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Spring Koshien

Results

Spring Koshien · 31
Final31/03/2026
Tue 31/03
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Semi-finals29/03/2026
Sun 29/03
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Sun 29/03
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Quarter-finals19/03/2026–27/03/2026
Fri 27/03
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Fri 27/03
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Fri 27/03
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Thu 26/03
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Mon 23/03
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Mon 23/03
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Mon 23/03
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Sun 22/03
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Sun 22/03
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Sun 22/03
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Sat 21/03
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Sat 21/03
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Sat 21/03
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Fri 20/03
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Fri 20/03
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Fri 20/03
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Thu 19/03
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Thu 19/03
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Thu 19/03
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Results26/03/2026
Thu 26/03
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Thu 26/03
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Teams

Spring Koshien

All 32 teams competing in the Spring Koshien 2026 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.

Past Seasons

Spring Koshien

Browse 9 archived seasons of the Spring Koshien, from 2017 to 2026. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 30 Mar 2025

Founded1924

The Spring Koshien was founded in 1924 as Japan's first national high school baseball tournament, held at the newly constructed Hanshin Koshien Stadium in Hyogo Prefecture. Originally designed to showcase the nation's finest young baseball talent during spring, the tournament has evolved into an invitational championship where 32 teams are carefully selected by the Japan High School Baseball Federation based on their performance in the previous autumn's prefectural and national tournaments. The tournament format remained single-elimination throughout its century-long history, maintaining its competitive intensity and dramatic narrative arc. In recent decades, the Spring Koshien has expanded its cultural significance beyond sport, becoming a national television phenomenon broadcast live by NHK and MBS, with finals routinely drawing viewership exceeding 20% of the national audience. The tournament's global profile has grown substantially, with international media coverage increasing and the tournament serving as a crucial development pathway for players destined for professional baseball in Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball league.

  • 1924 — Spring Koshien inaugural tournament held at newly opened Hanshin Koshien Stadium
  • 1934 — Toho High School wins first championship, beginning dynasty with eventual 5 titles
  • 1973 — Yokohama High School's Suguru Egawa sets Spring Koshien strikeout record with 60 strikeouts
  • 1989 — Toho High School wins 4th title, cementing status as most successful program
  • 2019 — Toho High School captures 5th championship after 30-year drought, remaining unmatched in tournament history
  • 2022 — Osaka Toin defeats Omi 18-1 in one of the largest margin victories in tournament history
  • 2025 — Yokohama High School wins 4th title, first championship in 19 years, becoming only team to win in three different eras

Competition Format 30 Mar 2025

Teams32

The Spring Koshien operates as a single-elimination tournament where 32 selected high school teams compete for the national championship. Teams are chosen by the Japan High School Baseball Federation selection committee based on their performance in the previous autumn's prefectural and national qualifying tournaments, ensuring only the strongest programs participate. The tournament runs from mid-March through late March each year, with matches played daily at Hanshin Koshien Stadium. The championship is decided through head-to-head elimination matches, with the final determining the national champion. There is no playoff mechanism as the single-elimination format itself serves as the ultimate playoff, with each team's tournament life ending upon a single loss. Extra innings are played if necessary to determine a winner, with no draws permitted.

Records 30 Mar 2025

Most titlesToho High School (5)

Suguru Egawa of Yokohama High School holds the Spring Koshien strikeout record with 60 strikeouts in the 1973 tournament.

Analysis 30 Mar 2025

Current Season Analysis

The 2025 Spring Koshien concluded with Yokohama High School capturing their fourth championship in the tournament's 101-year history, defeating Chiben Gakuen Wakayama 11-4 in a dominant final performance on March 30, 2025. Yokohama's victory marked a triumphant return to the summit after a 19-year drought since their previous championship in 2006, establishing them as the only program to win Spring Koshien titles across three distinct eras—the 1970s, 1990s, and 2020s. The final score of 11-4 demonstrated Yokohama's offensive prowess throughout the tournament, with their pitching and batting lineup operating at peak efficiency during the crucial final weeks of March.

