The Japan Series (日本シリーズ Nippon Shiriizu, officially the Japan Championship Series, プロ野球日本選手権シリーズ Puro Yakyū Nippon Senshuken Shiriizu),[1] also the Nippon Series,[2][3] is the annual championship series in Nippon Professional Baseball, the top baseball league in Japan. It is a best-of-seven series between the winning clubs of the league's two circuits, the Central League and the Pacific League, and is played in October or November. The first team to win four games is the overall winner and is declared the Japan Series Champion (日本一, Nippon Ichi, number one in Japan) each year. The Japan Series uses a 2–3–3-3 format, with the latter four games in theory if additional games are needed following tiebreakers.

Japan Series
First played1950
Most recently played2024
Current championsYokohama DeNA BayStars (3rd title)
Current runners-upFukuoka SoftBank Hawks
Most titlesYomiuri Giants (22)

The home team for games 1, 2 and eventually 6 and 7, alternates between the two leagues with the Pacific League having the advantage on the years ending with an odd number and the Central League on the years ending with an even number. Designated hitters are used if the team from the Pacific League hosts the game. There is a 40-man postseason roster limit, and the rule on drawn games is changed to 12 innings, since 2018. If the series is tied after the seventh game, a Game 8 will be held with the same team hosting Games 6 and 7 hosting this game. Only once a Game 8 has been played in Japan Series history, where the Seibu Lions defeated the Hiroshima Toyo Carp in 1986. In the event that Game 8 does not decide the series, the next game would be played at the stadium that hosted Games 3 through 5 after a day of rest, and games will continue until one team wins four games.

Every current team in the NPB has won the Japan Series at least once. The team with the most championships is the Yomiuri Giants, who have won the Japan Series twenty-two times. In 2004, the Pacific League instituted a three-team stepladder playoff format to determine the league champion, while the Central League champion had a long wait before the Japan Series. During this time, the Pacific League won four consecutive Series from 2003 to 2006. Starting with the 2007 postseason, both leagues adopted the Climax Series to determine their champions. The Climax Series involves the top three finishers in each league, though the format gives a significant advantage to the team with the best record in each league.

On November 6, 2010, the Chunichi Dragons and Chiba Lotte Marines played the longest game in Japan Series history. It lasted fifteen innings and resulted in a 2–2 draw, with the game lasting 5 hours and 43 minutes. Only Game 2 of the 2022 Japan Series on October 23, 2022, came close, with the Orix Buffaloes and Tokyo Yakult Swallows playing to a 3–3 draw after 12 innings, lasting 5 hours and 3 minutes.

Even though the Central League is historically more victorious, in recent years, the Pacific League has been catching up in titles. Currently, the Central League has 38 titles, while the Pacific League has 37 titles. The Pacific League won eight consecutive Japan Series championships from 2013 to 2020, with six by the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks, and one each by the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters and Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles. The streak was broken in 2021, with the Tokyo Yakult Swallows beating the Orix Buffaloes.

