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Nippon Professional Baseball

NPB’s Rakuten Golden Eagles Sign Cody Ponce

By Mark Polishuk | December 27, 2023 at 8:03am CDT

The Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles of Nippon Professional Baseball have signed right-hander Cody Ponce, the team announced.  This will mark Ponce’s third straight season in NPB, as he pitched for the Nippon Ham Fighters in both 2022 and 2023.

Ponce posted a solid 3.47 ERA over 135 innings for the Fighters over the last two seasons, though he missed about a month of the 2023 campaign due to injury.  His 18.76% strikeout rate and 6.88% walk rate basically matched his work over six minor league seasons, as Ponce relies on good command and soft contact to generate outs, rather than missing a lot of bats.  Ponce’s tenure in NPB was highlighted by a no-hitter on August 27, 2022, making him the seventh foreign-born player to toss a no-no in NPB since 1950.

A second-round pick for the Brewers in the 2015 draft, Ponce had a 3.93 ERA over 476 career frames in the minors, pitching in both the Milwaukee and Pittsburgh farm systems.  The Brewers dealt Ponce to the Pirates in a 2019 deadline deal that brought Jordan Lyles to Milwaukee, and Ponce then made his Major League debut the following season.  Over 55 1/3 career innings in the big leagues, Ponce has a 5.86 ERA, 19.6% strikeout rate and 6.9% walk rate, working mostly as a long reliever but with a few spot starts on his resume.

Pitching in Japan has allowed Ponce more of an opportunity as a regular starter than he likely would’ve received in North America, not to mention a steadier paycheck.  It isn’t surprising to see Ponce stick around for another year in NPB, and since he doesn’t turn 30 until April, there’s still plenty of time for the righty to consider a return to the Show down the road.

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Nippon Professional Baseball Transactions Cody Ponce

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Kyle Keller Signs With NPB’s Yomiuri Giants

By Anthony Franco | December 26, 2023 at 6:10pm CDT

Reliever Kyle Keller has signed with the Yomiuri Giants of Nippon Professional Baseball, the team announced. He’ll spend a third season in Japan after pitching for the Hanshin Tigers between 2022-23.

Keller, 30, pitched in the majors between 2019-21. The right-hander logged big league time with the Marlins, Angels and Pirates. He set a personal high with 33 1/3 innings for the Bucs in 2021, albeit with a lackluster 6.48 ERA, before making the move to Japan.

Over his two NPB seasons, Keller has found more success than he had during his big league run. He posted a 3.31 ERA with a stellar 46:5 strikeout-to-walk ratio over 32 2/3 innings in 2022. This year, his run prevention improved while his peripherals went in the other direction. Keller allowed only 1.71 earned runs per nine but issued 16 walks while fanning 28 across 26 1/3 frames. He spent some time with the Tigers’ minor league affiliate, making 18 appearances there.

FanSided’s Robert Murray reported last month that Keller was receiving some attention from MLB clubs. That apparently wasn’t robust enough to result in a better opportunity than the one he’ll receive from the Giants. If Keller can combine this year’s run prevention with something closer to his ’22 strikeout and walk profile, he could find stronger MLB interest next winter.

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Nippon Professional Baseball Kyle Keller

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NPB’s Chunichi Dragons Sign Alex Dickerson

By Mark Polishuk | December 23, 2023 at 11:24am CDT

The Chunichi Dragons have signed outfielder Alex Dickerson, according to multiple reports out of Japan (hat tip to Jon Heyman of the New York Post).  Dickerson didn’t play in the affiliated minors in 2023, instead playing 115 games with the independent Atlantic League’s Long Island Ducks, and also 12 games with Acereros de Monclova of the Mexican League.

Dickerson is a veteran of six MLB seasons from 2015-2022, playing in 339 games and hitting .255/.325/.460 over 1001 career plate appearances.  The large majority (872) of those plate appearances came against right-handed pitching, even though the lefty-swinging Dickerson’s career splits aren’t too dissimilar, apart from a lot more power against righty pitching.

