New York Daily News

Welcome to the Sho!

Japanese star to post, now real battle begins

- BY MIKE MAZZEO

It looks like the Babe Ruth of Japan will be coming to America next year.

A tentative posting agreement has been reached between between MLB, the MLB Players Assocation and Nippon Profession­al Baseball — pending ratificati­on by MLB teams — which would clear the way for Shohei Otani, the 23-year-old, twoway star, to play in the majors in 2018, a source confirmed to the News.

According to an Associated Press report, MLB owners are scheduled to vote for ratificati­on on Dec. 1, and Otani is expected to be posted then or the following day. The deal calls for the negotiatin­g period this offseason to be cut to 21 days from 30.

The posting fee limit this offseason remains $20 million, and Otani’s club, the Nippon Ham Fighters, is expected to seek the maximum.

As part of the deal, the AP reports, a tiered system for posting fees will start next Nov. 1. The fee will be 20 percent of the first $25 million of a major league contract, including earned bonuses and options. The percentage drops to 17.5 percent of the next $25 million and 15 percent of any amount over $50 million.

For minor league contracts, the fee will be 25 percent of the signing bonus.

Starting next offseason, the AP reports, the posting period will be shortened to Nov. 1 through Dec. 5. Under the previous agreement, the time period was Nov. 1 through March 1.

Because he isn’t waiting until he’s 25, when his free agency would be uncapped, Otani can receive a signing bonus of between $300,000-$3.535 million.

The Yankees are among many teams that will be interested in Otani’s services given his age, extremely affordable contract and vast potential. The Bombers are intent on getting under the $197 million luxury-tax threshold for 2018, and Otani fits the bill as a potential superstar level player who won’t make anywhere near superstar money.

The Yankees can offer Otani a $3.5 million signing bonus, with only the Rangers, at $3.535 million, having the ability to offer more.

The Bombers have an obvious hole in their rotation, with Luis Severino, Masahiro Tanaka, Sonny Gray and Jordan Montgomery under contract for 2018. They also have several DH at-bats available, which could appeal to Otani.

The Yankees have a strong foundation, featuring a young homegrown core, and have previously landed Japanese superstars Hideki Matsui and Tanaka, who could both help in what will essentiall­y be a college-recruiting process.

Otani has hit 100 mph with his fastball in Japan. This past season, however, he was limited due to injuries to his thigh and ankle. In 65 games at the plate, he posted a .942 OPS. In five starts on the mound, he posted a 3.20 ERA. He underwent ankle surgery on October.

The MLBPA had set an arbitrary 8 p.m. Monday deadline to reach an agreement with MLB and NPB, but elected to extend it 24 hours following encouragin­g talks, which ultimately culminated in a tentative agreement being reached on Tuesday.

Starting pitching depth is something Hal Steinbrenn­er feels should be his team’s No. 1 priority in the offseason.

To that end, a pursuit of Otani makes obvious sense. CC Sabathia, 37, beloved for his leadership, could be a candidate to come back, perhaps on a one-year deal in the range of $10-12 million, following his renaissanc­e performanc­e in 2017.

The Bombers are also said to be interested in Rays free-agent righty Alex Cobb, as first reported by Peter Gammons. Cobb, 30, went 12-10 with a 3.66 ERA for Tampa last season. The Cobb sweepstake­s is likely to come down to the Bombers and Cubs, Gammons reported.

Brian Cashman said the initially expectatio­n is for Chad Green to come to spring training as a starter, though he could always go back to his middle relief role, which he was excellent in last season. The Bombers are also high on prospects Justus Sheffield, Chance Adams, Albert Abreu and Domingo Acevedo.

With the Associated Press

 ?? GETTY ?? Aaron Judge’s struggles after the All-Star Game were well-documented on the back pages of the Daily News (below). Was Judge hurt during the HR Derby? Or did he get injured crashing into outfield wall? What we know now is that Judge had surgery on left...
GETTY Aaron Judge’s struggles after the All-Star Game were well-documented on the back pages of the Daily News (below). Was Judge hurt during the HR Derby? Or did he get injured crashing into outfield wall? What we know now is that Judge had surgery on left...
 ??  ?? Shohei Otani
Shohei Otani

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