2004 Nippon Professional Baseball season

2004 NPB season
LeagueNippon Professional Baseball
SportBaseball
DurationMarch 27, 2004 – October 25, 2004
Regular season
Season MVPCL: Kenshin Kawakami (CHU)
PL: Nobuhiko Matsunaka (DAI)
League postseason
CL championsChunichi Dragons
  CL runners-upYakult Swallows
PL championsSeibu Lions
  PL runners-upFukuoka Daiei Hawks
Japan Series
ChampionsSeibu Lions
  Runners-upChunichi Dragons
Finals MVPTakashi Ishii (SEI)

The 2004 Nippon Professional Baseball season was the 55th season of operation for Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). For the first time since 1982, the Pacific League instituted a playoff system to determine its representative to the Japan Series, in which the second-place and third-place teams would compete against each other for the right to play the regular season champion; previously, the league had a split-season playoff that would match the first-place team of the first and second half of the season from 1973 to 1982. The Pacific League regular season champion Fukuoka Daiei Hawks became part of dubious history when they subsequently lost to the Seibu Lions in five games to become the first regular season champion of the league to not reach the championship series. The Japan Series ended with the Seibu Lions defeating the Chunichi Dragons in the 2004 Japan Series. This season also saw the first and only players strike in Japanese professional baseball history. Players went on strike for two days in September because of the potential mergers and realignment.[1][2] The result was that the Pacific League saw the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles be created as an expansion team for 2005 while the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes and Orix BlueWave would merge to form the Orix Buffaloes.

Format

Central League

  • Season format
    • Regular season
  • Regular season 1st place is the champion

Pacific League

  • Season format
    • Regular season
    • Playoff 1st stage: Regular season 2nd place vs. regular season 3rd place – Best of 3
    • Playoff 2nd stage: Regular season 1st place vs. playoff 1st stage winner – Best of 5
  • Playoff 2nd stage winner is the champion

Japan Series

  • Central League champion vs. Pacific League champion – Best of 7

Standings

Note:Two games for each team are cancelled due to players' strike

Central League

Regular season

Central League G W L T Pct. GB
Chunichi Dragons 138 79 56 3 .583
Yakult Swallows 138 72 64 2 .529 7.5
Yomiuri Giants 138 71 64 3 .525 8.0
Hanshin Tigers 138 66 70 2 .485 13.0
Hiroshima Toyo Carp 138 60 77 1 .438 20.0
Yokohama BayStars 138 59 76 3 .438 20.0

Pacific League

Regular season

Pacific League G W L T Pct. GB
Fukuoka Daiei Hawks 133 77 52 4 .594
Seibu Lions 133 74 58 1 .560 4.5
Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters 133 66 65 2 .504 12.0
Chiba Lotte Marines 133 65 65 3 .500 12.5
Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes 133 61 70 2 .466 17.0
Orix BlueWave 133 49 72 2 .376 29.0

Playoff 1st stage

Seibu Lions (2) vs. Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters (1)

Game Score Date Location
1 Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters – 7, Seibu Lions – 10 October 1 Seibu Dome
2 Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters – 5, Seibu Lions – 4 October 2 Seibu Dome
3 Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters – 5, Seibu Lions – 6 October 3 Seibu Dome

Playoff 2nd stage

Fukuoka Daiei Hawks (2) vs. Seibu Lions (3)

Game Score Date Location
1 Seibu Lions – 3, Fukuoka Daiei Hawks – 9 October 6 Fukuoka Dome
2 Seibu Lions – 11, Fukuoka Daiei Hawks – 1 October 7 Fukuoka Dome
3 Seibu Lions – 6, Fukuoka Daiei Hawks – 5 October 9 Fukuoka Dome
4 Seibu Lions – 1, Fukuoka Daiei Hawks – 4 October 10 Fukuoka Dome
5 Seibu Lions – 4, Fukuoka Daiei Hawks – 3 (10 innings) October 11 Fukuoka Dome

Japan Series

Chunichi Dragons (3) vs. Seibu Lions (4)

Game Score Date Location Attendance
1 Dragons – 0, Lions – 2 October 16 Nagoya Dome 37,909
2 Dragons – 11, Lions – 6 October 17 Nagoya Dome 37,969
3 Lions – 10, Dragons – 8 October 19 Seibu Dome 23,910
4 Lions – 2, Dragons – 8 October 21 Seibu Dome 29,073
5 Lions – 1, Dragons – 6 October 22 Seibu Dome 31,526
6 Dragons – 2, Lions – 4 October 24 Nagoya Dome 38,120
7 Dragons – 2, Lions – 7 October 25 Nagoya Dome 38,050

See also

References

  1. ^ "Swallows, BayStars state opposition to contraction". The Japan Times. July 15, 2004. Retrieved November 20, 2013.
  2. ^ Graczyk, Wayne (September 29, 2004). "Fan power prevails as crisis in Japanese baseball subsides". The Japan Times. Retrieved April 10, 2019.