Japan - NPB Reserve League 03/26 04:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Softbank Hawks - View
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/24 05:00 - Softbank Hawks v Hiroshima Carp W 0-3
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/23 04:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Softbank Hawks L 1-5
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/22 09:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Softbank Hawks D 2-2
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/20 04:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Seibu Lions L 5-6
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/19 04:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Seibu Lions L 1-3
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/17 04:00 - Yokohama Bay Stars v Hiroshima Carp D 2-2
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/16 05:00 - Yokohama Bay Stars v Hiroshima Carp W 2-3
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/14 09:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Nippon Ham Fighters D 4-4
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/13 09:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Nippon Ham Fighters W 6-1
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/12 09:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Nippon Ham Fighters D 4-4
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/10 04:00 - Chunichi Dragons v Hiroshima Carp L 3-0
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/09 04:00 - Chunichi Dragons v Hiroshima Carp D 2-2
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/08 04:00 - Chunichi Dragons v Hiroshima Carp L 4-0
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/03 04:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Rakuten Eagles W 3-2
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/02 04:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Rakuten Eagles L 1-3
Japan - NPB Exhibition 03/01 04:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Rakuten Eagles W 4-2
Japan - NPB Exhibition 02/25 04:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Nippon Ham Fighters L 2-3
Japan - NPB Exhibition 02/24 04:00 - Yomiuri Giants v Hiroshima Carp L 10-1
Japan - NPB Exhibition 02/23 05:00 - Hiroshima Carp v Chunichi Dragons W 10-0
Japan - NPB Exhibition 02/21 04:00 - Yokohama Bay Stars v Hiroshima Carp L 2-1
Japan - NPB - Japan Series 10/21 05:00 2 Hanshin Tigers v Hiroshima Carp - Postponed
Japan NPB Climax Series 10/20 09:00 2 [7] Hiroshima Carp v Hanshin Tigers [9] L 2-4
Japan NPB Climax Series 10/19 09:00 2 [7] Hiroshima Carp v Hanshin Tigers [9] L 1-2
Japan NPB Climax Series 10/18 09:00 2 [7] Hiroshima Carp v Hanshin Tigers [9] L 1-4
Japan NPB Climax Series 10/15 04:00 14 [3] Yokohama Bay Stars v Hiroshima Carp [7] W 2-4
Japan NPB Climax Series 10/14 04:00 14 [3] Yokohama Bay Stars v Hiroshima Carp [7] W 2-3
Japan NPB Climax Series 10/01 05:00 - [9] Hanshin Tigers v Hiroshima Carp [7] L 6-5
Japan NPB Climax Series 09/30 09:00 - [9] Hanshin Tigers v Hiroshima Carp [7] W 1-2
Japan NPB Climax Series 09/29 09:00 - [10] Chunichi Dragons v Hiroshima Carp [7] L 4-1

Wikipedia - Hiroshima Toyo Carp

The Hiroshima Toyo Carp (広島東洋カープ, Hiroshima Tōyō Kāpu) is a professional baseball team based in Hiroshima, Japan. They compete in the Central League of Nippon Professional Baseball. The team is primarily owned by the Matsuda family, led by Hajime Matsuda (松田元, Matsuda Hajime), who is a descendant of Mazda founder Jujiro Matsuda. Mazda is the largest single shareholder (34.2%), which is less than the portion owned by the Matsuda family (about 60%). Because of that, Mazda is not considered the owner firm. However, the company connection is highlighted in the club name; until 1984, Mazda's official name was Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd. (東洋工業株式会社, Tōyō Kōgyō Kabushiki Gaisha). The Carp are the only one of the 28 Asian professional baseball teams to be majority privately owned. As the Carp was founded only four years after the Atomic bombing of Hiroshima and had risen to the Central League champion along with the reconstruction of Hiroshima, the team is often referred to as "the symbol of the post-war reconstruction of Hiroshima".

Currently, the team has the longest Japan Series championship drought, as they are one of only two existing teams to not win the series since the 21st century.

History

Early years

The Nippon Professional Baseball league was planned to be split into two separate leagues in 1949, and Hiroshima prefecture decided to establish a professional baseball team as part of the reconstruction process after the Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The team joined the Central League in December 1949 as the Hiroshima Carp. They were named the Carp after the koi fish that climbed the rapids of Hiroshima Castle, which signifies Hiroshima's rebirth after the above said bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in World War 2.

The team's first home field was a prefecture-funded stadium, and the team's lack of sponsorship made it extremely difficult to recruit players. Manager Hideichi Ishimoto had to personally scout players just to form a starting lineup. The ragtag team ended up in last place from 1950 to 1951.

The team's lack of funding became an even more serious problem in 1951, and it was proposed by NPB that the team be disbanded, or merge with the Taiyo Whales team, which was based in Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi at the time. Hiroshima citizens strongly protested against disbanding the team, and raised the money needed to keep the team through donations.

The Central League had seven teams in 1952, making it complicated to form a coherent schedule for each team. Therefore, it was decided that any team that ended the season with a winning percentage below .300 would be disbanded or merged with another team. This agreement may have targeted the Carp, since the team had been in last place every season. The team won only 37 games in 1952, mostly on the back of ace Ryōhei Hasegawa, but ended with a .316 winning percentage, saving itself from being disbanded. The Shochiku Robins ended the season in last place with a .288 winning percentage, and was merged with the Taiyo Whales. While the Robins "merged" with the Whales, since technically the Robins were jettisoned from NPB and folded, this left most of their star players as free agents; Hiroshima signed most of them as a result.