The tournament's competitive landscape featured several powerhouse programs competing for the ultimate prize. Osaka Toin, the 2022 champions, advanced deep into the tournament but ultimately fell short of defending their status as recent title holders. Chiben Wakayama, despite their runner-up finish in 2025, has emerged as a consistent elite program, regularly competing among the nation's best high school teams. The selection of 32 teams ensured that only the most accomplished programs from the previous autumn's qualifying tournaments participated, maintaining the Spring Koshien's reputation as Japan's premier high school baseball championship. Yokohama's path to the championship showcased their balanced approach, combining solid pitching performances with explosive offensive capabilities that proved decisive against all opponents.

The 2025 tournament maintained the Spring Koshien's tradition of captivating national audiences, with the finals broadcast live across NHK, MBS, and Gaora generating the championship's typical 20-30% television rating among Japanese viewers. Yokohama's victory resonated deeply with fans nationwide, as the program's return to championship glory after nearly two decades of waiting demonstrated the cyclical nature of high school baseball success and the importance of sustained development programs. The tournament's significance extended beyond mere sporting achievement—it served as a crucial platform showcasing Japan's finest young baseball talent, with numerous Spring Koshien participants destined for professional careers in Nippon Professional Baseball.

The Spring Koshien's Unique Position in Global High School Sports

The Spring Koshien stands apart from other high school sporting competitions worldwide through its combination of intense competitive standards, cultural significance, and media prominence. Unlike most high school championships that operate as secondary events within their sports' calendar, the Spring Koshien commands national attention equivalent to professional sporting events. The tournament's century-long history, dating to 1924, provides it with institutional prestige and tradition that shapes Japanese baseball culture at all levels. The invitational format, with only 32 teams selected from hundreds of high school programs nationwide, creates an elite championship where participation itself represents extraordinary achievement.

The tournament's venue at Hanshin Koshien Stadium carries profound symbolic weight in Japanese baseball history. The stadium, opened in 1924, hosted the inaugural Spring Koshien and has remained the exclusive home of both Spring and Summer Koshien tournaments throughout the competition's existence. This continuity of location across a century of baseball history creates an unbroken thread connecting contemporary players with legendary predecessors, reinforcing the tournament's historical significance. The stadium's capacity of approximately 47,000 ensures full attendance for most matches, particularly the finals, creating an atmosphere of intensity that few high school sporting events anywhere in the world can replicate.

Historical Dominance and the Evolution of Competitive Balance

Toho High School's five championships across nine decades (1934, 1939, 1941, 1989, 2019) remain unmatched in Spring Koshien history, establishing a dynasty that spans three centuries of Japanese baseball development. Toho's 1989 championship came after a 48-year drought, demonstrating that even historically dominant programs face extended periods of competitive struggle. Their 2019 championship, their first in 30 years, showcased the program's remarkable ability to rebuild and return to championship status despite changing generations of players. This pattern reflects the reality of high school athletics—while institutional strength and coaching excellence provide advantages, the constant turnover of student-athletes creates inherent competitive uncertainty that prevents any single program from dominating indefinitely.

Osaka Toin's four championships (2012, 2014, 2018, 2022) represent the second-most successful program in recent decades, with three of their four titles occurring since 2012. Their 2022 championship featured one of the tournament's most dominant performances—an 18-1 victory over Omi in the final that stands among the largest margin victories in Spring Koshien history. This demonstrated the capacity for elite programs to achieve overwhelming superiority during peak seasons when roster talent, coaching, and momentum align perfectly. The emergence of Osaka Toin as a modern powerhouse illustrates how competitive balance in the Spring Koshien has evolved, with newer programs like Osaka Toin, Chiben Wakayama, and Yokohama joining traditional powerhouses in the championship conversation.

