
For the second time in three seasons, Kawasaki won the Capital Division and had the Japan League’s top seed. The Killer Whales finished 103-58, surviving a spirited challenge from 96-66 Chiba. Kawasaki had the top pitching staff in East Asia Baseball with 491 runs allowed and a 2.65 team ERA.
Nagoya had the #2 seed at 96-66, winning the Central Division for the first time since their 2009 EAB Championship win. They dethroned the two-time defending EAB champ Kyoto, who fell short of the Nightowls by one game at 95-67. That ended the Kamikaze’s hopes of being the third-ever team to three-peat as EAB champs.
Sapporo repeated as North Division champ at 94-68, ten games ahead of their nearest foe Sendai. In a very tight and weak West Division, Hiroshima (83-79) took the title over Fukuoka (82-80), Kitakyushu (82-80), and Kumamoto (79-83). That ended a three-year playoff drought for the Hammerheads. The Monsters had won the division the prior two years, having won 100 games in 2011.
Hiroshima LF Hitoshi Kubota became the eighth EAB player to win four MVPs. He took the Japan League’s 2012 title, having previously won from 2007-2009. The 29-year old switch hitter led in home runs (53), total bases (408), OBP (.413), slugging (.716), OPS (1.129), wRC+ (246), and WAR (11.0). Kubota also had a .342 average, 195 hits, 107 runs, and 105 RBI. The Hammerheads locked up their longtime star to one of the richest deals in baseball history in July 2013 with a six-year, $128,200,000 extension.
Pitcher of the Year was Yokohama’s Kenzaburo Miyazaki, bouncing back from a torn back muscle that kept him out much of the prior season. The 25-year old righty led in ERA (1.78), and WHIP (0.72). Miyazaki had a 17-8 record over 232 innings with 305 strikeouts, a 185 ERA+, and 8.2 WAR. The Yellow Jackets had extended him the prior winter for six years and $39,540,000.
83-win Hiroshima stunned Kawasaki 3-1 in the first round of the playoffs, earning their first Japan League Championship Series berth since 2004. Sapporo edged Nagoya 3-2 on the other side to get back-to-back JLCS appearances. The Hammerheads continued surprising playoff dominance with a JLCS sweep over the Swordfish. This was Hiroshima’s eighth Japan League title and first since 1996.

No one stood out in the Korea League with only eight wins separating the top record from the ninth-best record. The top seed came down to a tie at 90-72 for the North Division title between Bucheon and defending KL champ Goyang. The Bolts won the tiebreaker game and their first-ever division title. It was their fifth-ever playoff berth with the last one coming in 1998. The Green Sox advanced as the first wild card.
In the North Division, Ulsan and Gwangju tied for first at 86-76 with Yongin one back at 85-77. The Swallows won the tiebreaker game, ending a four-year playoff drought. This ultimately ended the Grays’ four-year playoff streak.
It would be 86-76 Incheon who got the second wild card, with the tiebreaker game loss putting Gwangju a half-game worse at 86-77. The Inferno ended a five-year playoff drought. They were only one game better than Yongin and Pyongyang at 85-77 and three better than both Suwon and Jeonju at 83-79. Only eight games separated the #4 seed from the 14th-best team in the 16-team league. Only the bottom two teams Seongnam and Changwon were completely out of the mix entering September.
Ulsan’s Soo-Geum Yim joined hit king Byung-Oh Tan and Takashi Ishihara as the only five-time MVPs in EAB history. The 33-year old RF hadn’t won the top honor in his seven years with the Swallows, as he took it in 2001, 2003, 2004, and 2005 with Jeonju. This was also his 11th Silver Slugger.
Yim led the league in home runs (56), RBI (131), and total bases (367). He had a .962 OPS, 152 wRC+, and 4.6 WAR. It was a quiet season for standouts, as this is the only time as of 2037 that an EAB MVP winner had less than 5 WAR. This was Yim’s final season for Ulsan, as he’d sign with Incheon as a free agent at $60,00,000 over four years.
Suwon’s Seo-Hu Tongbang picked up Pitcher of the Year in his ninth season. The 30-year old righty led in strikeouts (301), K/BB (9.1), FIP- (72), and WAR (6.8). Tongbang added a 2.73 ERA over 247.2 innings with a 140 ERA+ and 17-10 record. The Snappers gave him a six-year, $79,200,000 extension in June and he’d ultimately play his entire career for Suwon.
Bucheon swept Incheon in the first round, while Goyang edged Ulsan 3-2. This gave the Bolts their third-ever Korea League Championship Series appearance and first since 1998. It would be the defending champ Green Sox who prevailed at 4-2, earning their third pennant in five years. It was Goyang’s fourth Korea League title (1991, 2008, 2011, 2012).

In the 92nd East Asian Championship, Goyang finally won their first overall title. The Green Sox dominated Hiroshima 4-1, becoming the 27th EAB franchise to win it all. This left Suwon, Daejeon and Saitama as the only of the charter 28 franchises without a title. The Ducks are the only original team without a single finals appearance. Expansion Kumamoto also hasn’t been to the finals once and expansion Bucheon also doesn’t have a ring, although they’ve been there once.

Other notes: Dong-Uk Choi and In-Soo Chi became the 25th and 26th players to 1500 runs scored. Hidenosuke Mazaki became the 38th slugger to 1500 RBI. Tokyo stole 427 bases as a team, rolling by the previous Japan League record of 407 by Hiroshima in 1994. This remains the JL’s best season as of 2037.
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