Injuries have been perhaps the chief reason why the 33-year-old hasn’t been able to carve out a solid niche for himself in the big leagues.  Dickerson missed all of the 2017-18 seasons due to back surgery and Tommy John surgery, and he has been a frequent visitor to the injured list several other times in his career.  The pandemic-shortened 2020 season was the only “full” season of good health for Dickerson, and he delivered an impressive .298/.371/.576 slash line over 170 PA for the Giants.

Though Dickerson hit very well after being acquired by San Francisco during the 2019 season, his production started to tail off during an injury-marred 2021.  The Giants designated him for assignment after the season and he caught on with the Braves, but Dickerson struggled badly in 13 games with Atlanta in April 2022, which marked his last appearances in the major leagues.

Dickerson will now get another international opportunity with the Nagoya-based Dragons, who are looking to reverse their fortunes after struggling for most of the last decade.  While Dickerson’s big numbers in the Atlantic League may not necessarily hint at future success in NPB, it seems quite possible that the outfielder might get on track if he can just stay healthy.  A successful season with the Dragons might then led to more opportunities in Japan, or perhaps more looks from MLB teams next winter.

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Nippon Professional Baseball Transactions Alex Dickerson

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Pirates Designate Andre Jackson For Assignment

By Anthony Franco | December 21, 2023 at 6:33pm CDT

The Pirates are designating right-hander Andre Jackson for assignment, as first reported by Alex Stumpf of DK Pittsburgh Sports. Pittsburgh needed to create a 40-man roster spot after re-signing Andrew McCutchen yesterday. Jason Mackey of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports (on X) that Jackson sought his release to pursue a deal with a team in Japan.

Pittsburgh acquired Jackson from the Dodgers in a minor trade in June. He’d been designated for assignment by Los Angeles leading up to that deal, which saw the Bucs send cash the other way. The 27-year-old started seven of 12 appearances down the stretch, his first rotation work at the major league level. Jackson turned in decent results, pitching to a 4.33 ERA across 43 2/3 innings. He struck hitters out at a solid 23% clip, although his 10.7% walk rate hinted at the control questions that have persisted for his entire career.

Jackson has long shown a combination of intriguing stuff and wobbly strike-throwing ability. He has pitched parts of three seasons at the MLB level, working to a 4.25 ERA through 82 2/3 frames. The Houston product has a less imposing 5.07 mark in 140 1/3 innings of work at the Triple-A level, where he has walked almost 15% of batters faced.

The control inconsistency meant that Jackson could have found himself on the roster bubble in 2024. This was his final minor league option season, so he’d have had to remain on Pittsburgh’s MLB team, be placed on waivers or traded. Given the chance that he’d have landed on the waiver wire, he apparently preferred to head to NPB and lock in some guaranteed money. He’ll technically land on waivers in the next few days but figures to go unclaimed and be released.

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Nippon Professional Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates Transactions Andre Jackson

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Jesus Aguilar To Sign With NPB’s Seibu Lions

By Steve Adams | December 21, 2023 at 12:06pm CDT

Veteran first baseman Jesus Aguilar is set to sign with the Seibu Lions of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball, reports Robert Murray of FanSided. The MVP Sports client has appeared in the Majors in each of the past ten seasons but will head overseas for the first time in his career.

Aguilar, 33, signed a one-year, $3MM deal with the A’s last offseason but struggled greatly through 36 games. In 115 plate appearances with Oakland, the burly slugger managed a tepid .221/.281/.385 slash with a 27% strikeout rate. It was a second consecutive lackluster campaign at the plate for Aguilar, and although he turned around a bit after signing with the Braves on a minor league deal, he never got a look in the big leagues with Atlanta. In 241 plate appearances with Triple-A Gwinnett, he hit .271/.373/.379 with a hefty 14.1% walk rate.

With the exception of a down season in 2019, Aguilar was a well above-average hitter from 2017-21. Even with a rough showing in ’19, his batting line over that five-year stretch checked in at .262/.338/.478, and he slugged 93 round-trippers along the way. Aguilar’s best year came with the Brewers in 2018, when he swatted a career-best 35 home runs and turned in a stout .274/.352/.539 batting line. The Lions will be hoping for that type of production, or something close to it, in signing the veteran slugger for the upcoming season.

