has seven cards, including one parallel foil card.  I'm not generally a big fan of the foil cards but I kind of like the Hawks ones because of the Hawks silhouette on it.  The Hawks set had 99 cards in it of which 90 were player/manager/mascot cards (all with the same background).  There were also three combination cards, five "Newcomer" cards and a checklist.  With that breakdown, it's not surprising that I got almost all player cards.

Unopened Lions pack

Contents of pack 1

Contents of pack 2
The Lions set also contained 99 cards but only 72 of them were "regular" cards for players/manager/mascots.  The other 27 cards were made up of several subsets - two checklists, a "Title Holder" card, two three card subsets containing a sequence of pictures of a player ("Lifeline"), three cards labelled "Idol", three cards labelled "Origins", three cards labelled "New Power" and a nine card "Spirit of Lions" subset.  I did a little better with variety with these cards picking up four subsets cards as well as an insert card - "Lead To Victory".

Unopened Marines pack

Contents of pack 1

Contents of pack 2

Contents of pack 3

Like the Lions set, 72 of the 99 cards in the Marines set were for the players, the manager and the mascot.  There was also a nine card puzzle subset featuring Naoya Masuda and Katsuya Kakunaka, a four card "Hopeful Rookies" subset, a two card "Moving Up" subset, a three card "Newcomer" subset, an eight card "Reliable Veteran" subset and one checklist card.  I like the fact that the back of the puzzle card shows you where that particular card goes so you can see what the whole picture looks like even if you don't have all the cards:


My luck with the first two sets' packs did not hold out with the Marines - I ended up with two doubles along with both the parallel version and non-parallel version of one card.  That's kind of frustrating given that I only opened three packs but given what I've experienced before with BBM, not terribly surprising.

Unopened Fighters pack

Contents of pack 1

Contents of pack 2

Contents of pack 3

Contents of pack 4

Contents of pack 5

The Fighters set was a little different.  Once again it was a 99 card set although it was only numbered 1 to 98.  There were two different versions of card #2 - #2a showed Shohei Ohtani pitching and #2b showed Ohtani batting.  71 cards depicted either a player, the manager or a mascot.  The remaining cards included a checklist card, a six card "Best Scenes 2012" subset, a five card "Newcomer" subset, a seven card "Rookie" subset and a nine card Shohei Ohtani puzzle subset.

I was a little disappointed with these packs.  If you look above, you'll see that the contents of pack 1 and pack 3 were identical except for the parallel card.  I also ended up getting triples of Kensuke Kondoh.  On the plus side, I got four different Ohtani cards, an insert card ("Keep Evolving!") of Daikan Yoh and, best of all, no mascot cards.  Still though, having the equivalent of one of the five packs you buy be all doubles is kind of annoying.  (Although two of those doubles are Ohtani so maybe it pays off in a few years...)

In addition to the 2013 team packs, I also recently picked up an unopened pack of 1995 BBM:

Unopened 1995 pack

Half the pack contents

The rest of the pack

Hmm, opening a pack and getting an Ichiro card and a Sadaharu Oh card - not too shabby.  Of course, the downside is that I already had both of those cards and as 1995 is one of the BBM sets that I don't have many cards from, I really would have preferred new cards.  But still, those are nice cards I can sell or trade.

More New Stuff

$
0
0
As we move into the second month of 2014 there are a couple new sets that have gotten announced:

- for the first time ever, BBM is putting out a box set dedicated to a player who is currently playing in the US - Hiroyuki Nakajima.  It's a 19 card set including 18 base cards and one "special" card - looks like autographed and a t-shirt memorabilia cards are possible.  I think the name of the set is something like "Next BBM Baseball Card Portraits Hiroyuki Nakajima" although it's possible that those words should be rearranged somewhat.  I'll be curious what the images on the cards look like - in the sample images there is one picture of him in a Lions uniform and all the rest show him in street clothes.  The set will be released in early March.

