3 teams that will regret not signing Kodai Senga while they had the chance

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 21: Kodai Senga #41 of Japanpitches during the Game 2 of the Championship Round of the 2017 World Baseball Classic between United States and Japan at Dodger Stadium on March 21, 2017 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Masterpress/Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 21: Kodai Senga #41 of Japanpitches during the Game 2 of the Championship Round of the 2017 World Baseball Classic between United States and Japan at Dodger Stadium on March 21, 2017 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Masterpress/Getty Images) /
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New York Yankees, Kodai Senga, Mets
YOKOHAMA, JAPAN – AUGUST 07: Pitcher Kodai Senga #21 of Team Japan delivers a pitch in the sixth inning against Team United States during the gold medal game between Team United States and Team Japan on day fifteen of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Yokohama Baseball Stadium on August 07, 2021 in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan. (Photo by Koji Watanabe/Getty Images) /

Kodai Senga signed with the New York Mets on Saturday night, as Steve Cohen went further over the luxury tax in the process.

Kodai Senga, though an unproven commodity at this juncture, was largely considered a second-tier starting pitcher on the free-agent market. With the likes of Justin Verlander and Jacob deGrom signing quickly, however, Senga became a priority for teams that had missed out on an obvious pitching upgrade so far this offseason.

Carlos Rodon remains available, and he’s an All-Star caliber starter who wants a reported seven-year deal. At 29 years old, that would be more attainable if Rodon didn’t have a complicated injury history, which has worried teams in the past.

Senga, while unproven as previously mentioned due to his lack of MLB experience, signed for a five-year deal worth $75 million. That’s likely less years and AAV than Rodon will receive, and he got it from the Mets, a team that (we assumed) had very little money to spend at this point in the offseason.

Yet, Steve Cohen surprised us all.

San Francisco Giants had a chance at Kodai Senga

The San Francisco Giants need to make a major splash in the free-agent market, and have now been outbid for both Aaron Judge and Kodai Senga.

Carlos Rodon, arguably the best free-agent pitcher available, was also on their pitching staff last season. Eventually, one would think Giants general manager Farhan Zaidi would connect.

Judge was always a longshot considering the Yankees were the other team involved in negotiations. Not only that, but he’s a homegrown Yankee. As much as San Francisco played up Judge being from the Bay Area, to suggest that he’d leave New York — where he has a chance to be the first true captain since Derek Jeter and the face of an era in The Bronx — just to come home is farfetched.

Senga, though, makes plenty of sense! San Francisco needs a front-end rotation starter, and Senga would’ve offered just that and brought in a new sector of the fanbase at the same time. Sadly, New York benefits again.