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JapanBall Itinerary

April 2011 - Japan Baseball Adventure 

Main Tour - Wednesday, April 13 to Thursday, April 21, 2011.
Disney Option - At conclusion of Main Tour, your choice of visiting Tokyo Disneyland or Tokyo DisneySea at Tokyo Disney Resort.  Thursday, April 21 to Friday, April 22, 2011.
See It All Option * - Unescorted additional games after the Main Tour.  Includes detailed itinerary for every step of the way, game tickets, hotels plus air and rail transportation. Thursday, April 21 to Friday, April 29, 2011.
* SEE IT ALL - By combining the Main Tour and See It All Option you visit all 12 Japanese home ballparks while traveling the length and breadth of Japan...and become a member of the JapanBall Hall of Fame.

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ITINERARY IN BRIEF - (Detailed Itinerary follows)

Wed April 13 Main Tour leaves home
Thu 14 Main Tour arrives in Tokyo.  
Fri 15 In Tokyo to see Yomiuri Giants at Tokyo Dome
Sat 16 In Tokyo to see Yakult Swallows at Jingu Stadium
Sun 17 In Nagoya to see Chunichi Dragons at Nagoya Dome
Mon 18 In Kyoto for Baseball Off-Day and Sightseeing
Tue 19 In Kobe to see Orix Buffaloes at Hotto Motto Stadium 
Wed 20 In Yokohama to see Yokohama BayStars at Yokohama Municipal Stadium
Thu 21 Main Tour to Tokyo Airport to Home
Thu 21 Disney Option to Tokyo Disney
Thu 21 See It All Option in Fukuoka to see Hawks
Fri 22 Disney Option to Tokyo Airport to Home
Fri 22 See It All Option in Hiroshima to see Carp
Sat 23 See It All Option in Osaka to see Tigers
Sun 24 See It All Option in Sendai to see Eagles
Mon 25 See It All Option - Travel Day to Sapporo 
Tue 26 See It All Option in Sapporo to see Fighters
Wed 27 See It All Option in Tokyo to see Marines
Thu 28 See It All Option in Tokyo to see Lions
Fri 29 See It All Option to Tokyo Airport to Home

DETAILED ITINERARY
WEDNESDAY - April 13, 2011
Main Tour leaves Home

Main Tour begins as you board your plane bound for Tokyo. During the flight you cross the International Dateline and go ahead one day.  A day you get back on your return flight home.  


THURSDAY - April 14, 2011
Main Tour arrives in Tokyo.  Overnight in Tokyo.

Upon your arrival we greet you as you exit customs.  From inside the airport you board a streamliner express train for the brief trip into downtown Tokyo and our JapanBall headquarters hotel.  

Many of you arrive in plenty of time to wander about the delightful Ochanomizu area of our hotel before our evening gathering at the world famous JapanBall Hall of Fame and Cafe.

The Kanda River along with main rail and subway lines run through Ochanomizu, the area of our well-located Tokyo hotel.

FRIDAY - April 15, 2011
Tokyo Yomiuri Giants (vs Hiroshima Carp)
Tokyo Dome - 6:00 PM
Overnight in Tokyo
We begin our exploration of Tokyo this morning.  The sheer level of energy is a striking aspect of Japan's capital city.  Close to soaring buildings are pockets of another Tokyo - an old wooden house, a Japanese inn, a kimono-clad woman sweeping outside her home with a straw broom.
This evening we visit the raucous Tokyo Dome to see the Tokyo Giants, Japan's favorite team.  Located just blocks away from our hotel, the team operates a shopping mall, restaurant center and amusement park outside the dome.  
The Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame is on the outside perimeter of the building along with a terrific souvenir store. There's a wild “you gotta see it to believe it” eight-story off-track horse racing parlor adjacent.
As for the Hall of Fame, it's a long way from the charm of Cooperstown, but for the price of a hamburger, it may be worth a look.  Team uniforms, pictures, cards and other memorabilia fill a long procession of glass cases, while one room contains member plaques.
On the outside premises is the Baseball Cafe that boasts a huge caricature statue of Tommy Lasorda that greets you as you enter. It's a baseball version of the Hard Rock Cafe and, while they don't serve Dodger Dogs, you can order burgers and other typical American fare at reasonable prices.

Partial view of Tokyo Dome City with its Tokyo Dome on left and amusement park roller coaster on right.

