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05 February 2016

2010 BBM True Heart Women's Pro Wrestling


I picked up this set quite a while ago, like maybe in early 2015, but I never got around to posting about it. The 2010 BBM True Heart Japanese Women's Pro Wrestling cards were distributed as a boxed set, with a 96-card base checklist and 3 insert cards (I believe there may have been inserts and autographs, but I am not sure). My boxed set was advertised as complete, but upon opening it I found that the three extra cards were missing. I worked out a partial refund with the seller. This top photo is a scan of the box lid.


The bottom of the box contains a checklist for the base set. This checklist is broken down by promotion, so you can see that each section has a header like JWP, LLPW, and NEO, which are all different wrestling leagues. The last portion of the checklist is made up of the freelance wrestlers who might wrestle for several different promotions in a given year. There aren't any subsets for Hall of Fame or retired wrestlers in the 2010 edition. Maybe they were included among the inserts? I don't really know.


The inside of the box lid has a few casual pictures of popular wrestlers, which for the most part I believe are taken from the backs of their cards. It also contains the set serial number, with this being box # 1542 / 3000. Later sets would move from the box set format to random pack-based distribution. The 2016 set just released and some of the cards have hit eBay already. I have been anxiously awaiting my three boxes, which left Tokyo the day I wrote this post. I am working a little ahead on my blog posts, so I will hopefully have them in-hand by the time this goes live.


I picked a few of my favorite wrestlers to show what the base cards look like. They are color-coded by promotion, so looking at the stack of cards from the side produces a nice stratified rainbow effect. Command Bolshoi is probably my favorite wrestler, which means she will probably retire soon and leave me to look for some other favorite. She is also a bodybuilder and musician, so she's got quite a bit going on.

Command Bolshoi & Makoto vs Kyoko Kimura & Hanako Nakamori

Makoto actually posted some photos of a tag team match the other day where she teamed up with Command Bolshoi to wrestle Kyoko Kimura and Hanako Nakamori. Most of the wrestlers' affiliations with a specific promotion don't necessarily tie them down from working with other promotions or making guest appearances all over the place.


While the card fronts are largely anglicized, the backs are in Japanese. You can parse out some of the biographical data pretty easily, but I haven't taken the time to try translating the blocks of text at the bottom. If I'm going to keep buying stuff from Japan I really need to take a few years to learn to navigate the language. I get by online with lots of guesswork and online translators, but there is a lot of contextual stuff that just passes me by.


I thought that Dash Chisako's shirt was interesting, as it commemorates Super Bowl XXIX between the San Diego Chargers and San Francisco 49ers. It's just an interesting choice of ring gear, especially as it is appearing in a wrestling card set released 15 years after that Super Bowl was played.


While the front of Haru Miyako's card is relatively boring, the back is anything but. I don't know why she is wearing football gear and flanked by a Sasquatch and a Yeti, but it makes for an interesting photo. Kana is now with the WWE as Asuka, which I imagine is a career path that many wrestlers hope for. Some of the other Japanese wrestlers posted photos mocking the move, stuffing their bras and strutting around like the stereotypical WWE Divas that come to mind when you mention the women's division of the WWE. There's probably a bit of jealousy there as well as a sense of betrayal.


Toshie Uematsu took her hairstyle straight out of There's Something About Mary. She and Dump Matsumoto represent earlier generations of wrestler. Someone in one of the Facebook groups was lamenting that there aren't a lot of heels in the current Japanese promotions. I think a lot of the heels from the past, like Dump Matsumoto and Toshie Uematsu have retired and no one wants to step up and fill that role. I don't know enough or watch enough matches to know if there really is a heel void that needs filled, but I think it would be hard to run a story line where everyone is a hero and no one is the villain.


That's all I scanned for the 2010 BBM True Heart Women's Pro Wrestling Set. I still have a few years that I haven't covered, as well as a few years that I don't have sets for. I'll probably be getting to 2011, 2012, and 2016 in the relatively near future. I'm still missing sets from 2000 and earlier, 2002-2005, and 2008-2009. I'll keep filling them in when I can, but the older stuff just doesn't pop up that often from sources available to the US.

10 comments:

  1. Those are really cool. Lots of good names in there like Chisako, Matsumoto, Uematsu, Kana, and others. It'd be really cool if there were Manami Toyota and Bull Nakano cards in there

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    1. Manami Toyota is in this set, but Bull Nakano isn't on the checklist for 2010. She is in the Hall of Fame subset in the 2012 set, though.

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  2. That Super Bowl shirt is pretty amazing. Nice catch.

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    1. Yeah, a Japanese wrestling card seems like an odd place to find Super Bowl memorabilia. Kind of a cool little Easter egg.

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  3. Sorry to hear the set was missing the three cards. Was hoping to see another insanely awesome signature. And that Miyako card is anything but boring. She's got this sexy librarian thing going for her.

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    1. Make sure to visit my blog again on Tuesday evening, then, as the new 2016 cards just got to my house. I spent most of today writing up the post about the set, and there are plenty of autographs to check out.

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    2. Sweet. Just curious. How much are boxes of this stuff? And how many autographs do you get per box?

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    3. I bought three boxes of the 2016 edition for about $186 including shipping. There were multiple discounts I used and the exchange rates play a role. The three-box lot was about $171.50, shipping was around $23, and I had a coupon and some points from previous orders that gave me about $8.50 in discounts. Single boxes have a slight premium over three-box lots, but it's a negligible difference. The shipping will be what gets you on single-box orders, because that shipping fee is pretty standard. So for a three-box order it's $60-65 per box. Buying one box at a time would make the price closer to $80-85 per box. Obviously a two-box order would fall in the $70-75 per box range.

      In the three boxes of 2016 that I opened I got 5, 5, and 6 autographs. So, probably 5 in a box with an outside shot at getting either 4 or 6. You won't get a base set in a box. You'll get 110 / 126 of the base set with about 25 doubles. If you're lucky, you'll get a full set out of 2 boxes. If you're me, your doubles will all line up and you'll barely complete a base set out of three boxes.

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    4. 15 to 16 autographs + one set + doubles for $200 seems reasonable. Can't see that ever happening with a baseball product outside of some draft pick or Team USA product. At least with these you're getting some of the sweetest looking signatures around.

      However collation is pretty poor if collectors need to bust three boxes to receive one set.

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    5. Collation is pretty tough on this product. I have enough cards for three base sets, but I have 5 copies of some cards and 1 copy of others. I have 3 copies of most cards, though.

      If you're just looking for a base set + autographs it might be easier to grab one on eBay. There's a guy who has sets listed right now for $30 shipped. He's also got a pretty good selection of autographs up with most of them in the $5-20 range.

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