Phillies Reportedly a Top Candidate to Sign Yoshinobu Yamamoto
Yoshinobu Yamamoto is the great lure of the 2023-24 MLB offseason. The mystery of an international free agent with an incredible ceiling appeals to Philadelphia Phillies fans in a way that retaining Aaron Nola doesn’t.
Should Dave Dombrowski and the Phillies pursue the great unknown from Japan or stay with the old reliable option who has built one of the best track records of any pitcher in franchise history? The incredible contrast could define Philadelphia’s offseason.
Yoshinobu Yamamoto
The 25-year-old right-hander has played seven seasons at the highest level of professional baseball in Japan. He has won the Japanese equivalent of the Cy Young Award three times and two MVP awards.
Yamamoto also helped Japan win the 2023 World Baseball Classic. He’ll likely sign with an MLB team after his Japanese club officially posts him. Alex Coffey cited a major league scout who expects the Phillies to be “one of the top five or six suitors for his services” this offseason.
The Phillies have never been a major factor in the market for Japanese free agents. However, they can’t ignore a significant source of major league talent in the Far East if they consider themselves a World Series contender.
Should the Phillies Finally Pursue Japanese Talent?
The Phillies will count on Zack Wheeler as their top starter in 2024. Who will pitch behind him? Will they eventually settle the negotiations with Aaron Nola? The familiarity is attractive for Dombrowski compared to other potential acquisitions.
Despite Nola’s shortcomings, he is more accomplished than trade candidate Dylan Cease and more durable than free agent Blake Snell. The organization knows what kind of pitcher Nola is after nine seasons in Philadelphia. Yamamoto comes with numerous question marks.
Scott Lauber spoke on The Best Show Ever about “great stuff” and “terrific numbers” for Yamamoto. He also thinks Yamamoto has a good chance to cost the highest raw contract total of any free-agent pitcher who signs this offseason. The lack of familiarity has to be a factor when weighing the Japanese phenom against Nola, however.
The era of analytics significantly impacts the perception of MLB front offices. When they don’t have the same terms of advanced statistics available from Nippon Professional Baseball in Japan, are they going to solely trust Yamamoto’s track record of impressive hardware? They have a pitcher who has already performed well by advanced metrics over a long period who wouldn’t mind staying in Philadelphia.
A Quick History Lesson
The Phillies have never made the big splash with Daisuke Matsuzaka or Shohei Ohtani, but they have signed an international starting pitcher with a high variance of potential outcomes entering his MLB career. Miguel Alfredo Gonzelez became the talk of Philadelphia in 2013 when Ruben Amaro Jr. became desperate to keep the window of championship contention open.
MLB scouts and executives and local media changed the bar of expectations for the Cuban righty within the span of a few weeks. They went from calling him a future force at the top of an MLB to an expected third starter by the time he signed. The projected value of his contract changed drastically through the negotiation period. He ultimately made six relief appearances with the Phillies on a three-year contract.
The documented track record of Yamamoto is more extensive than the information the Phillies had on Miguel Alfredo Gonzalez. However, the history lesson should remind them that the appeal of uncertainty isn’t necessarily better than the known option.
Phillies fans and members of the organization have reasonably become frustrated with Nola at times during his tenure in Philadelphia. However, the mystery of Japanese talent doesn’t outweigh an MLB track record. Dombrowski’s decision must come to the legwork of the international scouts and the assessment of Nola’s future against the expectations of Yamamoto.
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