Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks

(Redirected from Fukuoka Daiei Hawks)

The Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks (福岡ソフトバンクホークス, Fukuoka Sofutobanku Hōkusu) are a Japanese professional baseball team based in Fukuoka, Fukuoka Prefecture. They compete in Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) as a member of the Pacific League. Founded on February 22, 1938, as the Nankai Club, being the first Kansai team to play in Osaka proper, the team went through a few name changes before settling on Nankai Hawks in 1947, eventually changing ownership in 1988 and moving to Fukuoka in 1989. The team subsequently became known as the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks until 2005, when they were purchased by SoftBank Group, becoming the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks. Since 1993, the Hawks have played at Mizuho PayPay Dome Fukuoka, which has gone under several name changes and seats 40,000 people.[4]

Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks
福岡ソフトバンクホークス
Team logoCap insignia
Information
LeagueNippon Professional Baseball
Pacific League (1950–present)
Japanese Baseball League (1938–1949)
LocationChūō-ku, Fukuoka, Fukuoka, Japan
BallparkMizuho PayPay Dome Fukuoka
FoundedFebruary 22, 1938; 86 years ago (1938-02-22)[3]
Nickname(s)Taka (鷹, hawk)
PL pennants19 (1951, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1959, 1961, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1973, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2010, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2020)
Japan Series championships11 (1959, 1964, 1999, 2003, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020)
JBL championships2 (1946, 1948)
Former name(s)
  • Fukuoka Daiei Hawks (1989–2004)
  • Nankai Hawks (1947–1988)
  • Kinki Great Ring (1946–1947)
  • Kinki Nippon Club (1944–1945)
  • Nankai Club (1938–1944)
Former ballparks
ColorsRevolution Yellow, Black, White, Grey[1]
       
MascotHarry Hawk and the Hawk Family
Playoff berths18 (1973, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2022, 2023)
OwnershipMasayoshi Son, Yoshimitsu Goto
ManagementSoftBank Group, Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks Corp.[2]
ManagerHiroki Kokubo
General ManagerSugihiko Mikasa
PresidentSadaharu Oh
Websitesoftbankhawks.co.jp
Uniforms

The Hawks are often regarded as one of the most successful franchises in Pacific League and the richest in all of baseball under the ownership of SoftBank Group,[5] with the second most wins in all of Japanese sports, only trailing the Yomiuri Giants. The Hawks have played in the Japan Series 20 different times. The club also won two Japanese Baseball League championships in 1946 and 1948 while the team was based in Osaka. The Hawks' 11 Japan Series championships, including seven championships between 2011 and 2020, and 19 Pacific League pennants, with the most recent of both coming in 2020, are second-most in Pacific League and third-most in all of NPB, only trailing the Saitama Seibu Lions and Yomiuri Giants.

For various reasons, the Hawks experienced a 35 year title drought between 1964 and 1999 including a period of 26 years from 1973 to 1999 without a single Japan Series appearance, despite the relocation to Fukuoka. The drought finally ended in 1999, with gradual additions over the previous five years under new manager and home run king Sadaharu Oh. Under Oh (as manager and later executive), Daiei, and later SoftBank, the Hawks embraced internal development and sabremetrics as they eventually formed a baseball dynasty off of a core led by slugger Yuki Yanagita and aces Kodai Senga and Tsuyoshi Wada, capturing Japan Series titles in 2003, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020, making the Hawks first team since the 1965-1973 Yomiuri Giants to win more than three consecutive championships.[6]

Through 2023, the franchise's all-time record is 5616-5000-402 (.529).[7] The team's manager is Hiroki Kokubo and the organization's acting CEO is Yoshimitsu Goto [ja].

History

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Nankai Electric Railway Company ownership (1938–1988)

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The franchise that eventually became the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks was founded on February 22, 1938, by Nankai Electric Railway president Jinkichi Terada as Nankai Club, based in central Osaka. The organization was said to be created as a result of rival railway companies Hanshin Electric Railway and Hankyu convincing Nankai to create a baseball club of their own. While initially met with resistance, the club was admitted to the Japanese Baseball League (JPBL) in the fall of 1938, playing their first games at Sakai Ohama Stadium, but moved into Nakamozu Stadium in 1939. The team's name was changed to Kinki Nippon in mid-1944 as wartime austerity measures forced Nankai to temporarily merge with Kinki Nippon Railway. After the 1945 hiatus in the JBL due to the Greater East Asia War, in 1946 the team's name was changed to Kinki Great Ring and the team won the JBL championship. The name was chosen as a translation of Japan's ancient name, Yamato, in a similar way to the Montreal Canadiens or the New York Yankees.

In mid-1947, when Nankai broke away from Kinki Nippon Railway, they decided to change the team's name, also due to the fact that the name was popular with American soldiers stationed in Osaka, since they also found it funny, and settled upon the moniker they would use until they would sell the team in 1988 – Nankai Hawks (南海ホークス). The team was named after Nankai's logo, which, at that time, was a winged wheel. Other names considered were Condors, which was rejected because the Nankai representative who supervised the team was bald, and Cardinals, which was rejected because the club wanted to retain their colors, so they settled on the Hawks moniker.

After the JPBL was reorganized into Nippon Professional Baseball in 1950, the Hawks were placed into the Pacific League alongside the Mainichi Orions, Hankyu Braves, Tokyu Flyers, Daiei Stars, Nishitetsu Clippers, and Kintetsu Pearls. Under player-manager Kazuto Tsuruoka (known as Kazuto Yamamoto from 1946 to 1958) they became one of the most successful franchises through the first two decades of the Pacific League's existence, taking two Japan Series championships in 1959 and 1964, as well as 10 Pacific League pennants. Kazuto managed the team from 1946 to 1968, becoming the full-time manager after his retirement as a player in 1952.[8]

In 1964, the Hawks team sent pitching prospect Masanori Murakami and two other young players to the San Francisco Giants single-A affiliate in Fresno as a baseball "exchange student". On September 1 of that year, Murakami became the first Japanese player to play in Major League Baseball[9] when he appeared on the mound for the San Francisco Giants at Shea Stadium against the New York Mets. In his debut, Murakami pitched one inning, allowing one hit and facing four batters in a 1–4 loss for the Giants. Disputes over the rights to his contract eventually led to the 1967 United States – Japanese Player Contract Agreement, which effectively barred Japanese players from playing in MLB until Hideo Nomo exploited a loophole in the contract agreement to join the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1995, although others had tried before, including pitcher Kunikazu Ogawa in 1979 for the Milwaukee Brewers and later Murakami himself attempted to return to the Giants in 1983, but both were cut in spring training.[10] Murakami returned to the Hawks in 1966, playing for them through 1974. He contributed to the team's 1973 Japan Series appearance, their last under Nankai's ownership.

The team fell on hard times between 1978 and 1988, finishing no better than 4th place out of the 6 teams in the Pacific League in any year in the period. The team witnessed its fan base diminish as a result of the prolonged period of poor play, with attendance dropping and the club dealing with reduced profits. One of their only stars during this time was player-manager Katsuya Nomura, was forced to leave the team after his wife having too much of a choosing on his management, forcing Nomura to either choose to leave his wife or leave the team, in which he chose the latter.