The team's financial plight only worsened in the following years, and the team could only issue one uniform per player in 1953. Nevertheless, the team continued to play each season. The team moved to the newly constructed Hiroshima Municipal Stadium in central Hiroshima in July 1957. Finally, in 1960, they ended the season above the .500 mark.

In 1968, the Toyo Kogyo company became the team's chief sponsor, and the company name was inserted to become the Hiroshima Toyo Carp. The company was renamed Mazda Motor Corporation in 1984 after the Matsuda family sold their stakes in the company to Ford, but kept their 60% stake in the team, which they hold onto to this very day. The Toyo name remains memorialized in the name of the baseball team, although the team is rarely mentioned by its full name; only in the draft and in official news outlets. The team ended the season above 3rd place for the first time the year corporate sponsorship started, but fell back into last place from 1972 to 1974.

"Akaheru" golden age

A memorial plaque listing the team's Central League championships located next to old Hiroshima Municipal Stadium.

Red became the new team color in 1973, and the team's uniforms were redesigned. The current team uniform still resembles the 1973 design. The team logo was also changed from a letter "H" to a red wishbone-"C" in imitation of the Cincinnati Reds logo. The letter H logo still is used as the club's flag logo insignia.

The team hired its first non-Japanese manager, Joe Lutz, in 1975, becoming the first Japanese professional team to hire a foreign manager. Lutz ordered the team's cap to be changed to red to symbolize a never-ending fighting spirit[], and he hired Gail Hopkins and Richie Scheinblum. A month into the season, Lutz and the Carp parted ways as he decided to quit since he felt umpires were calling games against the Carp. However, the team won its first ever league championship in 1975 to begin a memorable series of seasons with Lutz's replacement Takeshi Koba. The Hankyu Braves would "sweep" them in 6 games, due to there being 2 ties in games 1 and 4.

The Carp team became a powerhouse in 1978, hitting over 200 home runs in one season for the first time in Japanese baseball history. Koji Yamamoto, Sachio Kinugasa, Jim Lyttle and Adrian Garrett formed the powerful Akaheru (meaning "Red Helmet") lineup, which won two consecutive pennants and Japan Series from 1979 to 1980, both against the Kintetsu Buffaloes. As of 2023, they remain the last Central League team to win back-to-back Japan Series rings. A strong pitching staff led to another Japan Series win in 1984 against the Braves. Koba retired in 1985, but the team still won the pennant the following year, losing to the Seibu Lions in 8 games. As of 2023, they are the last team to make it to the Japan Series without a single foreigner. (The Orix Buffaloes would make it to the Japan Series in 2022 without a foreign batter, with the only foreigner on their postseason roster was pitcher Jacob Waguespack.) The year after that, Kinugasa would break Lou Gehrig's consecutive games played streak, and would hold on to it until Cal Ripken Jr would break Gehrig's record, then his own in 1996.

Star player Koji Yamamoto became manager in 1989, and the team won yet another pennant in 1991. However, the team fell into last place in 1993, and Yamamoto resigned from his position.

Dark years

The Carp would endure a lengthy period without success after their 1991 pennant.

View from Hiroshima Municipal Stadium on March 14, 2004.

One of the major reasons for the team's fall after that 1991 pennant was the lack of financial support it received from its sponsors[]. The team never signed any free agents, and was often forced to let go of star players because they could no longer pay their salaries (recent examples include Tomoaki Kanemoto, Akira Etoh, Andy Sheets, Nate Minchey, John Bale, Greg LaRocca and Takahiro Arai). The Hiroshima Carp were the last Japanese team to have a non-Japanese player on its roster (excluding Japanese-Americans). Zoilo Versalles, the 1965 American League MVP, was the first non-Japanese player to play for the Carp.

Marty Brown became the manager in 2006, becoming the team's first non-Japanese manager in 31 years (since Joe Lutz). The team set a new record in April, 2006, scoring only 2 runs for the first 9 games of the season[]. Through still not finishing above third, the team concentrated on developing potential young players. In 2008, even though they were expected to finish last place[] as both the ace Hiroki Kuroda and slugger Takahiro Arai were gone by free agency, their chance of entering of playoffs was not eliminated until the very end of the season (when only 3 games remained), and they finished fourth, closely behind the Chunichi Dragons.

Beginning with the 2009 season, the team's home has been the New Hiroshima Municipal Stadium, also known as Mazda Zoom-Zoom Stadium, in the Minami (South) Ward of Hiroshima.

Resurgence

After years of futility, the Carp finally regained success in 2016, finishing the regular season with NPB's best record and defeating the Yokohama DeNA BayStars in the Climax Series Final to advance to their first Japan Series since 1991, where they faced the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters. The Carp won the first two games of the series at home, but the Fighters would win the next four games en route to the championship. After the season Hiroki Kuroda, who had returned to the Carp in 2015 following a stint in Major League Baseball, retired.

The Carp again finished with the Central League's best record in 2017, but were upset by the BayStars in a rematch of the previous year's Climax Series Final.

In 2018, the Carp captured another Central League Pennant and swept the Yomiuri Giants in the Climax Series Final. However, they once again came up short in the Japan Series, falling to the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks in five games.

The Carp finished the 2019 campaign in fourth place, missing the playoffs by a half game and ending the team's run of three consecutive Central League Pennants.

In 2020, the Carp finished 5th and once again missed the playoffs for a second consecutive year.

The Carp would finish in 4th place in the 2021 campaign, losing a playoff spot by just 2 games.

The 2022 season would begin with a major loss for the Carp, losing star player Seiya Suzuki after getting posted to the Chicago Cubs. Despite the setback, Hiroshima began the season 8-4 in their first 12 games. Despite the strong start, they missed out on the playoffs again, going 66-74-3.