Yankees sign Japanese pitcher Masahiro Tanaka for $155m contract

New York Yankees win race to sign Japanese star with seven-year deal plus $20m to the Rakuten Golden Eagles

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Masahiro Tanaka pitches for Japan during the World Baseball Classic at Tokyo Dome in Tokyo
Masahiro Tanaka pitches for Japan during the World Baseball Classic at the Tokyo Dome. Photograph: Toru Takahashi/AP

The New York Yankees and prized Japanese pitcher Masahiro Tanaka agreed to a $155 million, seven-year contract on Wednesday.

In addition to the deal with Tanaka, the Yankees must pay a $20 million fee to the Japanese team of the 25-year-old right-hander, the Rakuten Golden Eagles.

Tanaka caps an offseason in which the Yankees added catcher Brian McCann and outfielders Jacoby Ellsbury and Carlos Beltran. The four big deals totaled $438 million.

"We're going to do what we've got to do to win," Yankees co-chairman Hank Steinbrenner said. "We had to make sure we had enough pitching to go together with our new lineup."

Major League Baseball teams had until Friday to reach an agreement with Tanaka, who was 24-0 with a 1.27 ERA last year as the Golden Eagles won the Japan Series.

His agreement calls for $22 million in each of the first six seasons and $23 million in 2020, and it allows him to terminate the deal after the 2017 season and become a free agent.

Tanaka receives the highest contract for an international free agent and the fifth largest deal for a pitcher, trailing only those of the Los Angeles Dodgers' Clayton Kershaw ($215 million), Detroit's Justin Verlander ($180 million), Seattle's Felix Hernandez ($175 million) and the Yankees' CC Sabathia ($161 million under his original agreement with New York).

Tanaka replaces the retired Andy Pettitte in the rotation, and joins Sabathia, Hiroki Kuroda and Ivan Nova.

His deal pushes the Yankees' payroll for purposes of the luxury tax over $203 million. Barring trades, there is little chance New York will get under the $189 million tax threshold.

Yankees managing general partner Hal Steinbrenner had been saying for two years that getting under the tax threshold in 2014 was a goal but wouldn't get in the way of fielding a contending team.

"There has been criticism of myself and my brother the last couple years that, gee, if our dad was still in charge, we'd be spending this and spending that and doing whatever it takes to win," Hank Steinbrenner said, referring to late Yankees owner George Steinbrenner.

"He didn't have revenue sharing, at least for most of his time," Hank Steinbrenner added. "That's what these people in the sports media don't seem to get. If it wasn't for revenue sharing, we'd have a payroll of $300 million a year if we wanted to. So we're doing this despite having to pay all that revenue sharing."

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