The change in the club's financial performance led Nankai Electric Railway to question the value of maintaining ownership, even after considering the value the team represented as an advertising tool. The company's board of directors and union leadership put pressure on Den Kawakatsu, then-president of Nankai Railway and primary owner of the team, to sell the team, which he refused to do. However, Kawakatsu, who represented the most ardent supporter of Nankai's ownership of the Hawks, died on April 23, 1988,[11] and the team was sold to the Daiei Corporation to become the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks (福岡ダイエーホークス) after the 1988 season.

Katsuya Nomura, Mutsuo Minagawa, Hiromitsu Kadota, and Chusuke Kizuka are among the more notable franchise players that were active during the Nankai era.

Fukuoka Daiei Hawks (1988–2004)

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After the franchise was acquired by department store chain Daiei, Inc., the Hawks were moved to Fukuoka for two reasons; the first being the fact that the city had gone a decade without a team in the area, as the Crown Lighter Lions moved to Tokorozawa to become the Seibu Lions in 1978, and the second was that Daiei was looking to expand their reach as a brand to Kyushu, which Daiei had little to no presence in before the acquisition. As a result, they were no longer competing with the Hanshin Tigers, Kintetsu Buffaloes or even the by-then rechristened Orix Braves (later the Orix Blue Wave, now the Orix Buffaloes) for a market share of the Greater Osaka metropolitan area. However, in spite of those efforts of the new ownership, the Hawks still were usually in the cellar of the Pacific League, and continued to be at the bottom half of the league until 1997. The Hawks would play their first four seasons in Fukuoka at the Lions' old home of Heiwadai Stadium.

In 1993, the Hawks moved out of Heiwadai Stadium and into the newly constructed Fukuoka Dome, now known as Mizuho PayPay Dome Fukuoka, located 2.2 kilometers northwest of Heiwadai Stadium's former grounds. Heiwadai Stadium would later be closed in November 1997 and fully demolished by 2008. The Fukuoka Dome would be the first retractable roof stadium in NPB and the only retractable roof stadium until 2023, when Es Con Field Hokkaido opened. However, due to inefficient design, high operating costs, and the rainy climate of Fukuoka, the roof is only opened on special occasions (i.e. on Children's Day and other holidays) when the weather is clear.[12] Since the Hawks moved to the Fukuoka Dome, they have led Pacific League in annual average attendance every single year except for 2021, where pandemic restrictions in Japan prevented them from reaching said goal.[13]

The Hawks front office adopted a strategy of drafting and developing younger players, supplemented by free agent signings, a policy overseen by team president Ryuzo Setoyama and his aides. Setoyama's most brilliant moves were the hiring of home run king Sadaharu Oh in 1995 to take the reins of manager, a title he would hold until 2008 before he moved into the general manager's position. As of 2022, Oh is still with the Hawks organization as a chairman of the Hawks' board of directors, and still engages with day-to-day operations of the team at the age of 82. Oh replaced then-manager Rikuo Nemoto, who was named team president and held that position until his death in 1999. Also tapped was Akira Ishikawa, a little-known former player, who was tasked with bringing in talented amateurs. He brought in the likes of former Hanshin Tigers catcher Kenji Johjima, Kazumi Saitoh, Nobuhiko Matsunaka, future Chicago White Sox and Chiba Lotte Marines infielder Tadahito Iguchi, shortstop Munenori Kawasaki, and future team captain and current manager Hiroki Kokubo.

Supplementing the amateur signings were some key free-agent acquisitions. Daiei went toe to toe with the then richest man in Japan, Yoshiaki Tsutsumi, to pull former Seibu stars from their 1980s championship teams to Fukuoka. Among them were infielder Hiromichi Ishige, immensely popular outfielder (and Hawks manager from 2008 to 2014, replacing Oh in that capacity) Koji Akiyama, and ace left-handed pitcher and former manager Kimiyasu Kudoh.

These moves, alongside a few unpopular cost-cutting measures, helped to make the Hawks gradually more competitive with each passing year, and in 1999, the team finally broke through. That season, Daiei made their first Japan Series appearance since 1973 (and first as a Fukuoka team), and defeated the Chunichi Dragons in five games, giving them their first championship since 1964. Kudoh was dominant in his Game 1 start (complete game, 13 strikeouts), and Akiyama was named the 1999 Japan Series's most valuable player.

The following year, the Hawks again made the Japan Series, but this time lost to the powerful Yomiuri Giants in six games. Despite the shaky financial ground that Daiei was on thanks to their rampant expansion in bubble-era Japan, the team continued to be competitive. The team won their second Japan Series in five years, defeating the popular Hanshin Tigers in seven games in the 2003 Japan Series, a series in which the home team won every game.

Home run record controversy

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In 2001, American Karl "Tuffy" Rhodes, playing for the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes, hit 55 home runs with several games left, equaling Hawks' manager Sadaharu Oh's single-season home run record. The Buffaloes played a weekend series against the Oh-managed Hawks late in the season, after already clinching the pennant on a walk-off grand slam against the Orix BlueWave on September 26. Rhodes was intentionally walked during each at-bat of the series. Video footage showed Hawks' catcher Kenji Johjima grinning as he caught the intentional balls. Oh denied any involvement and Hawks battery coach Yoshiharu Wakana stated that the pitchers acted on his orders, saying, "It would be distasteful to see a foreign player break Oh's record." Rhodes completed the season with 55 home runs. League commissioner Hiromori Kawashima denounced the Hawks' behavior as "unsportsmanlike", and Wakana would be fired from the position as a result. Hawks pitcher Keisaburo Tanoue went on record saying that he wanted to throw strikes to Rhodes, but didn't want to disrespect the orders of his catcher.[14][15]

In 2002, Venezuelan Alex Cabrera hit 55 home runs with five games left in the season, with several of those to be played against Oh's Hawks. Oh told his pitchers to throw strikes to Cabrera, but most of them ignored his order and threw balls well away from the plate, although this also had to do with Cabrera later on being revealed to have likely been on steroids, likely taken during his time with the Arizona Diamondbacks after having been named to the Mitchell Report in 2007, and that other pitchers were intentionally walking him. After the game, Oh stated, "If you're going to break the record, you should do it by more than one. Do it by a lot."[15] In the wake of the most recent incident involving Cabrera, ESPN listed Oh's single-season home run record as #2 on its list of "The Phoniest Records in Sports".[16]

Eventually, in 2013, Curaçaoan-Dutch Tokyo Yakult Swallows outfielder Wladimir Balentien broke the NPB single-season home run record, finishing the season with 60 home runs.[17] In 2022, Swallows infielder Munetaka Murakami broke Oh's record for the most home runs in a single season by a Japanese-born player, hitting 56 home runs in the regular season.[18]

Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks (2005–present)

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Daiei had been under financial pressure to sell its stake in the team over the previous few years, with reports in 2003 suggesting the company would sell the team and the Fukuoka Dome. After filing for a bankruptcy reorganization provision in 2004, Daiei attempted to hold on to the team and held discussions with its primary lenders, including UFJ Bank, to see if it could find a way to retain the team, but ultimately the sale went through to SoftBank Group on January 28, 2005. SoftBank had been interested in owning a baseball team since 2002 and agreed to purchase all 14,432,000 of Daiei's shares in the team, which accounted for 98% of team ownership, for 15 billion yen.[19] This deal did not include the Fukuoka Dome and surrounding Hawks Town complex, which was sold in 2003 to Colony Capital and then later sold to an affiliate of the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation in 2007. SoftBank initially decided to lease the rights to the Fukuoka Dome for 4.8 billion yen per year for 20 years, but they would eventually purchase the stadium from the GIC affiliate for 87 billion yen in March 2012, with the stadium being fully owned by the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks Marketing Corporation by July 1, 2015.[20]

The Hawks continued their winning ways after the sale of the team to SoftBank. Following the sale, the Hawks represented one of the richest teams in the world, with a player core still intact from the last years of the Daiei era. Particularly strong was the team's starting pitching behind Saitoh, Tsuyoshi Wada, Nagisa Arakaki, and Toshiya Sugiuchi. In 2005, the Hawks finished in first place during the regular season, but fell to the eventual Japan Series champions, the Chiba Lotte Marines in the second stage of the Climax Series. In 2006, a dramatic pennant race led to an even more exciting playoff run that ended in the Sapporo Dome at the hands of the eventual Japan Series Champions, the Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters. Team manager Sadaharu Oh missed most of the 2006 season due to stomach cancer.

