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Korea Baseball Organization

KBO League’s LG Twins Re-Sign Yonny Chirinos, Austin Dean

By Mark Polishuk | December 6, 2025 at 1:25pm CDT

The LG Twins of the Korea Baseball Organization announced earlier this week that right-hander Yonny Chirinos and first baseman Austin Dean have been re-signed to new contracts for the 2026 season.  Right-hander Anders Tolhurst is also being brought back, as the Twins will be retaining their entire trio of foreign-born players from the previous season.

Dean earns the largest contract of the group with $1.4MM in guaranteed money ($1.1MM salary, $300K signing bonus) and another $300K available in incentives.  Chirinos also got a $300K signing bonus, as well as $900K in guaranteed salary, and up to $200K more in incentives.  Tolhurst will receive $800K in salary, a $200K signing bonus, and can get another $200K in incentive bonuses.

All three players were key contributors to a Twins team that won the Korean Series in 2025, and Dean also played a big role in the franchise’s 2023 championship team.  Dean has spent the last three seasons with the Twins, hitting .315/.384/.560 with 86 homers over 1686 plate appearances.  His distinguished resume with the Seoul-based team also includes a KBO All-Star nod in 2023 and two Golden Glove Awards.

Dean hit .228/.286/.390 over 365 PA and 126 games with the Marlins, Cardinals, and Giants from 2018-22, and had trouble sticking in the majors after getting most of his playing time with Miami in 2018-19.  Now entering his age-32 season, Dean has found a nice niche for himself with the Twins, and might well have several more years ahead of him in the KBO League.

Chirinos is another former big leaguer who emerged as a solid member of the Rays’ pitching mix in 2018-19, but a Tommy John surgery threw his career off track.  After posting a 3.65 ERA over 234 1/3 innings from 2018-20, Chirinos spent the entire 2021 season rehabbing and then delivered only a 5.31 ERA across 122 innings with the Rays, Braves, and Marlins over the 2022-24 campaigns.

The move to Seoul helped get Chirinos back on track, as he posted a 3.31 ERA across 30 starts and 177 innings.  A strong groundball pitcher in the minor leagues, Chirinos took that ability to new heights with a 59.8% grounder rate with the Twins.  A tiny 4.9% walk rate also helped him avoid damage, even if he didn’t miss many bats with an 18.6% strikeout rate.

Tolhurst was a 23rd-round pick for the Blue Jays in the 2019 draft, and he didn’t receive any MLB playing time during his four seasons in Toronto’s farm system.  He made it as far as Triple-A Buffalo in 2025, posting a 4.67 ERA in 71 1/3 innings with the Bisons.  With seemingly no promotion to the Show on the horizon, Tolhurst was released in August so he could make the jump to the KBO League, and he made an instant impact with his new team.  Tolhurst had a 2.86 ERA over 44 innings with the Twins, and he was the winning pitcher in both Game 1 and the series-clinching Game 5 of the Korean Series.

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Korea Baseball Organization Transactions Austin Dean Yonny Chirinos

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KBO League’s SSG Landers Sign Drew VerHagen

By Mark Polishuk | December 6, 2025 at 7:34am CDT

The SSG Landers of the Korea Baseball Organization announced a one-year contract with right-hander Drew VerHagen for the 2026 season.  VerHagen will earn $800K in guaranteed money ($750K salary, $50K signing bonus) and another $100K is available to the 35-year-old righty in contract incentives.

A veteran of eight Major League seasons, VerHagen has a 4.98 ERA over 281 2/3 innings with the Tigers (from 2014-19) and Cardinals (2022-23), working primarily as a long reliever with a few spot starts.  He also has a significant amount of experience pitching in Japan, as VerHagen pitched with the Nippon-Ham Fighters of Nippon Professional Baseball during both the 2020-21 seasons and then again over the last two seasons.

Overall, VerHagen has a 3.68 ERA, 23.7% strikeout rate, and 6.65% walk rate in 283 1/3 innings with the Fighters.  His most recent season, however, was his least-successful in NPB.  VerHagen delivered only a 6.08 ERA over 26 2/3 frames with the Fighters in 2025, and spent the bulk of the season with the Fighters’ minor league affiliate.