- Apparently BBM's Classic set last year was successful enough that they are re-using the theme with a small box set called "Rookie Edition Classic".  This will be a 25 card box set featuring 24 base cards and one special card - possible autograph and die-cut cards.  The 24 base cards are split between 12 cards of active players and 12 cards of OB players (I'd assume one per team for both groups).  All the base cards use the design of the 2003 Rookie Edition set (which was the inaugural one of those sets).  Despite the name, it does not look like the active players are current rookies - the two sample cards are Kazuo Matsui and Shinnosuke Abe - although it looks like the picture is from the player's rookie year.  The set comes out in late February.

- Frontier International is back this year with three new "Rookie And Young Star" sets (so far).  Like last year, the Lions and Buffaloes are featured in sets along with the Carp (instead of the Baystars) - although there's no reason to believe there won't be more sets released as the year goes on.  Each box set contains one autograph card along with either 24 (Lions and Carp) or 25 (Buffaloes) base cards.  The autograph cards could be either active or OB players from the team.  The base cards will contain active players only although they won't necessarily be rookies or young stars.  The Buffaloes and Carp sets are listed as coming out in March while the Lions set (despite being originally listed first) is apparently not getting released until the beginning of May.

2013 Baystars Fan Club Set

$
0
0
Ryan had a post today on the four different card sets put out by the Baystars fan club last season.  Reading the post, I realized that I'd seen the first set before - there was a display showing them at Yokohama Stadium at the open-sen game I went to last March:


I obviously didn't look at this too closely last year because I had just assumed that the cards were from 2012.  Looking at it now, I see that Tony Blanco's included which should have told me that the cards were new.

2014 Japanese Winter Olympians

$
0
0
With the WInter Olympics kicking off this week, I thought I'd check to see if any members of the Japanese team have appeared on First Pitch Ceremony cards in BBM's 2nd Version sets in the last few years.  I found two, both from the 2010 set - speed skater Keiichiro Nagashima and figure skater Daisuke Takahashi:

2010 BBM 2nd Version #803

2010 BBM 2nd Version #809

Yet More New Stuff

$
0
0
BBM released information about a couple new sets last week:

- Orix is going to be celebrating their 25th season since they bought the Hankyu Braves in the 1988-89 offseason and BBM is going to help them do it by releasing an Orix 25th Anniversary set in late February.  This will be a pack based set (as opposed to the box set BBM did for Orix's 20th Anniversary) with a base set of 72 cards, a nine card OB Best 9 insert set and possible autograph cards.  The base set will include 61 cards of OB Orix players, 11 cards for team managers and 9 cards for the current (2013?) team.  Since there are 10 former Orix managers plus the current one, it looks like everyone of them will have a card - Toshiharu Ueda, Shozo Doi, Akira Ohgi, Hiromichi Ishige, Leon Lee, Haruki Ihara, Katsuhiro Nakamura, Terry Collins, Daijiro Ohishi, Akinobu Okada and Hiroshi Moriwaki.  No idea if Ichiro Suzuki will be included or not (he was included in the 20th Anniversary set).

- BBM is also issuing some sort of box set entitled the "People's Honor Award" set.  The set will contain 19 cards - 18 base cards plus 1 special card which will I think be featuring the players who have won the eponymous award.  The web page lists Sadaharu Oh, Sachio Kinugasa, Shigeo Nagashima and Hideki Matsui.  I don't know if the set will only contain them or if there are other players who have been given the award over the years.  The set will be out in early March.

RIP Toru Mori

$
0
0
Toru Mori passed away from liver cancer last week at age 78.  Mori debuted with the Dragons in 1958 after attending Waseda.  He hit 75 home runs in his first three seasons but after his homers dropped to 13 in 1961, he was shipped off to the Taiyo Whales (possibly in a trade for Takeshi Honda).  He hit over 20 home runs in each of his first two seasons with the Whales but after two more sub-20 home run seasons, he moved on to the Tokyo Orions where he fnished his career in 1968.  As an odd footnote to his career, Mori was the manager of the Tokyo entry (the Tokyo Dragons) in something called the Global League, an attempt in 1969 to create an international major league with teams in Japan, the Philippines, Venezuela, Mexico and the US.  As you might of guessed by the fact that you've never heard of it, it failed.  (I'm pretty sure though that the uniform of the Tokyo team appears in "The History Of Uniform".)

Here's some cards of Mori.  He had some menko cards with the Whales but as far as I can tell, the only OB cards produced of him show him with the Dragons.

