NPB slugger Munetaka Murakami’s posting window closes at 4pm CT time on December 22. With just over a day left for Murakami to sign with an MLB club, Mark Feinsand of MLB.com reports that the White Sox are among the teams that are presently engaged in talks with the slugger’s camp. Chris Cotillo of MassLive adds that the Red Sox have “kicked the tires” on Murakami, as well as fellow NPB infielder Kazuma Okamoto. Okamoto’s posting window closes on January 4.
Murakami’s time on the market has been unusually quiet for a player of his status. These reports of interest on the part of Chicago and Boston are the first significant reports tying Murakami to any of MLB’s 30 teams, as his representation has seemingly played things very close to the vest regarding his market. The 25-year-old has surely received interest from other clubs as well that has simply gone unreported, of course, but Murakami’s market doesn’t seem to be quite as strong as expected even when factoring in that reality.
Geoff Pontes of Baseball America suggested in an appearance on Foul Territory this past week that the slugger’s market has been “softer” than he and his representation were expecting entering the offseason. MLBTR ranked Murakami as the #4 free agent on the market this winter, predicting an eight-year, $180MM contract for the young slugger as part of our Top 50 MLB Free Agents list. That ranking accounts for Murakami’s top-of-the-scale power and extreme youth heading into free agency; Yoshinobu Yamamoto was just six months younger than Murakami when he landed a $325MM contract from the Dodgers, while the fact that Juan Soto was headed into his age-26 season was a key factor in him landing a record-shattering $765MM deal last winter.
With that said, Murakami’s low contact rates have raised some eyebrows around the baseball world since his posting, and it’s not hard to see why. The Athletic’s Eno Sarris illustrated the concerns with Murakami’s lack of contact in NPB by sharing a list of players with comparable contact rates and exit velocities in the majors in recent years. The resulting group includes some stars like Nick Kurtz (and Shohei Ohtani if the parameters adjusted to be somewhat more favorable to Murakami), but it includes a far larger group of middling players, ranging from decent regulars like Matt Wallner to early-career flame-outs like Aristides Aquino. There’s certainly reasons to believe Murakami will be a great deal better than those players, of course; his raw production in NPB is nothing short of otherworldly. Even so, the risk in the young slugger’s profile is real, and it’s not necessarily a shock that teams might shy away from giving him a massive contract until and unless he can prove his style of play works at the big league level.
Turning to the clubs with reported interest in Murakami, the White Sox are a very interesting fit. The slugger is certainly young enough to be part of the next competitive team on the south side; he’s just two years older than star rookies Colson Montgomery and Kyle Teel. That makes him an intriguing fit for the Sox, especially if he signs with the club on a long-term deal. Miguel Vargas and Lenyn Sosa are the club’s projected starters at the infield corners at the moment, but neither player is locked in strongly enough to prevent the addition of Murakami.
A short-term deal could also be possible, as well; the White Sox signed Erick Fedde to a two-year deal two winters ago and rode a strong first half to secure a three-way trade involving Fedde that brought back Vargas. A similar approach could be employed here as well, at least in theory. Chicago might be a particularly appealing destination for the young slugger given their lack of competitive expectations this year; it could allow him the opportunity to make necessary adjustments at the big league level without the pressure of a pennant race, and perhaps the White Sox would be more comfortable than most clubs trying Murakami at third base despite widespread concerns about his ability at the position.
As for the Red Sox, Murakami could provide the sort of elite slugger than the Red Sox lost when they traded away Rafael Devers over the summer. That makes the fit between the sides plausible, but there are certainly questions and obstacles as well. For one, the Red Sox are entering a clear win-now window after making the playoffs last year, and might not be willing to play Murakami through any struggles that could come with his adjustment to the majors. For another, the Red Sox are already extremely left-handed and have Triston Casas in-house as a first base/DH option with plenty of upside in his own right. Boston would need to be confident that Murakami would be a substantial upgrade over Casas in order to commit significant dollars to him for the same role.
While a pursuit of Murakami from Boston can’t be ruled out, the quote from Cotillo about Boston “kicking the tires” on the slugger suggests more of a reserved approach to his market. That’s an understandable path to take, particularly given that Okamoto could be a better fit. Okamoto is older than Murakami and lacks his countryman’s elite power, but he’s enjoyed a much more steady career in NPB without contact rate concerns, offers more playable defensive skills at third base, and is a right-handed hitter who more effectively complements the Red Sox lineup. That solid fit is part of why the Red Sox have been linked to Okamoto on occasion throughout the winter, even as they pursue a reunion with third baseman Alex Bregman.

