Roh Si-hwan signed an 11-year, $30.7 billion won contract with a major league club through MLB's international posting system, while Song Sung-mun and a third Korean player secured deals that pushed the combined value past $50 million. The transactions mark the largest cluster of Korean signings in a single offseason since the posting system's 2013 restructuring.
All three players came through the posting process, which allows Nippon Professional Baseball and Korea Baseball Organization clubs to make players available to MLB teams for a posting fee capped at $1.25 million per player. The clubs avoided pre-arbitration cost uncertainty by locking in multi-year guarantees, a pattern that started appearing after Shohei Ohtani's initial Angels deal proved the posting system could deliver franchise-altering talent below market arbitration trajectories. Roh, a 23-year-old infielder, was the centerpiece—his $30.7 billion won ($22 million USD equivalent) over 11 years carries an average annual value below $2 million, structurally closer to a top international amateur signing than a free-agent veteran.
The timing reflects two market forces. First, the KBO's broadcast revenue has plateaued, making posting fees an attractive liquidity event for Korean clubs that face static domestic sponsorship growth. Second, MLB front offices are pricing in arbitration risk differently after recent cases showed players with two strong seasons can command $10 million+ in year three. A posted player on a pre-arbitration deal with club options effectively locks in cost certainty through age 28-30, the exact window teams previously overpaid for in free agency. One AL executive noted his club ran comps on Roh against signing a 29-year-old utility infielder at $8 million annually—the posted player returned higher expected surplus value by year four.
The signings also matter for Korean sponsors eyeing MLB inventory. Roh's deal puts a Korean position player in a major market for the next decade, creating clean activation windows for Seoul-based brands that struggled to justify MLB sponsorships when their players were relegated to minor league depth charts. A Japanese trading company paid an estimated $15 million over three years for Ohtani-adjacent inventory before he became Ohtani; Korean conglomerates are now asking clubs about similar packages tied to Roh's debut timeline. One team president mentioned a preliminary conversation with a Korean electronics manufacturer about naming rights to a spring training facility, contingent on the posted player making the Opening Day roster.
Watch whether other KBO clubs accelerate posting windows. Song's deal was reported within 72 hours of Roh's, suggesting clubs coordinated to avoid cannibalizing each other's MLB interest. If the model holds, expect four to six additional Korean players to enter the posting process before the 2026 season, particularly middle relievers and corner outfielders who profile as arbitration-cost hedges. Also watch for Japanese clubs to adjust posting fees upward—NPB teams still control Roki Sasaki's timeline, and his agency is reviewing the Korean contract structures for pricing comps.
The contracts are smaller than the headlines suggest, but the pattern is the point. MLB teams just bought 33 years of team control for roughly the cost of one $50 million free agent, and Korean front offices turned three roster spots into immediate cash. The next posting cycle starts in November 2025.