The Hawks' 2007 season was plagued by injuries and general ineffectiveness and inconsistency, leading to another 3rd-place finish and first-stage exit in the playoffs at the hands of the Marines. In 2008, though various injuries still affected the Hawks' bench (especially the bullpen), the club claimed its first Interleague title in June, winning a tiebreaker against the Hanshin Tigers. However, injuries caught up with them in the final month of the season, and the Hawks finished in last place with a 54–74–2 record. The finish represented their worst since 1996. Oh announced his transfer to a front office role at the end of the season, as former Hawk and fan favorite Koji Akiyama was named as his successor.

In 2009, the team cracked the playoffs once again on the backs of breakout seasons from surging starting pitcher D. J. Houlton, outfielder Yuya Hasegawa, Rookie of the Year Tadashi Settsu and another stellar season from ace Sugiuchi. However, the team still was unable to get out of the first stage, as the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles ousted the Hawks in a 2-game sweep.

Team of the 2010s

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The Hawks finally reclaimed the Pacific League regular season title in 2010 after a seven-year wait. The title came after a see-saw season in which the team recovered several times after extended losing streaks. Starting pitcher Wada, back from injury through much of the previous two seasons, was, along with fellow ace Sugiuchi, at his best. Wada set career highs in wins and games started. The reliable "SBM" relieving trio of Settsu, Brian Falkenborg, and Mahara limited opponent offenses late in games. The bullpen also benefited from the emergence of Keisuke Kattoh and Masahiko Morifuku, with the latter blossoming in the second half of the season.

The Hawks offense was largely composed of role players who seemed to take turns having big games and off days, and it was the team's speed that drove the team as the Hawks led the league in stolen bases in the regular season with 148, well ahead of their nearest challenger, who had 116. Yuichi Honda and Kawasaki combined to steal 89 bases. However, despite putting forward a strong group, the Hawks failed to make it to the Japan Series, losing to the Chiba Lotte Marines in six games in the Climax Series despite having a 3–1 series lead.

SoftBank won the Pacific League again in 2011, with a dominating season on all fronts. The offense was bolstered further by the acquisition of former Yokohama BayStars outfielder Seiichi Uchikawa, who led the league in batting average in 2011. Pitching from Sugiuchi, Wada and an excellent bounce-back season from Houlton also helped propel the team to the best record in NPB. After sweeping the Saitama Seibu Lions in the Pacific League Climax Series, the Hawks took on the Chunichi Dragons to win the Japan Series, a rematch of the 1999 Japan Series. The Dragons pushed SoftBank to the full seven games, but the Hawks shut out the Dragons 3–0 in the seventh game to win their first Japan Series since 2003.

The 2012 season started with losses for the Hawks. During the off season, they lost their star starters Tsuyoshi Wada (to the Baltimore Orioles), Toshiya Sugiuchi and D.J. Houlton (to Yomiuri Giants) through free agency. All star shortstop Munenori Kawasaki also left the team for the Seattle Mariners. Closer Takahiro Mahara would sit out the season through injury. To compensate for these losses, the team acquired outfielder Wily Mo Peña and starter Brad Penny from MLB, in addition to starter Kazuyuki Hoashi from the Lions. However, of the 3 major signings, only Peña made regular contributions. Hoashi and Penny made two starts combined in 2012, as Hoashi missed almost the entire season with an injury and Penny was released.

The team had to deal with their off season losses to their pitching staff from within the organization. Settsu was elevated to the team's ace, while young pitchers such as Kenji Otonari and Hiroki Yamada were given bigger roles. Nagisa Arakaki returned from long-term injury to join the rotation. However, new closer Falkenborg had to sit out most of the season through injury, eventually handing over the role to Morifuku. Arakaki could not regain his former numbers. In the end, the losses could not be mitigated. Despite a tailspin to end the season, the Hawks snuck into the Climax Series, finishing 3rd in the Pacific League regular season standings, one game over the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles, but eventually lost out to the pennant-winning Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters in the P.L. Climax Series Final Stage. The bright spark of the season came from rookie starter Shota Takeda, who went 8–1 with an ERA of 1.07.

In 2014 the Hawks won the Japan Series in five games over the Hanshin Tigers. Manager Koji Akiyama retired after the season, and the team named his former teammate Kimiyasu Kudo to succeed him. Under Kudoh's stewardship, SoftBank won for a second consecutive season in 2015 again in five games, this time over the Tokyo Yakult Swallows. Outfielder Yuki Yanagita won Pacific League MVP, the batting title, and a Triple 3 (.300 BA, 30 HR, 30 SB or better in all 3 categories).[21] It marked the first time since the Seibu Lions won three in a row from 1990 to 1992 that a team had won consecutive Japan Series championships.

After falling to Shohei Ohtani and the Fighters in 2016, the Hawks rebounded to win the 2017 Japan Series on the back of a dominating 94-49-0 season, their best season since 1959 in terms of winning percentage, in six games over the Yokohama DeNA BayStars, in a series where the Hawks led 3–0, but were almost pushed to a seventh game.[22]The following year the Hawks also won the 2018 Japan Series against the Hiroshima Toyo Carp in six games, making it back to back titles for a second time, and four out of the last five; the next year, they became the first team to win three straight Japan Series titles since the Seibu Lions did it from 1990 to 1992, by sweeping the Yomiuri Giants. Pitcher Kodai Senga would blossom into the team's ace over their run of six championships in seven seasons, as he also threw the team's first no-hitter since 1943 on September 6, 2019, against the Chiba Lotte Marines.[23]

2020s

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In 2020, the Hawks won the 2020 Japan Series, again in a four game sweep over the Yomiuri Giants, becoming the first team to win more than three consecutive Japan Series titles since the Yomiuri Giants won the last of nine consecutive titles in 1973. They also became the first team in NPB history to sweep two Japan Series against the same opponent in back-to-back seasons. Most notably, Matt Moore pitched seven no-hit innings in Game 3 of that Japan Series as the Hawks came within one out of the first combined no-hitter in Japan Series play since Daisuke Yamai and Hitoki Iwase threw a combined perfect game for the Chunichi Dragons to end the 2007 Japan Series.