I think the Red Sox would prefer Murakami over Okamoto because of his age. Maybe they feel more comfortable paying him?
Fen – No, not for 3B …. Murakami is below average there, whereas Okamoto is good there.
Murakami is the bigger risk because of his struggles with high velo, and he will cost a lot more.
Chris nailed it when he wrote “kicked the tires”, that’s probably all the Red Sox did.
I was thinking first base on a one year deal. A prove it type that also kicks the can down the road in addressing a real issue.
Fen – I would be all for that, but in demand Japanese players typically don’t (maybe never?) get posted for just a one-year contract.
x.com/peterappel23/status/1999922287743832221
It looks like that 0.095 against 95+ might have been some false reporting?
I don’t necessarily love signing either of them, but I think the velocity concern might be a nonissue.
Well I wasn’t wrong was I. I guess it was 2 years, but pretty much the same thing.
@FPG. Okamoto is the one with bad numbers against velocity over 93+. Murakami has high strikeouts, and maybe can play 1st.
Rex – It was Murakami, but seems like the reports were total BS. I really hate all the crap that gets spread via social media, no accountability.
cubbiescrib.com/warning-bells-are-sounding-around-…
@FPG. Yeah I think it started out as Murakami struggled against and okamoto didn’t and it turned into okamoto does as well. Im seen both its probably people mixing the two up. Anyway the Sox signed Murakami.
Rex – You are gonna have a lot of Boston fans who read your post annoyed ….. you didn’t say which Sox team signed him. LOL
@FPG. Haha my bad. I dont think thats a bad deal though.
Rex – Agreed, $34M is an incredibly reasonable gamble that he will be able to handle MLB pitching.
BTW – The MLBTR staff projected him at $18oM …. yikes!
Does Murakami translated mean….poor man’s version of Rob Deer?
Way better than that. Murakami set the Japanese “Babe Ruth” record for HR in a season … as a 22 year old. And has a near 400 career OBP. His problems are he’s bad defensively everywhere and is almost certainly limited to 1B/DH, and he K’s a ton.
I prefer Murakami due to his age, left-handed hitter, and raw power but kinda like Okamoto’s skill set better. Just wish he was a couple years younger and hit left-handed.
Dont even think about it Getz!
Put together a trade for Murf Gray.
Reason why?
Vargas is better, Ramos, Sosa can play third. Can potentially trade for Murf Gray who is going to be a masher.
Why spend the money tbis season? Especially on a guy who cant hit fastballs.
Trade what for him? Pirates aren’t looking to give him away
Warning to GMs: Pete Fairbanks’ sub-3.00 ERA is the most deceptive stat I have ever seen.
More than 1/2 the batters he faces launches the ball at 100MPH+.
His avg. save ends w/ a mad dash to the outfield wall and a acrobatic catch.
Highest hard-hit rate of any reliever in 2024 (probably 2025 as well, haven’t checked)
He’s perfected the boomerang pitch. Announcer: “Line shot ,,, caught. Oh, that ball was scalded.. He makes exit velocity of every batter look like Stanton. Yet another loud out.”
Increasingly afraid to throw his 98 MPH flatball anywhere near the zone because it is squared up 85% of the time.
Has 5 or 6 full implosions per season where he has to be pulled because he can’t record a single out or 2, much less 3..
Has lost ability to K anyone in the zone.
Save stats don’t count the numerous games where he fails to hold a tie.
Rays hid his ineffectiveness with timely DL visits.
In short — beware GMs — this is the luckiest pitcher in history — the law of averages will catch up and you will get less than 1 out for every $100k you waste on this guy.
Thank you, V Bow.
I am in fact a GM, secretly perusing the MLBTR comment section on a lazy Sunday morning as many of us GMs do. Thinking solely about Pete Fairbanks and my team’s heavy interest of him, I obviously clicked on an article about Munetaka Murakami. Your anecdotes and speculations have convinced me that I should call of our pursuit.
I bid you a great day and can only hope more GMs see this message in time. Alas, I do think it may be too late. I salute your service to the world of baseball.
@ V Bow
You wouldn’t happen to be representing a competing free agent reliever, would you?
Bow – All you had to say is Fairbanks’ K% drastically dropped after 2023.
And in a huge game last season he gave up a walkoff HR to Rafaela of all people ….. ‘nuf ced.
Great post! So true. I just re-lived about 10-15 “saves” from Pete reading this.
The only thing the Red Sox are interested in is not spending money
They just paid luxury tax.