1958 Doyusha JCM 30b

2011 BBM Legend Of Tokyo Big Six #005

2006 BBM Nostalgic Baseball #098

2006 BBM Dragons 70th Anniversary #28

Card Of The Week February 9

$
0
0
Former Saitama Seibu Lion Ryan Spilborghs announced last week that he was retiring from baseball to become a broadcaster for the Colorado Rockies. Spilborghs played seven years in the majors from 2005 to 2011 and signed with the Lions after a 2012 season that he spent in AAA in the Indians and Rangers organization.  He played just the one season for the Lions.

2013 BBM 1st Version #210

The open-sen game I went to last March at Seibu Dome was the Lions' first home game of the exhibition season.  They did an on-field introduction of all the new Lions players before the game started.  I'm not positive, but I think Spilborghs is the third from the left.


2005 BBM 2nd Version

$
0
0
2005 BBM 1st Version Set Summary

Size:  276 cards (numbered 560-835)
Cards Per Team:  9 (9 players)
Team Card Theme: No team cards
Number Of Leader Cards: N/A
Checklists: 3
Subsets: 1st Version Update(15), Managers(12), New Wave (24), The Early Stage Highlights (24), Interleague Game (72), First Ball Ceremony (8), 2005 Record (8), Interleague Champion and MVP (2)
Inserts: Opening Game Pitchers, Opening Game Hitters, Run!, Fielding!, Team Hero
Memorabilia Cards: 23 different - see below
Parallels: Silver and gold parallel versions of the 108 player cards - gold parallels are serially numbered to 50. Kira versions of New Wave subset (Light packs only).  Light packs also had Kira parallels of Opening Game Pitchers, Opening Game Hitters and Team Hero inserts.
Notable Rookies:  None

In 2005 BBM followed up the largest 1st Version set so far (559 cards) with the smallest 2nd Version set so far (276 cards).  The total number of cards between the two sets (835) was in line with the total sizes of the 2002-2004 sets however (2002 had 867 cards, 2003 had 839 cards and , 2004 had 852 cards).

This set featured only 108 "regular" player cards (9 per team), by far the smallest number in any BBM flagship set.  These cards represented less than %40 of the total cards in the set.  Surprisingly, there were four players who had "regular" cards in 2nd Version who did not appear in the 1st Version set - Atsunori Inaba of the Fighters, Shinichiro Koyama and Tadaharu Sakai of the Eagles and Masanobu Ohkubo of the Buffaloes.

#613

#675

#678

#588
The backs of the cards were a bit unusual as they did not show the player's complete statistical record.  For the first time, the backs only contained the player's stat lines for 2004 and for his career.  In the case of new foreign players, the back simply read "New Comer 2005" and had no stats at all.

Back of #687 (Kazuhiro Sasaki)
Instead of signature parallels, this time BBM did cards which had a strip on one side in either silver or gold.  The player's name and number would also be written in silver or gold along with the BBM logo.  The gold cards were serially numbered to 50 - the number appears on the back instead of the front.  I think that there is a parallel version of all 108 player cards.  There are, however, no "kira" versions of the regular player cards in the "Light" packs.

Gold and regular versions of #603

Silver and regular versions of #631
In addition to the "regular" cards, BBM also included a 15 card "1st Version Update" subset.  These 15 cards used a design identical to the "regular" 1st Version cards with the exception that the cards are actually labelled "2nd Version".  The majority of the players in the subset were late signing players although a couple were traded.  Only two of them (Junichi Kawahara and Mitsutaka Gotoh) appeared in the 1st Version set.  There were five Eagles (Shinichiro Koyama, Yoshinori Okihara, Tadaharu Sakai, Matt Skrmetta and Andy Tracy), four Giants (Masashi Date, Gotoh, Scott Mullen, and Kenji Yano), two Fighters (Atsunori Inaba and Brad Thomas), and one player each for the Carp (Juan Feliciano), Lions (Kawahara) and Swallows (Rick Guttormson).  And yes, you read that right - Inaba, Koyama and Sakai appear in both the 1st Version update and the "regular" player cards.