The Hawks ended an injury-riddled and underwhelming 2021 with a 60-62-21 record, finishing 4th in the Pacific League, the first time the team had not qualified for the playoffs since 2013. This also was the first time since 2008 that the Hawks failed to maintain a .500 winning percentage season, as manager Kimiyasu Kudoh stepped down after the conclusion of the 2021 season.[24]

Following Kudoh's departure, farm team manager Hiroshi Fujimoto was promoted to the majors to be the new manager for 2022. Yuki Yanagita was named team captain by Fujimoto, becoming the first team captain since Seiichi Uchikawa gave up the role after the 2018 season. The Hawks went on a tear to begin the season, winning eight straight games, with Fujimoto being the first new manager to win seven consecutive games, and the first time since 1955 that the Hawks won eight straight games to open the season.[25] A solid spring, including a Maddux no-hitter by Nao Higashihama on May 12 against the Saitama Seibu Lions,[26] followed by a less than ideal summer filled with ups and downs, including going 1–9 in their annual Hawk Festival series and being the first team since the 1995 Seibu Lions to be no-hit by the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters, led to the Hawks losing the pennant race to the Orix Buffaloes via tiebreaker after the Hawks lost to the Chiba Lotte Marines on the final day of the season, with both teams finishing with a record of 76-65-2. This marked the first time the top two teams in a league shared the exact same record in NPB history at the conclusion of the regular season, resulting in a tiebreaker being necessary. The Hawks lost the overall regular season series against Orix, as the Buffaloes won 15 games against them in comparison to SoftBank's 10 wins, resulting in Orix taking the 2022 Pacific League pennant.[27] They would eventually fall to the Buffaloes in the second stage of the Climax Series, breaking an eighteen game playoff winning streak in the process.

On October 10, 2022, the Hawks announced the formation of a yon-gun squad (third farm team), becoming the first team in NPB to begin operations on a third farm team, beginning play in 2023.[28] Before the 2023 season, the Hawks added to their already loaded core in response to losing ace Kodai Senga to the New York Mets[29] by signing elite contact hitter Kensuke Kondoh to a 7-year deal from the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters, poaching elite reliever Roberto Osuna away from the Chiba Lotte Marines,[30] and signing Kohei Arihara after a failed stint with the Texas Rangers.[31] Despite these additions and Kondoh breaking out for a near Triple Crown season, only losing it out to Yuma Tongu also having a breakout campaign and winning the 2023 Pacific League Batting Title, the Hawks were hampered by a lack of foreign power and subpar pitching, being unable to climb the mountain and settled for a third place finish in Pacific League, losing out on second on the final day of regular season play, the second year in a row where they lost position on the final day of the regular season. Eventually, they would fall short, losing to the Marines in the 1st Stage of the Pacific League Climax Series. After that, it was announced that Fujimoto was to step down as manager due to health concerns, and was replaced by the club's farm team manager Hiroki Kokubo. The Hawks once again were active in the 2023-24 off-season, trading pitchers Keisuke Izumi and Rei Takahashi for Yomiuri Giants slugger Adam Walker,[32] acquiring first baseman slugger Hotaka Yamakawa after a scandal tarnished his image with the Lions, and extended foreign pitchers Liván Moinelo and Carter Stewart to long-term, record setting deals,[33][34] as well as converting Moinelo from a reliever to a starter to bolster their lackluster pitching.

Roster

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First squadSecond squad

Pitchers

Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders


Manager

Coaches

Head coach
Pitching
Hitting
Infield defense & base running
Outfield defense & base running
Battery
Pitchers

Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders


Manager

Coaches

Pitching
Hitting
Infield defense & base running
Outfield defense & base running
Battery
Rehabilitation coach
Coordinator
Training
Development Players
Updated June 7, 2024All NPB rosters