Boston has 10th biggest Media Market and the 7th highest payroll in 2025. Those cheapskates!
sportsbusinessjournal.com/Articles/2025/09/29/us-m…
spotrac.com/mlb/tax/_/year/2025
I like Casas as a buy-low guy if the Red Sox get another 1B, Murakami or not.
You’re not alone and I doubt it would be all that “low.”
Bob – Yeah Casas is the exact type of guy the Red Sox would want if he wasn’t currently on the Red Sox..
They’ll snag every other team’s players coming back from injury, but they won’t keep their own players who are coming back from injury (ie: Sale).
Murakami literally can’t hit anything above 93mph!!! This is 100% a move the Red Sox would make.
@Jay wheeler. wrong Japanese guy. Murakami strikeouts alot and is probably a DH, 25 with raw power.
Its the DH situation that makes it a bad move for a rebuilding team like the White Sox and Murakami is a DH.
Why spend money on a DH – it takes away all the flexibility in your lineup. Murakami could be Schwarberesque but unproven in MLB and a spend like that on a DH only makes sense when you are in position to win.
Jay – Some reports have refuted that though. Who knows, reporting is mostly crap these days ….. everyone wants the big headlines and the clicks that come with it, but nobody gives a damn about accuracy anymore.
@FPG. Okamoto was originally said to have a problem with high velocity, now it’s Murakami too who really knows. Is it Yamamoto’s fastball with alot of movement. Because ohtani throws gas but batters hit close to .300 off of it. Plus in Japan they all have 8 pitches with different variations.
Krall wouldn’t kick the tires, he would be afraid of hurting his foot.
These guys aren’t Ohtani or Yammamoto but I am surprised no one has signed them since it only costs money. There is no compensation picks or prospects you have to deal.
The Red Sox aren’t going to sign. The Red Sox are bargain bin shopping. That is their new strategy. They will sign a free agent…. as long as the years and the money per year isn’t top of the market. Last year’s Bregman signing is what they are trying to do going forward.
No way either of these guys are getting eight years off the bat with no experience in MLB. If they thought that, they will be sorely disappointed.
It will be an option heavy deal like Imanaga with the Cubs
It’s a sock off!
People keep waiting for the Red Sox to make a big move. Hope they aren’t holding their breath.
I’d prefer Okamoto over Murukami for the White Sox, but I can see the appeal of getting Murukami instead. But I can see Getz getting one these guys.
Acoss – Is it just me, or are very low payroll teams suddenly looking to spend this offseason? Did MLB come down on them like they did with the Athletics last offseason?
Fever,
Yes, I think Jerry told Getz to spend a little bit on payroll and just might sign one of these Japanese free agents. Plus, Jerry won’t be around much longer so the leash might be longer on Getz these next few offseasons.
League needs to make the numbers look better before the negotiations next year. Or the high nobility owners told the petty lords and serfs they’re not willing to pay the tax if you’re going to pocket it and make the league look bad
oh – That is an excellent point, it’s hard to cry poverty when the Pirates and Athletics are making huge profits.
A lot of them are talking about it but none have actually done it yet.
Seam – Less than half of the Top 50 free agents are signed. Give it another month, they are probably just waiting for everyone else to fill their plate at the buffet table.
Realistically the small market teams will not win any bidding wars against large market teams.
Small market teams only have access to players big market teams didn’t want
oh – Exactly!
FPG
Crazy when the Dodgers ,Mets,ect. are paying more in luxury tax $$ ,than approximately a third of the teams actual payroll. Dodgers are paying almost $170 million in penalties. The descrepitcies are so vast , it just doesn’t seem sustainable. This is why unfortunately there will be a work stoppage. I can’t stand it. Can’t stand even talking about it ,but I think it’s going to happen.
The bad numbers vs high velo doesn’t matter. Hitters in Japan face so little of it that they aren’t prepared for it. Ohtani had similar “concerns.” He’ll figure that out inside of half a season. Bigger concerns are two: he has no place to play and may need to be a DH. And he K’s a lot (but again, so did Ohtani).
He will sign with the Reds Sox, he’s been their number one target all off season. Schwarber & Alonso were the ones they did the tire kicking on.
Guess your sources were wrong yet again.
Road – Don’t buy all the crap that’s on the internet, lots of players have been reported as the Red Sox “number one target”.
I don’t buy into any of it, but I have to say I really thought the Red Sox were going to $pend on posting fees again seemed like such a thing for them to do, I’m certainly not disappointed he’s not coming to Boston.
Good for the white Sox. 35-40 homers
Every report: Red Sox interested in said guy
Reality of the fans: that means we aren’t getting anyone
Good for the white Sox