Fame. If a young guy goes over, he'll end up in the minor league system for a few seasons, until he's developed enough to make it in the bigs. Now for all that time, he's invisible. He won't get publicity in Japan, and nobody's gonna know who he is.
If he stays in Japan, he has a good chance of being called up in his first year. His friends and family will know what he's doing, he'll get much more media exposure, and he has a chance of being a real star. Big fish in a small pond sort of idea.
Salary. Related to above. If he's reasonably talented, he may well earn as much in Japan as he would in the MLB, where he'd have to be a star to receive massive amounts of money. And in any case, if he makes it in Japan, he can then still go over to the MLB (after the nine years, or as Jim suggested, a more reasonable seven).
So, while I see a handful of young guys going over, there will not be the massive numbers some American journalists like to believe. The dream for the vast majority of high school players is to first, play at Koshien, and second, get drafted by a pro team in Japan, preferably the Giants.
Now, what we may see happening is that the guys who miss out might try their luck in the States, but because of the cultural/language difficulties, the number will still be limited. Very limited.
Just my two yen worth.
My point is, if MLB is taking the vast majority of the best Japanese players after they've only had a year or two to shine in Japan, I can't see how NPB can survive in its current form. Fan interest in NPB would almost certainly wane, thus eliminating the ability to pay the kind of competitive salaries they can today.
This process would take several years to really start to have an effect, but once it did, it could gain momentum rapidly. My favorite analogy is erosion for its slow, steady, stealthy start, but its eventual huge results. Further, just like erosion, the process may be prevented or at least greatly impeded by use of carefully thought out and executed countermeasures early on.
I would suspect you are right, however, that right now the focus is on the Japanese stars in MLB, not MLB itself.
Jim Albright
This is a site about Pro Yakyu (Japanese Baseball), not about who the next player to go over to MLB is. It's a community of Pro Yakyu fans who have come together to share their knowledge and opinions with the world. It's a place to follow teams and individuals playing baseball in Japan (and Asia), and to learn about Japanese (and Asian) culture through baseball.
It is my sincere hope that once you learn a bit about what we're about here that you will join the community of contributors.
Michael Westbay
(aka westbaystars)
Founder
The second thing that has caught my eye is what I understand to be the desire of the Japanese youngster (sorry, I've forgotten his name) who is regarded as the likely first pick in the Japanese draft and wants some promises he will be able to pursue a major league career in much less than the 9 years the current agreement between NPB and its players locks up Japanese talent.
In some ways, these two items coincide. It seems to me that so long as NPB locks up Japanese talent for 7 years or more, they're pretty safe, because it will guarantee they have stars. If they go below 5 years, that will be the end of NPB as we know it, because it won't have many stars. It usually takes a year or two for a young Japanese draftee to be productive, and if he's gone in another two or three years if he's really good, NPB will have lost its ability to retain home-grown stars. From 5 to 6 years, I suspect NPB could manage, but to me, that's the gray area.
This young draftee, if he gets his way, could easily tick off veterans who would also like to have a chance. That could fuel contractual out clauses and maybe even a full-scale change in the number of years Japanese talent is locked up. This is a far more likely scenario the more Japanese youngsters (the future generation of ballplayers) agree with the Sports Illustrated writers' assertion about dreaming of MLB over NPB, as there are more players who might be willing to emulate this current young hot prospect.
Also, any sport or league which loses its hold on local youth (the future ticket buyers) is in danger of decline. Such a decline in the attractiveness of NPB could certainly provide fuel for merger. This process is likely to take years to fully develop, even if it is taking root now. That time would permit science to solve the issue which is often mentioned as a bar to a trans-Pacific baseball league: that of lengthy travel. We have the technology to travel the Pacific in the time it takes an ordinary jet to travel the 3,000 miles or so from the East Coast of the U.S. to the West Coast or vice versa. However, the Concorde was not economically viable. If science could find a way to make such travel economically viable, that issue would essentially disappear.
I don't mean to suggest that even if such an idea is taking root in Japanese youth (and I have no way to measure if it is even occurring), that NPB will not continue to exist as we know it. However, if one wishes to keep NPB as it is, NPB must find ways to keep this thought from being prevalent in Japan's youth for its own health. If the NPB can't stop this idea from gaining steam, it may find itself unable to maintain its current status. As I've maintained in other threads on the future of NPB, its ability to keep some stars and its rank and file players are essential to maintaining its current high level independent status.
What do you folks think?
Jim Albright