South Korean pitcher Roh Si-hwan has signed an 11-year contract worth ₩30.7 billion (~$24M USD) through MLB's posting system, the longest guaranteed term ever awarded to a Korean pitcher entering the major leagues. The deal frontloads security over annual value, a structure typically reserved for position players with lower injury risk. The signing club has not been disclosed, though posting agreements require payment to the Korea Baseball Organization team before contract terms finalize.
Roh, 23, posted a 3.25 ERA across 162 innings in the 2024 KBO season with the NC Dinos, striking out 138 while walking 47. He throws a mid-90s fastball with a tight slider, profile characteristics American front offices grade as fourth-starter ceiling with middle-relief floor. The posting fee paid to NC is estimated at 10-15% of the contract value, a cost absorbed by the signing team outside the luxury tax calculation. Roh's agent, Scott Boras, negotiated similar long-term structures for other international arms including Kodai Senga's five-year $75M Mets deal in 2022, though Senga carried superior overseas velocity metrics.
The length matters more than the average annual value. At $2.2M per season, Roh's deal sits below the $3-5M range typically paid to MLB relievers with arbitration leverage, suggesting the buying team views him as a rotation project requiring patience through multiple minor-league assignments. Eleven years locks in club control through Roh's age-34 season, covering what would normally be six years of team control plus five free-agent years. The structure implies ownership belief in development infrastructure—advanced biomechanics labs, pitch design coordinators—that didn't exist when earlier Korean pitchers like Chan Ho Park entered on shorter deals.
The contract creates downstream effects in how MLB teams value KBO arms. Roh's signing follows a winter where multiple Korean position players—Kim Ha-seong's extension talks in San Diego, Lee Jung-hoo's $113M Giants deal last year—reset international pricing. Front offices now treat the KBO as a peer league to NPB for everyday players but still discount pitchers due to smaller ball, tighter strike zone, and lower average fastball velocity. Roh's 11-year guarantee suggests one organization decided those adjustments matter less than locking in cost certainty during the pitcher's prime aging curve.
The timing intersects with MLB's broader international strategy. Commissioner Rob Manfred has pushed for an international draft to replace the posting system, which allows deep-pocketed teams to bypass bonus pools. Roh's deal—structured outside draft constraints—exemplifies why small-market clubs support the proposed change. If the international draft launches in 2027 as currently negotiated, Roh becomes one of the final Korean pitchers to secure nine-figure career earnings through unrestricted bidding.
Watch for the buying team's disclosure within 72 hours, required under posting rules once medical clearance completes. Roh's first spring training assignment will signal whether the club views him as a 2025 September callup or a 2026 rotation candidate after a full Triple-A season. The KBO's NC Dinos are expected to use the posting fee to pursue a veteran shortstop before their spring camp opens in early February. Two other KBO pitchers—both age 25 or younger—are reportedly considering posting requests before the 2025 season, and their agents will use Roh's AAV as the new floor.