The Nationals announced today that right-hander Sauryn Lao has been released to pursue an opportunity in Japan. The club’s 40-man roster count drops to 39. Mike Rodriguez reported last month that Lao had agreed to a deal with the Nippon-Ham Fighters of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball. Per Rodriguez, that deal is for one guaranteed year with a club option for 2027 and could end up paying more than $3MM.
Lao, 26, landed with the Nats via waivers in September. He had made his major league debut with the Mariners earlier in 2025. Between the two clubs, he tossed 11 innings, allowing six earned runs while striking out nine opponents.
He began his professional career as an international signing of the Dodgers back in 2015. Initially an infielder, he couldn’t hit enough to get beyond the High-A level, so the Dodgers put him on the mound in 2023. He showed some encouraging results for a couple of years but didn’t get a roster spot. He became a minor league free agent after 2024 and landed a minor league deal with the Mariners.
His track record in the majors is obviously still quite limited but his results in the minors have been good. He tossed 74 2/3 Triple-A innings last year over 25 appearances. 19 of those were technically starts, though mostly in the range of two to four innings. He allowed 3.01 earned runs per nine with a 24.7% strikeout rate and 6.9% walk rate, both solid figures.
Despite the solid numbers, his path to regular big league playing time would have been a bit challenging. He has two option years, meaning he could be sent to the minors regularly for another two years. Even if he carved out a regular role in the bigs, he only has 24 days of big league service time, meaning he would be three years away from an arbitration raise.
Taking the opportunity to go overseas gives him a better chance to pitch on a big stage and bank some notable earnings in the next few years. Since he’s still in his mid-20s, perhaps he can try to return to North American ball in a few years if he has some success overseas.
For the Nats, they are losing an arm they liked enough to grab from the waiver wire. However, clubs generally don’t stand in the way of players pursuing such opportunities in other leagues. The front office has also been overhauled since the claim of Lao, so it’s entirely possible the new regime was less attached to him than the previous one. The Nats will likely receive a nominal release fee from the Fighters.
Photo courtesy of Mark J. Rebilas, Imagn Images

This was already known a while ago
Not by me.
Gollum seized the Ring and fell into the Cracks of Doom, destroying it and himself. Sauryn Lao was utterly defeated, and vanished from Middle-earth.
Beware of encountering the hobbits over there, Sauryn.
Can we make the baseball off season not suck please? Have a lockout/strike take games even but this is a joke
Man, the entitlement is mind boggling.
huh? why should baseball work at all like every other sport right?
huh? why should baseball work at all like every other sport right? Entertainment is the only purpose of all of this
you should delay your gratification in your other areas of life. not everything has to come in a split second.
Thanks for the 3.52 ERA over 7.2 Innings Sauryn. Now discover your true potential in the Far East.
Literally who
Baseball player, there’s lots of them, hard to keep track of them all, I had no idea either. But he has a cool name.
Sauryn Lao you illiterate muppet.
Sauryn was unlikely to get his One Ring with the Nats anyway.