Former players

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Hawks former players

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Hawks former players
DSFSFormer playersCountryYREraPosNote
19381942Yoshiyuki Iwamoto  Japan5NankaiOFPacific League Best Nine Award (1950,1951)
Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Member
19391952Kazuto Tsuruoka  Japan4NankaiIFJBL & Pacific League MVP Award (1946,1948,1951)
Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Member
19421948Takehiko Bessho  Japan7NankaiPEiji Sawamura Award (1947)
Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Member
19491953Kazuhiro Kuroda  Japan5NankaiOF
19501959Kazuo Kageyama  Japan10Nankai3BPacific League Best Nine Award (1951,1952)
19541971Mutsuo Minagawa  Japan18NankaiPPacific League Best Nine Award (1968)
Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Member
19541977Katsuya Nomura  Japan23NankaiCNPB Triple Crown Award (1965)
Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Member
19551977Yoshinori Hirose  Japan23NankaiSSPacific League Best Nine Award (1963–1965)
Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Member
19561968Yoshio Anabuki  Japan13NankaiOF
19581970Tadashi Sugiura  Japan13NankaiPPacific League MVP Award (1959)
Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Member
19601965Joe Stanka  United States6NankaiPPacific League Best Nine Award (1964)
Japan Series MVP (1964)
19611963Buddy Peterson  United States3NankaiSSFormer MLB player.
NPB All-Star Series (1962,1963)
19621967Kent Hadley  United States6Nankai1B
1962
& 1966
1963
& 1974
Masanori Murakami  Japan17NankaiPFirst Asian MLB player.
San Francisco Giants (19641965)
19641964Johnny Logan  United States1NankaiSSFormer MLB player.
19671970Toshio Yanagida  Japan4NankaiOFNPB All-Star Series (1968)
19681968Marty Keough  United States1NankaiOFFormer MLB player.
19691969Lee Thomas  United States1NankaiOFFormer MLB player.
19701977Don Blasingame  United States8NankaiIF
19701973Clarence Jones  United States4Nankai1BFormer MLB player.
Pacific League Home runs Leader (1974,1976)
1970
& 1991
1988
& 1992
Hiromitsu Kadota  Japan21Nankai/DaieiOFPacific League MVP Award (1988)
Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Member
19701972Takashi Teraoka  Japan3NankaiOF
19711971Thad Tillotson  United States1NankaiP
19721975Takenori Emoto  Japan4NankaiP
19721973Willie Smith  United States2NankaiOFFormer MLB player.
19721981Shinsaku Katahira  Japan10NankaiIF, OF
19731976Hiroaki Fukushi  Japan4NankaiPPacific League Winning percentage Leader (1980)
19741974Wes Parker  United States1Nankai1BFormer MLB player.
MLB Gold Glove Award (1967–1972)
19751985Hiromasa Arai  Japan11NankaiOFPacific League Batting Leader (1987)
Pacific League Best Nine Award (1979,1982,1986,1987)
19751975Jim Nettles  United States1NankaiOFFormer MLB player.
19761976Don Buford  United States1NankaiIFPacific League Best Nine Award (1974)
19761977Yutaka Enatsu  Japan2NankaiPEiji Sawamura Award (1968)
Pacific League Saves Leader (1977,1979–1983)
19761976Tom Robson  United States1Nankai1BFormer MLB player.
19771977Gail Hopkins  United States1Nankai1BFormer MLB player.
19771977Jack Pierce  United States1Nankai1BMexican Professional Baseball Hall of Fame Member
19781981Carlos May  United States4NankaiOF
19781985Mitsuo Tateishi  Japan8NankaiIF
19781978Bobby Tolan  United States1NankaiOFFormer MLB player.
19791980Frank Ortenzio  United States2NankaiOF
19801989Nobuyuki Kagawa  Japan10Nankai/DaieiCAlso known as Dokaben
19811982Jim Tyrone  United States2NankaiOFFormer MLB player.
19821998Hiroshi Fujimoto  Japan17Nankai/Daiei3B
19831996Hiroshi Ogawa  Japan14Nankai/DaieiSS
19841985Jeff Doyle  United States2Nankai2BFormer MLB player.
Pacific League Home runs Leader (1974,1976)
19841995Shinichi Katoh  Japan12Nankai/DaieiP
19841986Chris Nyman  United States3Nankai1BFormer MLB player.
19841993Makoto Sasaki  Japan10Nankai/DaieiOFPacific League Batting Leader (1992)
Pacific League Best Nine Award (1991–1995,1997)
19861986Danny Goodwin  United States1Nankai1BFormer MLB player.
19861987Dave Hostetler  United States2Nankai1BFormer MLB player.
19871987Steve Hammond  United States1NankaiOF
19871987Hideji Katoh  Japan1NankaiOFPacific League Batting Leader (1973,1979)
Pacific League RBI leader (1975–1976 ,1979)
19871991Hiroyuki Mori  Japan5Nankai/DaieiC
19871996Hiroshi Moriwaki  Japan10Nankai/DaieiIF
19881990Tony Bernazard  Puerto Rico3Nankai/Daiei2B
19882006Noriyoshi Omichi  Japan19Nankai/Daiei
/SoftBank
OFNPB All-Star Series (2001,2004)
1988
& 1993
1988
& 1993
George Wright  United States2Nankai/DaieiOF
19881998Toyohiko Yoshida  Japan11Nankai/DaieiPPacific League Best Battery Award (1994)
19882000Koichiro Yoshinaga  Japan13Nankai/DaieiCPacific League Best Nine Award (1994,1996)
19891990Willie Upshaw  United States2Daiei1B
19901993Toshifumi Baba  Japan4Daiei3BMitsui Golden Glove Award (1995,1996)
19901990Goose Gossage  United States1DaieiPNational Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
19902000Takayuki Nishijima  Japan11DaieiOF
19901997Manabu Saito  Japan8DaieiP
19902007Keisaburo Tanoue  Japan18Daiei/SoftBankPPacific League Winning percentage Leader (2001)
19901990Jim Wilson  United States2Daiei1BFormer MLB player.
19911997Yutaka Ashikaga  Japan7DaieiP
19912003Koji Bonishi  Japan13DaieiC
19911996Takayoshi Eguchi  Japan6DaieiP
19911992Mike Laga  United States2Daiei1BFormer MLB player.
1991
& 2009
2009
& 2010
Arihito Muramatsu  Japan14Daiei/SoftBankOFPacific League Stolen bases Leader (1996)
Mitsui Golden Glove Award (2003,2004)
19911995Tsuyoshi Shimoyanagi  Japan5DaieiPCentral League The most wins champion (2005)
19911993Lee Tunnell  United States3DaieiP
19911992Eddie Williams  United States2Daiei3BFormer MLB player.
19922001Chihiro Hamana  Japan10DaieiSSNPB All-Star Series (1992,1995,1996)
19921992Hisao Niura  Japan2DaieiPCentral League ERA champion (1977, 1978)
Central League Best Nine Award (1978)
19921995Kazuya Tabata  Japan4DaieiP
19922002Kenichi Wakatabe  Japan11DaieiPPacific League Rookie Special Award (1992)
NPB All-Star Series (2002)
19921992Boomer Wells  United States1Daiei1BPacific League Batting Leader (1984,1989)
Pacific League RBI Leader (1984,1987,1989,1992)
19931995Shinichi Sato  Japan3DaieiOF
19942002Koji Akiyama  Japan9DaieiOFPacific League Home runs Leader (1987)
Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Member
1994
& 2007
2003
& 2012
Hiroki Kokubo  Japan16Daiei/SoftBankIFPacific League Home runs Leader (1995)
Pacific League RBI Leader (1997)
19941997Hiromi Matsunaga  Japan4DaieiIFPacific League Stolen bases Leader (1985)
Pacific League Best Nine Award (1988-1991,1994)
19941995Kevin Reimer  United States2DaieiOF
19941995Bobby Thigpen  United States2DaieiPFormer MLB single season saves holder.
19941994Brian Traxler  United States1Daiei1B
19941997Tomoyuki Uchiyama  Japan4DaieiP
19942001Hidekazu Watanabe  Japan8DaieiPPacific League Rookie of the Year Award (1994)
19942006Shuji Yoshida  Japan13Daiei/SoftBankPPacific League Holds Leader (1998,2001)
19942006Shintaro Yoshitake  Japan13Daiei/SoftBankPNPB All-Star Series (2005)
19952000Masao Fujii  Japan6DaieiPPacific League Holds Leader (1999)