1st Version #15 & 2nd Version #570

1st Version #331 & 2nd Version #560
Normally BBM includes the managers with the "regular" cards in the set - i.e the managers have a card that uses the same design as the players.  For the first and so far only time ever, BBM did a separate design for the managers.

#581
As standard for a 2nd Version set, this set included a subset devoted to prospects.  Called "New Wave" again (for the first time since 2003), the subset contained 24 cards and as you probably already guessed, that meant there were two players per team.  The players included were Norichika Aoki, Kantaro Hashimoto, Yosuke Hiraishi, Yasuhiro Ichiba, Shotaro Ide, Toshiaki Imae, Yuya Ishii, Ken Kamakura, Yasushi Kamiuchi, Hideki Kishimoto, Takumi Kuriyama, Atsuhiro Mitsuhara, Michael Nakamura, Takeya Nakamura, Kenichi Nakata, Tsuyoshi Nishioka, Atsushi Nohmi, Takahiko Nomaguchi, Yoshinori Ogata, Hiroaki Ohnishi, Yuhei Takai, Tomohiro Umetsu, Tetsuya Utsumi, and Teruaki Yoshikawa.  "Kira' parallel versions of these cards were available in "Light" packs.

#710
BBM included two subsets that commemorated events early in the 2005 season.  The first was called "The Early Stage Highlights" and contained 24 cards (two per team).  These cards celebrate note-worthy games in March and April.  For example, one of the Eagles cards immortalizes their first game ever.  One of the Marines cards celebrates their 26-0 drubbing of the Eagles in the Eagles second game ever.  Many of the cards depict groups of players and players are not individually labeled, at least not on the front of the card.

#729

#725

NPB introduced inter-league play in 2005 and BBM included a 72 card subset called "Interleague Game" to acknowledge it.  There are six cards for each team that each highlight one of that team's games against one of the teams from the other league.  Like the "Early Stage" cards, many of the cards show groups of players and players are not individually identified.  I frequently see one of the Fighters cards from this subset listed as a Yu Darvish card from this set.  I'm probably splitting hairs when I say that I disagree - it's kind of like saying that Topps did a card of Thurman Munson in their 1980 set because he's visible in the Yankees team picture.  Although in this case at least Darvish is the only player pictured on this card.

#760

#814
The "Ceremonial First Pitch" subset from the 2004 2nd Version set returned this year as a subset called "First Ball Ceremony".  It doubled in size to eight cards this year.  Three of the cards featured former players - Masaaki Ikenaga, Masaji Hiramatsu and Masanori Murakami.  Ikenaga's inclusion is noteworthy as he had been banned for life in 1970 due to his involvement in the Black Mist scandal.  He was reinstated in 2005 after a long appeal process.  Another card featured Mickey, the ball delivery dog for the Hiroshima Toyo Carp.  The other cards were for celebrities - "Seidokaikan Karateka" Nobuaki Kakuda, mixed martial arts fighter and wrestler Nobuhiko Takada, gravure idol and model Yuko Ogura and actress Tomoka Kurotani.

#815

#821
The "2005 Record" subset is somewhat mis-titled as the events commemorated by the cards are milestones reached by players and not new records.  The eight players included are Atsuya Furuta (2000 hits), Tomoaki Kanemoto (300 home runs), Kazuhiro Kiyohara (500 home runs), Kimiyasu Kudoh (3000 innings pitched), Kenjiro Nomura (2000 hits), Tuffy Rhodes (350 home runs), Kazuhiro Sasaki (250 saves) and Kazuyoshi Tatsunami (450 doubles),  All the milestones were reached between April and June of 2005.

#827
The final subset in the base set contained two cards celebrating the interleague champion (the Marines) and MVP (Hiroyuki Kobayashi).  These are also labelled "Interleague Game" but I feel they are a separate subset in that the design is a little bit different and these two cards are not numbered consecutively with the others (the others are numbers 743 to 814 while these are cards 831 and 832).  And the card of Kobayashi is clearly labelled as a card of his, unlike the Darvish one above.