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Nippon Professional Baseball Transactions Jesus Aguilar

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Jose Espada Signs With NPB’s Yakult Swallows

By Anthony Franco | December 20, 2023 at 11:07pm CDT

Right-hander Jose Espada signed with the Yakult Swallows of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball, he announced on X over the weekend. Espada had signed a minor league deal with the Padres in late November before being granted his release last week.

Espada, 27 in February, made his major league debut in the season’s final week. The Padres added him to the 40-man roster at the end of September. He pitched once, throwing a scoreless inning to punctuate a victory over the Cardinals. He struck out a pair while issuing two walks.

While he has only received that cup of coffee at the highest level, Espada has been in the professional ranks since 2015. He spent time in the Red Sox and Blue Jays organizations before joining the Padres out of independent ball in 2022. The Puerto Rico native had his strongest season this year. Working in a multi-inning capacity, he combined for a 2.81 ERA in 83 1/3 frames between Double-A and Triple-A. Espada fanned an excellent 32.3% of opponents in the minors, although he paired that with a notable 12.5% walk rate.

San Diego was impressed enough with his minor league performance they were prepared to keep him around as non-roster depth going into 2024. The NPB opportunity affords Espada a chance to lock in a salary that’s surely above what he’d have made if he’d spent much or all of next season at Triple-A El Paso. He’ll get a look in what is generally viewed as the world’s second-highest level of professional baseball.

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Nippon Professional Baseball San Diego Padres Transactions Jose Espada

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NPB’s Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters Sign Andrew Stevenson

By Darragh McDonald | December 13, 2023 at 12:50pm CDT

12:50pm: Darren Wolfson of Skor North relayed the financials. Stevenson will be guarantee $850K with a club option that could make it $2.4MM over two years.

12:32pm: The Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball have signed outfielder Andrew Stevenson, reports Jon Heyman of The New York Post.

Stevenson, 30 in June, has 273 games of major league experience. Most of that was with the Nationals, though he was in the Twins’ organization in 2023. Broadly speaking, he has served as a glove-first outfielder in that time. He has eight home runs in 489 plate appearances, batting .243/.316/.352 overall for a wRC+ of 80. His glovework has resulted in four Defensive Runs Saved, three Outs Above Average and a grade of 4.8 from Ultimate Zone Rating.

He signed a minor league deal with the Twins back in March and was added to the roster in September. He had performed very well in Triple-A, hitting .317/.394/.522 while stealing 44 bases. He played 25 major league games down the stretch but hit just .189/.250/.216 in those, though he did swipe another four bags. He was outrighted by the Twins and elected free agency in October.

Despite his speed-and-defense, Stevenson has struggled to hold onto a big league roster spot in recent years, both due to his lack of hitting in the majors and because he burned his final option year in 2021. He didn’t get to the big leagues at all in 2022 and was just a September call-up in the most recent campaign.

Had he stayed in North America for 2024, he likely would have had to settle for another minor league deal. But by heading overseas, he will lock in a nice guarantee for himself. The financials of this deal aren’t publicly known but guys who move from MLB to NPB generally get paid a salary close to the MLB minimum. If he succeeds for the Fighters, that could perhaps lead to some more earnings in Japan and/or a return to North America down the line.

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Nippon Professional Baseball Transactions Andrew Stevenson

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Thomas Hatch, Taylor Hearn Reportedly Sign With NPB’s Hiroshima Carp

By Nick Deeds | December 9, 2023 at 5:22pm CDT

The Hiroshima Carp of Japan’s NPB have signed a pair of hurlers who pitched in the majors this past season. According to Yahoo Japan (Japanese language link), the Carp have agreed to deals with left-hander Taylor Hearn and right-hander Thomas Hatch. The report indicates Hiroshima’s agreement with Hearn is worth $900K in total, while Hatch’s deal is reportedly worth a total of $1.3MM. Hatch was released by the Pirates late last month and was initially expected to sign with the Nippon-Ham Fighters prior to landing a deal with the Carp. Hearn, on the other hand, elected free agency back in October.

