
Where EAST meets the Northwest

PADRES PITCHER. Japan relief pitcher Yuki Matsui throws the ball during the
eighth inning of the first round Pool B game between South Korea and Japan at
the World Baseball Classic at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, in this March 10, 2023
file photo. Matsui has agreed to a five-year contract with the San Diego Padres.
(AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, File)
From The Asian Reporter, V34, #01 (January 1, 2024), page 14.
Padres, Japanese reliever Yuki Matsui agree to $28-million,
5-year deal
By Ronald Blum
The Associated Press
At 5’8", Yuki Matsui figures to be among the shortest pitchers in the major
leagues.
"It’s a very a clean delivery. Good mechanics. I think pitchers come in all
shape and sizes," San Diego general manager A.J. Preller said after the
28-year-old left-hander agreed to a $28-million, five-year contract with the
Padres. "He’s left-handed. He does things very efficiently. Obviously, there’s
been some great pitchers that have been sub-6-footers and he’s been one of them
so far in Japan."
Matsui made his Japanese big league debut at age 18 and became a five-time
All-Star for the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles, leading the Pacific League in
saves in 2019, 2022, and this year. He had a career-best 39 saves with a 1.57
Earned Run Average (ERA) and 2-3 record this season, striking out 72 and walking
13 in 57 1/3 innings.
He has a 2.40 career ERA, 236 saves, and a 1.11 Walks & Hits per Innings
Pitched (WHIP) in Nippon Professional Baseball. Matsui became the youngest
pitcher in the Japanese major leagues to reach 200 saves.
"He’s got a great track record in Japan really dating back to his amateur
days, somebody that was a highly acclaimed amateur player and then for him to do
what he did really right out of the gate, that’s something that is very unique,"
Preller said. "It’s been a 10-year run of just consistent performance and
excellence."
Because Matsui had nine years of service time, he was a free agent and no
posting fee is involved in his acquisition. The deal includes opt-outs.
Matsui struck out one in a perfect inning for Japan in the World Baseball
Classic against South Korea in the group stage. He threw 15 fastballs averaging
91.7 mph among 23 pitches, mixing in five changeups, two sliders, and one
curveball.
"We know he can pitch in back of the bullpen," Preller said. "So whether
that’s pitching somewhere seven, eight, nine, he’s been at that back of the
bullpen where he’s shook hands as a closer, so we know he can pitch in those big
pressure spots."
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