Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes

Former Japanese professional baseball team, active in the Pacific League until 2004 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes (大阪近鉄バファローズ, Ōsaka Kintetsu Bafarōzu) were a Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) team based in Osaka, Japan, which was in the Pacific League. In 2005 the team was merged with the Orix BlueWave to become the team now known as the Orix Buffaloes. The team played in Fujiidera Stadium, and later in Osaka Dome.

FoundedNovember 26, 1949; 76 years ago (1949-11-26)
Quick facts Logo, Cap insignia ...
Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes
Dissolved and merged with the Orix BlueWave in 2004 to create the Orix Buffaloes
Logo Cap insignia
Information
LeagueNippon Professional Baseball
Pacific League (1950–2004)
LocationNishi-ku, Osaka, Osaka, Japan
BallparkOsaka Dome
FoundedNovember 26, 1949; 76 years ago (1949-11-26)
FoldedDecember 1, 2004; 21 years ago (2004-12-01)
Nickname(s)Mogyu (猛牛, raging bull)
Japan Series championships0
Pacific League championships4 (1979, 1980, 1989, 2001)
Playoff berths3 (1975, 1979, 1980)
Former name
  • Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes (1999-2004)
  • Kintetsu Buffaloes (1962–1998)
  • Kintetsu Buffalo (1959–1961)
  • Kintetsu Pearls (1949–1958)
Former ballparks
ColorsRed, Black, White
     
MascotBuffie and Falulu
Retired numbers
ManagementKintetsu Railway Co., Ltd.
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Although the team won four Pacific League championships, they lost all four Japan Series in which they played. The team's batting lineup was known as Itemae Dasen (いてまえ打線).

Logo design

A stylized buffalo's head with angry-looking red eyes (designed by Okamoto Taro), or "Buffaloes" in red script, outlined with white. Another logo featured the "Buffaloes" in red script, while also featuring Buffie, the Buffaloes mascot.

Franchise history

The team was founded in 1949 and began play in 1950 in the newly organized NPB. Owned by Kinki Nippon Railway Co. (later known as Kintetsu Railway), the franchise was known as the Kintetsu Pearls from 1950 to 1958, Kintetsu Buffalo from 1959 to 1961, the Kintetsu Buffaloes from 1962 to 1998, and the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes from 1999 to 2004. In 1961, the Buffaloes lost 103 games that year. As of 2022, it is NPB's only 100 loss season.

The Kintetsu Buffalo were among the first Japanese teams to sign American players. They signed former major league pitcher Glenn Mickens and catcher Ron Bottler for the 1959 season. Mickens had played for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1953 and Bottler had been a career minor league catcher in the United States. Mickens played for five years in Japan, compiling a record of 45–53 with a 2.54 ERA. Bottler played for the Buffalo for three seasons, gradually converting from catcher to starting pitcher, where he had more success.[1]

It took 30 years for the franchise to win its first Pacific League title, in 1979, but it lost the Japan Series to the Hiroshima Toyo Carp 4-games-to-3. The Buffaloes made it back to the Japan Series in 1980, but again lost to Hiroshima by the same margin.

The franchise's most notable player was pitcher Keishi Suzuki, who played for the Buffaloes from 1966 to 1985, compiling a won-loss record of 317–238, a 3.11 ERA, and 3,061 strikeouts. He was elected to the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame in 2002.

In 1988, the Buffaloes were so close to making the Japan Series, after tying a second game in a double-header against the Lotte Orions. In order for Kintetsu to win the pennant, they had to win both games.[2]

They would make the Japan Series the following year, but just barely, after being .001 winning percentage higher than the second place Orix Braves, but lost to the Giants in the first reverse sweep since the 1958 Japan Series.

American outfielder Ralph Bryant starred for the Buffaloes from 1988 to 1995, in the process becoming one of the best left-handed power hitters in Japanese baseball history. Bryant had his best season in 1989, where his 49 home runs led the Buffaloes to their third Pacific League championship. He won the season MVP award that year, and also tied Sadaharu Oh's career record for hitting three home runs in a game five times. Bryant also struck out countless times, and holds the top four spots on the single-season strikeout records in Nippon Professional Baseball.

Pitcher Hideo Nomo starred for the Buffaloes from 1990 to 1994 before he exercised a loophole in his contract and "retired," allowing him to sign with MLB's Los Angeles Dodgers. The subsequent wave of players moving to Major League Baseball has become a fixture of Japanese professional baseball. To combat this, MLB and NPB agreed to make the posting system, which allowed players in NPB to "post" and allowed them to move to MLB. Without Nomo, the Buffaloes struggled in pitching, with a 4.16 ERA and 4.70 FIP after Nomo's departure.

