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Yusei Kikuchi Likely To Exercise Player Option For 2022

By Steve Adams | October 11, 2021 at 9:56am CDT

The Mariners’ original signing of Yusei Kikuchi provided the left-hander with one of the more unconventional option scenarios in recent memory. The team can exercise a four-year, $66MM extension option after the current season, and if the Mariners turn down that effective extension clause, he’ll have a one-year, $13MM player option for the 2022 season.

It looked like an intriguing dilemma for the Mariners midway through the season, when Kikuchi had made the All-Star team and was in the midst of what looked like a breakout campaign. However, the left-hander faded down the stretch to the extent that it now looks likelier that the Mariners will decline their portion of the option. Ryan Divish of the Seattle Times reports that if the Mariners indeed decline to pick up the additional four years of Kikuchi, the pitcher plans to exercise his portion of the deal, setting him up for a fourth season in Seattle and a $13MM salary.

Back in early July, I took a lengthy look at the situation at what was perhaps the peak point of Kikuchi’s season. At the time, he carried a 3.18 ERA with a 25.4 percent strikeout rate, an 8.5 percent walk rate and a career-high 53.8 percent grounder rate. Kikuchi’s average fastball jumped immensely from 2019 in his second and third big league seasons, and he was missing bats more than ever with career-best command. He’d held opponents to three or fewer runs in 13 of 15 starts and rattled off a 2.33 ERA over his past 11 starts — averaging 6 1/3 frames per outing along the way.

Things almost immediately took a turn for the worse, as Kikuchi yielded a combined 12 runs over his next two starts and never fully regained his footing. There were still some strong starts mixed in along the way, including seven shutout frames against the Astros on Aug. 31, but Kikuchi pitched to a collective 6.22 ERA over his final 14 outings. His strikeout rate dipped slightly (23.3 percent), his walk rate rose (10.3 percent) and his ground-ball rate plummeted from that 53.8 percent mark all the way down to 41.7 percent. Unsurprisingly, the huge uptick on balls hit in the air against Kikuchi prompted his home-run rate to spike as well (1.70 HR/9 in those final 14 starts).

The end result doesn’t necessarily look that bad on paper. Kikuchi totaled 157 innings and notched a 4.41 ERA with a roughly average strikeout rate, a worse-than-average walk rate and an above-average ground-ball rate. Taken in its entirety, it was a respectable overall season. And if Kikuchi had flipped things around, starting with those ugly 14 starts before more or less dominating in his final 15, we’d be viewing the option decision quite differently even though the end results would look exactly the same.

There’s a case to be made that perhaps Kikuchi could exceed that $13MM he’s guaranteed on the player option by declining and seeking a multi-year deal at a lower annual rate. We’ve seen plenty of two-year contracts in the $16-20MM range for veteran arms with comparable bottom-line numbers and less-impressive combinations of strikeout rate and ground-ball tendencies. That said, he likely wouldn’t exceed that $13MM salary by much, so it’s not a huge surprise that on the heels of a dismal second half, he’d lock that salary in and hope to position himself for a stronger trip to the market in the 2022-23 offseason.

Looking to the Mariners’ payroll, they may not consider paying Kikuchi $13MM next year to be ideal, but it’s hardly a backbreaker. The only guaranteed contracts on the books are Marco Gonzales ($5.5MM), Ken Giles ($5MM in what will be his return season from 2020 Tommy John surgery), Chris Flexen ($2.75MM) and Evan White ($1.4MM). They hold a $20MM club option on Kyle Seager that Divish and others have suggested is likely to be bought out, and the Mariners will also pay $3.75MM to the Mets under the previous Robinson Cano trade. They’ll be looking at arbitration raises for Mitch Haniger, J.P. Crawford, Paul Sewald and Diego Castillo, among others, but Haniger’s $3.01MM salary from 2021 is the highest starting point for any of those raises. None should break the bank.

Seattle only opened the 2021 season with a payroll in the $74MM range, but from 2017-19 the M’s averaged an Opening Day payroll of roughly $152.9MM. Recently promoted president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto has already said that ownership has authorized him to increase payroll next year, and with such a light slate of commitments on the books, a returning Kikuchi at $13MM shouldn’t prove too much of a detriment.

