Genei Sato commits to Penn State, forgoing NPB draft

Japanese right-hander Genei Sato, previously reported to be planning a U.S. college transfer, has committed to Penn State University. The Nittany Lions announced the move Monday, allowing him to pursue the 2027 MLB Draft directly without the NPB posting system.

A week after reports surfaced of his intent to bypass Japan's NPB draft for NCAA eligibility, Genei Sato has chosen Penn State. The 5-foot-11 righty from Sendai University in Shibata, Japan, will enroll for the fall 2026 semester, positioning him for the 2027 MLB amateur draft.

Sato, projected as a first-round NPB pick, boasts a 2.22 ERA with nearly 11 strikeouts per nine innings at Sendai, featuring a triple-digit fastball and elite splitter. He impressed versus the USA Collegiate National Team this summer, fanning six in 4 1/3 innings. UCLA's Roch Cholowsky, a top MLB prospect, raved: "He's real. (He) was like 97-99 throwing a splitter at like 92. A lot of ride on the fastball. Throws his splitter hard but has depth on it, too."

Penn State coach Mike Gambino called Sato a "premium arm" in the announcement: "When Genei's camp reached out... this is a premium arm. He's in the conversation among best arms in Japan and was considered a top draft prospect in the Nippon league and has the potential to be a top round pick here."

Sato joins a wave of Japanese amateurs like Stanford's Rintaro Sasaki, Chicago White Sox prospect Rikuu Nishida, and Georgia's Kenny Ishikawa opting for U.S. colleges to fast-track MLB dreams.

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Illustration of Genei Sato, Japanese pitcher planning U.S. college transfer for 2027 MLB draft eligibility.
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Genei Sato planerar övergång till USA för MLB-draften 2027

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Högerhänta Genei Sato, tredjeårsstudent vid Sendai University i Japan, avser att byta till ett amerikanskt college i februari 2026 för att bli draftbar till MLB-draften 2027. 21-årige kastaren, som ses som en potentiell förstanamning i Japans NPB-draft 2026, kommer att spela sommarboll i USA innan. Detta följer en växande trend bland japanska amatörer som söker vägar till Major League Baseball via NCAA-program.

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