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In a rather historic commitment, highly-touted Japanese right-hander Genei Sato announced his commitment to Penn State, signaling a massive win for the Nittany Lions program. The closer for the Japanese Collegiate National Team this past summer, Sato will enroll in classes this summer and join the team in the fall.

“It’s pretty cool, and it’s pretty special,” said head coach Mike Gambino in an interview with ROAR+ on Monday.

Gambino would go on to mention Penn State’s previous successes this calendar year, which included recruiting Gavin McKenna and Masanosuke Ono, as “paving the path” for Soto to choose the Nittany Lions.

One of the top prospects for the Nippon Professional Baseball draft, Sato will forgo a potential first-round selection to find a pathway to the major leagues without participating in the posting system.

While some notable bats have attempted this, including Stanford’s Rintaro Sasaki, Soto is the first noteworthy arm to make the jump. As a result of his timeline, Sato will be eligible for the 2027 MLB Draft, despite being 21 years of age in 2026.

For Penn State, this is a massive move that will have long-lasting repercussions. The last time the program reached the postseason was in 2000, while their most recent first-round selection was Nate Bump in 1998.

They have not had a top-three round selection in that timespan, either, though things have trended up since Gambino came to Happy Valley. In 2025, the program had five draftees, which ties the highest mark in program history. 2007 was the only other year in program history to feature five draftees.

With that said, Sato’s upside is tantalizing, and he will enter the United States with fanfare and high expectations. During a sweep of the USA Collegiate National Team in July, Sato served as the closer, striking out six batters and relinquishing just three hits, one run, and one walk to a talented lineup that included Roch Cholowsky, AJ Gracia, Drew Burress, and more.

Sato’s heater was the most successful offering during the series, generating 11 whiffs and sitting in the mid-90s, reaching back for 99 mph. His command and shapes can get inconsistent, though evaluators have mentioned that Sato can generate considerable ride out of his high slot, generating whiffs in the upper half of the strike zone.

His best secondary is a hard splitter that tunnels exceptionally well with the fastball, diving out of his hand in the low-90s. It’s an offering that features solid depth and will generate empty swings when located away from lefties consistently. There’s a softer, low-80s slider with two-plane tilt, though it lags behind the fastball/splitter duo.

Sato stacks his backside rather well and has a delivery reminiscent of previous Japanese hurlers, which includes a high leg kick that draws inward before kick-stepping his way down the bump.

The biggest challenge that Sato will face in his first-round aspirations will be his size and adapting to collegiate hitting.

At 5-foot-11, 180 pounds, Sato’s frame is atypical of a starter’s frame. His size isn’t a disqualifier, but it will be something that works against him in evaluations. The athleticism and pure stuff give him an edge, though.

His arsenal should play right away in the collegiate landscape, though he’ll need to prove his ability to start in 2027. As of now, he has top-three-round upside.

This article first appeared on Just Baseball and was syndicated with permission.

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