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Is Fukudome Really That Great?

22
Vote

by Mlbrumorsguy

Outfielder Kosuke Fukudome is expected to make his announcement tonight on whether or not he is coming to the United States, but reports have already come out saying that he will be. The Cubs, Padres, Rangers, and White Sox are believed to be the four teams that have made an offer to him, and a decision is expected as early as tonight. The reason I bring this up is because the level of play in Japan is not as good as it is here, so if he can make the switch and perform is in question. Not only that, but he is coming off surgery, after playing just 81 games. So his endurance is in question for next season and whether or not he can perform at a .305 average with 20-25 homeruns. He is drawing comparisons to Hideki Matsui, but I look at him more as a "better Aki Iwamura."

Hideki Matsui hit .334 with 50 HR and 107 RBI in 2002 with Yomiuri Giants. The year before, he hit .333 with 36 HR and 106 RBI. When he came over and signed with the Yankees, the following year he hit .287 with 16 HR and 106 RBI in 123 more at-bats than 2002. He was not coming off surgery the year before, and had 500 at-bats compared to Fukudome's 269. The year after he hit 31 HR and batted .298, but has started to decline since then. Fukudome is 30, and it is possible we could see that similar occurrence.

Aki Iwamura of the Tampa Bay Rays hit .311 with 32 HR and 77 RBI in 2006 for the Swallows. The year before that, he hit .319 with 30 HR and 102 RBI. Last season with the Devil Rays, he hit .285 with 7 HR and 34 RBI. Obviously the numbers do not transform like you would think and if you look at Fukudome's stats, they are not as good as either Matsui or Iwamura in Japan.

Now maybe Fukudome would be like Kenji Johjima, who has batted .289 with 32 HR and 137 RBI in two seasons with the Mariners. The year before in Japan, he batted .309 with 24 HR and 57 RBI, so it is pretty similar. However, he had 200 more at-bats than Fukudome did this year so it brings into question his endurance.

I'm not saying that Kosuke Fukudome would be a bad signing, but I think that he is being way over hyped. Look at how over-rated Daisuke Matsuzaka was when he came over. He put up fourteen wins, but it does not look that good because everyone was expecting his 'gyro ball' to get him 20 wins. I think the Cubs and Padres are the two leading candidates, and whoever signs him has made a good signing. However, do not expect him to be like Hideki Matsui. Expect a mix between Aki Iwamura and Kenji Johjima, someone who will hit .275-.290, with about 10-20 homeruns. I expect a signing to happen in the next couple of days, probably a four year deal between 10-13 million dollars annually. As for who is the front-runner, a lot of people are saying the Cubs, but my money is on the Padres.


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KelsdadAll-Star
748 days ago
Score 2+-
I take it you haven't seen the Cubs offer.
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RomiezzoLegend
748 days ago
Score 2+-
It was 45 million for 3 years, wasn't it?
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KelsdadAll-Star
748 days ago
Score -1+-
No, that was the Padres offer. Cubs are offering Soriano money, 14-15 million a year.
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I am a cpcpMajor Leaguer
748 days ago
Score 2+-
Last time I checked 45 divided by three was... 15.
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Niteowl049AAA-er
748 days ago
Score 0+-
Have read that Fukudome is a cross between Ichiro and Hideki Matsui but it may like mlbrumorsguy says and turn out to be a cross between Iwamura and Johjima.
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DNLLegend
748 days ago
Score 1+-
I've said something like that before, but really, he's neither. Fukudome is a high OBP, doubles-power player. I see him as a Derrek Lee type with more walks and fewer homers; say, 40 doubles, 100 walks, 15-20 homers.
Permalink
KrafticusSoccer Kid
748 days ago
Score 0+-
I am not all for him myself. I think is over 30, and could face injuries this season. Outside of Ichiro, it seems that most Japanese players find it much harder than expected to play the longer, grinding season. The travel is unlike anything in Japan, which could hamper him down. Also, I hope they aren't hoping for the Japanese marketing dollars, as the Sox with 2 players (1 with extreme hype) didn't see much increase in the international dollars. Anything to help the Cubs though, could be good. I would like to see the Sox and Cubs in the fall classic (with the Sox winning in 4 of course)
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Kwitt11Varsity Captain
748 days ago
Score 0+-
Hideki Matsui played in over 500 MLB games in a row before a bad injury last year. His career 1st half OPS is .856, his 2nd half OPS is .856, and his September OPS is .857.
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I am a cpcpMajor Leaguer
748 days ago
Score 0+-
I'm surprised at how much the rich MLB teams keep being so enamored by Japanese players. For every Ichiro there are fifteen Dice-Ks that are only average players in the bigs.
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RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
748 days ago
Score 1+-
I'd give Matsuzaka more than one season before he's called "average." And I wouldv'e used Tsuyoshi Shinjo as an example.
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Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
748 days ago
Score 2+-
CPCP, the Japanese players generate revenue more than they get paid. Tampa Bay games were covered HEAVILY by a dedicated media contingency. Hell, there's as many Asian beat reporters covering the Rays as there is local beat reporters. For ONE player - Aki!

I was also in the press box for the Yankees - Rays game in April for Hideki Matsui's first game back from injury as well as Kei Igawa getting the start and it was STUFFED with more Japanese reporters than North American.

Don't underestimate the economic impact in signing a seemingly sub par player to a big contract - there's more to the business of baseball than the actual game of baseball - in fact, the game is the smallest part it seems sometimes!
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RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
748 days ago
Score 0+-
Everytime I see Fukudome's name, I think of that guy who climbed the boards in Philly in an attempt to fight Tie Domi. He must have been saying something similar to Fuk u dome when he did it.
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KelsdadAll-Star
748 days ago
Score 0+-
And the revenue they generate in JAPAN is what Manny means. Sales of US ML teams merchandise in Japan outsells JAPANESE ML merchandise in Japan. If the Cubs or Padres want to give a Triple A player 12-15 million a season its their business, hell, the Red Sox gave that amount to one of their own minor leaguers and won the World Series, so there is a precedent for this type contract structure.
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