Tokyo Senators (1936–1939) The Senators were founded by a group that included politician
Yoriyasu Arima.
Saburo Yokozawa managed the team in 1936–1937. In the fall 1936 campaign, rookie pitcher
Akira Noguchi went 15-13 with a 2.65 earned run average, following that with a combined 34–22 record in 1937, with a 2.21 ERA. (The 1936 and 1937 JBL seasons were split into spring and fall half-seasons.) Noguchi's 1937 totals led the league in games pitched and innings; he started nearly 70% of his team's games, and his 34 wins represented 68% of the Senators combined victories for the full season. Akira Noguchi left the team after the 1937 season, but he was replaced in 1939 as the team's ace by his brother
Jirō Noguchi. Jirō's rookie season was remarkable: a workhorse, he went 33–19 with a 2.04 earned run average, setting a rookie record for victories. He led the league in innings pitched, most games pitched, complete games (a remarkable 38), and hits and home runs allowed. He pitched in 72% of the team's games and had 67% of their total victories. When not pitching, he often played outfield or first base (although he only hit .251).
Tsubasa (1940) For the 1940 season, the team was renamed the
Tsubasa Baseball Club (
Tsubasa meaning "wing"). (In October 1940, responding to rising hostility toward the West due to
World War II, the league outlawed the use of English in Japanese baseball.) In 1940, Jirō Noguchi put together another remarkable season, going 30–11 with a league-leading 0.93 earned run average. He also hit .260. He had nearly 60% of the team's total number of victories for the season.
Taiyō (1941–1942) Following the 1940 season, the team was wholly acquired by
Yoriyasu Arima; the failing
Nagoya Kinko was also merged with Tsubasa and for 1941 the new team was renamed the
Taiyō Baseball Club. Jirō Noguchi went 25–12 with a league-leading 0.88 ERA in 1941, becoming the only pitcher in Japanese professional baseball history to have two consecutive sub-1 ERA seasons. The franchise had its best season in 1942, finishing with 60 victories and a winning percentage of .606, good for second place in the league behind the
Tokyo Kyojin. Jirō Noguchi won two-thirds of his team's victories, a league-leading 40 (he also lost 17 games), to go with a 1.19 ERA, and a still-league-record 19 shutoutsas well as 264 strikeouts. That year Noguchi pitched all 28 innings of a tie game against
Nagoya Club that featured Nagoya's
Michio Nishizawa also pitching the entire game. The team's manager in 1942–1943 was
Shuichi Ishimoto.
Nishitetsu (1943) Financial instability led to the team being acquired in 1943 by
Nishi-Nippon Railroad, and it being renamed the
Nishitetsu Baseball Club. Despite finishing with a .513 winning percentage that year (with Jirō Noguchi winning 25 games), the team was dissolved before the 1944 season. == Legacy ==