SATURDAY - April 16, 2011
Tokyo Yakult Swallows (vs Yokohama Bay Stars)
Jingu Stadium - 2:00 PM
Overnight in Tokyo
The Swallow's Jingu Stadium is set in the Meiji Shrine's Outer Garden and many find this unpretentious gem to be the best place in Japan to see a game.
Opened in 1926, Jingu Stadium is Tokyo's oldest ballpark.  It's brickwork evokes images of Ebbets Field and other parks of the past.  This is a place where you can go and imagine how baseball was years ago. 
Some say the Jingu scoreboard is the best in Japan, if for no other reason than it alone posts each player's batting average and home run total for the duration of every game.  It gives you what's important without relying on a lot of technological gimmicks - part of the quiet appeal of Jingu.
The ballpark is in the center of a national sports complex that contains a rugby field, soccer stadium and tennis courts.  
Japan is so safe that nightfall fails to stop us.  After the game, the evening is free.  Yesterday we taught you how to get around Tokyo with ease.  Any place you go is likely within steps of a subway station, with stops marked in English. 
Tokyo is loaded with restaurants, nightlife and the like.  However, if you want to slow the pace, you can do so in the city's many tranquil gardens, shrines and temples, many of which are wonderfully illuminated at night. 

Jingu Stadium, an old-time park set in an ultra-modern downtown Tokyo.

SUNDAY - April 17, 2011
Chunichi Dragons (vs Hanshin Tigers)
 Nagoya Dome - 3:00 PM
Overnight in Kyoto
Today is our first trip on the Shinkansen, Japan's high-speed bullet train.  We arrive from Tokyo at Nagoya Station, store our luggage, and head to the Nagoya Dome for this afternoon's game.
The Chunichi Dragons are owned by the local newspaper.  The Dragons put on a good show as one of the more hip ballclubs in Japan.  They keep their park sparkling and make it come alive for their fans.
What distinguishes the Nagoya Dome from other domes are its vibrant interior colors and ceiling tiles that open to allow in sunlight.  A shopping mall is adjacent and fun to visit for snacks and other items before the game.
Nagoya, Japan's fourth largest city, developed as a castle town housing one of the branches of the ruling Tokugawa family. It grew to house heavy manufacturing and is the longtime home to Honda, Mitsubishi and Toyota.  Because of such heavy manufacturing it was a prime target in the air raids of 1945.  The city was rebuilt with a large grid pattern of spacious boulevards and avenues.
After the game we retrieve our luggage from the train station and make the short train trip on to our hotel in Kyoto, the Center of Old Japan.

The Dragons always draw well to their Nagoya Dome home.

MONDAY - April 18, 2011
Baseball Off-Day.  Kyoto Sightseeing.
Overnight in Kyoto
Baseball in Japan shuts down today and we use the off-day for exploring Kyoto, a city brimming with World Heritage Sites.
If you could visit but one place in Japan this is it for its beauty, stunning architecture, and citizens who still wear traditional dress. Today we visit some of Kyoto’s treasured castles, temples and gardens.
Kyoto is great to explore on foot so that its sights, sounds, smells and textures can be savored. And you don’t need to walk far to do it. Cool green garden moss, the echo of a temple bell, the caress of silk, and the aroma of soy, sugar and sake, all experienced on a short walk, convey this ancient culture in a personalized manner to each visitor. The city's sights and charms are tightly woven together in this ideal setting.
This evening we offer an optional group dinner at a time-honored Japanese restaurant with a pre-meal stroll through the quaint back alleys of the Gion District, the setting of the best-selling novel and Steven Spielberg film, Memoirs of a Geisha.  

Kinkaku-ji, the Gold Pavilion, a Zen temple whose top two floors are completely covered in gold leaf.  One of the World Heritage Sites we visit in Kyoto.

TUESDAY - April 19, 2011
Orix Buffaloes (vs Nippon Ham Fighters) 
 Hotto Motto Stadium - 6:00 PM
Overnight in Kyoto
We have the morning and afternoon free to poke around Kyoto and its environs before we make the half-hour trip to Kobe for tonight's game with the Buffaloes.
Today's Buffaloes are the result of the relatively recent merger of two ballclubs: The Orix Blue Wave of Kobe and the Kintetsu Buffaloes of nearby Osaka. The clubs merged to become the Orix Buffaloes. This then left a gap of one team in the Pacific League that was immediately filled with an expansion club, the Rakuten Golden Eagles in Sendai.
The Buffaloes now split their home games between Kobe and Osaka.  In Osaka they play in the Osaka Dome, while in Kobe they play in the outdoor Hotto Motto Stadium, the ballpark in which Ichiro Suzuki played before leaving Japan to join the Seattle Mariners.
The ballpark, with naming rights held by discount Hotto Motto Airlines, is an intimate affair seating about 30,000.  It was the first stadium in Japan to sell naming rights, having done so in 2003.  
Interestingly enough, the Hanshin Tigers also use Hotto Motto from time to time when their Koshien Stadium becomes the site of the national summer high school baseball tournament, testimony to the broad popularity of the game in Japan.