VerHagen will now look to turn the page in a new league and a new country.  He’ll take up one of the Fighters’ allotted roster spots for foreign-born pitchers, essentially replacing Drew Anderson (who is returning to MLB on a one-year deal with Detroit).

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Korea Baseball Organization Transactions Drew VerHagen

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Sam Hilliard Signs With KBO’s KT Wiz

By Anthony Franco | December 3, 2025 at 9:47pm CDT

The KT Wiz of the Korea Baseball Organization announced the signing of outfielder Sam Hilliard to a $1MM contract. He’ll collect a $300K signing bonus and make a $700K salary. Hilliard elected minor league free agency after being outrighted by Colorado in July.

A lefty-hitting outfielder, Hilliard has played parts of seven seasons in the big leagues. Most of that time has been with the Rockies, for whom he logged separate stats sandwiching a 2023 season in Atlanta. Hilliard has plus raw power and speed but has never made enough contact to stick as a regular. He has yet to appear in more than half a team’s games or top 238 plate appearances in an MLB season.

The 31-year-old Hilliard is a lifetime .218/.298/.437 hitter in a little under 1000 career trips to the plate. The former 15th-round draftee has punched out in 34.3% of those plate appearances. He’s a much more accomplished Triple-A performer. Hilliard has a .275/.356/.563 slash over six Triple-A campaigns. That includes a .288/.367/.565 showing with 17 homers in 91 games for Colorado’s top affiliate this past season.

This is Hilliard’s first trip to Asia, where he’ll take home a stronger salary than he’d have received on a minor league deal. Hilliard completes the Wiz’s trio of allotted foreign-born players. The team signed right-handers Matt Sauer and Caleb Boushley earlier in the offseason.

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Korea Baseball Organization Transactions Sam Hilliard

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Latest On Cody Ponce

By Steve Adams | December 1, 2025 at 2:43pm CDT

Right-hander Cody Ponce left South Korea this past weekend to travel back to the United States, per a report from Bae Young-Uen of the Korea JoongAng Daily. Ponce and his wife welcomed a daughter in early November and had been planning to remain in South Korea through the end of the year as a result, but interest in the right-hander has picked up enough that he’s traveling back to North America earlier than anticipated (presumably for some in-person meetings).

Interest in the 6’6″ righty indeed appears strong. Ken Rosenthal and Katie Woo of The Athletic reported this morning that Ponce could more than double the $15MM guarantee secured by Erick Fedde in his return to Major League Baseball from the Korea Baseball Organization two offseasons ago. Clubs are generally expecting Ponce to command a three-year contract, per The Athletic report. Fedde’s $15MM guarantee is the largest a North American pitcher has received upon returning from the KBO, so doubling that (or more) would establish a new precedent.

Topping $30MM would be fairly sizable risk on a 31-year-old (32 in April) who hasn’t pitched in the majors since 2021 and has never had much big league success. Ponce, however, was recently named the KBO MVP after a historically dominant season. Pitching to a 1.89 ERA in 180 2/3 innings with the Hanwha Eagles, Ponce set the single-season strikeout record (252) and the single-game strikeout record (18) in South Korea’s top league. He fanned a comical 36.2% of his opponents with a mammoth 16.5% swinging-strike rate and just a 5.9% walk rate.

Back in 2020-21, Ponce threw 55 1/3 innings for the Pirates, who’d acquired him from the division-rival Brewers. The former second-round pick was roughed up for a 5.86 ERA in 55 1/3 innings and struck out only 19.6% of his opponents.

Things have changed for Ponce since that first MLB run. He’s spent three years pitching in Japan and a fourth (2025) in Korea. The 255-pound righty has added substantial velocity, jumping from a 93.2 mph average fastball with the Pirates to what The Athletic’s Eno Sarris suggests was a 95 mph average with the Eagles.

Evaluators who spoke to MLBTR last month ahead of our Top 50 Free Agent List (where Ponce ranked 39th) offered similar reviews, noting that he sat 94-96 mph and topped out at 98 mph. Ponce has also added a splitter and kick changeup that have missed bats. A scout who spoke to MLBTR brought Ponce up unprompted when discussing other free agents from Japan’s NPB and the KBO, opining that he might top $20MM. That was before free agency opened in earnest.

