Baseball cards and collectibles related to Japanese and other international baseball players.
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Complete Set: Hideo Nomo 1996 Upper Deck Oversized Cards
$10.00After five dominant seasons pitching for NPB’s Kintetsu Buffaloes, Hideo Nomo trailblazed his way to the Los Angeles Dodgers for the 1995 season. His first year in MLB earned him National League All-Star and Rookie of the Year honors.
Following that historic season, Upper Deck created the beautiful “Hideo Nomo Collection.” This set features 16 oversized cards that depict his phenomenal season.
You are purchasing an opened, complete set that has the wear and tear of something that has been admired for 20+ years.
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Masahiro Tanaka Rookie Card – 2014 Donruss Panini Rated Rookie
$1.50A schoolboy legend, a rookie phenom, a superstar ace, a national hero, and an import All-Star: Masahiro “Mā-kun” Tanaka has played many roles on the mound and has garnered as many accolades as any pitcher in the world.
He could have retired after his high school career with a solidified place in Japanese baseball history due to his otherworldly performance at the annual Koshien championship in 2006, but he didn’t stop there. He immediately earned NPB Rookie of the Year honors in 2007 as an 18-year-old rookie for the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles and proceeded to dominate for six more seasons, tallying six All-Star games and two Sawamura Awards for best pitcher in the league. His 2013 season was the most dominant and captivating in NPB history, going 24-0 and leading the Eagles to their first Japan Series championship; more importantly, he was the face of the Tohoku region’s recovery from the devastating 2011 earthquake and corresponding tsunami and nuclear fallout.
Tanaka rode that championship wave to New York, signing a seven-year contract with the Yankees in 2014. He was four times their Opening Day starter (the most by a Japanese pitcher in MLB), twice an American League All-Star, and earned his pinstripes with numerous excellent starts in the playoffs.
After playing out his Yankees contract, Tanaka elected to return to Sendai, receiving a hero’s welcome from the Eagles faithful. Now the seasoned veteran, he still is effective, being named an NPB All-Star for the seventh time in 2021.
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Shogo Akiyama Rookie Card – 2020 Panini Chronicles Contenders Optic Season Ticket
$1.00Over nine seasons with the Saitama Seibu Lions of NPB’s Pacific League, Shogo Akiyama was the leadoff/outfield prototype that managers’ dreams are made of. His bat-to-ball skills and blazing speed made him a pest to opposing pitchers, while his range and steady glove in the outfield made him one of the best defenders in the league. He did all of the “little things,” and the flashy ones too! From 2011-2019, he amassed an impressive number of accomplishments, including:
- 6× Pacific League Golden Glove Award (2013, 2015–2019)
- 4× Pacific League Best Nine Award (2015, 2017–2019)
- 5× NPB All-Star (2015–2019)
Before the 2020 season, he signed with MLB’s Cincinnati Reds. While it took him a while to adjust to MLB pitching in the Covid-affected 2020 season, he was highly productive in the second half of the season and was named a finalist for the National League Gold Glove Award for left field. Reds fans got a taste of all the ways he can contribute to a winning ballclub, and we look forward to him becoming a fan favorite in Cincinnati, just as he was in Tokorozawa.
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Hideki Matsui 2003 Upper Deck Fortyman Rookie Card
$1.50A beautiful “New Releases” rookie card featuring Hideki Matsui, a.k.a. Godzilla, in his brand-new New York Yankee pinstripes.
In 10 seasons with the Yomiuri Giants, Matsui was Japan’s biggest star. He was NPB’s most feared power hitter from the get-go, swatting 11 home runs in just 57 games as a 19-year-old rookie and then tallying 311 more over the next nine seasons. He was 8x “Best Nine,” 9x an All-Star, a 3x MVP, and led the Giants to Japan Series championships in 1994, 2000, and 2002, winning the Series MVP in 2000. His NPB achievements were immortalized with his induction in the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame in 2018.
After moving to MLB from the Giants in 2003, he more than earned his pinstripes. He was twice an All-Star, twice earned MVP votes, and was the MVP of the 2009 World Series, leading the Yankees to a title over the Philadelphia Phillies. He contributed as a dependable veteran for the Angels, A’s, and Rays before retiring in 2013. His ten years in MLB showed Americans that Japanese players can be power hitters too, and he will go down in history as a beloved hero in two countries. We ranked him as the third-best Japanese import in MLB history.
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Hideo Nomo 1995 UD SP Premier Prospects Rookie Card
$1.50This set made by Upper Deck has a unique die-cut shape and shiny, foil-like surface (not depicted well in the scan). The photo on the card is from his first MLB start on May 2, 1995, against the San Francisco Giants. A great rookie card of Hideo Nomo from his 1995 MLB debut season!
Before even joining the professional ranks, Nomo was a sensation in Japan. He was a key member of “Samurai Japan” (the national team) in various international events, including the 1988 Seoul Olympics when he was only 19 years old. He joined the Kintetsu Buffaloes in 1990 and pitched at a level never before seen in NPB. He won the Pitching Triple Crown, earning him not just Rookie of the Year, but also the Sawamura Award for best pitcher and MVP of the Pacific League. He proceeded to lead the league in wins and strikeouts of his first four seasons.
He famously left NPB for the Dodgers in 1995, trailblazing the way for many after him. Nomo spent 12 productive years in MLB, including two no-hitters, one All-Star appearance, the 1995 National League Rookie of the Year award, and two seasons that we consider to be in the top 10 of seasons by Japanese pitchers in MLB; in fact, he pitched well enough for us to consider him the second-best Japanese import player in MLB history!