A view from our seats at Hotto Motto Stadium in Kobe.

WEDNESDAY - April 20, 2011
Yokohama BayStars (vs Hiroshima Carp)
Yokohama Stadium - 6:00 PM
Overnight in Tokyo
This morning we travel from Kyoto back to our Tokyo headquarters hotel.  We arrive in time for lunch and some Tokyo reconnoitering before we make a short hop to Yokohama.
The ballpark is conveniently located just a long fly ball from the train station.  There's plenty to see and do within walking distance in almost every direction from the stadium. 
With Yokohama Municipal Stadium, a JapanBall favorite, as their home since 1978, the BayStars play in one of the best locations in Japan, nestled in a park, and just a few blocks from a pedestrian waterfront and a bustling Chinatown.  
The stadium has undergone a recent facelift with lots of bright colors and upgraded concession stands.  The new high outfield wall now cuts down the number of home runs, but the upgraded seating configuration puts fans right on top of the action.
It's in this park where two-time JapanBall trip participant Martin Smith remarked, "I love this country.  Every time I wave to a cute girl I end up with a beer in my hand!"

One of the ubiquitous beer girls at Japanese games.

THURSDAY - April 21, 2011

Main Tour to Tokyo Narita Airport to Home  
Main Tour goes to Tokyo Airport for flights out of Japan.  You arrive home the same date, getting back the day you lost when crossing the International Dateline on your flight over.

THURSDAY - April 21, 2011

Disney Resort Option to Tokyo Disney 

Overnight in Tokyo

Disney Option goes to East Tokyo to the Tokyo Disney Resort.  There you have your choice of visiting one of the two parks on the grounds: Disneyland or DisneySea.   

We offer this option because so many guests have asked for it.  Those who go are struck by how the Japanese have taken something so uniquely American and put their own twist on it in a way that Western visitors seem to enjoy.

Tokyo Disneyland was the first Disney park outside the United States.  Opened in 1983, it was built by Walt Disney Imagineering and is owned by The Oriental Land Company.  It, along with its companion park, Tokyo DisneySea, are the only Disney parks not owned by The Walt Disney Company.
Tokyo DisneySea has quickly become one of the most popular Disney Parks in the world.  It's also the most expensive theme park ever built at over $4 billion.  It's the clear JapanBall favorite between the two parks. 
The intention with DisneySea was to create a more adult-oriented park, including faster, scarier rides and shows designed for an older audience.  Those not interested in rides will find plenty to do with all the sights and exhibits available.  By the time Tokyo DisneySea opened in 2001, its concepts and designs had been in development at Disney Imagineering for well over 20 years.

A a partial view of the expansive Tokyo DisneySea.  Note Pacific Ocean in the upper-left corner.


THURSDAY - April 21, 2011

See It All Option travels from Tokyo to Fukuoka

Fukuoka Softbank Hawks (vs Rakuten Golden Eagles)
Fukuoka Yahoo Dome - 6:00 PM
Overnight in Fukuoka
See It All Option travels today to the southernmost point on your journey, to seaside town of Fukuoka on Kyushu Island for your game with the SoftBank Hawks.
Playing in the Fukuoka Yahoo Dome, a relatively new ballpark modeled after Toronto's SkyDome, the Hawks have a loyal following and have occasionally rivaled the Tokyo Giants for the attendance lead. 
The Fukuoka Dome, set just across the street from a beach on the Sea of Japan, offers Japan's only opening lid, so it may well be open for your visit.  
The area surrounding the stadium is called Hawk's Town and features a stunning array of restaurants, shopping and amusement activities to enjoy before and after the game.

Sadaharu Oh, former pilot of the Hawks who holds the home run record in Japanese baseball at 868, visits with JapanBallers during batting practice in Fukuoka.