If there was any doubt about Ponce’s looming return to MLB, the Eagles’ actions since season’s end likely erase that. The JoongAng Daily report indicates that Hanwha has already effectively replaced Ponce by signing 26-year-old righty Wilkel Hernandez, who spent the past several seasons pitching with the Tigers’ Triple-A club. If the Eagles felt there was any chance of retaining their ace and reigning MVP, they’d surely have waited, as KBO teams are restricted on the number of foreign players they can roster.

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Korea Baseball Organization Cody Ponce Wilkel Hernandez

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KBO’s Samsung Lions Sign Matt Manning

By Mark Polishuk | November 30, 2025 at 10:12pm CDT

The Samsung Lions of the Korea Baseball Organization announced the signing of right-hander Matt Manning to a one-year, $1MM contract.  Manning was outrighted off the Phillies roster in September, and he elected minor league free agency earlier this month.

Manning was once one of baseball’s top pitching prospects, and he was a fixture of top-100 prospect rankings in the years following his selection as the ninth overall pick of the 2016 draft.  He posted solid numbers on his way up the Tigers’ minor league ladder until his MLB debut in June 2021, but the strikeout ability Manning displayed in the minors didn’t translate to his work in the Show.  Over 254 innings and 50 starts with Detroit from 2021-24, Manning posted a 4.43 ERA, 7.8% walk rate, and only a 16.4% strikeout rate.

Some injuries hampered Manning during this time, but the Tigers eventually decided to move on entirely from the right-hander.  Manning spent the entire 2025 season in the minors, first with Triple-A Toledo and then with the Phillies’ Double-A affiliate in Reading after the Tigers designated Manning for assignment and traded him to Philadelphia just before the trade deadline.

Manning turns 28 in January, so between his relative youth and his past pedigree as a top prospect, it is a little surprising that he didn’t draw interest from any MLB teams on a minor league contract.  The fact that Manning inked his deal with the Lions relatively early in the offseason, however, perhaps suggests that he wasn’t interested in waiting perhaps several more weeks to land a non-guaranteed deal, and then going through the grind of another season in the minor leagues.  Manning is also now out of minor league options, so even if he did make a big league roster, he might’ve been facing more DFAs and outrights, plus potential moves to other teams on waiver claims or trades.

Rather than ride this carousel, Manning will get a $1MM payday from the Lions.  The KBO League is generally a hitter-friendly league, yet the lesser level of competition might help Manning get his career on track.  There have been several instances of pitchers who have used stints in the KBO to rework their pitching repertoire, post some strong numbers, and get back onto the radar of big league teams, so chances are we haven’t seen the last of Manning in a Major League organization.

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Korea Baseball Organization Transactions Matt Manning

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Caleb Boushley Signs With KBO’s KT Wiz

By Steve Adams | November 26, 2025 at 10:02pm CDT

The KT Wiz of the Korea Baseball Organization announced this week that they’ve signed former Brewers, Twins and Rangers righty Caleb Boushley to a one-year contract. He’ll be guaranteed $900K on the contract and can pick up an additional $100K via incentives.

Boushley, who turned 32 in October, has pitched in parts of three big league seasons, totaling 49 2/3 innings. He has an ugly 5.80 ERA to show for it despite generally solid rate stats. Boushley’s 21.1% strikeout rate is only about one percentage point shy of average, and his 8.1% walk rate is lower than the league average. He’s also yielded only 1.09 homers per nine innings pitched. However, Boushley has been dogged by a sky-high .367 average on balls in play, which has contributed to a 62% strand rate that’s more than 10 percentage points lower than the MLB average. Metrics like SIERA (3.95) and FIP (4.03) feel Boushley has pitched far better than his more rudimentary earned run average would suggest.

In parts of six Triple-A seasons, Boushley has totaled 512 innings with a 4.61 ERA. As in the majors, he’s displayed a lower-than-average strikeout rate but better-than-average command. Boushley has generally been a durable source of Triple-A innings. Though he spent most of the 2025 season in the Rangers’ bullpen, the lanky 6’3″, 190-pound Boushley averaged 25 starts and 130 innings per season from 2021-24, despite spending a portion of that time (2023-24) shuttling between the majors and minors.

