Friday, December 12, 2025

Navigating through a Japanese repack

I was fortunate to be able to travel for a couple of weeks to Japan the past year - mostly taking photo ops at various sighteeing sites.

When I could, I tried to look for cards and seek out places where they were sold - this blog was instrumental in helping find a few card shops, where I sought a few places out to get a look at the Japanese baseball card scene.

In my second trip to Yellow Submarine Akihabara, where it's part of a multi-floor 'department store,' made up of different shops for various hobbies / interests I might be too old for [or not] - there was a dedicated section for sports cards and other trading cards with bulk bins to rummage through, packs for sale, supplies and single cards displayed behind glass.

There might have been a display table with repacks and after browsing around for miscellanous 'non-sport singles' featured behind glass - I grabbed a couple of bulk baseball card repacks in plastic for 200 yen or around $1.30.

I saw another person grabbing and stacking 5-10 repacks together and while it wasn't all that serious - I wondered if I should stake my claim before they all disappeared for the day.

I do not know about Japanese baseball cards at all, so maybe the nuances about collecting specific ones didn't matter as much as getting a bunch of cards to take home with me - I ended up thumbing through the contents and while these might not be valued cards, I tried to separate them where I had keepers for my collection.

Cards of Atsuya Furata and Shigeo Nagashima - I didn't know who Furata was and his card ends up an odd duck for me, but looking him up online, he ends up being a legendary catcher and Japanese baseball Hall of Famer.

Nagashima ends up a legend I may have heard of in passing where an American collector on YouTube collects him - go figure, I ended up buying a copy of the card from the bulk bins of the card shop, where I didn't go through the repack until I was back home.

Some retro cards of Japanese baseball legends - adds some historicity in my pack, even if the cards are actually fairly recent.
Japanese cards of guys who played in the big leagues - just like the Nagashima, I may or may not have picked up a copy of the Masahiro Tanaka card I found in the repack
A couple of cards of a pair of Japanese players expected to sign with big league teams - the cards may only be regular cards, but it's a novelty where I only really have the chance to collect MLB cards.
Cards of a couple of gaijin players who played in Japan - after a dominant season pitching in Korea, Cody Ponce signed a three year contract with the Toronto Blue Jays to see whether he can build on his overseas performance.
Some odds and ends - a couple of the same cards found of Shinnosuke Ogasawara, a Japanese pitcher who played for the Washington Nationals in 2025 and a trio of gaijin players.

These may not be the best example, but for guys who have had their share of mainstream American cards - it's always interesting to see examples of their Japanese cards.

Parallels / inserts - these might not be high brow cards of better players, but anything different besides regular cards ends up as a teaser.
Standouts - even if only regular cards, I went ahead and used Baseball Reference to check up on players and see whether they were 'good or not.'

I wanted to separate the bulk repack cards of guys who might be better than the rank-and-file players at best - where maybe if young enough, have the chance to eventually big leaguers, if that is a path they decide to choose.

Maybe I will look to get a beat on keeping up with the Japanese baseball season in 2026 - where it might be fun keeping up with certain guys whose cards I've pulled and made keepers of.
More standouts - maybe I can make a themed curated set out of this repack, where it ends up being a scrapbook, rather than trying to squirrel the cards in different places.
There were a couple of instances were I was bipped with the same player - I wasn't sure who Sachiya Yamasaki was, but he pitched for the Nippon Ham Fighters the past three seasons and has generally been a solid veteran.
Cards of old dudes - there might be a more cards of older players set aside in my standouts portion, but these end up as notable 'super veterans.'

I found a card of Takumi Kuriyama, a 41-year old who hung on to play his 22nd season with one team, the Seibu Lions - where everyone gets old, it's pretty neat to see a pro baseball player still active in his 40s.

I also found a card of Masanori Ishikawa, who is even older at 45 and was still pitching through 2025, all with the Yakult Swallows - he has a losing career record of 198-203, but it looks like he chasing 200 wins, so he might be back next season.

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