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Seattle Mariners Yusei Kikuchi

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59 Comments

  1. freeland1787

    4 years ago

    That player option would probably be around or slightly above what he’d get on the FA market, so it works out in Seattle’s favor here.

    4
    Reply
    • BuddyBoy

      4 years ago

      Not really as I don’t think Seattle wants him back.

      4
      Reply
      • TylerBlackSimon

        4 years ago

        Yypical idiot fan

        Reply
      • Rsox

        4 years ago

        Even if thats true, once he picks up the option they can try trading him. $13 million isn’t terribly high for one year of a starting pitcher and the Mariners could eat part of it to facilitate a trade if necessary

        5
        Reply
      • ryne23x

        4 years ago

        You are right

        Reply
    • The Mets "Missed WAR"

      4 years ago

      If it’s at or slightly above market how does that work out in Seattle’s favor? If that’s the case they could have just signed him as a free agent for a little less. And for whoever called him an idiot, what he said was relatively accurate at least and there was certainly nothing idiotic about it. Also, when calling someone an idiot don’t use words like “Yypical” at the same time. You look like the only idiot when you do that.

      10
      Reply
    • SodoMojo90

      4 years ago

      What would work out in Seattle’s favor is not having this bum pitch for us next year

      3
      Reply
      • Cora the Destroya

        4 years ago

        He is a great 4 or 5 option. Decent k rate and has had strings of good starts. I’m assuming he might have been streaky because he had an ERA in the 3’s early on and ended up with one at 4.50. He’s got some upside but probably doesn’t project better than a #4 pitcher.

        1
        Reply
        • compassrose

          4 years ago

          They might need to stick him on the IL 2-3 times in the season. Use dead arm or tired or whatever but give him some extra rest throughout the season. They can work around him and if that works give him a 3-4 year contract.

          Reply
    • compassrose

      4 years ago

      Thanks for telling us the player option would be around what he would get on the open market. We might not have caught it the couple times it was in the article.

      2
      Reply
  2. Fred Park

    4 years ago

    As Dave used to say, “he’s done: stick a fork in him.”
    This Player Option thing is just one more thing wrong with baseball (and the world) today.
    The inmates are in charge of Rikers Island this morning.
    The supply chain is failing.
    But a guy like Kikuchi will get $13 million.

    3
    Reply
    • Wowwwwww

      4 years ago

      Awfully intense for a post about baseball…weirdo

      17
      Reply
      • Fred Park

        4 years ago

        Wowwwww, I guess you just woke up, huh?
        Well, while you were asleep for a few years, the world did become more intense.
        Justice was the first thing to fail.
        Enjoy the game while we still have it to enjoy.

        2
        Reply
        • philliesphan77

          4 years ago

          Don’t you need to go suck on a Werthers and yell at some kids to get off your lawn, Grandpa Fred?

          7
          Reply
        • vtadave

          4 years ago

          Can you tell us more about the delta variant, what is going on in Afghanistan, and your thoughts on BIden?

          2
          Reply
        • vtadave

          4 years ago

          I don’t often give thumbs up to posts, but made an exception for this one.

          Reply
        • TylerBlackSimon

          4 years ago

          damn vta, i remember your name from the original Scout.com message boards. Phil Spence aka SpenDodger RIP.

          Reply
        • Fred Park

          4 years ago

          Kids . . .
          What we learn from history is that we never learn from history.
          So enjoy the game while we still have it.

          2
          Reply
        • Slothcliff Hokum

          4 years ago

          You are right on, Fred. Glad to see you posting comments here.

          2
          Reply
        • Fred Park

          4 years ago

          You, too, Hokum.
          Always good to see a grownup here from time to time.

          3
          Reply
        • Rosstradamus

          4 years ago

          We’ll still have games in the future, you know Hunger Games, Squid Games etc….;)

          2
          Reply
        • Fred Park

          4 years ago

          Great moniker there, @Rosstradamus.

          1
          Reply
    • bucketbrew35

      4 years ago

      God forbid a player actually has some leverage regarding their future. They committed to him and he moved from Japan to play for them. He was only right to seek additional security for himself if things went south.

      I see no issue with the player option nor do I think anything is wrong with it. To me it’s one less way that the front office can treat players like cattle.

      14
      Reply
      • FredMcGriff for the HOF

        4 years ago

        @brew. I agree nobody forced the Mariners to give Kikuchi that contract.