#831

#832

Depending on how you classify them, there were either three or five insert sets issued with the set (or even four if you're half agreeing with me and half agreeing with Gary Engel).  Engel lumps the "Run!" and "Fielding!" cards together as one set while I view them as two separate ones (as they have two separate sets of numbers).  Both sets contain 12 cards (one for each team) and are made of translucent plastic.

#R3

#F7

Similarly, Engel lumps the "Opening Game Pitcher" and "Opening Game Batter" cards into one insert set while I think they are two separate ones (again because they are numbered separately). Both sets again contain 12 cards featuring the starting pitcher and cleanup batter for each team's Opening Day lineup.  There were parallel "kira" versions of these available in the "Light" packs.

#OP5

#OB8
The other insert set (which Engel and I do not disagree on) is the "Team Hero" set.  Once again, this set contained 12 cards (one for each team) and there was a "kira" parallel version available in the "Light" packs.

#TH6
There were 23 separate memorabilia cards available with this set.  There were only 50 of each card made although I do not know if the cards were serially numbered or not.  There were several different types of memorabilia available - undershirts (Daisuke Matsuzaka, Kei Igawa, Koji Uehara and Hiroki Kuroda), bats (Alex Cabrera, Nobuhiko Matsunaka, Luis Lopez and Kazuhiro Kiyohara), jerseys (Tsuyoshi Wada, Carlos Mirabal, Fernando Seguignol, Hisashi Iwakuma, Kenshin Kawakami and Kazuyoshi Tatsunami), batting gloves (Tomoaki Kanemoto and Greq Larocca) and autographs (Shunsuke Watanabe, Kazuya Furuuka, Hidetaka Kawagoe, Hirotoshi Kitagawa, Masanori Ishikawa, Alex Ramirex and Daisuke Miura).

I want to add one final word here on the "Light" packs.  I have never seen a "Light" pack from this set but I'm guessing from what I'm reading that each pack contained four cards - three "regular" cards and one "kira" parallel card - either for the "New Wave" subset or for the "Opening Game" or "Team Hero" insert sets.  I think (but again I don't know for sure) that three "regular" cards could only be from the 108 player cards, not from any of the subsets.  As usual, memorabilia cards were not available in the "Light" packs but in a departure from the previous years (as well as the 2005 1st Version set) there were no MVP inserts that were exclusive to the "Light" packs.

Wrapper

Box

Poster

Back of poster (checklist)

2006 BBM 1st Version

$
0
0
2006 BBM 1st Version Set Summary

Size: 501 cards
Cards Per Team: 37 (team card, manager + 35 players)
Team Card Theme:  Game Action/Candids
Numer Of Leader Cards:  36
Checklists:  None
Subsets:  Retirement Players (20), Legend Players (4)
Inserts:  Best 9, Golden Glove
Memorabilia Cards:  Jersey cards for Toshiya Sugiuchi, Toshiaki Imae and Daisuke Miura.  Tomoaki Kanemoto bat card.  Dual jersey cards for Sugiuchi & Miura and Imae & Kanemoto.
Parallels:  108 cards have silver facsimile autographs.  There is also a gold facsimile autographed version of those 108 cards that is serially numbered to 100. Autographed Versions of Retirement Players (except Koji Gotoh and Daisuke Motoki) and Legend Players subsets (numbered to 50).  Gold and "Blue Hologram" parallels for both the Best 9 and Golden Glove insert sets - the "Blue Hologram" parallels are serially numbered to 100.
Notable Rookies:  Kazuyuki Yoshimi, Yuichi Honda, Nobuhiro Matsuda, Daikan Yoh (as Chung-Shou Yang), Takahiro Okada, Ginji Akaminai

After growing the 1st Version set back to the pre-2002 "flagship" set sizes in 2005, for 2006 BBM dialed the size of the 1st Version set back down a little.  The 2006 set had 501 cards in it, almost 60 cards down from the 2005 set.  The drop in set size is pretty much completely attributable to the drop in the number of players depicted - the 2005 set had 40 players per team (480 player cards in all) while the 2006 set had just 35 (420).  Atsuya Furuta of the Swallows had been named player-manager and so had both a player and a manager card.

Cards #325 (left) and #341 (right)
Once again, 108 of the player cards (9 per team) had two varieties of parallel facsimile autograph cards - gold (numbered to 100) and silver.

