This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Nagoya Kinko" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR(March 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Nagoya Kinko
Information
League
Japanese Baseball League
Established
1936
Folded
1940; merged with Tsubasa Baseball Club
Former name(s)
Nagoya Golden Dolphins (1936)
Ownership
Nagoya Shimbun
Manager
Genzaburo Okada (1936–1940)
Nagoya Kinko (long name: Nagoya Kinnosachihiko)[citation needed] was a Japanese baseball team that played in the Japanese Baseball League (JBL) before it merged with another team. It was owned by the daily broadsheet Nagoya Shimbun.[citation needed] Notable players for the team over the course of its existence included Harris McGalliard and Toshio Kurosawa.
The club was founded as the Nagoya Golden Dolphins before the 1936 JBL season. In 1937 the team changed its name to Nagoya Kinko.
The franchise never had a winning record and never placed higher than fourth in the league standings. Few players wanted to play for the team,[citation needed]and it merged with the Tsubasa Baseball Club after the 1940 season to form the Taiyō Baseball Club (that franchise was itself dissolved following the 1943 JBL season).
NagoyaKinko (long name: Nagoya Kinnosachihiko)[citation needed] was a Japanese baseball team that played in the Japanese Baseball League (JBL) before...
schedule. Before the 1940 season, one of the founding teams, NagoyaKinko (originally the Nagoya Golden Dolphins), merged with the Tokyo Senators. The 1940...
outfielder in 1933 while on a club trip to Hawaii. Kurosawa debuted with NagoyaKinko in 1936, in the inaugural season of the Japanese Baseball League. By...
for the NagoyaKinko Last JBL appearance 1938, for the Korakuen Eagles JBL statistics Batting average .309 Home runs 13 RBI 103 Teams NagoyaKinko (1936)...
[citation needed] From 1936–1940 it owned the Japanese Baseball League team NagoyaKinko.[citation needed] The paper acquired the Chubu Nihon (now Chunichi Dragons)...
Baseball Club (1940–1941) → Yamato Baseball Club (1942–1943) → Broken up NagoyaKinko (1936–1940) → Merged into the Tsubasa Baseball Club Tokyo Senators (1936–1939)...
season, the team was wholly acquired by Yoriyasu Arima; the failing NagoyaKinko was also merged with Tsubasa and for 1941 the new team was renamed the...
other stories (short story collection) 1989 - Nominee for Naoki Prize: Kinko no yume (金鯱の夢) (novel) 1990 - Nominee for Naoki Prize: Kyokō shiritsu fujōri...
founded. 1973 – Toyokawa Shinkin Bank Incident (豊川信用金庫事件 Toyokawa Shin'yō Kinko Jiken) occurred. 1993 – Kozakai Town Cultural Hall (小坂井町文化会館) was completed...
History and Filmography of Toho's Godzilla Series (2nd ed.). McFarland. Ito, Kinko (February 2005). "A History of Manga in the Context of Japanese Culture...
The Toyokawa Shinkin Bank incident (豊川信用金庫事件 Toyokawa Shin'yō Kinko Jiken) was a bank run on Toyokawa Shinkin Bank in what was then Kozakai, Aichi Prefecture...
is independent of the JRA, with most of the racecourse owned and run by Nagoya Horse Racing Co., Ltd [ja]. Chukyo Racecourse has a grass courses, a dirt...
in 1985 Saturday Night at the Mysteries (EX) Saigo no Kake/Rō Keiji to Kinko-yaburi (1977, Daiei/Haiyuza Movie Broadcasting Department) Kyōhaku Kōfuku...
responsible for the collapse of The Industrial Bank of Japan and Tōyō Shinyo Kinko Bank. The entire crisis also badly affected direct consumption and investment...
machi-nami (Sakura・Narita・Sawara・Chōshi: hyakuman toshi Edo o sasaeta Edo kinkō no yottsu no daihyō-teki machi-nami-gun) Chiba Chōshi [46] [47] Katori Narita...