Notable Individual Achievements and Record Performances

The Spring Koshien has produced numerous legendary individual performances that transcend the tournament itself and become part of Japanese baseball lore. Suguru Egawa's 60 strikeout performance for Yokohama in 1973 established a record that has endured for over 50 years, a testament to the exceptional pitching demands of the single-elimination format where dominant performances can eliminate opponents in a single game. Egawa's strikeout record reflects both his individual brilliance and the tournament's intensity—achieving 60 strikeouts across multiple games in a concentrated March tournament demonstrates sustained excellence under pressure conditions that few pitchers in any era have matched.

The tournament's single-elimination format creates unique opportunities for dramatic individual performances impossible in traditional season-based competitions. A pitcher can achieve legendary status through a single outstanding tournament performance, while a hitter can carry a team to the championship through sustained offensive excellence. This format rewards both consistency and peak performance simultaneously, creating narratives where individual players become forever associated with their tournament's success. The 2025 final saw Yokohama's lineup produce the 11-4 victory through balanced offensive contribution, with multiple players contributing to the decisive margin rather than relying on a single star performer.

Broadcasting, Viewership, and Cultural Impact

The Spring Koshien's broadcast presence on NHK, MBS, and Gaora ensures near-universal access for Japanese audiences, with the finals routinely achieving television ratings exceeding 20% of the national audience. These viewership figures place the Spring Koshien championship among Japan's most-watched sporting events, comparable to professional baseball's Japan Series and far exceeding typical high school sporting events in any country. The 2023 championship attracted over 254,000 live online viewers through streaming platforms, indicating the tournament's growing digital reach beyond traditional television audiences. This broadcasting prominence transforms the Spring Koshien from a regional or national high school event into a cultural phenomenon that shapes how millions of Japanese people experience baseball.

The tournament's media coverage extends beyond game broadcasts to encompass extensive pre-tournament analysis, player profiles, and post-tournament retrospectives that treat the Spring Koshien with the journalistic rigor typically reserved for professional sports. Japanese sports media organizations dedicate substantial resources to covering the tournament, recognizing that the Spring Koshien commands audience interest and advertising revenue comparable to professional competitions. This media environment creates opportunities for young players to achieve national celebrity status during their Spring Koshien performances, with standout players becoming recognizable to millions of viewers and attracting recruitment interest from elite universities and professional organizations. The broadcasting prominence also ensures that Spring Koshien performances become part of permanent historical record, with highlight reels and statistics preserved for future generations in ways that most high school competitions cannot match.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in Spring Koshien?

Thirty-two teams are selected to compete in the Spring Koshien, chosen by the Japan High School Baseball Federation based on their performance in the previous autumn's qualifying tournaments. Special editions have occasionally featured 36 teams.

What is the format of the Spring Koshien tournament?

The Spring Koshien is a single-elimination tournament held annually at Hanshin Koshien Stadium in Hyogo Prefecture. Teams compete from mid-March through late March, with the championship decided through head-to-head elimination matches. Extra innings are played if necessary to determine a winner.

Which school has won the most Spring Koshien titles?

Toho High School holds the record with five Spring Koshien championships, won in 1934, 1939, 1941, 1989, and 2019. No other program has won more than four titles.

How is Spring Koshien different from Summer Koshien?

Spring Koshien is an invitational tournament with 32 selected teams competing in March, while Summer Koshien is a nationwide championship where all 47 prefectures send one representative team competing in August. Summer Koshien is larger and more inclusive, while Spring Koshien features only the nation's elite programs.

Who won the 2025 Spring Koshien championship?

Yokohama High School won the 2025 Spring Koshien championship, defeating Chiben Gakuen Wakayama 11-4 on March 30, 2025. This was Yokohama's fourth title in the tournament's history.

How many people watch Spring Koshien?

The Spring Koshien finals routinely achieve television ratings exceeding 20% of Japan's national audience, with an estimated 2-3 million viewers watching the championship match. The tournament is broadcast live by NHK, MBS, and Gaora.

API data: 17 May 2026 · Content updated: 30 Mar 2025