Gold and regular versions of card #183

Silver and regular versions of card #78
Besides the annual Leader subset, the only subsets in this set are the Retired Player subset containing cards of player who retired at the end of the previous season and the Legend Player subset featuring cards of managers who left their positions (either voluntarily or otherwise) following the 2005 season.  One Retired Player who stands out is Shigetoshi Hasegawa who had been playing in MLB for the Angels and Mariners since 1997.  I believe at this time he is the only player to retire as an MLB player to appear in one of BBM's subsets or sets for retiring players.  Kazuhiro Sasaki also appears in this particular subset, but he had played in NPB the previous two seasons.  The other 18 players in the subset are Koji Gotoh, Kiyoshi Hatsushiba, Tsutomu Iwamoto, Takashi Kashiwada, Tetsuru Kawajiri, Makoto Kitoh, Kanei Kobayashi, Daisuke Motoki, Takeshi Nakamura, Shinji Nishiyama, Kenjiro Nomura, Koichi Ohshima, Toshikazu Sawazaki, Masanori Taguchi, Taisei Takagi, Hiroshi Takamura, Kenichi Watanabe and Tatsuki Yamamoto.  The four former managers (Legend Players) are Tsuneo Horiuchi, Yasushi Tao, Tsutomu Wakamatsu and Koji Yamamoto.  They're all depicted as managing the team they were left go from (the Giants, Eagles, Swallows and Carp respectively) rather than from their playing days like all the previous Legend Player subsets.  There are serially numbered (to 50) autographed versions of all the Retirement Player and Legend player cards except for Gotoh and Motoki for some reason.

#475

#486
Regular packs for the set contained the two now-standard insert sets for the previous season's Best 9 and Golden Glove teams.  There were gold parallel versions of both inserts also along with a serially numbered (to 100) "blue hologram" version.

#BN2

Gold Version of #BN11

#GG4
Engel does not list any special "Light" pack cards associated with this set - no "kira" cards, not MVP inserts.  I do not know if this is simply an oversight on his part of if BBM either did not issue "Light" packs for this set or didn't issue special cards with them.  Engel does list "Light" pack cards for the 2006 2nd Version set so I'm inclined to believe that BBM didn't issue them for this set.

Other cards and ephemera (this is the last set that I attempted to build from unopened boxes so the last one that I'll have wrappers, etc for):

#57

#159

#131

#230

#181

#279

Back of #375 (Shinnosuke Abe)

#499

#450

Wrapper

Box top

Checklist insert in box


Card Of The Week February 16

$
0
0
In honor of last Friday being Valentine's Day, I thought I'd share a card of...no, not him, but instead former Cincinnati Reds pitcher Joe Valentine, who in 2007 was a Chunichi Dragon just long enough to make it into BBM's 1st Version set (#218).  He only pitched for the ni-gun Dragons before getting released in June of that year.  He finished the season back in the US playing for the Long Island Ducks of the Atlantic League (where one of his teammates was former Orix Blue Wave pitcher Ed Yarnell).


2014 BBM 1st Version Announced

$
0
0
BBM released information this week on this years 1st Version set and it's going to be...different.

First, the good news.  The base cards look very nice although similar to last year's base cards (in the same way Topps' flagship cards this year look like last year's).  They didn't drop the number of player (and manager) cards lower than the 27 it's been at since 2011 (although they are apparently continuing the stunt of having two cards for Shohei Otani - one as a pitcher and one as a batter - which is great unless it means there's only 26 Fighters represented in the set instead of 27).  And after four years (which was at least two too many) they've retired the "Cross-blank" cross set subset after running out of elements (water in 2010, earth in 2011, fire in 2012 and air in 2013).

Now the bad news.  All the subsets that have been a staple of BBM's flagship set for years are gone.  No team cards.  No Best 9 cards.  No Golden Glove cards.  And most unbelievably, no Leader cards.  Instead, there will be six(!) 12 card subsets (and you already know what 12 cards in a subset means) - Genuine Ace, Big Slugger, Limitless Hope, Spirit Of The Team, God Of Defense and Last Guardian.

