DALLAS — Major League Baseball investigated to ensure no team had an advance deal in place for Roki Sasaki, and the agent for the Japanese pitcher said picking a club will be ''like the draft in reverse.''
On the first day of Sasaki's 45-day window to sign with an MLB team, agent Joel Wolfe said the 23-year-old right-hander likely will sign shortly after the 2025 international signing pool window opens on Jan. 15 and wouldn't wait until the Jan. 23 deadline.
''The incentive to sign as early as possible is to get the visa process going so that he would be on time for spring training,'' Wolfe said Tuesday during a half-hour news conference at the winter meetings.
Sasaki helped Japan win the 2023 World Baseball Classic and has a fastball clocked at 102.5 mph. The 6-foot-2 pitcher is 29-15 with a 2.10 ERA over four injury-shortened seasons with the Chiba Lotte Marines of Nippon Professional Baseball's Pacific League.
Because he is under 25, Sasaki is treated by MLB as an international amateur and subject to signing bonus pools for minor league contracts usually allocated to 16-year-old Latin American prospects. The Los Angeles Dodgers kept $2,502,500 open in their 2024 bonus pool, leading other teams to speculate whether an agreement had been reached.
''There was a lot of discussion in the media, in the league, in NPB about Roki's situation,'' Wolfe said. ''There were some accusations, allegations, all of them false, made about predetermined deals, things like that. However, MLB rightly wanted to make sure that this was going to be a fair and level playing field for everyone, so they did their due diligence and interviewed numerous parties ahead of time to make sure that that was the case.''
Wolfe said MLB preferred Sasaki's posting availability extend into the 2025 period, where team amounts will range from $7,555,500 to $4,146,200.
''My advice to him is don't make a decision based on that because the long-term arc of your career is where you're going to earn your money,'' he said.