This will be Boushley’s first work overseas and will easily be the largest guaranteed payday in what’ll be ten professional seasons. Boushley was a 33rd-round pick by the Padres out of Division-II University of Wisconsin La Crosse back in 2017. He signed for just $1,000 out of the draft. After years of middling minor league pay and shuffling back and forth between the majors and Triple-A, he’ll take home a salary that tops the MLB minimum by $120K and land a chance at the first seven-figure salary of his career (if he can max out his incentives package).

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Korea Baseball Organization Transactions Caleb Boushley

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KBO’s Kia Tigers Re-Sign James Naile

By Steve Adams | November 26, 2025 at 11:15am CDT

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.

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KBO’s Doosan Bears Sign Daz Cameron

By Darragh McDonald | November 25, 2025 at 5:45pm CDT

Free agent outfielder Daz Cameron has agreed to a deal with the Doosan Bears of the Korea Baseball Organization in South Korea, reports Jon Heyman of The New York Post. The Bears, in announcing the deal, revealed that Cameron will earn $1MM in 2026.

Cameron, 29 in January, was once a notable prospect. The Astros took him 37th overall in 2015. Due to his speed and defensive abilities, he was considered to have a decent floor. The larger question was how much he would provide with the bat to complement his other skills.

Ultimately, a lack of punch on offense has become the story, at least in the majors. Cameron has 472 big league plate appearances spread over five seasons with a 6.6% walk rate and 29.9% strikeout rate. That’s led to a .200/.258/.326 line and 65 wRC+.

Cameron has fared a bit better in the minors, particularly lately. Over the 2024 and 2025 seasons, he stepped to the plate 464 times at the Triple-A level. His 22.2% strikeout rate was far more palatable and his 13.1% walk rate was actually quite strong. He hit a combined .291/.394/.577 for a 146 wRC+.

Despite the strong numbers on the farm, he’s mostly been relegated to a fringe roster position in the majors. He exhausted his final option season in 2022. Since then, he’s bounced on and off 40-man rosters with various clubs. He has occasionally received a bench role but then has been designated for assignment and passed through waivers multiple times. He got a brief run on the Brewers’ roster in 2025 but was outrighted in July. He became a minor league free agent at season’s end.

If Cameron had stayed in North America for the 2026 season, he surely would have been stuck with minor league offers. By heading to Korea, he will presumably lock in a better guaranteed salary and get a nice opportunity to showcase his abilities on a bigger stage. If he succeeds over there, he could perhaps try to return to North America, though staying in the KBO with a nice raise or pursuing opportunities in other Asian leagues would be options as well.

Photo courtesy of Jeff Hanisch, Imagn Images

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Blue Jays’ Easton Lucas Granted Release, Expected To Sign Overseas

By Steve Adams | November 25, 2025 at 3:51pm CDT

The Blue Jays announced Tuesday that they’ve placed left-hander Easton Lucas on unconditional release waivers. That drops their 40-man roster count to 37. Ben Nicholson-Smith of Sportsnet reports that Lucas will sign with a foreign team once he clears waivers (presumably in Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball or in the Korea Baseball Organization).

Lucas, 29, appeared in six games (five starts) for Toronto this past season. He became a cult hero in April when he rattled off 10 1/3 shutout innings across two starts to begin his Jays tenure — including a game at Fenway Park where he outdueled eventual Cy Young runner-up Garrett Crochet. The good times didn’t last, however. Lucas was torched for eight runs in his next start and wound up surrendering a total of 18 runs in 14 innings following that scoreless stretch.

This was the third season in which Lucas has logged some big league time, though his 24 1/3 frames this year marked a career-high. He’s pitched 42 2/3 innings in the majors and been tagged for an 8.02 earned run average. Lucas has fanned a below-average 19.6% of opponents against a bloated 12.3% walk rate in his limited MLB exposure.