There will also be three 12 card insert sets - Great Hit Makers, Wonder Rookie and Lightning.  There will be parallels of 108 of the player cards, as well as all the rookie cards, all the subset cards and the Great Hit Makers and Wonder Rookie inserts.  The Lightning inserts are limited to 50 cards each - I assume they are serially numbered but I don't know that for sure.  There will also be memorabilia cards available - jersey and autograph cards.

I'm very disappointed that BBM isn't doing the Leader cards.  Masahiro Tanaka should have had several cards in the subset - MVP, Sawamura and various statistical categories.  And I was looking forward to a Wladimir Balentien 60 home run card.  And BBM is really saying "f*ck you" to Eagles fans - not only do the Eagles not get a Nippon Series set last fall, they don't even get a "Nippon Series Champion" card in the 1st Version set.

The set will be out in mid-April.

Card Of The Week February 23

$
0
0
After spending a couple of weeks in camp coaching with the Yomiuri Giants, Hideki Matsui headed for the US last week to spend some time coaching for the Yankees in their spring training.  So he's leaving my least favorite NPB team to work with my least favorite MLB team.  But regardless, I thought that was a good enough excuse to show case this Matsui card this week:


This card was given away at several Giants games at the Tokyo Dome the first part of last May.  That included the game that was preceded by the "People's Honor Award" ceremony for Matsui and Shigeo Nagashima which explains the back of the card:


More BBM Pack Busting

$
0
0
Got a couple more BBM team packs from the Ebay seller that I had bought the other packs from.  This time they were Eagles team packs.  He had originally been selling these at $5 a pack but he dropped it to $4 after a few weeks.  Since that was roughly the face value of the packs and I was buying something else from him anyway, I decided to pick up two of them.

Unopened Eagles pack

Contents of pack #1

Contents of pack #2

I'm not a big fan of the parallel cards but if I'm going to get one it's nice to get a good one.  Each pack had a Masahiro Tanaka - the parallel in the first pack and the "Unrivaled Ace" card in the second.

The set contained 99 cards, of which 74 were devoted to the players and manager.  There were also three mascot cards, two leader/checklist cards, two "Star Of Hope" cards, three "Powerful Backer" cards, three "Unrivaled Ace" cards (all featuring Tanaka), three "Combination" cards and nine "Wings To Flap" cards.

I was a little bummed to get two doubles out of the 14 cards but given that it's BBM, I wasn't actually surprised.  I did find it odd that I only got a couple cards from the subsets.

That's More Like It

$
0
0
Details (including a checklist) for the first Calbee set of the year were announced this past week.  There will be 84 "regular" player cards (7 per team) in the First Series, along with a whopping five subsets.  The subsets are all four or less cards but still - five subsets!  Calbee appears to be attempting to make up for BBM's slack in not commemorating the Eagles championship - there's two cards for the League Champions (the Eagles and the Giants), four cards for the Climax Series and three cards for the Series itself.  There's also a three card subset for "Legend Retirement Players" Tomonori Maeda, Shinya Miyamoto and Shinjiro Hiyama - I don't know if these will feature reprints of their earlier Calbee cards although historically they have not.  There is also the ubiquitous four checklist cards - this year it appears that Calbee has resumed featuring highlights on these as Wladimir Balentein, Shohei Ohtani and Norihiro Nakaura are all included.

It also looks like Calbee has addressed one of my complaints from last year and is featuring players who switched teams in the off season (Hirokazu Ibata for one) and rookies (Yuki Matsui) in the set.

As usual, there's a 24 card "Star" insert set featuring two players per team.  There is also a "Title Holders" box set that is being made available as some sort of online purchase.  Oddly enough, this subset includes Masahiro Tanaka who obviously will not play in Japan in 2014 but not Estaban German, who will.  German lead the Pacific League in OBP in 2013 while playing for the Lions but joined Orix in the off season and apparently Calbee did not get a picture of him with his new team in time.

There are also two special "lucky" card winners that (I think) feature last year's Rookie Of The Year winners - Takahiro Norimoto and Yasuhiro Ogawa (who both appear in the Title Holder box set as well).  Not sure how you win one of them.

According to Niki'spage about the set it will be released March 24th.
Viewing all 2492 articles
Browse latest View live