In 2000, the Buffaloes signed Mexican pitcher Narciso Elvira. While he had terrible pitching, he was noted for being the only Mexican player in NPB history as of 2022 to throw a no-hitter, and only allowing 4 walks.[3] He was cut 6 games into the Buffaloes' 2001 Pacific League championship season, and then signed with the Samsung Lions of the KBO League and won the 2002 Korean Series with them.

Tuffy Rhodes played for the Buffaloes for eight seasons from 1996 to 2003, hitting 288 home runs over that span. In the 2001 season, he hit his 55th homer to tie Sadaharu Oh's Japanese League single season home run record, set in 1964. For the rest of the season, opposing pitchers intentionally walked Rhodes to prevent him from breaking Oh's record. Rhodes also played in tandem with Norihiro Nakamura, who also hit 46 home runs that same season. Together, they became a deadly hitting tandem, and the Buffaloes had one of the most dominant offenses in the league.

Despite the efforts of Rhodes and Nakamura, the Buffaloes could still not win the Japan Series, as they lost to the Tokyo Yakult Swallows in 5 games in the 2001 Japan Series. The Buffaloes are the second team to make the Japan Series but never win it, the first being the short lived Shochiku Robins, who only made the Japan Series in NPB's inaugural season, losing to the Mainichi Orions (now Chiba Lotte Marines) before folding at the end of the following season and being merged with the Taiyo Whales (now Yokohama DeNA BayStars).

Sale and merger

In 2004 the team was sold to the Orix Group, the owner of the Orix BlueWave baseball team. The new owner then announced that the financially challenged Buffaloes and BlueWave would be merged into one team, called the Orix Buffaloes, before the start of the 2005 NPB season. At the time, Kintetsu Railway, the Buffaloes' owners, were in ¥1.3 trillion (or $11.2 billion today) in debt. This caused Buffaloes legend Tuffy Rhodes to sign with the Yomiuri Giants as Kintetsu was not able to strike up the multi year deal he wanted.[4]

The proposed merger of the teams led to the biggest crisis in the traditional two-league structure in NPB and finally caused the first baseball player strike in Japan. The dispute officially ended after the two groups reached consensus on September 23, 2004. As part of the agreement, the Rakuten Golden Eagles were newly created (at a reduced "entry fee") to keep the former six-team league structure. Other agreements included the leagues adopting interleague play to help the Pacific League gain exposure by playing the more popular Central league teams. All these changes took place before the 2005 season.