        5
        Reply
        • vandal25

          4 years ago

          I think the Seattle fan base doesn’t like it but hindsight is pretty easy to make that assessment. Kukuchi has been very inconsistent. Trader jerry will trade that contract and eat some money to do it.

          2
          Reply
    • iverbure

      4 years ago

      Nobody forced Seattle to sign him, and nobody forced the pitcher to sign with Seattle. Don’t like the terms of the contract don’t offer it or sign it.

      Reply
  3. bucketbrew35

    4 years ago

    Long term Kikuchi strikes me as someone who could have a very successful career as a swing man.

    3
    Reply
    • TylerBlackSimon

      4 years ago

      Long Term Kikuchi is a lost Gorillaz track.

      7
      Reply
  4. whiskeyted

    4 years ago

    I watch alot of Mariner’s baseball. This guy has the stuff to make it, but he just can’t put it all together. 2nd half of the season with him was super hard to watch. He throws alot of meaningless pitches. by that I mean in pitcher’s counts, he would waste at least a pitch or two that no pro hitter is gonna swing at. I think after free agency and some more development from some youngsters, that he will just be an afterthought

    4
    Reply
    • bucsfan0004

      4 years ago

      I watched him shut down the Blue Jays like they were a AAA team. So there’s something there. He’s well worth the $13M for 2022.

      2
      Reply
      • Fred Park

        4 years ago

        He sort of “lost feel for” his changeup after that, according to all I could find out about it.
        When his change wasn’t working he was just another pitcher. He’d set up with his sinker, then get them with the change. But only when the change was working just right..

        1
        Reply
  5. Chester Copperpot

    4 years ago

    Kikuchi’s tale of two seasons…
    Before foreign substance crackdown:
    80.2 IP – 3.45 ERA

    After foreign substance crackdown:
    76.1 IP – 5.42 ERA

    9
    Reply
    • 12thDan03

      4 years ago

      His fade also coincided with the Mariners switching (out of necessity) from a 6-man rotation to 5. Much more likely that’s the cause.

      4
      Reply
      • Chester Copperpot

        4 years ago

        Meh. He threw less innings after the crackdown. Are you saying it was fatigue, or he just can’t pitch every 5 days? He needs an extra day?

        Quite honestly, both of those are less likely than him using a foreign substance. Did you ever notice how often he went to the bill of his cap?

        2
        Reply
        • iverbure

          4 years ago

          Which mlb pitcher doesn’t have a routine where they don’t touch the same 3/5 spots on themselves?

          1
          Reply
        • TylerBlackSimon

          4 years ago

          Jim Abbott

          6
          Reply
        • compassrose

          4 years ago

          One of the playoff games was switching around so forget which one. They all went to the mound. One of the players reached up and wiped something off the side of the pitchers cap. He then wiped it on his pants.

          Another one was the relief P when called in took the rosin bag and hit it against his leg multiple times. How much is just an old habit and how much is a work around from what they were doing?

          It seems they think they need more than the rosin bag anymore. Give them one approved substance and be done with it. Still I think some would not like the approved stuff and use something different.

          Reply
        • Fred Park

          4 years ago

          @TylerBlackSimon, thanks for the memory there.
          I hadn’t thought about Jim Abbott n a long time.
          Imagine, having success as a MLB player despite being born wi th no right hand.
          What a smart, gutty, and determined guy he was!

          3
          Reply
      • ksmurray

        4 years ago

        I agree. And they may start next year with a 6 man. They have a lot of starters on the rise in the minors plus Sheffield, Dunn, LJ Newsome, and the lefty starter (Margevicious ???) all available. They can trade out if thus surplus or call depth a good thing as injuries always happen.

        Reply
  6. BSHH

    4 years ago

    Kikuchi would have to be crazy not to use his option. Pitchers with a 4.50ish ERA seldom get more than $ 13m AAV. He will also get an opportunity with the Mariners to position himself for a better outlook for the 2023 Free Agency.

