11/20/07 5:55 PM ET
Tribe lands Japan's Kobayashi
Reliever inks two-year contract with option for 2010
By Anthony Castrovince / MLB.com

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"His slider is his out pitch," Mirabelli said. "He can throw it any time for strikes. His strength is he's very durable. He's resilient, he can go day-to-day, and he has experience. Put the sum of all those parts together, and you've got a pretty good pitcher." Still, in signing Kobayashi, the Indians, who are usually leery of granting multi-year contracts to relievers, are taking a risk that his stuff will play out in the States. "I'd give every player a one-year deal, if I had my choice," Shapiro said with a smile. "But the market is what the market is. We're talking about a guy who has a very consistent track record of closing ballgames. That consistency makes us comfortable with a two-year deal." Only two Japanese pitchers, other than Kobayashi, have had 200 or more saves in their careers -- Kazuhiro Sasaki and Shingo Takatsu, both of whom have pitched in the Majors. Kobayashi was a member of the Japanese Olympic team in 2005 and the Lotte team that won the Japan Series in 2005. But Kobayashi struggled a bit in 2007, losing a career-high seven games and putting up a 3.61 ERA in 49 appearances. He spent some time on the injured list toward the end of the year with what was labeled "neck irritation," but both Kobayashi and Mirabelli said that was a phantom injury used to send the pitcher down on the farm for a short time after his club had clinched a playoff berth and other pitchers needed innings. Kobayashi was back in the mix for the Japanese playoffs. "I feel healthy," said Kobayashi, who passed the Indians' physical examination Tuesday morning. Now, he has to feel up to the challenge of acclimating to life in a new country and a city he's almost completely unfamiliar with. "Beautiful lake," he said when asked about his knowledge of Cleveland, "and the city has the Indians." That's all he knows. The Indians know they'll hire a full-time translator to smooth Kobayashi's transition, and they expect him to mesh well with a roster already comprised of players from Venezuela, the Dominican Republic and Korea, as well as the U.S. "Baseball is rapidly becoming a multi-cultural game," Shapiro said. "With the kind of attitude our players have, they're going to embrace him and make him feel like part of the team." Kobayashi wasn't eligible for free agency until this year. Once he made the decision to head to the Majors, the Indians were among his most aggressive suitors. "The Indians showed the most interest in me," he said. "I knew the Indians were one of the best teams in Major League Baseball. I was so impressed that they had interest in me."
Anthony Castrovince is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.













