Izumi Taifuu is a professional golfer who lusts after women and is riddled with dirty money. But that same outrageous person also possesses unimaginable talent, and is even said to have a doctorate... Thus, he begins creating one scandal after another! Source: Futabasha
Okita Keisuke begins his career as a golfer at age 24. Okita gets a good result in the Asian tour, and attends the UK open. He meets a caddie named Lily who's the daughter of a family of many excellent caddies. While fighting the tough tournament together, Okita and Lily get attracted to each other. Kaze no Daichi received the 1994 Shogakukan Manga Award for general manga.
Under the beautiful clear skies of Asahikawa, Hokkaido, this refreshing story unfolds between Hikari Hoshino, a young girl whose eyes shine toward the future, and Makoto Sugimoto, a genius player who once gave up golf. (Source: Shogakukan, translated)
Choji Sorimachi, a third-year student at Misakigaoka Junior High School, is a fastball pitcher so powerful that he is nicknamed ``Kyoji the Killer.'' His best friend, Tetsu Saionji, is a great catcher who skillfully compensates for Sorimachi's flaws in his quarrelsome nature. On the other hand, Noboru Hinata of Togo Academy is a young boy who gathers promising baseball players from junior high schools all over the country and harbors an ambition to win the Koshien Tournament for the fifth time in a row. Hinata, who has fallen in love with Sorimachi and Saionji's battery, applies to Misakigaoka Junior High School for a match. If Misakigaoka loses, the condition is that both Sorimachi and Saionji will take the entrance exam for Togo Academy High School... A baseball manga filled with the youth, friendship, setbacks, and life of baseball players!
Koshien means money, women, and the love of Yoko!! The nine members of the Akiba High School baseball team, under the leadership of the strong-armed pitcher Kobayashi, put their youthful passion into action through blood-soaked practices and outrageous behaviors in their quest to reach Koshien! (Source: Futabasha, translated)

