Yukihito Taguchi-USA TODAY Sports

With the Mets‘ rotation likely to take a considerable hit come the August 1st trade deadline, the blue and orange will undoubtedly have to add to their rotation this coming offseason.

Even if Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander stay in Queens past August 1st, there will be a hole in the rotation next season, with Carlos Carrasco set to become an unrestricted free agent.

The likes of Julio Urias, Blake Snell, and Shohei Ohtani will likely be available on the open market, but what if the Mets went overseas for the second straight season to sign a Japanese pitcher?

The Mets are taking a look at Yoshinobu Yamamoto.

According to SNY, New York Mets general manager Billy Eppler traveled to Japan earlier this year to watch the Orix Buffaloes’ 24-year-old ace, Yoshinobu Yamamoto. The Buffaloes are expected to make the righty available via the posting system for MLB teams this winter.

Yamamoto has pitched 101.1 innings across 14 starts to a 1.61 ERA and has struck out 110. In addition, the 24-year-old is a four-time all-star, two-time Eiji Sawamura Award winner, the Japanese baseball equivalent of the Cy-Young, and a two-time Pacific League MVP.

With Yamamoto only set to turn 25 next month, he will not be subject to MLB’s international bonus rules and, with him being posted, will be eligible to sign any size contract he wants.

Many teams are expected to be vying for Yamamoto’s services, with eight teams being confirmed to have sent scouts to his most recent start. The Mets, however, have an advantage that other teams do not: Billy Eppler.

The Eppler advantage

Many of the most notable players that have come over from Japan in recent years have had Eppler’s fingerprints on them.

Eppler was the assistant general manager of the Yankees when the blue and white signed Masahiro Tanaka to the largest contract ever for a posted Japanese player.

Then as the general manager of the Angels, he signed Shohei Ohtani, who has blossomed into the face of baseball, before signing Kodai Senga this past offseason as general manager of the Mets.

Eppler’s experience and connections in Japan, combined with the checkbook of Steve Cohen, could be the formula necessary to sign what many expect to be baseball’s next Japanese superstar.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Watch: Bryson DeChambeau pays tribute to the late Payne Stewart after winning U.S. Open
Rory McIlroy chokes away U.S. Open with pair of brutal missed putts
Watch: Dodgers' Mookie Betts leaves game after taking 98 mph pitch to hand
Dodgers' Dave Roberts confirms Yoshinobu Yamamoto is going on 15-day IL
Ryan Blaney staves off challengers for dominant win at Iowa Corn 350
Sky forward Angel Reese rips officials following loss to Fever
Watch: Denmark's Christian Eriksen nets goal at Euro 2024 three years after suffering cardiac arrest
Watch: UFL championship marred by late on-field altercation between Stallions, Brahmas
Is Commanders' Jayden Daniels likely to open season as starting QB?
Kyrie Irving's warning to potential Celtics is being taken out of context
What could the Ducks fetch for Trevor Zegras in trade?
The biggest surprises during the 2024 MLB season so far
Dodgers star will miss 'some time' with broken bone in left wrist
Former MLB journeyman dies at 61 years old
Pivotal Celtics center deemed questionable ahead of Game 5
Draymond Green weighs in on Klay Thompson's latest move
Tom Brady makes his broadcasting debut during UFL championship
Former top-five pick could follow the Dante Exum blueprint for NBA return
Yankees shelve top prospect once more due to injury concern
Watch: Reds' Elly De La Cruz scores from second base on pickoff attempt

Want more Mets news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.