 FRIDAY - April 22, 2011

Disney Resort Option to Tokyo Narita Airport to Home

Disney Resort Option travels to Tokyo Airport for flights out of Japan.  You arrive home the same date, getting back the day you lost when crossing the International Dateline on your flight over.

FRIDAY - April 22, 2011

See It All Option travels from Fukuoka to Hiroshima 

Hiroshima Carp (vs Yakult Swallows)
Mazda Hiroshima Stadium - 6:00 PM
Overnight in Hiroshima
From Hakata Station in Fukuoka you take the RailStar Super Express bullet train to Hiroshima for a game at Japan's newest stadium, Mazda Hiroshima Stadium.  The ballpark is a short walk from your hotel.
Wayne Graczyk, our JapanBall colleague and columnist for The Japan Times wrote, "This new facility is one of the best ballparks in Japan, or anywhere else, for that matter."  JapanBall guests seem to agree with that assessment.
Located alongside Japan Railway tracks near Hiroshima Station, the park has seating for 30,000 with an asymmetrical playing field, a rarity in Japan.  It has huge concourses for strolling, a seemingly infinite variety of food choices, and so many nooks and crannies that you can easily spend a good deal of time simply exploring.
We recommend that before the game you stop by the old Hiroshima ballpark where, just across the street, is the A-Bomb Dome, Peace Park and A-Bomb Museum located at ground-zero of the first atomic bomb drop. The museum is first-rate and reasonably even-handed given its location and topic.

Mazda Hiroshima Stadium, opened in 2009, is the newest park in Japan.

 SATURDAY - April 23, 2011

See It All Option travels from Hiroshima to Osaka
Hanshin Tigers (vs Yokohama BayStars)
Koshien Stadium - 2:00 PM
Overnight in Osaka
From Hiroshima you make the jump to Osaka for today's game with the Hanshin Tigers.  
The Tigers play in Koshien Stadium.  Built in 1924 it's Japan's oldest, most traditional and most revered ballpark.  Taking it a bit far, some call it Sacred Koshien Stadium.  But, indeed, it's the only stadium with a shrine just outside where offerings are made for the home team!  
Originally built for the national high school baseball tournament, Koshien is still used for that purpose.  It seats 55,000, has a grass outfield, a dirt infield and ivy covered walls.  A classic ballpark that in 1934 hosted Babe Ruth and other MLB All-Stars touring Japan.
Koshien Stadium is Japan's Fenway Park and, like Fenway, the seats and aisles are narrow, there are no private boxes, and the amenities are basic.  While renovation is ongoing, the old-style character of the park remains, along with the most exuberant and colorful fans anywhere. 

Tigers faithful at Koshien Stadium.

 SUNDAY - April 24, 2011

See It All Option travels from Osaka to Sendai
Rakuten Golden Eagles (vs Nippon Ham Fighters) 
Kleenex Miyagi Stadium - 2:00 PM
Overnight in Sendai
This morning you depart Osaka on the Tokaido Shinkansen and transfer at Tokyo Station to the Komachi Shinkansen bullet train bound for Sendai to see Japan's newest team, the Rakuten Golden Eagles.
Kleenex Miyagi Stadium, a continually upgraded ballpark, is simply a delight with loads of life about it and it's another proven JapanBall favorite.
The Eagles boast a full menu of seating options from lawn seats to opulent luxury boxes to right-on-top-of-the-action infield seats.  It’s a small, intimate ballpark seating about 23,000. 
Like many Japanese parks, the bullpens are set under the stands out of view of the seating bowl.  Here, however, windows open in the outer concourse area to allow fans to watch pitchers warm up.
In an interesting twist, concession stands and other activities are located both inside and outside the stadium.  The Eagles make great use of the space outside as people spaces.  A wonderful, yet simple, concept that allows you to use their entire grounds for your baseball experience.  

Kleenex Miyagi Stadium, the most colorful and fan-friendly ballpark in Japan.

 MONDAY - April 25, 2011

See It All Option travels from Sendai to Sapporo 
Baseball Off-Day
Overnight in Sapporo
Japanese Baseball takes Monday as an off-day.  You use part of it to make a short flight from Sendai to your northernmost point, the city of Sapporo on the island of Hokkaido.
Upon arrival at New Chitose Airport in Sapporo you take a quick express train into town, check into your hotel, and have the night and next day free for sightseeing.  
For Sapporo, as with all the cities you visit, we'll have sightseeing suggestions for you.
Sapporo is a much smaller town compared to the cities in which you've been so far.  You can get your arms around it quickly, the pace is laid back, and it's far enough away from the mainland that few foreign tourists venture here.

