Monday, March 6, 2017

2016 Epoch JWBL Set

I don't know a whole lot about the Japan Women's Baseball League (JWBL).  The league was founded in 2009 as the Girls Professional Baseball League (GPBL) and was renamed in 2013.  There have apparently always been four teams in the league although the names have changed constantly.  Currently the teams are Hyogo Dione, Kyoto Flora, Reia and Saitama Astraia.  Ryan knows a lot more about the league of course as he's actually gone to at least a couple games - up in Sendai and near Yokohama.  The league has an official YouTube channel with some nice highlight videos:




Ryan has reported in the past on baseball cards related to the league.  BBM did cards in at least 2010 and 2011 (no idea how they were distributed) and an outfit called AIAIO has been issuing cards for the league since 2012 maybe although they appear to be either a give away with tickets or possibly sold through AIAIO itself.  Last October thought, Epoch issued what I believe is the first national release of baseball cards for the league.  It was a 78 card set issued as a traditional pack based set - it was sold in boxes of 20 packs of 5 cards each.  It actually was the ONLY set Epoch issued last year as a traditional pack based set instead of a ridiculously overpriced box containing a handful of cards for more than 10,000 yen.  There were no insert cards to go with the base set although there were possible autographed cards as well as "checki" cards.

The cards for each team include a card of the mascot, the manager and a coach.  There are 22 cards for Hyogo Dione, 21 cards for Kyoto Flora, 13 cards for Reia and 21 cards for Saitama Astraia.  Each of the teams has a former NPB player as either coach or manager - Hyogo coach Tomoya Kawaguchi (Orix), Kyoto coach Heisyu Ohhara (Yakult), Reia coach Takanobu Tsujiuchi (Yomiuri) and Saitama manager Shinsaku Katahira (Nankai, Seibu & Taiyo).

I've no idea why Reia has much fewer cards than the other three teams.  What's also odd is that Hyogo, Kyoto and Saitama have only one "Rookie" card but Reia has four.  Since I don't know anything about the league, I don't know if the player selection is leaving anyone out.  I do know that the two players I was aware of - Shingo Kawabata of the Swallows sister Yuki and Minami Takatsuka who had a promo card for the 2015 Real Venus set in SCM #114 - are both in the set.

The cards themselves are pretty attractive and for the most part feature action photos of the players:

#54

#59

#01

#14

#73

#70

#22

#40
I have to say that I find their mascots a bit on the creepy looking side:

#77
If you've been paying attention you'll have noticed that the total number of cards I listed for the teams adds up to only 77.  The other card is yet another "First Pitch" card for Ami Inamura:

#78
Despite not knowing much about this league, I really like this set.  One of the things I like about it is that unlike BBM's Real Venus sets there's no attempt to glamorize the ballplayers - they're not treated as anything other than the athletes they are.  This set would look pretty much exactly the same if the players in the league were all men - of course the name of the league wouldn't make much sense then.   (And in fairness I think the 2010-11 BBM sets and the AIAIO cards are the same way.)  As a father of two young women that means a lot to me.

You can as always see all the cards at Jambalaya.  They have a handful of the autographed cards on line as well.

2 comments:

kbocollections said...

Those ladies have some skills. I know that my community league team would get drilled by them. Also, some nice looking cards. It would be cool if Korea had a professional women's league, but to my knowledge they only have women's community leagues. The community leagues do occasionally play women against men from time to time, but not too often.

Anonymous said...

There is a highlight video on the league’s YouTube channel where Minami hits a towering blast for a home run. This isn’t softball!