    Gruß,
    BSHH

    1
    Reply
    • BuddyBoy

      4 years ago

      He hurts his future value if he’s in the bullpen, which is his role in Seattle next year if he comes back. Unless they trade him, which is likely what they’d do f he came back

      Reply
      • SodoMojo90

        4 years ago

        He is going to exercise the option and then I’m sure the Mariners will look to trade him for next to nothing. Hopefully there’s a team out there that will give him a go. He can’t be much worse than some of the Orioles starters. He’s setting up to be next years Montero out of the bullpen and cost us a good 10-15 games

        1
        Reply
  7. meanmike

    4 years ago

    You can’t be throwing the ball every which Way but over the plate. A picture has got to have consistency. Kikuchi, while having great stuff, cannot effectively control his stuff. A guy with his shaky command should not be making anywhere near what he’s making! Get rid of him, he was not as advertised

    1
    Reply
    • TylerBlackSimon

      4 years ago

      Username checks out

      2
      Reply
  8. BuddyBoy

    4 years ago

    I doubt he’d exercise his option. First, he’s not going to likely start in Seattle which means he’d either go to the bullpen or be traded. Neither of which is in his best interests to rebuild value or choose a comfortable landing spot. Secondly, he is represented by Boras who is unlikely to advise him to do so. Boras will find him a landing spot where he makes similar or more money (over time) while choosing a good fit.

    1
    Reply
    • bigdaddyhacks

      4 years ago

      Hopefully, don’t let the door hit you on the way out.

      3
      Reply
  9. TylerBlackSimon

    4 years ago

    He should take the $13 mil.

    1
    Reply
  10. Monkey’s Uncle

    4 years ago

    What I got out of this article was that Steve Adam’s obviously somehow jinxed or cursed Kikuchi when he wrote that last article about him, so the Mariners can blame Steve. 😉

    3
    Reply
  11. Slothcliff Hokum

    4 years ago

    He threw way too many pitches in a lot of games, but especially in those games late in the season. (Any pitches at all got to be just about too many to watch.) Seattle may have a youngster or two who is/are nearly ready to provide more reliable production than Kikuchi can. There are also a number of others for whom Jerry could make a deal. Please, Mariners, just move on.

    1
    Reply
    • TylerBlackSimon

      4 years ago

      it’s not their call.

      Reply
      • Slothcliff Hokum

        4 years ago

        They can always try to trade him, right? Sounds like that’s their call. See SodoMojo90’s previous comment.)

        Reply
  12. Fred Park

    4 years ago

    Way, way back in the day, the first big-money player was Babe Ruth.
    I read about this years ago.
    He was making $80 a year, and a baseball writer told him, “Did you realize you’re making more the President of the United States?”
    Back then, Babe was able to blandly reply, “I had a better year than he did.”
    That was cute when my Grandpa read the story to me..
    Flash forward until NOW:
    It isn’t cute anymore.
    Like all unions, the Players Association became too strong. Now salaries are obscene, I don’t ca re who you are or think you are.
    Most unions have been forced to pull in their hornz, The workers aren’t in charge anymore, not even during this weird pandemic time.
    Eventually the MLBPA will have to ease up.
    I don’t want the game of baseball to die just because of unreasonable greed.
    Many of my older friends not only can’t afford to go to games, they can’t even afford to include ROOT in their TV package.
    It is getting worse. That’s the rub.

    3
    Reply
    • compassrose

      4 years ago

      Fred we can fast forward that until now. Kikuchi is having a better year than the Pres. He is not making more money than him though. He probably gets a cut of Hunters new paint by blowing through a straw masterpieces. The only people in DC politics that aren’t getting rich are the new ones. They don’t have the contacts or under table deals.

      4
      Reply
      • Fred Park

        4 years ago

        @compassrose, right on.
        You understand politics., got it figured out.

        1
        Reply
  13. TylerBlackSimon

    4 years ago

    The Seattle Mariners:At Least We’re Not The Mets

    1
    Reply
    • bucsfan0004

      4 years ago

      But they do have most of their best prospects

      4
      Reply
  14. CrikesAlready

    4 years ago

    I’ll coin the phrase: “Nohtani.”

    Kikuchi influenced a younger Ohtani while the went to the same high school. Same high school, not Ohtani. 😀

    3
    Reply
  15. DarkSide830

    4 years ago

    they’re foolish I’d they don’t sell high on Sewald

    1
    Reply
  16. GreenReign

    4 years ago

    I honestly think a move to the bull pen is in order. He doesn’t have the stamina to pitch deep into games or late into the season. But I think he can be dominant for short stints. Question is would we want to pay $13M for a BP arm?

    3
    Reply

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