Free Agency comes to Japan[1] This has been lowered to nine since this article was written.
In keeping with the authorized view of Japan as the land of consensus and compromise, rather than litigation and coercion, the system of salary arbitration and free agency developed out of negotiations between labor and management and were not imposed by the courts, as they were in the majors. The person who was perhaps most responsible for the sudden arrival of free agency may have been Akinobu Okada, the head of the player's negotiators. He refused to let the owners stall another year on the issue by promising to strike on opening day of 1994 if they didn't approve some system.
Well, the players got free agency, and just to show their compassion toward labor which Japanese management frequently boasts, the Tigers made sure that Okada would be the first player fired at the season's end. There's nothing wrong with dumping Okada, since he hasn't been any good for a couple of years. In fact, it was a smart move. To me that was the give away. I mean, if the Tigers make a smart move, they have to have some ulterior motive.
What's the difference between free agency here and in the States?
Structurally, the two systems aren't very similar. In the majors there is no limit on salaries to be offered to players changing teams, and compensation comes from draft choices. In Japan, compensation to teams losing free agents will be in terms of cash and perhaps a player who is not one of the forty players protected by the signing team. This means that if another team takes one of your free agents that you might pick up their forty-first best player. That's not much. It's not nearly as damaging as the loss of top draft choices in the majors.
Another BIG difference is that in the U.S., players have to have six years of service in order to file for free agency, but in Japan it's ten [1]. This guarantees that very few Japanese free agents will be in their prime. Of course, the players who do make it to free agency before the age of thirty will be those who were good enough to play in their teens. Position players in this category often develop far beyond other players who don't break in until their twenties. Except for these rare few, I don't think any free agents are going to have much of an impact.
A few of the better players, if they fill a complete gap on a contenting team, may influence a pennant race. I don't think any of the players available this year could turn either Daiei or Lotte into a contender [2]. This is not to say that there are no good players around. Matsunaga, Makihara, and Komada are all pretty good if they're healthy, but we can't expect them to retain their skill levels for much longer.
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
I am writing a paper for a University class on the difference between American and Japanese baseball Arbitration. Directly, if a player in Japan can file for arbitration and how often it is done. I would like to contrast an American player that has filed for arbitration in Japan (or if a player has not, why) and a Japanese player that has filed in the MLB.
If you could please provide any information at all on this topic that you think would be useful, it would be very much appreciated. Also, if anyone knows of any place where I might be able to find information on this topic it would be much appreciated. The information that I have been able to gather so far on your website has been very useful.
Thank you very much for any help you can lend.