Hearn, 29, made his big league debut back in 2019 with the Rangers and spent parts of five seasons in the majors with the club, pitching to a 5.11 ERA and 4.45 FIP during that time. From 2021-22, Hearn occupied a swing role with Texas, pitching both as a member of the starting rotation and out of the bullpen throughout the two campaigns. Those two seasons accounted for a 204 1/3 of Hearn’s career 229 innings of work for the Rangers and both campaigns saw him post strong numbers out of the bullpen, with ERAs of 3.54 and 3.51 respectively. Unfortunately, that success didn’t translate over in his limited time as a full-time reliever during the 2023 season, where he struggled to a 11.40 ERA in 15 innings of work while splitting time between the Rangers, Royals, and Braves organizations. Looking ahead to 2024, Hearn figures to have the opportunity to pitch in a full-time relief role on a regular basis with the Carp.

Hatch, 29, has found more big league success during his career than Hearn. A third-round pick by the Cubs in the 2016 draft, Hatch made his big league debut with the Blue Jays during the shortened 2020 season and impressed in his first taste of big league action with a 2.73 ERA in 26 1/3 innings of work. Things came off the rails a bit for Hatch the following two seasons, however, as he pitched just 14 innings in the majors with a 10.93 ERA. He got a more extensive opportunity in the majors in 2023, however, and did reasonably well with it. Across 28 2/3 innings of work with the Blue Jays and Pirates, Hatch posted a solid 4.08 ERA with a strong 52.3% groundball rate and a respectable 20.2% strikeout rate. Those decent results and promising peripherals surely made Hatch an attractive target for Hiroshima, and he’ll now join Hearn on the Carp pitching staff in 2024.

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Nippon Professional Baseball Transactions Taylor Hearn Thomas Hatch

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Roki Sasaki Asks To Be Posted For MLB Teams, Chiba Lotte Marines Likely To Deny Request

By Mark Polishuk | December 9, 2023 at 1:32pm CDT

Japanese pitching sensation Roki Sasaki has asked the Chiba Lotte Marines to make him available to MLB teams via the posting system this winter, according to Sponichi Annex (Japanese language link from Yahoo Japan).  Nippon Professional Baseball teams have until December 15 to post players for possible moves to Major League Baseball in advance of the 2024 season, and this brief timeline alone makes it highly unlikely that the Marines will grant Sasaki’s request.

In the broader picture, it is quite rare for Japanese players to ask to be posted so early in their careers, as the 22-year-old Sasaki has only played three seasons in NPB.  As per MLB’s posting rules, players must be at least 25 years and have at least six pro seasons under their belt in order to receive anything more than a minor league contract.  Big league clubs could also only pay such players money from their international bonus pools, and with this year’s international signing window yet to open on January 15, teams have long since committed the bulk of their pool money to prospects.  Shohei Ohtani faced these restrictions when he came to the majors at age 23, and thus received only a minors deal from the Angels and a $2.3MM signing bonus.

Jorge Castillo and Jack Harris of the Los Angeles Times profiled Sasaki last month, noting that Sasaki’s contract with the Marines “is thought to” have an escape clause that would allow the righty to leave for the majors at any time.  Ohtani enacted such a clause in 2017, though Ohtani had played five seasons with the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters.

The Sponichi article didn’t give any mention about such a contractual opt-out, though the unusual timing of Sasaki’s request perhaps does indicate that he has some leverage to take this rather immediate plunge into the posting system.  Castillo/Harris wrote that the Dodgers, Padres, and Giants have all “intensely scouted” Sasaki in Japan, and at one point, the Dodgers thought that Sasaki would be available as early as this offseason.

Sasaki wouldn’t achieve full free agency until he has nine seasons of service time, and in general, NPB teams don’t post players early until they’re a year or two away from that nine-season threshold.  For instance, Yoshinobu Yamamoto played seven seasons with the Orix Buffaloes before the Buffaloes agreed to post the star righty this winter, and the 25-year-old Yamamoto now looks poised to command a contract well north of $200MM.

