LOS ANGELES — In an offseason defined by secrecy, speculation, and a global tug-of-war, the Los Angeles Dodgers ultimately won the rights to the most coveted young arm on the planet. But as it turns out, their victory in the sweepstakes for Rōki Sasaki may have hinged on something far more personal than pitch sequencing, market size, or championship pedigree. It may have come down to a toilet.
Yes — a toilet.
Sasaki, just 23 years old, stunned the baseball world when he left Japan early, sacrificing the opportunity for a massive long-term contract in Nippon Professional Baseball to test the international waters under MLB’s strict bonus pool system. Because of his age and service time, he wasn’t eligible for a nine-figure megadeal. Instead, he could only sign using funds from a team’s international bonus pool — a fraction of what his talent might otherwise command.

And yet, nearly every serious contender in baseball lined up for a meeting.
In the end, it was the Dodgers who emerged victorious. But according to Dodgers president and CEO Stan Kasten, the decisive moment in negotiations didn’t involve velocity charts or analytics presentations. It involved comfort. Culture. And a surprisingly specific question.
While the Dodgers were aggressively renovating their clubhouse during the recruitment process, Kasten found himself enthusiastically detailing the upgraded amenities to Sasaki and his representatives.
“I was telling him about all the amenities we were adding,” Kasten told the Orange County Register’s Bill Plunkett. “‘We’re going to have this and this and this.’ And he asked, ‘Are you going to have Japanese-style toilets?’”
The room reportedly paused.
It may have sounded like a punchline, but Sasaki wasn’t joking.
“It sounds like a joke. But for me, it’s pretty important,” Sasaki said through an interpreter.
For a young superstar leaving his home country, his language, and his comfort zone to pitch thousands of miles away under relentless MLB scrutiny, the request carried weight. Japanese-style toilets — equipped with advanced bidet functions, heating elements, and precision controls — are commonplace in Japan. In the United States, they remain a luxury rarity.
Kasten understood immediately that this wasn’t about plumbing. It was about respect.

He asked Sasaki directly whether it would influence his decision. Then he took the request to Janet Marie Smith, the Dodgers’ executive vice president for planning and development, who was already overseeing extensive clubhouse renovations. The timing was complicated. Construction was underway. Blueprints were finalized. Changes at that stage would not be simple — or cheap.
Plunkett reported that accommodating the request could have added as much as $100 million to the broader clubhouse renovation project, though that figure remains unconfirmed. Even so, Kasten believed the message would resonate far beyond fixtures and flooring.
Comfort matters. Signal matters. Showing a 23-year-old phenom that his needs would not only be heard but prioritized could tilt the scales in a crowded field of suitors.
And so the Dodgers made the call.
When Kasten informed Sasaki that Japanese-style toilets would indeed be installed in the clubhouse, the pitcher didn’t require translation to express his reaction.
“Awesome,” he replied in English.
That single word may have sealed one of the most consequential international signings of the decade.
Make no mistake — the Dodgers didn’t land Sasaki because of bathroom renovations alone. They offer a perennial contender, elite player development, West Coast proximity to Japan, and a roster already stacked with global icons. But in a race where every team could promise winning and exposure, small details became decisive leverage.
![]()
Sasaki’s decision to leave Japan early already demonstrated boldness. Forgoing financial security for MLB competition signaled ambition. Choosing Los Angeles signaled trust. And the organization’s willingness to meet what some might dismiss as an unusual request revealed a franchise operating on a different wavelength.
It’s easy to laugh at the optics. It’s harder to ignore the symbolism.
For international stars, transitions are rarely seamless. Culture shock, language barriers, lifestyle adjustments — they accumulate. By addressing something as personal as bathroom design, the Dodgers sent a powerful message: you belong here.
In an era when franchises pour hundreds of millions into analytics departments and biomechanics labs, it was a reminder that sometimes recruitment hinges on humanity.
Sasaki will ultimately be judged by strikeouts, ERA, and postseason dominance. The Dodgers will measure success in October wins. But long before he toes the rubber at Chavez Ravine, before the first 100-mph fastball explodes into a catcher’s mitt, the groundwork for this partnership was laid in a quiet meeting room, in a question that caught executives off guard.
Are you going to have Japanese-style toilets?
The answer was yes.
And with it, the Dodgers didn’t just upgrade a clubhouse. They may have secured the future of their rotation.