In an appearance on TV Tokyo’s “Sports Real Live” show (Japanese language link from Yahoo Japan), Kenta Maeda said that he is leaving North American baseball behind at the conclusion of the 2025 season. Maeda revealed that he initially made his decision after signing his two-year, $24MM deal with the Tigers that that would be his final contract with a Major League team, and he is hoping to continue his career in Japan with a Nippon Professional Baseball club in 2026.
Maeda (who turns 38 in April) began his pro career with eight seasons with the Hiroshima Carp before being posted for MLB clubs, and signing an incentive-heavy eight-year, $25MM deal with the Dodgers back in January 2016. Maeda’s stint in North America has seen him suit up in nine Major League seasons — he missed the 2022 campaign recovering from a Tommy John surgery, and he has yet to see any big league action during a 2025 season spent entirely in the minors.
After struggling badly in the first year of his Tigers contract, a move to the bullpen didn’t change Maeda’s fortunes this year, and Detroit released the right-hander in early May. He then joined the Cubs on a minor league contract before being released in early August, quickly landing with the Yankees on another minors deal. Over 76 1/3 Triple-A innings this season, Maeda hasn’t shown any of his old form, posting a 6.25 ERA for New York and Chicago’s top affiliates.
During the TV Tokyo interview, Maeda said his family has been living in Japan during his year in the minors, in order to have some stability while Maeda has now bounced around to multiple teams. His recent on-field results (or lack thereof) had no bearing on his decision, as Maeda stated that he would’ve returned to Japan after 2025 if he’d been a 20-game winner at the big league level.
Since it doesn’t look like the Yankees will be calling Maeda up in September, his MLB resume could be closed after 226 games (172 of them starts) with the Tigers, Twins, and Dodgers over parts of nine seasons. Maeda has a 4.20 ERA, 25.8% strikeout rate, and 7.8% walk rate over 986 2/3 career innings in the regular season, as well as a 3.24 ERA across 41 2/3 career postseason frames with Minnesota and Los Angeles.
Though his final act in Detroit didn’t go well, Maeda was generally a very effective pitcher in the majors. He had a 3.87 ERA during 589 innings in L.A., with the Dodgers using Maeda both as a starter and as a reliever, though Maeda made it known that he preferred rotation work. A trade to the Twins prior to the 2020 season gave Maeda a full-fledged starting job, and he responded with a runner-up finish in AL Cy Young Award voting, posting a 2.70 ERA in 66 2/3 innings during the pandemic-shortened season. He wasn’t as effective during a 2021 campaign that was cut short by his Tommy John procedure, though Maeda returned in solid form (4.23 ERA in 104 1/3 IP) for Minnesota’s AL Central-winning team in 2023.
Damn shame he didn’t get one more win in the bigs but a nice career nonetheless
Or five more wins. It’s a 69, but you both bring a #2 to the party.
He still could. One more month left in the season. Could still get a call-up
MaeKen!
One of my favorite players
Come back home! Anyone is better than Tanner Scott.
I know this website has featured a few stories about roster manipulation to avoid contract bonuses, the Pirates had a particularly noticeable one last year. But the Dodgers did it to Kenta during 2 or 3 of his seasons with them because a bunch of his incentives were based on games started and they would just move him to the bullpen in August.
Technically speaking, Maeda’s .750 WHIP in 2020 is the second lowest qualified mark post-1900. The only player to post a lower mark (while pitching enough innings to qualify) was Pedro Martinez in 2000. Ovbiously, it was the 2020 season, but that’s one thing he can be proud of.
The article says that Maeda spent the entire 2025 campaign in the minors.
That is not true…
He was with the Tigers’ Major League club until early May. His results were very unimpressive to say the least.
lol he’s like get me the hell outta here man