Nishi Nippon Pirates

Nishi Nippon Pirates / Nishinippon Pirates
Cap insignia
Information
LeagueNippon Professional Baseball
Central League (1950)
LocationChūō-ku, Fukuoka, Fukuoka, Japan
BallparkHeiwadai Stadium
Founded1949
Folded1951 (merged with the Nishitetsu Clippers)
ColorsWhite, Navy, Yellow
     
OwnershipNishinippon Shimbun
ManagerToshio Kojima

The Nishi Nippon Pirates (西日本パイレーツ, Nishi-Nippon Pairētsu) or Nishinippon Pirates were a former Nippon Professional Baseball team and a founding member of the Central League in 1950. The team was owned by the Nishinippon Shimbun and played their home games in Heiwadai Stadium in Fukuoka. After only one season in which they fell victim to the first perfect game in professional Japanese baseball history, had financial and managerial problems, and finished in sixth place, the Pirates merged with the other Fukuoka-based Nishitetsu Clippers to form the Nishitetsu Lions in the Pacific League.

History

Yuko Minamimura played in Pirates' only season.

During the Japanese Baseball League's (JBL) 1949–50 offseason, the Fukuoka-based Nishinippon Shimbun and Nishitetsu Railroad, newspaper and railroad companies, respectively, planned to jointly create a professional baseball team.[1] The plan broke down, however, when the JBL decided to reorganize and split into the Central (CL) and Pacific Leagues (PL) before the 1950 season. After the split, the Yomiuri Shimbun, the newspaper company that owned the CL's Yomiuri Giants, persuaded Nishinippon to form their own Central League team and the Nishi Nippon Pirates were formed on September 19, 1949,[2] with the newly-built Heiwadai Stadium in Fukuoka acting as the team's home field.[3] Nishitetsu went ahead and also created its own team, the Nishitetsu Clippers, in the Pacific League in November.

On June 28, 1950, in a game against the Giants, the Pirates were on the losing side of Hideo Fujimoto's perfect game, the first in professional Japanese baseball history.[4] Because of ownership's inexperience in operating a sports team, management was unstable and they soon faced financial difficulties. By August, players' salaries began getting delayed soon went unpaid.[5] Nishitetsu, realizing that Shimbun's management of the team was failing, proposed a merger and officially agreed to it in September. The team finished the season sixth out of eighth in the Central League. However, because of the large talent discrepancy between the top and bottom teams, the Pirates' record was 50–83–3 and they finished 48 games behind the first-place Shochiku Robins.[4][5]

After the season, the team fought a proposal by Yomiuri to merge the Taiyo Whales and the Hiroshima Carp and dissolve the Pirates to create a six-team Central League. At a meeting of CL team representatives on January 10, 1951, the league realignment proposal was postponed. A week later, the Pirates announced former Giants' manager Osamu Mihara as the team's next manager. The initial aim of the teams' merger plan was to play in the Central League, where they could continue to play against the popular Giants. However, this plan was complicated when the team hired Mihara and also tried to acquire Giants' hitter Noboru Aota, as the Giants and other CL teams found the attempt problematic.[6] With the relationship with the other Central League teams in trouble, it was instead announced on January 30 that the Pirates' merger with the Clippers would result in the formation of a Pacific League team, the Nishitetsu Lions.[7] Mihara would go on to manage the Lions starting with the 1951 season.[8] After the merger, the Giants argued that the Central League had the rights to Nishi Nippon's players and Yuko Minamimura and Saburo Hirai would both play for Yomiuri the following season.

Roster

In the one season that the Pirates existed, the team utilized 27 players and was managed by player-manager Toshio Kojima.[9] No Pirates players or personnel received any awards that season, nor were any ever voted into the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame.

1950 Nishi Nippon Pirates roster

Pitchers

Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Manager

  • 30 Toshio Kojima

References

  1. ^ "1951年 西鉄ライオンズ誕生!" [1951 - The Nishitetsu Lions are born!] (in Japanese). Saitama Seibu Lions. Retrieved December 13, 2020.
  2. ^ Chunichi Dragons, ed. (February 1, 2006). 中日ドラゴンズ70年史 [70-year history of the Chunichi Dragons] (in Japanese). Chunichi Shimbun. p. 47. ISBN 978-4806205142.
  3. ^ "【球跡巡り・第6回】西鉄黄金時代の「野武士軍団」が躍動した舞台 平和台野球場" [[Baseball Ruins Tour #6] Heiwadai Baseball Stadium, where the "Wild Warrior Army" of Nishitetsu's Golden Age thrived] (in Japanese). Nippon Professional Baseball. October 19, 2018. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  4. ^ a b Nagata, Takeshi (June 28, 2020). "完全試合をくらった球団" [The team that lost the perfect game]. Nishinippon Shimbun (in Japanese). Retrieved December 13, 2020.
  5. ^ a b Tominaga, Hirotsugu (April 2019). "The Perfect Memorial Year" (PDF). Newsletter. Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Retrieved December 13, 2020.
  6. ^ "西鉄ライオンズ最強伝説: 草創期編/5 三原、福岡へ" [The Legend of the Nishitetsu Lions: The Early Years / 5 Mihara Goes to Fukuoka]. Mainichi Shimbun (in Japanese). June 9, 2017. Retrieved December 13, 2020.
  7. ^ "パシフィック・リーグ" [A Brief History of the Pacific League] (in Japanese). Pacific League. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  8. ^ "1951 Nishitetsu Lions". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  9. ^ "1950 Nishinippon Pirates". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved December 13, 2020.

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