A view up the Odori Park boulevard in downtown Sapporo as seen from the Sapporo Tower.  

 TUESDAY - April 26, 2011

See It All Option in Sapporo 
Nippon Ham Fighters (vs Fukuoka Softbank Hawks)  
Sapporo Dome - 6:00 PM
Overnight in Sapporo
The nickname of the Nippon Ham Fighters is Fighters, not Ham Fighters.  Nippon Ham is the owner of the team.  As a New York Times article notes, "It's simply a bit of misfortune that the organization's full name suggests lunch-meat gladiators."
The Sapporo Dome is remarkable in that it features the ability to move the baseball field in and out on rollers.  From the dome’s 160-foot high observation deck, you can see not only the layout of Sapporo, but Ishikari Bay as well. 
A nice touch is the wide concourse unobstructed by gates allowing you to circle the entire stadium while stopping here and there to take in the game from a variety of different vantage points.

During your visit to the Sapporo Dome will you see the Fighters' Yu Darvish pitch?  Is Darvish really Dice-K 2.0 - the next Daisuke Matsuzaka?

 WEDNESDAY - April 27, 2011

See It All Option travels from Sapporo to Tokyo

Chiba Lotte Marines (vs Orix Buffaloes)
QVC Stadium - 6:15 PM
Overnight in Tokyo
This morning you leave Sapporo on your flight to Haneda Airport in downtown Tokyo.  Our JapanBall Tokyo hotel headquarters awaits where you can rest and unwind before your game this evening with the Chiba Lotte Marines in East Tokyo.
The Marines play in QVC Stadium in Makuhari City, one of the largest urban development projects in Japan, located halfway between downtown Tokyo and Narita Airport.  There's a huge convention center, new high-tech buildings, luxury class hotels and the ballpark.
The ballpark is a round multi-purpose affair like those of Cincinnati, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh of the '70's.  They've done nice upgrades to the park including a wonderful museum outside the stadium with a gift shop and studio where guests can pose and take photos in replicas of the locker room, bullpen, outfield and more.  
The Marines, by the way, are Japan's reigning champs, having won The Japan Series for 2010.

A panoramic shot of QVC Stadium.  The Pacific Ocean is just over the outfield wall.

 THURSDAY - April 28, 2011

See It All Option in Tokyo

Seibu Lions (vs Rakuten Golden Eagles)
Seibu Dome - 6:00 PM
Overnight in Tokyo
You have the entire day free before tonight's game at the Seibu Lions ballpark in West Tokyo.  The stadium is part of a large entertainment complex that includes an amusement park, a golf course, two practice baseball fields and an indoor ski slope.  
Unlike other Japanese dome stadiums, the Seibu Dome is not really a dome.  It was an outdoor ballpark until Yoshiaki Tsutsumi, owner of the Lions, decided to put an umbrella over it.  With its open air sides it gives the partial feel of an outdoor park.
Slightly smaller than most stadiums and because of the breeze that can blow through to the outfield, the Seibu Dome tends to see more home runs than any other Pacific League park.  Concession stands and restrooms surround the tree-lined rim of the stadium.  

A pre-game sunset at the Seibu Dome in West Tokyo.

 FRIDAY - April 29, 2011

See It All Option to Tokyo Narita Airport to Home

Today you return to the airport for your flight out of Japan.  You arrive home the same date, getting back the day you lost when crossing the International Dateline on your trip over.

* BECOME A MEMBER OF THE HALL OF FAME! 

The JapanBall Hall of Fame Induction Committee has established the following criteria for admission:

1.  The combination and successful completion of the See It All Option with the Main Tour in any one season, or

2.  Successful completion on three separate occasions of the Main Tour over any number of seasons.

Should you complete either of the above you will have earned your rightful place in the JapanBall Hall of Fame, with all the rights and privileges thereof.  

Your official member plaque will be forever enshrined in the JapanBall Hall of Fame located in Roje's Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan.  A duplicate plaque will be presented to you.

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Bob Bavasi

JapanBall.com

Seattle, Washington

  Phone:  425-423-9655    

E-mail:  Bob@JapanBall.com or Click here to e-mail us being sure to include your e-mail address if you wish a response.

 

 

"Your idea to combine baseball and Japan is more than just a tourist adventure. You give travelers an insight they couldn’t get without your expertise and enthusiasm."
--- Gregg Z.

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