Eastern League (Japanese baseball)
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Sport | Baseball |
---|---|
Founded | 1955 |
Ceased | 1956 (revived in 1961) |
No. of teams | 8 |
Country | Japan |
The Eastern League (イースタン・リーグ) is one of the two minor leagues ("ni-gun")[1] of Japanese professional baseball. The league is owned and managed by the Central League of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). Teams in the Eastern League generally play an 80-game schedule every year.
Teams
[edit]The league currently contains the minor league affiliates of seven Japanese professional teams. With a few exceptions, Eastern League teams currently carry the same name, and use the same uniforms, as their parent team.
Current teams, their main home stadiums and locations:
- Chiba Lotte Marines (ja:ロッテ浦和球場:,Saitama, Saitama)
- Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters (ja:ファイターズスタジアム,Kamagaya, Chiba)
- Saitama Seibu Lions[2] (ja:西武第二球場, Tokorozawa, Saitama)
- Yokohama DeNA BayStars (Yokosuka Stadium, Yokosuka, Kanagawa)
- Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles (ja:楽天イーグルス泉練習場, Sendai, Miyagi)
- Tokyo Yakult Swallows (ja:ヤクルト戸田球場, Toda, Saitama)
- Yomiuri Giants (Yomiuri Giants Stadium, Inagi, Tokyo)
- Oisix Niigata Albirex (Niigata Prefectural Baseball Stadium, Niigata, Niigata)
History
[edit]Shin Nippon League
[edit]In 1954 the six teams of NPB's Central League agreed to form their own minor league — the Shin Nippon League[3] (or "New Japan League")[1] — as a complement to the already extant Kansai Farm League, which had begun play in 1952. The minor league affiliates of the Chunichi Dragons and Hanshin Tigers moved over from the Kansai Farm League.
The initial roster of Shin Nippon League teams (NPB parent team in parentheses):[1]
- Chunichi Diamonds (Chunichi Dragons)
- Hiroshima Greens (Hiroshima Carp)
- Kokutetsu Fresh Swallows (Kokutetsu Swallows)
- Osaka Jaguars (Osaka Tigers)
- Taiyō-Shochiku Junior Robins (Taiyō-Shochiku Robins)
- Yomiuri Junior Giants (Yomiuri Giants)
Formation of the Eastern League
[edit]Both minor leagues decided to join forces with Nippon Professional Baseball in 1955, and the 14 farm teams of the Central League and Pacific League were split up to create the Eastern League and the Western League, each with seven teams.
The Eastern League contained the minor league teams of the seven professional teams that had their homefields in the Eastern region of Japan (NPB parent team in parentheses):[1]
- Daiei Junior Stars (Daiei Stars)
- Kokutetsu Fresh Swallows (Kokutetsu Swallows)
- Mainichi Little Orions (Mainichi Orions)
- Taiyo Junior Whales (Taiyo Whales)
- Toei Chick Flyers (Toei Flyers)
- Tombo Unions ni-gun (Tombo Unions)
- Yomiuri Junior Giants (Yomiuri Giants)
1956-1960 hiatus
[edit]After one year of operation, the league dissolved in 1956[1] for financial reasons.[3]
Rebirth
[edit]The Eastern League restarted in 1961 with five teams:[1] in the interim the Daiei Stars and the Takahashi Unions (formerly the Tombo Unions) had merged into the Daiei Unions, who in turn merged with the Mainichi Orions to ultimately form the Daimai Orions (now known as the Chiba Lotte Marines). From that point until the year 2000, all Japanese minor league teams used the same name as their NPB parent club.[1]
In 1979, the Nishitetsu Lions moved their franchise to Saitama, with their minor league team leaving the Western League to join the Eastern League.
In 2005 the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles were formed to join NPB, and their farm team became part of the Eastern League as well.
The independent Niigata Albirex Baseball Club was added to Eastern League for the 2024 season.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g "Minor League History," JapaneseBaseball.com. Archived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Accessed April 20, 2015.
- ^ The minor league team name depends on the sponsoring company; from 2004–2006 they were known as the Invoice Lions; in 2007 naming rights were acquired by Goodwill, but they reverted to the major league team name in 2008 because of Goodwill's illegal commercial activities.
- ^ a b Ryo. "Ni-Gun Baseball," NPB Tracker (25 August 2009). Archived 31 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine