Sport | Baseball |
---|---|
Founded | 1924 |
No. of teams | 32 (36 in special editions) |
Country | Japan |
Venue(s) | Hanshin Koshien Stadium |
Most recent champion(s) | Yamanashi Gakuin - 95th (2023) |
Most titles | Toho High School (5 Titles) |
TV partner(s) | NHK, MBS, Gaora Sports |
Streaming partner(s) | Yahoo Japan , SportsBull , TVer |
Related competitions | The National High School Baseball Championship |
Official website | https://mainichi.jp/koshien/senbatsu
https://baseball.yahoo.co.jp/hsb_spring/ https://sportsbull.jp/senbatsu/ |
The National High School Baseball Invitational Tournament (選抜高等学校野球大会 senbatsu kōtō gakkō yakyū taikai) of Japan, commonly known as "Spring Kōshien" (春の甲子園 haru no kōshien) or "Senbatsu" (センバツ), is an annual high school baseball tournament.
Background
The tournament, organized by the Japan High School Baseball Federation and Mainichi Shimbun, takes place each year in March at Hanshin Koshien Stadium in the Koshien district of Nishinomiya, Hyōgo, Japan.
Teams qualify for the tournament by participating in the regional fall tournaments held throughout the country. While finishing in the top teams generally guarantees an invitation, it is up to the Japan High School Baseball Federation to determine invitees. For instance, in the 2008 Fall Tournament in the Tōhoku region, Ichinoseki Gakuin was the runner-up. However, they were passed over for 3rd place Hanamaki Higashi for the 2009 invitation tournament.
Of the 32 bids, 26 are automatically awarded as follows to the following regions:
- Hokkaido - 1
- Tōhoku - 2
- Kantō - 4
- Tokyo - 1
- Tōkai - 2
- Hoku-shin'etsu - 2
- Kansai - 6
- Chūgoku - 2.5
- Shikoku - 2.5
- Kyushu including Okinawa - 4
In addition, one additional bid is awarded to a team in the Kanto/Tokyo region, and another to a team in the Chugoku/Shikoku region.
The region of the winning team in the Meiji Jingu Fall Tournament (which consists of all fall regional champions) also receives a bid.
The final 3 bids are what are considered "21st Century Teams".
21st century teams are a way to give teams who either may not get close to qualifying or who have served as a model school in some way a chance to compete. A team from each prefecture is nominated around November–December. The teams must have advanced to the round of 16 play, but not gotten past the quarterfinals of their prefecture's tournament. Then each region nominates one of those nominees to the selection committee by December 15. Finally, the committee selects the three 21st century teams.
Finals
(R) | Replay |
* | Game went to extra innings |
List of champions
Number | Year | Champion | Runner-up | Final Score |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1924 | Takamatsu High School | Waseda Jitsugyo High School | 2-1 |
2 | 1925 | Matsuyama High School | Takamatsu High School | 3-2 |
3 | 1926 | Kouryo Central High School | Matsumoto High School | 7-1 |
4 | 1927 | Wakayama Central High School | Kouryo Central High School | 8-3 |
5 | 1928 | Kansai Gakuin Central High School | Wakayama Central High School | 2-1 |
89 | 2017 | Osaka Toin High School | Riseisha Gakuen Toyonaka High School | 8-3 |
90 | 2018 | Osaka Toin High School | Chiben Gakuen Wakayama High School | 5-2 |
91 | 2019 | Aichi Toho University | Narashino | 6-0 |
92 | 2020 | cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic | ||
93 | 2021 | Tokai University Sagami High School | Meiho High School | 3-2 |
94 | 2022 | Osaka Toin High School | Ohmi High School | 18-1 |
95 | 2023 | Yamanashi Gakuin High School | Hōtoku Gakuen High School | 7-3 |
See also
- High school baseball in Japan
- Japan High School Baseball Federation
- Japanese High School Baseball Championship ("Summer Koshien")
- Hanshin Koshien Stadium
34°43′16.34″N 135°21′41.84″E / 34.7212056°N 135.3616222°E