"The responsibility about whether or not to hold negotiations with us rests with the the other side," [Hawks executive Takanori] Takeuchi said. "If they do sit down with us, and there is a problem, then it is up to the other side to clear it up beforehand."Well, I would agree with that but for Takeuchi also stating, "And while we were in the process of finding out whether we could or could not acquire him, we reached an agreement." That kind of suggests that they knew about Powell and Orix having made an agreement. Yet then continued on in talks with Powell's agent anyway. Now they're blaming the agent for continuing to deal with them?
"This rocks the core of manners within the baseball world," said Katsuhiro Nakamura, Orix's director of baseball operations. "We urge SoftBank to exercise self-restraint so as not to set a bad precedent."This kind of reminds me of the NPB owners' meetings last week and a comment that Negoro-acting commissioner said. Regarding the players' objections and firm statements about free agency reform, Negoro said something to the effect of, "the players have one, unanimous direction that they want to go, whereas the owners have 12 fragmented directions." (Please don't use that as a direct quote - that's just the gist of what I understood him to say.) This is not the way to promote cooperation.
They sent Jeremy a two-page fax in Japanese. They said, "With very little time left before camp starts we need to get working on your visa when you do sign." I didn't know what it was. It was in Japanese.According to Katsuhiro Nakamura, the Buffaloes announced the signing on January 11th, but Landis denied that claim, saying that Powell never agreed to any contract terms, and that therefore they couldn't be prevented from talking with other teams.
We never signed a personal contract with Jeremy's salary. I have seen Japanese contracts before and they run much longer than two pages.
No contract is considered complete until it includes the salary terms and conditions. In that sense, Orix's contract cannot be considered complete. It is a fax, has no terms and is conditional upon the passing of a physical.Murata went on to say the Hawks deal is also done, but said that it doesn't really mean much that Softbank's deal is 100% done:
The Hawks' deal is 100 percent perfectly complete. However, under the law it doesn't matter who gets the contract done first. In terms of whose case is the strongest, the Hawks have the most complete contract, but that is not the issue.
The Orix Buffaloes said Friday they have acquired right-hander Jeremy Powell on a one-year contract worth an estimated 55 million yen, plus performance-related incentives.[Emphasis added.]
The 31-year-old former Yomiuri Giants player will play for Orix for the first time in three seasons, with the deal to be finalized over the next few days.
After confirming that this was being used solely for paperwork purposes, I signed it and faxed it back.Nowhere is this an official contract with terms and conditions, such as conditional on him passing a physical.
We never heard anything from them [that they wanted out]. The first thing we heard was when SoftBank announced it had a contract with him.Once again, it doesn't matter whether Powell or his agent informed Orix or not since, as the league said, the Buffaloes' contract had no terms or conditions and was conditional on him passing a physical. A team can't sign someone without terms, and in this case, when they haven't passed the physical necessary to finalize the deal.
We do not accept the president's instruction. Orix was completing the signing according to the rules. So to have this one-sided judgment all of a sudden is unacceptable.Moving back to what has already been said. There was no contract as ruled by the league, as the contract proposal the Buffaloes had didn't include any terms and was conditional on him passing a physical. So therefore, Powell was free to talk to any team he wished, since he was therefore not under contract with any NPB team.
If this thing goes to court, it's going to take a long time. Nobody knows how long. I had to think of my responsibility as president.I guess my beef with this is that Koike's responsibility should be putting Powell with the team he belongs with, and in this case that is the SoftBank Hawks as the Orix deal (according to the league) had no terms and was conditional on passing a physical. Furthermore, no punishment should be imposed since the parties to be can't think rationally.
Powell and his agent, Craig Landis, have insisted they believed the contract the Buffaloes claim binds him to Orix was nothing but part of the paperwork necessary to begin the process of getting his visa.My question is: Why in the world is he trying to get a visa from Orix to work, and has no intent on playing for them? Sounds like grounds for Immigration Fraud to me.
"After confirming that this was being used solely for paperwork purposes, I signed it and faxed it back," said Powell, who said Orix then wanted to change the deal they had agreed to earlier in January.
Now Orix is simply trying to bully not only the whole of NPB, but the whole d*** country. Why? Because the almighty suits that head up NPB can't man up and make a solid decision based on facts and evidence.Couldn't say it any better, now that Orix has lost and that the league is hell bent on turning this into a even bigger mess. Instead of creating a big fuss like a spoiled child Orix, why don't you move on and accept that as a team you are the most incompetent ran team in all of NPB. The league has already ruled that your contract proposal wasn't considered a deal since it had no terms and was conditional on him passing a physical.
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Michael Westbay
(aka westbaystars)
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