
The defending East Asian Champion Kyoto had the best record in the Japan League with a 105-57 record atop the South Division. This gave the Kamikaze their third straight division title. Kobe had the second best record in the league, but at 96-66, were still nine games away from the division crown. In the North Division, Tokyo took first at 92-70 for their second division title in three years. Sapporo, who had 107 wins last year, finished second at 88-74.
Japan League MVP went to Kyoto’s Min-Hwi Eun. The 29-year old third baseman was the league leader in hits (216), total bases (402), average (.362), OBP (.402), OPS (1.075), wRC+ (214), and WAR (11.8), adding 47 home runs and 112 RBI. Pitcher of the Year went to fifth-year Tokyo arm Katsuo Nakayama. The 27-year old righty has a 2.38 ERA over 212 innings with 230 strikeouts and 5.8 WAR.

The Korea League ended up very unbalanced with the top six teams all in the North Division. Defending division champ Goyang and Incheon tied for the top spot at 96-66, while Seoul was 94-68 and Hamhung was 90-72. In the one-game playoff tiebreaker, the Green Sox defeated the Inferno to advance. Meanwhile, the South Division had no teams with a winning record. Two-time defending league champ Daegu took first at 81-81, beating Ulsan by three games and Gwangju by five.
League MVP went to Seongnam’s Seo-Yun Lee. The 23-year old RF nicknamed “Mongo” was the league leader in hits (210), stolen bases (106), batting average (.363), and OBP (.408), adding 6.9 WAR. Seoul’s Jae-Hoon Seon won Pitcher of the Year, his second having also taken the award way back in 1967. The 36-year old lefty had a 2.59 ERA and 21-6 record over 271 innings with 238 strikeouts and 6.5 WAR. Seon crossed 250 career wins, the seventh to do so.
The 1975 Japan League Championship Series was a rematch of the 1973 edition. Just like that edition, Tokyo prevailed over Kyoto, this time in a seven-game thriller. This gives the Tides their fourth league title (1975, 73, 36, 21). The Korea League Championship Series was a rematch and despite their 81-81 record, Daegu downed Goyang in six games. This gave the Diamondbacks a three-peat and their eighth league title.

The 55th East Asian Championship was a rematch of 1973 between Tokyo and Daegu. Just like two years prior, the finale went all seven games, the fourth straight season the EAB final went the distance. The Diamondbacks upset the Tides for their second title in three years. CF I-Deun Mok won finals MVP with 19 hits, 7 runs, 3 home runs, and 10 RBI in 13 playoff games. Daegu now has four overall titles (1975, 73, 56, 53). The 81-81 record is the worst record by an EAB champion to date.

Other notes: Chiba’s Seung-Yu Moon had a 33-game hitting streak, tied for the third longest EAB streak to date. Strikeout king Sang-Hun Joon crossed 5500 career Ks. He’d finish his career after the 1976 season with 5694 and remains EAB’s strikeout leader as of 2037. RF Hyeog-Jun Wi won his 11th Gold Glove. Two-way pitcher Totaro Uchiyama won his 11th Silver Slugger.
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