Triple-A has been another story entirely. Lucas has spent parts of three seasons at the top minor league level and, in 162 2/3 innings, pitched to a solid 3.60 ERA. He’s punched out 24.4% of his opponents and logged a more palatable (but still higher-than-average) 10% walk rate. Lucas sits 93-95 mph with his four-seamer and rounds out his four-pitch arsenal with a changeup, slider and more seldom-used cutter.

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Korea Baseball Organization Nippon Professional Baseball Toronto Blue Jays Transactions Easton Lucas

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KBO’s Samsung Lions Re-Sign Lewin Diaz, Ariel Jurado

By Steve Adams | November 25, 2025 at 9:11am CDT

The Samsung Lions of the Korea Baseball Organization announced that they’ve re-signed first baseman Lewin Diaz and right-hander Ariel Jurado to one-year contracts for the 2026 season (link via Jee-ho Yoo of the Yonhap News Agency). Diaz is guaranteed $1.5MM. Jurado is guaranteed $1.6MM. Both players can earn an additional $100K worth of incentives.

It’s a nice birthday present for Diaz, who turned 29 just a few days ago. Once a top prospect within the Twins and Marlins organizations, he wound up bouncing to the Pirates, Orioles, Braves and Nationals organizations before eventually heading overseas. Diaz has appeared in parts of three big league seasons but tallied only 343 plate appearances with a .181/.227/.340 batting line in that time.

Though he never hit in the majors, Diaz carries a solid .258/.340/.479 batting line in parts of three Triple-A seasons. He was very popular on the waiver wire in during the tail end of his run in North America, being claimed off waivers or traded following a DFA five times in the 2022-23 offseason. That’s due in part to his solid Triple-A production and former prospect status, but more so because even amid his MLB struggles at the plate, Diaz remained an elite defensive first baseman. Scouting reports have pegged him as a 70- or even 80-grade defender at the position.

He took that plus glove with him to Daegu, South Korea midway through the 2024 season, and in 2025 Diaz finally unlocked the plus raw power that’s been missing in game settings throughout his pro career in North America. The 6’2″ lefty-swinging slugger absolutely erupted in the KBO, pummeling opposing pitchers with a .314/.381/.644 batting line (165 wRC+) and 50 round-trippers this past season. Diaz walked in 9.6% of his plate appearances and fanned at only a 15.9% rate. His 158 (!!) runs batted in broke the single-season KBO record, and Diaz took home the KBO equivalent of a Gold Glove for his defense at first base.

Diaz will play all of next season at age 29. If he can replicate that mammoth production and continue playing his typical brand of plus-plus defense, a return to the majors in 2027 is possible. Obviously, the KBO is a hitter-friendly setting, but Diaz went above and beyond level of offensive output that most successful MLB-to-KBO transitions enjoy.

As for Jurado, he’ll return for what’s now a fourth season with the KBO and his second with the Lions. The former Rangers top prospect has started 30 games in each of the past three seasons — two with the Kiwoom Heroes and one with the Lions — and pitched to a sterling 2.87 ERA in 571 1/3 innings. He’s fanned a below-average 19.7% of his opponents but also logged a tiny 4.7% walk rate in his three KBO campaigns. Last year’s 197 1/3 innings and 2.60 earned run average were personal bests, and those 197 1/3 frames led all KBO pitchers.

Like Diaz, it’s plausible that Jurado could eventually set his sights on a return to Major League Baseball. He pitched 177 innings with Texas in 2018-19 and four innings with the Mets in 2020, but his short time in the majors was a struggle. In 181 frames, he was tagged for a 5.97 ERA.

Even with those struggles a fourth straight year of this type of production would presumably garner some interest. Jurado isn’t an especially hard thrower and doesn’t miss many bats, so perhaps offers from MLB clubs would be too light to persuade him to uproot himself and move across the globe once again. If he prefers to keep pitching in South Korea, he won’t exactly be hurting for cash. He’s cleared $5MM in earnings overseas with this new contract and won’t even turn 30 until January. He’ll have plenty of opportunity to continue taking home seven-figure salaries in the KBO as long as he continues pitching effectively.

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Korea Baseball Organization Transactions Ariel Jurado Lewin Diaz

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