Following Japanese Baseball, Part 1: Online Text

» 03 March 2014 » In npb »

Back when I announced my return to writing, one of the topics I intended to pursue was some guidelines for how to follow Japanese baseball without know the Japanese language. It took me almost a year to get to it, but here we are.

One of my frequently asked questions is “how can I follow Japanese baseball from the US?” I’m happy to say that thanks to the Web, it’s pretty doable. But unfortunately some of this stuff is fairly well-hidden, my hope is to have something of a guide available. My plan is to break this into three or four posts: this one for writers, another for Twitter, one for video, and then any miscellany if necessary.

On with the show. If you want to read up on NPB or Japanese baseball in general, you now have plenty of options. Here are my favorites:

The Beat

  • Japan Times columnist Wayne Graczyk is probably the dean of active Yakyu writers.
  • Robert Whiting is kind of the dean emeritus to Wayne’s dean. I don’t think he’s regularly publishing articles, but he does turn up from time to time.
  • The Japan Times has doubles its quality coverage with Jason Coskrey, who has also written for ESPN.
  • John Gibson writes for the Daily Yomiuri and One World Sports. I don’t think his Yomiuri work is online, but his One World Sports work is.
  • Jim Allen has been writing about Pro Yakyu since the mid-90’s. He’s currently with Kyodo, and I suspect his work is buried behind a paywall. But fear not! Because the next bullet point makes up for it.
  • Additionally, John and Jim host an excellent weekly podcast, which can be downloaded from iTunes or John’s page on Japanesebaseball.com. They were even kind enough to have me on a couple months ago.

The Blogosphere

  • Any summary of the Yakyu Blogosphere has to begin with Michael Westbay, the founder and operator of JapaneseBaseball.com. JapaneseBaseball.com has been an invaluable resource to me, particularly early on in my pursuit of Pro Yakyu knowledge in the late-90’s/early-00’s. Without JapaneseBaseball.com and it’s vibrant community, I never would have learned enough to start this site. Westbay-san also blogs, has written for Baseball Magazine, and did a video podcast throughout 2013.
  • Any summary of the Yakyu Blogosphere has to continue with Gen Sueyoshi and YakyuBaka.com. If you want a place to keep up with the daily and even hourly goings-on of Japanese baseball, YakyBaka.com is the single best resource available.
  • Deanna Rubin doesn’t seem to be actively updating her Marinerds site, but the archives are well worth a visit. You’ll tons of pics and information about college ball, ni-gun, indy leagues and minor league ball. Plus, Deanna got recognized by a reader last year when we went to the WBC final in San Francisco.
  • Japanese Baseball Cards is, helpfully, exactly what it sounds like.
  • I hadn’t looked at A Noboru Aota Fan’s Notes for years before writing this post, but it’s still going and still deeply historical.
  • Jan Benner’s blog covers baseball in Germany, Japan and the United States. Jan also contributed an article on German baseball to NPB Tracker a few years ago.
  • If you happen to speak Spanish, check out Claudio Rodriguez’s Beisbol Japanes.

Team-Specific Blogs

  • Love the Chiba Lotte Marines? So does Steve Novosel.
  • The Hanshin-devoted Tiger Tails blog is a wee bit on the pessimistic side.
  • The TokyoSwallows.com is probably closest thing any NPB team has to an English-language online beat. The TS team of writers publishes notes on pretty much every game.
  • Edwin Dizon’s Koukou Yakyu rivals even the most detailed Japanese language high school baseball sites.
  • I hope Dan Kurtz doesn’t mind me lumping MyKBO.net in to this category.

Did I miss anyone? It wasn’t intentional. If I did, please drop me a line in the comments or via email.

Trackback URL

  1. Patrick
    NPB_reddit
    03/03/2014 at 12:52 am Permalink

    While there’s not a whole lot of original content as of yet, since I’m on reddit a lot, I figured I’d start up a place for fans of baseball to learn about Japanese baseball. On the “wiki” tab I’ve got the basic team descriptions down, as well as vocab and records pages.