List of winners

edit
CL Central League
PL Pacific League
MVP Japan Series Most Valuable Player Award
FSA Fighting Spirit Award (MVP on the losing team)
Year Winning Team Losing Team Series MVP FSA
1950 Mainichi Orions (PL) Shochiku Robins (CL) 4–2 Kaoru Bettou Not awarded
1951 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Nankai Hawks (PL) 4–1 Yukou Minamimura Not awarded
1952 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Nankai Hawks (PL) 4–2 Takehiko Bessho Not awarded
1953 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Nankai Hawks (PL) 4–2–1 Tetsuharu Kawakami Hiroshi Minohara
1954 Chunichi Dragons (CL) Nishitetsu Lions (PL) 4–3 Shigeru Sugishita Hiroshi Oshita
1955 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Nankai Hawks (PL) 4–3 Takehiko Bessho Ichiro Togawa
1956 Nishitetsu Lions (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–2 Yasumitsu Toyoda Kazuhisa Inao*
1957 Nishitetsu Lions (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–0–1 Hiroshi Oshita Toshio Miyamoto
1958 Nishitetsu Lions (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–3 Kazuhisa Inao Motoshi Fujita
1959 Nankai Hawks (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–0 Tadashi Sugiura Masataka Tsuchiya
1960 Taiyō Whales (CL) Daimai Orions (PL) 4–0 Akihito Kondo Kenjiro Tamiya
1961 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Nankai Hawks (PL) 4–2 Andy Miyamoto Joe Stanka
1962 Toei Flyers (PL) Hanshin Tigers (CL) 4–2–1 Masayuki Dobashi
Masayuki Tanemo
Yoshio Yoshida
1963 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Nishitetsu Lions (PL) 4–3 Shigeo Nagashima Kazuhisa Inao
1964 Nankai Hawks (PL) Hanshin Tigers (CL) 4–3 Joe Stanka Kazuhiro Yamauchi
1965 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Nankai Hawks (PL) 4–1 Shigeo Nagashima Nobushige Morishita
1966 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Nankai Hawks (PL) 4–2 Isao Shibata Taisuke Watanabe
1967 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Hankyu Braves (PL) 4–2 Masaaki Mori Mitsuhiro Adachi
1968 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Hankyu Braves (PL) 4–2 Shigeru Takada Tokuji Nagaike
1969 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Hankyu Braves (PL) 4–2 Shigeo Nagashima Tokuji Nagaike
1970 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Lotte Orions (PL) 4–1 Shigeo Nagashima Reiji Iishi
1971 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Hankyu Braves (PL) 4–1 Toshimitsu Suetsugu Hisashi Yamada
1972 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Hankyu Braves (PL) 4–1 Tsuneo Horiuchi Mitsuhiro Adachi
1973 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Nankai Hawks (PL) 4–1 Tsuneo Horiuchi Katsuya Nomura
1974 Lotte Orions (PL) Chunichi Dragons (CL) 4–2 Sumio Hirota Morimichi Takagi
1975 Hankyu Braves (PL) Hiroshima Toyo Carp (CL) 4–0–2 Takashi Yamaguchi Koji Yamamoto
1976 Hankyu Braves (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–3 Yutaka Fukumoto Isao Shibata
1977 Hankyu Braves (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–1 Hisashi Yamada Kazumasa Kono
1978 Yakult Swallows (CL) Hankyu Braves (PL) 4–3 Katsuo Osugi Mitsuhiro Adachi
1979 Hiroshima Toyo Carp (CL) Kintetsu Buffaloes (PL) 4–3 Yoshihiko Takahashi Takashi Imoto
1980 Hiroshima Toyo Carp (CL) Kintetsu Buffaloes (PL) 4–3 Jim Lyttle Toru Ogawa
1981 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Nippon-Ham Fighters (PL) 4–2 Takashi Nishimoto Hiroaki Inoue
1982 Seibu Lions (PL) Chunichi Dragons (CL) 4–2 Osamu Higashio Seiji Kamikawa
1983 Seibu Lions (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–3 Takuji Ota Takashi Nishimoto
1984 Hiroshima Toyo Carp (CL) Hankyu Braves (PL) 4–3 Kiyoyuki Nagashima Yukihiko Yamaoki
1985 Hanshin Tigers (CL) Seibu Lions (PL) 4–2 Randy Bass Hiromichi Ishige
1986 Seibu Lions (PL) Hiroshima Toyo Carp (CL) 4–3–1 Kimiyasu Kudo Mitsuo Tatsukawa
1987 Seibu Lions (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–2 Kimiyasu Kudo Kazunori Shinozuka
1988 Seibu Lions (PL) Chunichi Dragons (CL) 4–1 Hiromichi Ishige Masaru Uno
1989 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Kintetsu Buffaloes (PL) 4–3 Norihiro Komada Hiromasa Arai
1990 Seibu Lions (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–0 Orestes Destrade Kaoru Okazaki
1991 Seibu Lions (PL) Hiroshima Toyo Carp (CL) 4–3 Kouji Akiyama Kazuhisa Kawaguchi
1992 Seibu Lions (PL) Yakult Swallows (CL) 4–3 Takehiro Ishii Yoichi Okabayashi
1993 Yakult Swallows (CL) Seibu Lions (PL) 4–3 Kenjiro Kawasaki Kazuhiro Kiyohara
1994 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Seibu Lions (PL) 4–2 Hiromi Makihara Kazuhiro Kiyohara
1995 Yakult Swallows (CL) Orix BlueWave (PL) 4–1 Tom O'Malley Hiroshi Kobayashi
1996 Orix BlueWave (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–1 Troy Neel Toshihisa Nishi
1997 Yakult Swallows (CL) Seibu Lions (PL) 4–1 Atsuya Furuta Kazuo Matsui
1998 Yokohama BayStars (CL) Seibu Lions (PL) 4–2 Takanori Suzuki Koji Otsuka
1999 Fukuoka Daiei Hawks (PL) Chunichi Dragons (CL) 4–1 Kouji Akiyama Kenshin Kawakami
2000 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Fukuoka Daiei Hawks (PL) 4–2 Hideki Matsui Kenji Jojima
2001 Yakult Swallows (CL) Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes (PL) 4–1 Atsuya Furuta Tuffy Rhodes
2002 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Seibu Lions (PL) 4–0 Tomohiro Nioka Alex Cabrera
2003 Fukuoka Daiei Hawks (PL) Hanshin Tigers (CL) 4–3 Toshiya Sugiuchi Tomoaki Kanemoto
2004 Seibu Lions (PL) Chunichi Dragons (CL) 4–3 Takashi Ishii Kazuki Inoue
2005 Chiba Lotte Marines (PL) Hanshin Tigers (CL) 4–0 Toshiaki Imae Akihiro Yano
2006 Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters (PL) Chunichi Dragons (CL) 4–1 Atsunori Inaba Kenshin Kawakami
2007 Chunichi Dragons (CL) Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters (PL) 4–1 Norihiro Nakamura Yu Darvish
2008 Saitama Seibu Lions (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–3 Takayuki Kishi Alex Ramírez
2009 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters (PL) 4–2 Shinnosuke Abe Shinji Takahashi
2010 Chiba Lotte Marines (PL) Chunichi Dragons (CL) 4–2–1 Toshiaki Imae Kazuhiro Wada
2011 Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks (PL) Chunichi Dragons (CL) 4–3 Hiroki Kokubo Kazuhiro Wada
2012 Yomiuri Giants (CL) Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters (PL) 4–2 Tetsuya Utsumi Atsunori Inaba
2013 Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–3 Manabu Mima Hisayoshi Chōno
2014 Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks (PL) Hanshin Tigers (CL) 4–1 Seiichi Uchikawa Randy Messenger
2015 Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks (PL) Tokyo Yakult Swallows (CL) 4–1 Lee Dae-ho Tetsuto Yamada
2016 Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters (PL) Hiroshima Toyo Carp (CL) 4–2 Brandon Laird Brad Eldred
2017 Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks (PL) Yokohama DeNA BayStars (CL) 4–2 Dennis Sarfate Toshiro Miyazaki
2018 Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks (PL) Hiroshima Toyo Carp (CL) 4–1–1 Takuya Kai Seiya Suzuki
2019 Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–0 Yurisbel Gracial Yoshiyuki Kamei
2020 Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks (PL) Yomiuri Giants (CL) 4–0 Ryoya Kurihara Shosei Togo
2021 Tokyo Yakult Swallows (CL) Orix Buffaloes (PL) 4–2 Yuhei Nakamura Yoshinobu Yamamoto
2022 Orix Buffaloes (PL) Tokyo Yakult Swallows (CL) 4–2–1 Yutaro Sugimoto José Osuna
2023 Hanshin Tigers (CL) Orix Buffaloes (PL) 4–3 Koji Chikamoto Kotaro Kurebayashi
2024 Yokohama DeNA BayStars (CL) Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks (PL) 4-2 Masayuki Kuwahara Kenta Imamiya

