After the 2006 season, Nitkowski accepted a one-year contract tender with Nippon Professional Baseball's Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks.[5] He played two seasons for the Hawks, but did not return to the team in 2009.[6]
Nitkowski began the 2009 season with the SK Wyverns in South Korea,[7] but was granted his release by the team on June 20.[8] On June 28, 2009, the Doosan Bears in South Korea claimed him off waivers. He was released at the end of the season due to concerns over a shoulder injury he suffered in Game 1 of the first round of the playoffs. In July 2010, Nitkowski signed with the Nexen Heroes based in Seoul, South Korea.
Nitkowski signed a minor-league deal on July 13, 2012, with the New York Mets.[9] He began using a sidearm delivery.[10]
Media career
After retiring from baseball in April 2013, Nitkowski began a career in media as a writer, studio host, radio host, color analyst and play-by-play man. As a writer, he has had articles published for Sports Illustrated, Associated Press, SB Nation, Baseball Prospectus, ESPN.com and MLB.com.[11] From 2013 to 2016, he wrote exclusively for Fox Sports, including for the now defunct Just a Bit Outside, Fox's baseball microsite that attempted to follow the Monday Morning Quarterback model.
Radio
From 2013 to 2016, Nitkowski co-hosted Eye on Baseball, a national radio baseball show for CBS Sports Radio. His co-hosts on the show were Damon Bruce (2013), Brandon Tierney (2013) and Adam "The Bull" Gerstenhaber (2014–2016). Nitkowski is also a host and analyst for MLB Network Radio on Sirius XM[11] He currently appears on Loud Outs weekdays 3-6PM ET with Ryan Spilborghs and Brad Lidge.
In 2013, Nitkowski filled in for Suzyn Waldman and worked alongside John Sterling on New York Yankees radio broadcasts for 880 CBS Radio.[citation needed] In 2013, he was also a studio analyst for MLB.com.[11] In 2014, Nitkowski called a handful of New York Mets games on radio alongside Josh Lewin and Howie Rose for WOR 710. From 2017 to 2019, he had a weekly show with sports radio 1310 AM and 96.7 FM The Ticket's BaD Radio Show hosted by Bob Sturm and Dan McDowell in Dallas, Texas.
In 2017, Nitkowski was named a member of the Texas Rangers' television broadcast booth,[13] where served in both the color analyst and play-by-play roles through 2022. Nitkowski was nominated seven times and won five regional Sports Emmy Awards for his work on Rangers broadcasts.[14] He was also part of the 2016 broadcast group on Fox which won a national Sports Emmy for their postseason coverage.
On January 30, 2009, it was revealed that Nitkowski was interviewed by the FBI as part of its investigation into the perjury case against Roger Clemens. Nitkowski worked out sporadically in the off-seasons from 2001 to 2006, while also being trained by Brian McNamee, Clemens' principal accuser. Nitkowski, in a statement to the Associated Press (an organization he also occasionally contributes to as a writer) said, "I have never seen Roger or Andy take any illegal performance-enhancing drugs. I have never talked to either of them about PEDs, nor do I have any firsthand knowledge of them taking any PEDs."
Nitkowski was the first major-leaguer to maintain his own website, www.CJBaseball.com, where he posted ongoing personal diaries about life in the big leagues, as early as 1997.[1] The site still exists but is sporadically updated.
Raised a Catholic, Nitkowski converted to Evangelical Christianity after an incident in which his son nearly drowned in a swimming pool during spring training in 2002.[17]
Film and television
In May 2012, Nitkowski was filmed playing the role of former MLB player Dutch Leonard for a scene in the motion picture 42, which chronicles Jackie Robinson's life story. Coincidentally, the footage was shot in Engel Stadium in Chattanooga, Tennessee, the ballpark where Nitkowski broke into professional baseball as a first-round pick of the Reds in 1994.[1][18]
In 2016, Nitkowski served as a script and technical consultant for Dan Fogelman's Pitch, a television drama about the first woman to reach the Major Leagues.[19]