Players of note

Former players

Japanese

Foreign players

Award winners

Pacific League Most Valuable Player Award

Eiji Sawamura Award

Pacific League Rookie of the Year

Nippon Professional Baseball Comeback Player of the Year Award

Retired numbers

Managers

Season-by-season records

Central League Pennant
(19502004)
More information Season, League ...
Season League Finish Wins Losses Ties Win% GB Playoffs Awards
Kintetsu Pearls
1950 Pacific 7th 44 72 4 .379 37.5
1951 Pacific7th37565.39833.5
1952 Pacific 7th 30 78 0 .278 40
1953 Pacific 7th 48 69 3 .410 22
1954 Pacific 4th 74 63 3 .540 16
1955 Pacific 5th 60 80 2 .429 39
1956 Pacific 5th 68 82 4 .455 29.5
1957 Pacific 6th 44 82 6 .356 38.5
Kintetsu Buffalo
1958 Pacific 6th 29 97 4 .238 49.5
1959 Pacific 6th 39 91 3 .300 49
1960 Pacific 6th 43 87 1 .331 39 Akitoshi Kodama (Best Nine Award)[5]
1961 Pacific 6th 36 103 1 .261 51.5
Kintetsu Buffaloes
1962 Pacific 6th 57 73 1 .438 21 Jack Bloomfield (Best Nine Award)
Akitoshi Kodama (Best Nine Award)
1963 Pacific 4th 74 73 3 .503 12.5 Jack Bloomfield (Best Nine Award)
Akitoshi Kodama (Best Nine Award)
1964 Pacific 6th 55 91 4 .377 28.5 Akitoshi Kodama (Best Nine Award)
1965 Pacific 6th 46 92 2 .333 42.5 Takashi Takagi (Best Nine Award)
Akitoshi Kodama (Best Nine Award)
1966 Pacific 6th 48 62 3 .369 31
1967 Pacific 6th 59 71 2 .454 16 Masahiro Doi (Best Nine Award)
1968 Pacific 4th 57 73 5 .438 23 Masahiro Doi (Best Nine Award)
1969 Pacific 2nd 73 51 6 .589 2 Keishi Suzuki (Best Nine Award)
Youzou Nagafuchi (Best Nine Award)
1970 Pacific 3rd 65 59 6 .524 13.5
1971 Pacific 3rd 65 60 5 .520 18
1972 Pacific 2nd 64 60 6 .5161 14
1973 Pacific 6th/6th 42 83 5 .336
1974 Pacific 5th/4th 56 66 8 .459 Clarence Jones (Best Nine Award)
1975 Pacific 3rd/1st 71 50 9 .587 Lost Pacific League playoffs (Braves) 3–1 Keishi Suzuki (Best Nine Award)
Kyosuke Sasaki (Best Nine Award)
1976 Pacific 5th/4th 57 66 7 .463
1977 Pacific 3rd/6th 59 61 10 .492 Shigeru Ishiwata (Best Nine Award)
1978 Pacific 2nd 71 46 13 .607 Keishi Suzuki (Best Nine Award)
Kyosuke Sasaki (Best Nine Award)
1979 Pacific 1st/2nd 74 45 11 .622 Won Pacific League playoffs (Braves) 3–0
Lost Japan Series (Carp) 4–3
Masataka Nashida (Best Nine Award)
Shigeru Ishiwata (Best Nine Award)
Shigeru Kurihashi (Best Nine Award)
Charlie Manuel (Best Nine Award)
1980 Pacific 2nd/1st 68 54 8 .557 Won Pacific League playoffs (Orions) 3–0
Lost Japan Series (Carp) 4–3
1981 Pacific 6th/4th 54 72 4 .429
1982 Pacific 3rd/2nd 63 57 10 .525
1983 Pacific 4th 52 65 13 .444 29.5
1984 Pacific 4th 58 61 11 .487 16.5
1985 Pacific 3rd 63 60 7 .5121 15.5
1986 Pacific 2nd 66 52 12 .559 2.5
1987 Pacific 6th 52 69 9 .430 21.5
1988 Pacific 2nd 74 52 4 .587 0.0
1989 Pacific 1st 71 54 5 .568 Lost Japan Series (Giants) 4-3
1990 Pacific 3rd 67 60 3 .528 14.5
1991 Pacific 2nd 77 48 5 .616 4.5
1992 Pacific 2nd 74 50 6 .597 4.5
1993 Pacific 4th 66 59 5 .528 7
1994 Pacific 3rd 68 59 3 .5354 7.5
1995 Pacific 6th 49 78 3 .386 32
1996 Pacific 4th 62 67 1 .481 14.5
1997 Pacific 3rd 68 63 4 .519 7.5
1998 Pacific 5th 66 67 2 .496 5
Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes
1999 Pacific 6th 54 77 4 .412 23.5 Norihiro Nakamura (Best Nine Award)
Phil Clark (Best Nine Award)
Tuffy Rhodes (Best Nine Award)
2000 Pacific 6th 58 75 2 .436 15.0 Norihiro Nakamura (Best Nine Award)
2001 Pacific 1st 78 60 2 .565 Lost Japan Series (Swallows) 4–1 Norihiro Nakamura (Best Nine Award)
Koichi Isobe (Best Nine Award)
Tuffy Rhodes (Best Nine Award)
2002 Pacific 2nd 73 65 2 .529 16.5 Jeremy Powell (Best Nine Award)
Norihiro Nakamura (Best Nine Award)
Tuffy Rhodes (Best Nine Award)
2003 Pacific 3rd 74 64 2 .536 8.5 Tuffy Rhodes (Best Nine Award)
2004 Pacific5th61702.46617.0Hisashi Iwakuma (Best Nine Award)
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Mascots

The Buffaloes had 2 mascots, named Buffie and Falulu (バフィリード and ファルルリーナ). Buffie is a male buffalo and was introduced in 1997. He also appeared on the team logo. Falulu is a female buffalo. Buffie's jersey number is 100 while Falulu's is 200. They were retired in 2005 after the Buffaloes merged with the then-named Orix BlueWave (present day Orix Buffaloes). Buffie reappeared in a Buffaloes reprint match in 2013. They also had 2 other mascots as part of the same group, named Capelot and Balbarock, with Capelot being a much more child-like character, whilst Balbarock was supposed to resemble the club's cap logo. Both were retired in 2000. All 4 were designed by Hanna-Barbera Productions, and their backstory was that they lived in a fantasy world of dreams and adventures named "Buffalo Valley", as described in the club's 1997 supporters' handbook. However, after the merger, only Buffie's copyright trademark was transferred to Orix Corporation.[6]

Before they were introduced, the team's mascot was a human character named Buffer (バッファくん), who served as the team mascot from 1976 to 1996. Logos of him usually depicted him holding a baseball bat and a ball, wearing the Buffaloes cap, raising one leg, whilst wearing Asics spiked shoes. However, a secondary logo primarily used by the team only had him holding a bat and ball. His jersey number was 100. He was designed by Yoshio Shirakawa.[7] He was retired in 1997 following the Buffaloes' major logo and jersey overhaul, coinciding with their move to the Osaka Dome.

References

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