His number 15 is honored by the Hawks.
19951996Hiromichi Ishige  Japan2DaieiSSPacific League Best Nine Award (1981-1987,1992,1993)
Mitsui Golden Glove Award (1981-1983,1985-1988,1991,1993)
19952005Kenji Johjima  Japan11Daiei/SoftBankCFormer MLB player.
Pacific League MVP Award (2003)
19951999Kimiyasu Kudo  Japan5DaieiPPacific League ERA Champion (1985,1987,1993,1999)
Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame Member
19951995Kevin Mitchell  United States1DaieiOFFormer MLB player.
Silver Slugger Award (1989)
19961997Masashi Arikura  Japan2DaieiP
19961996Rodney Bolton  United States1DaieiPFormer MLB player.
19961999Ryo Kawano  Japan4Daiei1B
19961997José Núñez  Dominican Republic2DaieiP
19962010Kazumi Saito  Japan15Daiei/SoftBankPEiji Sawamura Award (2003,2006)
NPB Triple Crown (2006)
19962002Masahiro Sakumoto  Japan7DaieiP
19961998Kazuhiro Takeda  Japan3DaieiPPacific League The most wins champion (1998)
Pacific League Saves Leader (1991)
19972004Tadahito Iguchi  Japan8DaieiIFFormer MLB player.
Pacific League Stolen bases Leader (2001,2003)
19972007Shinji Kurano  Japan11Daiei/SoftBankP
19972015Nobuhiko Matsunaka  Japan19Daiei/SoftBank1BNPB Triple Crown Award (2004)
Pacific League MVP Award (2000,2004)
19971997Rod Nichols  United States1DaieiPFormer MLB player.
19972006Katsunori Okamoto  Japan10Daiei/SoftBankP
19971997Greg Pirkl  United States1Daiei1BFormer MLB player.
19972011Hiroshi Shibahara  Japan15Daiei/SoftBankOFPacific League Best Nine Award (1998,2000)
Mitsui Golden Glove Award (2000,2001,2003)
19971997Fujio Tamura  Japan1DaieiCPacific League Best Nine Award (1993)
19971997David West  United States1DaieiP
19981998Ryan Hancock  United States1DaieiP
19981999Shintaro Yamasaki  Japan2DaieiP
19982002Hiroshi Nagadomi  Japan5DaieiP
19982008Junji Hoshino  Japan11Daiei/SoftBankP
19981998Luis Lopez  United States1Daiei1BCentral League RBI Leader (1996,1997)
Central League Hitting Leader (1997)
19982005Tomohiro Nagai  Japan8Daiei/SoftBankP1999 Japan Series Outstanding Player Award
19982001Tatsuji Nishimura  Japan4DaieiPNPB Comeback Player of the Year Award (1998)
1998
& 2003
2002
& 2005
Takashi Sasagawa  Japan18Daiei/SoftBankIF
19982009Takayuki Shinohara  Japan12Daiei/SoftBankPPacific League Winning percentage Leader (1999)
19981998Ryan Thompson  United States1DaieiOF
19981998Brian Williams  United States1DaieiPFormer MLB player.
19992005Yudai Deguchi  Japan7Daiei/SoftBankOF
19992000Melvin Nieves  Puerto Rico2DaieiOF
19992010Akio Mizuta  Japan12Daiei/SoftBankP
19992012Shinsuke Ogura  Japan14Daiei/SoftBankP
19992002Rodney Pedraza  United States4DaieiPPacific League Saves Leader (2000,2001)
19992006Yusuke Torigoe  Japan8Daiei/SoftBankIF
19992008Ryo Yoshimoto  Japan10Daiei/SoftBankIF
20002000Brian Banks  United States1Daiei1B
2000
& 2017
2011
& 2017
Munenori Kawasaki  Japan13Daiei/SoftBankIFFormer MLB player. Currently with Tochigi Golden Braves
Pacific League Hits Leader (2004)
Pacific League stolen base Leader (2004)
20002009Naoki Matoba  Japan10Daiei/SoftBankCPacific League Best Battery Award (2006)
20002002Brady Raggio  United States3DaieiP
20002000Matt Randel  United States1DaieiP
20012010Hisao Arakane  Japan11Daiei/SoftBankOF
20012001Chris Haney  United States1DaieiP
20012004Pedro Valdés  Puerto Rico4DaieiOFHe scored a 104 RBIs. (2003)
20012008Michinao Yamamura  Japan8Daiei/SoftBankP
20012013Katsuki Yamazaki  Japan13Daiei/SoftBankC
20022002Morgan Burkhart  United States1Daiei1B
20022002Carlos Castillo  United States1DaieiPFormer MLB player.
20022010Shotaro Ide  Japan9Daiei/SoftBankOF
20022012Yasushi Kamiuchi  Japan11Daiei/SoftBankP
20022011Toshiya Sugiuchi  Japan10Daiei/SoftBankPEiji Sawamura Award (2005)
Pacific League MVP Award (2005)
2002
& 2013
2006
& 2018
Hayato Terahara  Japan11Daiei/SoftBankP
20022005Masanori Taguchi  Japan4Daiei/SoftBankC
20032014Nagisa Arakaki  Japan12Daiei/SoftBankPPacific League Strikeouts Leader (2004)
20032004Brandon Knight  United States2DaieiP
20032003Bryant Nelson  United States1Daiei2B
20032003Matt Skrmetta  United States1DaieiP
20032003Chen Wen-bin  Taiwan1DaieiOF
20032006Julio Zuleta  Panama4Daiei/SoftBank1BPacific League Best Nine Award (2005)
20042022Kenji Akashi  Japan19Daiei/SoftBankIFNPB All-Star Series (2012)
Japan Series Outstanding Player Award (2015)
20042005Lindsay Gulin  United States2Daiei/SoftBankP
2004
& 2012
2010
& 2016
Keisuke Kaneko  Japan12Daiei/SoftBankIF
20042018Ryuma Kidokoro  Japan15Daiei/SoftBankOF
20042012Takahiro Mahara  Japan9Daiei/SoftBankPPacific League Saves Leader (2007)
20042004Héctor Mercado  Puerto Rico1DaieiPFormer MLB player.
20042010Koji Mise  Japan7Daiei/SoftBankPPacific League Rookie of the Year Award (2004)
Pacific League Saves Leader (2004)
20042006Katsuhiko Miyaji  Japan3Daiei/SoftBankOFPacific League Best Nine Award (2005)
20042004Brad Voyles  United States1DaieiP
20052005Tony Batista  Dominican Republic1SoftBank3BFormer MLB player.
20052006Jolbert Cabrera  Colombia2SoftBank2BFormer MLB player.
20052019Tomoaki Egawa  Japan15SoftBankOF
20052005Pedro Feliciano  Puerto Rico1SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
20052006Tatsuya Ide  Japan2SoftBankOFMitsui Golden Glove Award (1997, 2002)
NPB All-Star Series (1997,2001)
20052008Naoyuki Ohmura  Japan4SoftBankOFPacific League Hitting Leader (2006)
20052011Toru Takahashi  Japan7SoftBankP
20062010Yuta Arakawa  Japan5SoftBankC
20062006D. J. Carrasco  United States1SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
20062013Yoshiaki Fujioka  Japan8SoftBankP
20062018Yuichi Honda  Japan13SoftBank2BPacific League Stolen bases Leader (2010,2011)
Mitsui Golden Glove Award (2011‐2012)
20062013Keisuke Katto  Japan8SoftBankP
20062011Yusuke Kosai  Japan6SoftBankOF
20062022Nobuhiro Matsuda  Japan17SoftBank3BPacific League Best nine Award (2018)
Mitsui Golden Glove Award (2011,2013‐2019)
20062009Michitaka Nishiyama  Japan4SoftBankP
20062013Hidenori Tanoue  Japan8SoftBankCPacific League Best Nine Award (2009)
20062016Akihiro Yanase  Japan11SoftBankP
20062013Yang Yao-hsun  Taiwan8SoftBankP
20072007Brian Buchanan  United States1SoftBankOFFormer MLB player.
20072019Shuhei Fukuda  Japan13SoftBankOF
20072008Rick Guttormson  United States2SoftBankP
20072021Yuya Hasegawa  Japan15SoftBankOFPacific League Batting Leader (2013)
Pacific League Hitting Leader (2013)
20072007Adam Hyzdu  United States1SoftBankOF
20072016Masahiko Morifuku  Japan10SoftBankPNPB All-Star Series (2011.2012)
20072008C. J. Nitkowski  United States2SoftBankP
20072017Kenji Otonari  Japan11SoftBankPNPB All-Star Series (2012)
2007
& 2014
2008
& 2015
Jason Standridge  United States4SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
20072021Hiroaki Takaya  Japan15SoftBankC
20072012Hitoshi Tamura  Japan6SoftBankOFPacific League Best Nine Award (2010)
20072017Hiroki Yamada  Japan11SoftBankP
20082021Sho Iwasaki  Japan14SoftBankPPacific League Holds Leader (2017)
Currently with Chunichi Dragons
20082011D. J. Houlton  United States4SoftBankPPacific League The Most Wins Champion (2011)
20082008Tetsuya Matoyama  Japan1SoftBankC
20082015Shota Oba  Japan8SoftBankP
20082008Jeremy Powell  United States1SoftBankP