    There’s still a lot of room for improvement, but right now I’m the only one working on it, while trying to actually work, so things are coming along slow. Hopefully I can keep updating and adding as the season goes along, but there are currently plenty of links (including a link to here!) there for people that are interested. I also do some tweets when I find something interesting not covered by the major sites and blogs. (Yes, I do follow you on twitter)

    Cheers, and keep up the good work!

  2. Patrick
    Patrick
    03/03/2014 at 8:42 am Permalink

    I’ve seen the Reddit site (thanks for setting it up, btw) and was planning on including it the part of this series about Pro Yakyu online communities, along with JapaneseBaseball.com and Westbay-san’s Google+ group.

  3. Patrick
    Jan
    07/03/2014 at 6:30 am Permalink

    It’s not much and – as Keith Hernandez would say – I still lack the fundies, but I write about the Mets, the German Bundesliga and, yes, Japanese Baseball here > http://weakgrounder.wordpress.com
    Feel free to add me to the list, Patrick
    (^_^) ooOO (…and it’s also okay if you don’t, haha)

  4. Patrick
    Patrick
    07/03/2014 at 12:29 pm Permalink

    Added. Good stuff Jan!

Trackbacks

  1. npbtracker 03/03/2014 at 12:22 am

    Following Japanese Baseball, Part 1: Online Text http://t.co/ydSOspT6Sb

  2. npbtracker 03/03/2014 at 12:25 am

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  3. akkain 03/03/2014 at 12:28 am

    Why not learning the language!? "@npbtracker: Following Japanese Baseball, Part 1: Online Text http://t.co/yPubc5PMc2"

  4. yakyunightowl 03/03/2014 at 6:07 am

    RT @npbtracker Following Japanese Baseball, Part 1: Online Text http://t.co/vycHlgnakP

  5. npbtracker 03/03/2014 at 8:52 am

    If you're interested in following Japanese baseball, here are my recommended English-language resources: http://t.co/BdRUNBk2dm

  6. Molina34 03/03/2014 at 8:57 am

    RT @npbtracker: If you're interested in following Japanese baseball, here are my recommended English-language resources: http://t.co/BdRUNB…

  7. CamdenDepot 03/03/2014 at 9:01 am

    Yalta Baka is a great resource. Often talk to Gen. "@npbtracker: interested in Japanese baseball, English resources: http://t.co/c10oAmAKJK"

  8. npbtracker 03/03/2014 at 9:01 am

    RT @CamdenDepot: Yalta Baka is a great resource. Often talk to Gen. "@npbtracker: interested in Japanese baseball, English resources: http:…

  9. BradleyWoodrum 03/03/2014 at 9:09 am

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  10. d_russ 03/03/2014 at 9:10 am

    RT @BradleyWoodrum: Hooray for this! "Following Japanese Baseball, Part 1: Online Text" http://t.co/w9R9OoI7TW

  11. janblurr 03/03/2014 at 9:58 am

    RT @npbtracker: If you're interested in following Japanese baseball, here are my recommended English-language resources: http://t.co/BdRUNB…

  12. FreeBald 03/03/2014 at 1:08 pm

    RT @npbtracker: If you're interested in following Japanese baseball, here are my recommended English-language resources: http://t.co/BdRUNB…

  13. npbtracker 03/03/2014 at 11:28 pm

    I'm working on another one of these http://t.co/BdRUNBk2dm, but Twitter accounts to follow. If you want to be included, let…

  14. Watwoman 05/03/2014 at 10:01 am

    Following Japanese Baseball, Part 1: Online Text » NPB Tracker http://t.co/oRw2baCPog

  15. oakfaninva 07/03/2014 at 9:57 pm

    Meant to share this earlier. @npbtracker starter a nice intro into following Japanese baseball: http://t.co/vjEmHThsmB

  16. npbtracker 07/03/2014 at 10:03 pm

    RT @oakfaninva: Meant to share this earlier. @npbtracker starter a nice intro into following Japanese baseball: http://t.co/vjEmHThsmB

  17. SaltLakeBeisbol 07/03/2014 at 10:10 pm

    RT @oakfaninva: Meant to share this earlier. @npbtracker starter a nice intro into following Japanese baseball: http://t.co/vjEmHThsmB