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The Developmental Player System (育成選手制度, Ikusei Sensyu Seido) is a system that allows players to be held for the purpose of training players separately from the 70 registered players under control of each team created in the fall of 2005 at Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB).[1] It is akin to the practice squads seen in other sports.
The system was established in 2005 to create an environment in which amateur players could gain playing experience after company-owned amateur baseball teams were folding following the economic recession of the Lost Decades.[2] Players who are part of the system are considered "semi-controlled" in that they play for the team they are signed to but they are not a controlled player and thus their team doe not have exclusive rights to them.[3]
The Developmental Player System include players drafted as rookies (e.g. Yusuke Kosai, Michitaka Nishiyama), foreign players signed as developmental players (e.g., Raidel Martínez, Liván Moinelo), players drafted as registered players under control but re-signed with a team as developmental players due to their abilities (e.g., Kenta Kurose), players who became free agents with their former team and signed with another team (e.g., Masaru Nakamura, Kouya Fujii), and players who were removed from the registration of players under control and re-signed as a developmental player as an injury rehabilitation assignment (e.g., Takuya Kuwahara, Hiroya Shimamoto). There is an argument that de-registering players who cannot play due to injury and re-signing them as developmental players will protect their careers; on the other hand, the use of the developmental players system, instead of systems like the Major League Baseball (MLB) Injured list, is criticized as contrary to the original intent of this system to develop and provide opportunities to amateur players.[4] The oldest player to become a developmental player is Soichi Fujita, who signed in 2011 at the age of 39. The longest period as a developmental player was Kousuke Naruse 's eight seasons (2011-2018) as of the 2022 season.
The developmental player system, which began in the 2005 season, has been successful in producing major players for each team (e.g. Yoshiki Sunada, Yuji Nishino). The Yomiuri Giants, who have been heavily utilizing this system since the beginning, have signed more than 50 developmental players as their registered players under control as of the 2022 season. The Fukuoka Softbank Hawks have also signed 40 developmental players as their registered players under control, and have produced players like Kodai Senga and Takuya Kai who have won league titles and awards and represented Japanese baseball on the national baseball team.[20] The Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters, which had been reluctant to acquire developmental players, drafted a player as a developmental player for the first time in the 2018 draft.[21] In the 2022 draft, 51 players will be selected as developmental players, the largest number in history, and the acquisition of developmental players is a growing trend.[22]
Player Name | Team | enrollment | League Titles and Awards |
---|---|---|---|
Shuta Ishikawa | Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks | 2013 Draft. | 1× Pacific League winning percentage leader (2020) 1× Pacific League the most wins Champion (2020) Pitched a no-hitter on August 18, 2023 |
Takuya Kai | Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks | 2010 Draft. | 6× Pacific League Golden Glove Award (2017–2022) 3× Pacific League Best Nine Award (2017, 2020. 2022) |
Raidel Martínez | Chunichi Dragons | Signed in 2017. | 1× Central League Saves leader (2022) |
Tetsuya Matsumoto | Yomiuri Giants | 2006 Draft. | 1× Central League Rookie of the Year (2009) |
Liván Moinelo | Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks | Signed in 2017. | 1× Pacific League Best Relief Pitcher Award (2020) 1× Pacific League Holds leader (2020) |
Yoshifumi Okada | Chiba Lotte Marines | 2008 Draft. | 2× Pacific League Golden Glove Award (2011, 2012) |
Yariel Rodríguez | Chunichi Dragons | Signed in 2020. | 1× Central League Best Relief Pitcher Award (2022) 1× Central League Holds leader (2022) |
Kodai Senga | Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks | 2010 Draft. | 2× Pacific League strikeout leader (2019, 2020) 1× Pacific League ERA leader (2020) 1× Pacific League winning percentage leader (2017) 1× Pacific League the most wins champion (2020) 2× Pacific League Best Nine Award (2019, 2020) 2× Pacific League Golden Glove Award (2019, 2020) Pitched a no-hitter on September 6, 2019 |
Ukyo Shuto | Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks | 2017 Draft. | 1×Pacific League Stolen bases Leader (2020) |
Tetsuya Yamaguchi | Yomiuri Giants | 2005 Draft. | 1× Central League Rookie of the Year (2009) 3× Central League Best Relief Pitcher Award (2009, 2012-2013) |
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