20082008Michael Restovich  United States1SoftBankOF
20092009Chris Aguila  United States1SoftBankOF
20092013Brian Falkenborg  United States4SoftBankPPacific League Best relief pitcher (2010)
20092009Justin Germano  United States1SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
20092009Kameron Loe  United States1SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
20092015Kim Mu-young  South Korea7SoftBankP
20092021Akira Niho  Japan13SoftBankPCurrently with Hanshin Tigers
20092011José Ortiz  Dominican Republic3SoftBank2B
20092018Tadashi Settsu  Japan10SoftBankPPacific League Rookie of the Year Award (2009)
Eiji Sawamura Award (2012)
20092012Soichiro Tateoka  Japan4SoftBankOFCurrently with Yomiuri Giants
20092016Shingo Tatsumi  Japan8SoftBankP
20102010Lee Bum-ho  South Korea1SoftBank3B
20102010J. D. Durbin  United States1SoftBankP
20102013Takehito Kanazawa  Japan4SoftBankP
20102021Hiroyuki Kawahara  Japan12SoftBankP
20102010Roberto Petagine  Venezuela1SoftBank1BCentral League Home runs Leader (1999,2001)
Central League MVP Award (2001)
20102011Masaumi Shimizu  Japan2SoftBankC
20102012Teruaki Yoshikawa  Japan3SoftBankP
20112016Edison Barrios  Venezuela6SoftBankP
20112011Yhency Brazobán  Dominican Republic1SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
20112012Alex Cabrera  Venezuela2SoftBank1BPacific League Home runs Leader (2002)
Pacific League MVP Award (2002)
20112011Soichi Fujita  Japan1SoftBankPPacific League Hold Champion (2000)
NPB All-Star Series (2001)
20112016Toru Hosokawa  Japan6SoftBankCPacific League Best Nine Award (2008,2011)
Mitsui Golden Glove Award (2008,2011)
20112011Anthony Lerew  United States1SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
20112022Kodai Senga  Japan12SoftBankPPacific League strikeout leader. (2019,2020)
Pacific League ERA leader. (2020).
Pacific League winning percentage leader.(2017)
Pacific League wins champion. (2020).
Currently with New York Mets
20112020Seiichi Uchikawa  Japan10SoftBank1BCentral League & Pacific League Batting Leader (2008,2011)
Central League & Pacific League Hitting Leader (2008,2012)
20112017Ayatsugu Yamashita  Japan7SoftBankC
20122012Brandon Allen  United States1SoftBank1B
20122012Ángel Castro  Dominican Republic1SoftBankP
20122012Terry Doyle  United States1SoftBankP
20122015Kazuyuki Hoashi  Japan4SoftBankPNPB All-Star Series (2005.2008)
20122021Go Kamamoto  Japan10SoftBankOF
20122014Kyohei Kamezawa  Japan3SoftBankIF
20122023Shinya Kayama  Japan12SoftBankPCurrently with Tokyo Yakult Swallows.
2012
& 2012
2014
& 2014
Hideki Okajima  Japan2SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
MLB Rookie of the Month Award (April 2007)
20122013Wily Mo Peña  Dominican Republic2SoftBankOFFormer MLB player.
20122012Brad Penny  United States1SoftBankP
20122012Renyel Pinto  Venezuela1SoftBankP
20122012Levi Romero  Venezuela1SoftBankP
20122015Naoki Shirane  Japan4SoftBankOF
20132014Shintaro Ejiri  Japan2SoftBankP
20132018Ryota Igarashi  Japan6SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
Central League Saves Leader (2004)
20132018Yuya Iida  Japan6SoftBankP
20132013Bryan LaHair  United States1SoftBank1BFormer MLB player.
20132022Yusuke Masago  Japan10SoftBankOF
20132013Vicente Padilla  Nicaragua1SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
20132022Tomoki Takata  Japan10SoftBankIF
20132013Shogo Yamamoto  Japan1SoftBankP
20132014Hirofumi Yamanaka  Japan2SoftBankP
20132018Yuki Yoshimura  Japan6SoftBankOF
20132013Makoto Yoshino  Japan1SoftBankP
20142016Bárbaro Cañizares  Cuba3SoftBank1B
20142015Ryo Hidaka  Japan2SoftBankP
20142015Takeshi Hosoyamada  Japan2SoftBankC
20142020Ren Kajiya  Japan7SoftBankPCurrently with Hanshin Tigers
20142021Keizo Kawashima  Japan8SoftBankIF
20142015Dae-ho Lee  South Korea2SoftBank1BPacific League RBI Leader (2012)
20142023Yuito Mori  Japan10SoftBankPNPB All-Star (2015,2018)
Pacific League Saves leader (2018)
Currently with Yokohama DeNA BayStars.
20142019Kenichi Nakata  Japan6SoftBankP
20142019Ken Okamoto  Japan6SoftBankP
20142021Dennis Sarfate  United States8SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
Pacific League Saves Leader (2015, 2016, 2017)
20142017Kaisei Sone  Japan4SoftBankIFCurrently with Hiroshima Toyo Carp
20142018Shinya Tsuruoka  Japan5SoftBankCPacific League Best Nine Award (2012)
20142023Seiji Uebayashi  Japan10SoftBankPNPB All-Star (2017)
Currently with Chunichi Dragons.
20142015Brian Wolfe  United States2SoftBankP
20152017Daisuke Matsuzaka  Japan3SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
Eiji Sawamura Award (2001)
Pacific League The Most Wins Champion (1999–2001)
20152020Rick van den Hurk  Netherlands6SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
Japan Series Outstanding Player Award (2015)
20162018Kenta Chatani  Japan3SoftBankIFCurrently with Chiba Lotte Marines
20162020Reiji Kozawa  Japan5SoftBankPCurrently with Tokyo Yakult Swallows
20162022Kenta Kurose  Japan7SoftBankIF
20162019Robert Suárez  Venezuela4SoftBankPCentral League Saves Leader (2020)
Currently with San Diego Padres
20162023Jumpei Takahashi  Japan8SoftBankP
20172019Oscar Colas  Cuba3SoftBankOFCurrently with Chicago White Sox
20172023Alfredo Despaigne  Cuba7SoftBankOFPacific League Best Nine Award (2017, 2019)
20172021Yuto Furuya  Japan5SoftBankP
20172023Ryuhei Kuki  Japan7SoftBankC
20172019Hiroki Hasegawa  Japan3SoftBankPCurrently with Tokyo Yakult Swallows.
20172017Kyle Jensen  United States1SoftBank1B
20172022Seigi Tanaka  Japan6SoftBankPCurrently with Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters.
20182022Yurisbel Gracial  Cuba5SoftBank3BJapan Series Most Valuable Player Award. (2019)
20182019Tomoya Ichikawa  Japan2SoftBankC
20182023Shu Masuda  Japan6SoftBankIFCurrently with Tokyo Yakult Swallows.
20182020Ryoma Matsuda  Japan3SoftBankP
20182019Ariel Miranda  Cuba2SoftBankPFormer MLB player.
20182020Tetsuro Nishida  Japan3SoftBankSS
20182022Kotaro Otake  Japan5SoftBankPCurrently with Hanshin Tigers.
20182023Arata Shiino  Japan6SoftBankP
20182023Rei Takahashi  Japan6SoftBankPNPB All-Star (2019)
Pacific League Rookie of the Year (2019)
Currently with Yomiuri Giants.
20182021Yuta Watanabe  Japan4SoftBankP
20192023Keisuke Izumi  Japan5SoftBankPCurrently with the Yomiuri Giants.
20192023Hiroshi Kaino  Japan5SoftBankPCurrently with the Saitama Seibu Lions.
20192023Masato Okumura  Japan5SoftBankP
20202020Matt Moore  United States1SoftBankPMLB All-Star Game (2013)
Currently with Los Angeles Angels.
20202021Wladimir Balentien  Netherlands2SoftBankOFCentral League home run leader (2011–2013)
Central League Best Nine Award (2012–2013)
20212021Dariel Álvarez  Cuba1SoftBankOFCurrently with Mariachis de Guadalajara.
20212021Nick Martinez  United States1SoftBankPMLB player.
Currently with San Diego Padres
20212022Masahiro Nakatani  Japan2SoftBankOF
20222022Ryo Akiyoshi  Japan1SoftBankPNPB All-Star Game (2016).
20222022Tyler Chatwood  United States1SoftBankPMLB player.
20222023Freddy Galvis  Venezuela2SoftBankSSMLB player.
20232023Willians Astudillo  Venezuela1SoftBank3BMLB player.
20232023Joe Gunkel  United States1SoftBankP
20232023Courtney Hawkins  United States1SoftBankOF

