The Kia Tigers of the Korea Baseball Organization announced this week that they’ve re-signed righty James Naile to a one-year deal. The Sports One client will be guaranteed $1.8MM with an additional $200K available via incentives.
It’s one of the more lucrative one-year deals we’ve seen for a foreign player re-upping in the KBO, though it’s not hard to see why. The 32-year-old Naile (33 in February) has spent the past two seasons pitching for Kia in the KBO, working to a combined 2.38 ERA across 53 starts — a total of 313 2/3 innings. He’s fanned 22.2% of his opponents and only yielded a walk to 5.8% of the batters he’s faced — all with a ground-ball rate around 56%. Despite the hitter-friendly nature of the KBO, he’s surrendered only 17 home runs in his 313 2/3 frames (0.49 HR/9). Jee-ho Yoo of South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency points out that Naile is the only qualified starter in the KBO with a sub-3.00 ERA across the past two seasons.
A former 20th-round pick by the Athletics, Naile appeared in parts of two major league seasons — both with the Cardinals. From 2022-23, he pitched a tiny sample of 24 1/3 MLB innings, during which he was tagged for 20 runs (7.40 ERA) on 35 hits and 11 walks with 12 punchouts. Though Naile never got much of a look in the majors, he’s a veteran of six Triple-A seasons. He pitched to a 4.15 ERA across 357 2/3 innings in that time and logged a 17.6% strikeout rate and 7% walk rate in that time.
Naile is now up to $3.95MM in guaranteed earnings since signing overseas. He’s cleared $4MM when you factor in incentives on his prior contracts and could end up around $4.5MM in total over his first three seasons in the KBO with another strong performance in 2026. Readers curious about the lifestyle of an American player overseas may be interested in Naile’s 2024 vlog about his experience in Gwangju, where he and then-teammate Cam Alldred (a former Pirates farmhand who very briefly saw the majors in Pittsburgh) took some fans through their daily routine.
There’s certainly a chance that Naile could eventually look to return to North American ball, but he’ll be entering his age-34 campaign next offseason and has never been an especially hard thrower, sitting 91.7 mph with his sinker in his brief MLB looks. Both traits could give MLB clubs some pause. Regardless of whether Naile pursues a big league return, he ought to have plenty of opportunity to continue being paid handsomely to pitch in the top leagues in Asia for the next few seasons.