Yamamoto’s combination of youth and skill has all but guaranteed a huge contract, yet even his number could pale in comparison to what Sasaki might receive.  Though he would seemingly be limited to a minor league deal at first and would have to wait at least a few seasons into an MLB career to sign an extension without drawing attention from the league office, that might be a risk Sasaki is willing to take given the potential huge payoff down the road.  In the interim, he won’t be lacking in compensation, since a jump to the majors would surely boost his endorsement appeal.

Over 283 2/3 career innings with the Marines, Sasaki has a 2.00 ERA, 34.4% strikeout rate, and 5.12% walk rate, and these video-game numbers are only part of Sasaki’s burgeoning legend.  His fastball routinely sits in the upper-90s and has topped out at 102.5mph, and his forkball is arguably an even deadlier pitch.  Sasaki’s pitched well for Japan’s gold medal-winning team at the 2023 World Baseball Classic, and he has two NPB All-Star appearances on his resume.  Most famously, Sasaki came within an inning of back-to-back perfect games — he tossed a perfecto against the Buffaloes in April 2022 that saw him record 13 straight strikeouts amidst an NPB-record 19 K’s in his masterpiece of a start.  Incredibly, Sasaki followed that up with eight perfect innings in his next outing before being pulled before the start of the ninth due to pitch count reasons (102 pitches).

The Marines’ desire to preserve Sasaki’s arm and overall health has been a main storyline of his career.  He was the first overall pick of the 2019 NPB draft, yet he didn’t make his debut with Chiba until May 2021, as the team wanted to ease his development into pro ball.  Sasaki missed about six weeks this season due to an oblique strain, limiting him to 91 innings for the 2023 campaign.  As MLB’s Dai Takegami Podziewski noted in his last installment of the NPB Players To Watch feature, durability is basically the last question Sasaki has to really answer about his long-term potential, and the righty’s 6’4″, 203-pound frame would suggest that he is perhaps built to hold up under the larger workloads faced by Major League pitchers.

While it remains to be seen if Sasaki will actually be able to enter the 2023-24 free agent market, it would obviously be a game changer in a winter that already has a lot of high-end starters still on the board.  If nothing else, Sasaki’s request might well be setting a stage for a posting next winter, when he could join another loaded pitching class that might include Corbin Burnes, Max Fried, Walker Buehler, Shane Bieber, Tyler Glasnow, Max Scherzer, Justin Verlander, and possibly even Gerrit Cole if the Yankees don’t enact a contract clause preventing Cole from opting out.

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Los Angeles Dodgers Newsstand Nippon Professional Baseball San Diego Padres San Francisco Giants Roki Sasaki

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Junior Fernandez Signs With NPB’s Chiba Lotte Marines

By Mark Polishuk | December 9, 2023 at 12:12pm CDT

The Chiba Lotte Marines announced (Japanese language link) the signing of right-hander Junior Fernandez.  The move to Nippon Professional Baseball comes after Fernandez elected minor league free agency following a 2023 season spent with the Triple-A affiliates of the Blue Jays and Nationals.

An international signing for the Cardinals in 2014, Fernandez spent his entire career in the St. Louis season until September 2022, and he has since bounced around to four different MLB teams before now heading to the Marines.  The Pirates claimed Fernandez off waivers in September 2022 and the Yankees and Jays then added the righty on subsequent waiver claims during that offseason.  Toronto released Fernandez in August, and he then caught on with the Nats on a minor league contract.

Fernandez has a 5.17 ERA over 54 career MLB innings with St. Louis and Pittsburgh from 2019-22, seeing at least some big league action in each of those four seasons.  He posted a hefty 13.9% walk rate while striking out only 18.7% of batters.  Fernandez became a full-time reliever in 2018 and has since shown some flashes of improved strikeout ability, as well as a pretty steady ability to generate grounders.  However, walks have been an issue, as Fernandez has had trouble fully controlling a pitch repertoire that includes a 98.7mph sinker.

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Nippon Professional Baseball Transactions Junior Fernandez

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