Retired numbers

edit
  • none

Honored numbers

edit

Sadaharu Oh's 89 was originally planned to be retired or honored after his retirement, but Oh made clear his preference to give the number to his successor. Ultimately, however, the man who replaced him as manager of the Hawks, Akiyama, declined to wear the number on the grounds that the honor of bearing it would be too great so shortly after Oh's departure. Instead, Akiyama wore the number 81.

Managers

edit
No.Years
in office
YRManagersGWLTWin%Pacific League
championships
Japan Series
championships
Playoff
berths
119381Kazuo Takasu (1st)4011263.296
219391Kazuo Takasu (1st)
Hachiro Mimachi (1st)
9640506.444
319401Kazuo Takasu (2nd)10528716.283
419411Hachiro Mimachi (2nd)8443410.512
519421Hachiro Mimachi (2nd)
Kisaku Kato (1st)
10549560.467
619431Tatsuo Takata
Kisaku Kato (2nd)
8426562.317
719441Kisaku Kato (2nd)3511231.324
81946196520Kazuto Tsuruoka (1st)2,6461,58599071.6168 times
(1951, 1952, 1953, 1955,
1959, 1961, 1964, 1965)
2 times
(1959, 1964)
919650Kazuo Kageyama
10196619683Kazuto Tsuruoka (2nd)40222216812.5691 (1966)
1119691Tokuji Iida13050764.397
12197019778Katsuya Nomura1,04051347255.5211 (1973)1 (1973)
13197819803Yoshinori Hirose39013622727.375
14198119822Don Blasingame26010613618.438
15198319853Yoshio Anabuki39014921031.415
16198619894Tadashi Sugiura52022327126.451
17199019923Kōichi Tabuchi3901512309.396
18199319942Rikuo Nemoto2601141406.449
191995200814Sadaharu Oh1,91399887738.5323 times
(1999, 2000, 2003)
2 times
(1999, 2003)
4 times
(2004, 2005, 2006, 2007)
20200920146Koji Akiyama86445636840.5533 times
(2010, 2011, 2014)
2 times
(2011, 2014)
5 times
(2009, 2010, 2011,
2012, 2014)
21201520217Kimiyasu Kudo97855837842.5963 times
(2015, 2017, 2020)
5 times
(2015, 2017, 2018,
2019, 2020)
6 times
(2015, 2016, 2017,
2018, 2019, 2020)
22202220232Hiroshi Fujimoto2861471345.5232 times
(2022, 2023)
232024–presentHiroki Kokubo
Totals85 seasons19 managers11,0185,6165,000402.52919 times11 times17 times
  • Statistics current through the end of the 2023 season.[36]

Mascots

edit

The Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks have the largest number of mascots in NPB, with a total of twelve active mascots. Nine of them are traditional mascots that are a part of the Hawk Family, with three other miscellaneous traditional mascots. The currently known family members since 1992 are as follows:[37]

  • Harry Hawk – a 23 year old yellow hawk with an orange beak wearing the number 100, Harry supports the team as the main mascot. He is the youngest brother of Homer Hawk, the former main mascot when the team was owned by Daiei. Harry is the only one with a Twitter account.
  • Honey Hawk – an 18 year old pink female hawk. Honey is Harry's girlfriend and the namesake of the Honeys, the Hawks' dancing and cheerleading squad.
  • Herculy Hawk – a 23 year old brown hawk wearing the number 200, Herculy is Harry's teammate as well as his longstanding rival since Hawk University days. Herculy is only seen wearing the team's away jersey, even at home and during special events, such as Hawks Festival or Fight! Kyushu days.[38]
  • Honky Hawk – a 57 year old brown hawk, Honky is Harry's uncle, and the mayor of Hawks Town. He loves baseball and wears a brown fedora.
  • Helen Hawk – a 55 year old female hawk, Helen is Honky's wife. They had eloped during their high school days.
  • Hack Hawk – Harry's 7 year old nephew and the oldest brother of Hock and Rick. Hack wears red-lined T-shirt and the same color cap.
  • Rick Hawk – Harry's 5 year old nephew and middle of Hawk brothers. Rick wears glasses and blue-lined T-shirt and the same color cap.
  • Hock Hawk – Harry's 3 year old nephew and youngest brother of Hack and Rick. Hock wears a green-lined T-shirt and the same color cap.
  • Homer Hawk – The original mascot of the Hawks from 1989 to 2004 and the older brother of the team's current mascot Harry.

The Hawks also had 2 VTuber avatar mascots, named Takamine Umi and Aritaka Hina. Unveiled on November 9, 2020, they have their own YouTube channel as well as their own Twitter profiles.[39][40] They also made appearances on the PayPay Dome's video board. The two were retired in December 2022.

Temporarily in 2020, the Hawks had 10 Spot robots from Boston Dynamics (at the time SoftBank owned Boston Dynamics) and 10 Pepper robots from SoftBank Robotics to replace the fans during a game against the Eagles due to COVID-19 restrictions in NPB games. They were still used when 5,000 fans were allowed in NPB games as fans were still not allowed to sing or use their voices to make noises, only through clapping or cheering batons.[41][42]

The Hawks are the only other team, aside from the Fighters, to have a mascot primarily for their second team, and are the only team with one in the Western League (the Fighters' ni-gun team plays out of the Eastern League), in a chick named Hinamaru. He wears the team's cap, and has an eggshell that looks like a baseball.

The Hawks also have a mascot named Fu-san, who is based on a jet balloon that fans launch during the Lucky 7, prior to when the Hawks are up to bat in the 7th inning.

In 2023, in celebration of the team's 85th anniversary and 30th season in the Fukuoka PayPay Dome, the Hawks introduced their twelfth mascot, Barikata-kun, a half-pig, half-human creature with a retractable hairline and sunglasses, inspired by Fukuoka's famous tonkotsu ramen.

MLB players

edit

Retired/Former:

Active:

Note: The Hawks are the only team in NPB to have never posted a player under the current posting system implemented in 1998.[43]

Notes

edit
  1. ^ "球団理念" (in Japanese). 福岡ソフトバンクホークス. 2023-01-24. Retrieved 2023-01-26.
  2. ^ "会社概要".
  3. ^ "Index by team". NPB. NPB. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  4. ^ "2021年度 福岡PayPayドームの定員について". 公式サイト. 福岡ソフトバンクホークス. 2021-01-29. Retrieved 2023-02-09.
  5. ^ The Richest Sports Team Owners
  6. ^ Coskrey, Jason (November 26, 2020). "Hawks sweep Giants again to clinch fourth straight Japan Series title". The Japan Times. Retrieved November 25, 2020.
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