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Saturday, November 18
 
Suzuki signs deal with Mariners

Associated Press

KYOTO, Japan -- Ichiro Suzuki, signed Saturday by the Seattle Mariners, isn't worried about the pressure of being the first Japanese position player in major league baseball.

The 27-year-old right fielder, the best hitter in Japan, believes he has the ability to make the transition a success.

"I'm confident, or I wouldn't be sitting here right now," he said after signing a three-year contract.

The team did not disclose the terms of the deal, but the Mariners have agreed to pay Suzuki's former team, the Orix BlueWave, $13 million for the right to negotiate with him.

"The Mariners recognize that Ichiro is one of the very best baseball players in the world," said Howard Lincoln, Seattle's chief executive. "He has tremendous talent and will fit nicely with our team and organization."

Lincoln and five other Mariners executives spent three days negotiating with Suzuki's agent, Tony Attanasio, in Kobe, home of the Orix BlueWave.

Suzuki, who speaks little English, said that playing with the Mariners during spring training in 1999 helped convince him he wanted to be in the majors.

"Playing with the Mariners is like a dream come true," he said. "It is good to be joining a team that was successful last season and to be a teammate of my friend Kazu Sasaki."

Kazuhiro Sasaki, a former star in Japan's Central League, is Seattle's bullpen ace.

Suzuki has won seven straight batting titles with the BlueWave in Japan's Pacific League. He hit .387 last season.

Suzuki was reportedly asking for a contract of more than four years and an annual salary of about $7.4 million. He was said to have made about $5.5 million this season.

Several Japanese pitchers, including Sasaki, have gone on to play in the majors. Doubts have remained concerning position players, with questions about their speed and power.

But the Mariners are convinced Suzuki will produce.

Suzuki is expected to arrive in Seattle on Nov. 28 and take a team physical the next day.

The Mariners plan to play him in right field. Jay Buhner, who often played right field last season, is a free agent, and team officials said Saturday that if he re-signs with Seattle, he would do so knowing his role would change.




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