Kazuhisa Inao, as an exception, won the Fighting Spirit Award (in 1956) while playing for the victorious Nishitetsu Lions.

Extra inning rules

edit

Since 2018, there is a limit of 12 innings in the seven regulation games, with games being called tie games if tied after that time. From 1987 to 2020, the innings limit is abolished starting in extra games (Game 8, et al) if necessary. Since 2021, extra games are played to 12 innings as normal. Starting in the 13th inning of extra games, the World Baseball Softball Confederation two-runner tiebreaker with runners at first and second base, similar to the Japanese High School Baseball Championship (Koshien), will be implemented.

Historically:

  • Until 1966 (except 1964): Game is called at sunset (all games were played as day games)
    • 1964 (all games at night): No new inning may start after 10:30 p.m.
  • 1967–1981: No new inning may start after 5:30 p.m.
  • 1982–1986: No new inning may start after the game time reaches four-and-a-half hours
  • 1987–1993: 18-inning limit until Game 7, unlimited innings Game 8 and onward (change introduced due to Game 8 being necessary in the 1986 series due to Game 1 being called after 14 innings)
  • 1994: 18- (day game) / 15-inning (night game) limit until Game 7, unlimited innings Game 8 and onward
  • 1995–2017: / 15-inning limit until Game 7, unlimited innings Game 8 and onward
    • The three-and-a-half hour cut-off rule used in the 2011 regular season was not used for the Japan Series.
  • 2018–2020: 12-inning limit until Game 7, unlimited innings Game 8 and onward
  • 2021–present: 12-inning limit. Starting in Game 8, further innings played use WBSC two-runner tiebreaker.

Teams by number of wins

edit
Team Wins Losses
Yomiuri Giants 22 14
Saitama Seibu Lions1 13 8
Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks2 11 10
Tokyo Yakult Swallows 6 3
Orix Buffaloes3 5 10
Chiba Lotte Marines4 4 2
Hiroshima Toyo Carp 3 5
Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters5 3 4
Yokohama DeNA BayStars6 3 1
Chunichi Dragons 2 8
Hanshin Tigers 2 5
Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles 1 0
Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes7 0 4
Shochiku Robins8 0 1

1The franchise currently known as the Saitama Seibu Lions had a Japan Series record of 3–2 as the Nishitetsu Lions.
2The franchise currently known as the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks had a Japan Series record of 2–8 as the Nankai Hawks, and 2–1 as the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks.
3The franchise currently known as the Orix Buffaloes had a Japan Series record of 3–7 as the Hankyu Braves, and 1–1 as the Orix BlueWave. It took its current name in 2005 after merging with the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes.
4The franchise currently known as the Chiba Lotte Marines had a Japan Series record of 1–0 as the Mainichi Orions, 0–1 as the Daimai Orions, and 1–1 as the Lotte Orions.
5The franchise currently known as the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters had a Japan Series record of 1–0 as the Toei Flyers.
6The franchise has a Japan Series record of 1–0 as Yokohama Baystars and a Japan Series record of 1–0 as the Taiyō Whales.
7The Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes were merged with the Orix BlueWave in 2005 to form the Orix Buffaloes.
8The Shochiku Robins were merged with the Taiyō Whales in 1953, eventually becoming the Yokohama DeNA BayStars.

Leagues by number of wins

edit
Central League 38–37 Pacific League

Streaks and droughts

edit

Individual awards

edit

Two individual awards are given out at the conclusion of the Japan Series: the Most Valuable Player Award, given to the most impactful player on the winning team;[citation needed] and the Fighting Spirit Award, given to the most impactful player on the losing team.[4][5] As stated above, the FSA was only given to a player on the winning team once; Kazuhisa Inao won it in 1956, despite being on the winning side, the Nishitetsu Lions.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "日本シリーズ チャンピオンフラッグのお値段は?". Sponichi Annex. Yakyu Taro (週刊野球太郎編集部). 2014-11-01. Archived from the original on 2024-11-27. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  2. ^ Nippon Professional Baseball Organization. "Nippon Professional Baseball Organization". Npb.jp. Archived from the original on 2022-06-29. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
  3. ^ File:2014_JS_logo.png
  4. ^ Coskrey, Jason (2023-11-05). "Buffaloes to allow ace pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto to move to MLB". The Japan Times. Archived from the original on 2023-11-06. Retrieved 2023-11-06.
  5. ^ Baggarly, Andrew. "Long-suffering Hanshin Tigers end 'Curse of the KFC Colonel,' win Japan Series". The Athletic. Retrieved 2023-11-06.