Showing posts with label Takehiko Besho. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Takehiko Besho. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 11, 2020

New Menko Finds

 

I have a couple of recent menko pick ups which seem to be from an uncatalogued set (or sets).

The card on the left features Tigers star and HOFer Fumio Fujimura.  He is one of several Babe Ruth type players who was a star both on the mound and at the plate in his early career, then mainly at the plate later in his career.  As a pitcher he posted a career 34-11 record.  His best pitching season was in 1946 when he went 13-2 with a 2.44 ERA.  Four years later, in 1950, at the plate he set the single season hit record in Japan with 191 (in a 140 game season).  That record would last until 1994 when Ichiro Suzuki broke it.

The card on the right is Takehiko Bessho, another HOFer who I've written about before so won't repeat his biography.

I'm not sure if these cards belong to the same set or not.  The team names are written in katakana on both, which is unlike any set listed in Engel's catalogue.  The style of artwork is also similar, and the rock/paper/scissor symbol is the same.  But the player names are written in different styles as are the menko numbers, so these might be from different sets.  Bessho is pictured as a member of the Nankai Hawks who he played for between 1946 and 1948 so likely the set (or sets) dates to one of those years (Fujimura played his entire career for the Tigers so his card doesn't help with the date).

As you can see, neither of my cards is exactly what you would call high grade.  Anybody know how PSA treats massive vertical gouges across the entire length of a card that are so deep they nearly cut it in half?  I'm guessing they would ding me for that if I were to ever submit them. 

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Complete set of 1947 JCM 75: The Film Noir of Baseball Cards

 This is my oldest complete set, an uncut sheet of JCM 75 from 1947 featuring all 8 cards.  This is kind of cheating since I obviously got the set all in one go, but it still counts!

The set has a lot of star power, more than half of these guys *5 out of 8) are hall of famers.

The artwork is quite striking.  The images are a bit crude, not unlike other menko from the late 40s, but what is really interesting is the exaggerated shadows on all the players.  It makes them look like characters from a film noir detective thriller from the same era.  Especially Takehiko Besho:

Another interesting thing about this sheet is the backs.  7 out of 8 of the cards feature a "Baseball" back with a batter and math equation.  But one card, that of Bozo Wakabayashi, features Tarzan and an elephant for some reason.  I'm curious about why his card has a different back!

Kind of a cool set that currently sits in my ultra exclusive pile of "things I want to display if I ever move into a house big enough to display stuff in and also is not full of toddlers constantly covered in blueberry jam".