(LEAD) Right-hander returns to KBO after stint in Taiwan
(ATTN: ADDS details in paras 9, 11-14)
SEOUL, June 3 (Yonhap) -- Dominican right-hander Henry Sosa is returning to South Korea for his eighth season following a short stint in Taiwan.
The SK Wyverns of the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) announced Monday they've signed Sosa for US$170,000 for the rest of the season and given him a signing bonus of $350,000.
Sosa, 33, will replace Canadian right-hander Brock Dykxhoorn in the Wyverns' rotation.
Dykxhoorn had been 3-2 with a 3.56 ERA in 12 appearances in his first KBO season. He had 58 strikeouts against 18 walks in 65 2/3 innings. While those numbers are solid, the Wyverns weren't pleased with his lack of velocity. Dykxhoorn was averaging 144.3 kilometers per hour (km/h) with his fastball, ranking him 16th among qualified starters.
The Wyverns' other foreign starter, Angel Sanchez, is leading the KBO in that category with 150.8 km/h. And the team will now pair him up with another fireballer in Sosa, who ranked second behind Sanchez in the average fastball velocity in 2018 at 149.5 km/h while pitching for the LG Twins.
The Wyverns will be Sosa's fourth KBO club. He made his KBO debut with the Kia Tigers in 2012 and spent two seasons there. He pitched for the Nexen (currently Kiwoom) Heroes in 2014, before signing with the Twins in 2015 to begin a four-season run there.
In 194 career KBO games, Sosa has gone 68-60 with a 4.32 ERA. He has logged at least 180 innings in every season from 2015 to 2018. Only one other pitcher, Yang Hyeon-jong of the Tigers, has matched that feat.
For the Fubon Guardians in the Chinese Professional Baseball League in Taiwan this year, Sosa was 8-2 with a 1.56 ERA.
The Wyverns, going for their second straight Korean Series championship, are currently in first place at 38-20-1 (wins-losses-ties). They have the third-best team ERA with 3.62 and lead all teams with 464 strikeouts.
Sosa had back taxes amounting to about 900 million won ($760,950) during his time in South Korea before he left for Taiwan.
Under income tax regulations revised in February 2015, foreign players in the KBO began to be classified as residents. Their income tax rate jumped from 22 percent to up to 46 percent. Foreign nationals whose jobs required a stay of at least 183 consecutive days in South Korea were considered residents for tax purposes. And with the typical baseball season stretching for more than six months, foreign players were faced with heavy tax burdens.
KBO clubs didn't properly inform their import players of the revisions, and after last season, players like Sosa and another Dominican player, former Tigers pitcher Hector Noesi, chose to sign elsewhere. Without a tax treaty between South Korea and the Dominican Republic, those players were subject to double taxation.
The Wyverns said Sosa plans to use his entire $350,000 signing bonus to pay off parts of his outstanding income tax.
He's scheduled to arrive in South Korea on Wednesday on a tourist visa and will go into his interview for a work permit with detailed plans to pay the rest of his taxes, the Wyverns added.
jeeho@yna.co.kr
(END)
-
'Queen of Tears' weaves rich tapestry of Korean contemporary art
-
Ateez member Yunho throws first pitch at MLB match between Dodgers, Mets
-
N. Korea says Kim guided simulated nuclear counterattack drills for 1st time
-
N. Korea calls envisioned U.S. aid to Ukraine 'hallucinogen'
-
N. Korea calls on party propaganda officials to work harder
-
'Queen of Tears' weaves rich tapestry of Korean contemporary art
-
Experts see possibility of N.K. conducting nuclear test before U.S. presidential vote
-
Details of meeting between Yoon, opposition leader undecided: presidential office
-
N. Korea says Kim guided simulated nuclear counterattack drills for 1st time
-
Looming weekly closure of major hospitals feared to worsen medical service crisis
-
S. Korea eliminated in Olympic football qualifiers as poor defense, undisciplined play prove costly
-
10-man S. Korea lose to Indonesia to miss out on Paris Olympic football qualification
-
(LEAD) 10-man S. Korea lose to Indonesia to miss out on Paris Olympic football qualification
-
Indonesia coach left with mixed feelings after eliminating native S. Korea in Olympic football qualifiers
-
ADOR CEO calls conflict with Hybe 'worst experience of my life'