Cheer songs from Power Pro and popular BGM: a collection of divine tracks
The PowerPro series has long been loved as a landmark in baseball games.
The BGM and cheering songs that excite players’ hearts are cherished as key elements that further enhance the game’s appeal.
In this article, we’ll introduce recommended tracks—focusing on cheering songs that are popular at high school baseball games, professional baseball, and even Samurai Japan matches.
Feel free to use them as references when creating your own cheering songs.
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PowerPro Cheer Songs and Popular BGM: Ultimate Tracks Compilation (41–50)
Rokko OroshiKoseki Yūji

This is one of the oldest and most storied fight songs in Japanese professional baseball, composed by Yuji Koseki.
It was created in 1936 as the team song for the Hanshin Tigers, and the recording sung by Yoshinori Karato was released in April 1993.
It’s said that the commission came in hopes of replicating Koseki’s success with Waseda University’s fight song “Konpeki no Sora.” The powerful, straightforward march-like melody stirs the listener’s heart and vividly conjures the image of a team charging toward victory.
There’s even an anecdote that trains turned into a mass sing-along of this song during the championship run in 1985, showing just how deeply it embodies the spirit of the fans.
It’s a quintessential, textbook example—perfect to use as a reference when creating a cheer song in Power Pro.
A Little Love SongMONGOL800

This is a cheer-song arrangement of “Chiisana Koi no Uta,” a signature track by MONGOL800, a three-piece rock band representing Okinawa.
It’s such a well-known song that it ranked second in the karaoke rankings of the Heisei era and is popular across a wide range of age groups.
“Dragon Quest” Overture / Overture Marchsugiyama kouichi

If you’ve played Dragon Quest, you’ll probably think, “Oh!” That’s right—the Overture March.
It might feel a bit too ominous to be called a fight song, but if you like both Dragon Quest and Power Pro, it’s a track that’ll make you happy.
I’d want to listen to it in a pinch.
Tokyo Ondo

A classic song with a cheerful melody that makes you want to clap along, loved across generations.
It’s well known from the Tokyo Yakult Swallows’ cheering, and many people can probably picture the scene at Jingu Stadium in the bottom of the seventh inning, umbrellas open as everyone sings in unison.
Released in July 1933, sung by Kouta Katsutaro and Kazue Mishima, it was a massive hit at the time, selling 1.2 million copies.
It brings listeners’ hearts together and gives you energy for tomorrow! It’s a reliable track that gives you a push in moments when you want to bring unity and momentum to a team.
cherry (sweet cherry; cherry fruit)Otsuka Ai

This song was supposed to be a pure love song… (lol).
But the energy is absolutely perfect, right? That feeling of “charging ahead without fear” must have matched well as a fight song.
It seems they actually arranged the part with the lyric “one more time!” And it’s even been officially used in PowerPro, so it’s quite popular!
SharpshootingYamamoto Rinda

It’s a song that became a classic after the phrase “Nerai-uchi” matched so well as a batter’s cheering chant in baseball! Brass bands from various schools perform it with all kinds of arrangements.
By the way, in the original lyrics, what Linda Yamamoto is “aiming at” is a different kind of ‘tama’—not the baseball, but ‘tama no koshi’ (marrying into wealth).
It’s even been officially adopted in Power Pros, of course!
SunriseSPECTRUM

It used to be a Koshien staple, but it’s a hidden gem that not many people know the original of.
Of course, the original is way cooler! If you didn’t know it, give it a listen.
Surprisingly, the original is ska-punk, and it caught on after Tsuyoshi Nishioka used it during his time with the Chiba Lotte Marines, which helped it spread to Koshien.
As the title suggests, it’s often used as a cheer song for fast runners.



