Shocking! Lee Jung-hoo, the first MLB record player in 125 years! The two homers against the Yankees were the first of the Giants hitters ever

Apr 14, 2025

 Shocking! Lee Jung-hoo, the first MLB record player in 125 years! The two homers against the Yankees were the first of the Giants hitters ever
An astonishing record was released. Lee Jung-hoo (27, San Francisco Giants) did what no one in the 125-year history of the Major League Baseball (MLB) has done.

A second-year hitter from Korea has reached an unknown territory that even San Francisco legends such as Willie Mays, Barry Bonds, Willie McCorvey, Jeff Kent, and Buster Posey have not achieved.

Lee Jung-hoo became the first Giants (including the New York Giants) batter to hit multiple home runs in a game against the New York Yankees for the first time in the 125-year history of the Major League. It is a record that will live forever in the history of the San Francisco club and Major League Baseball.







 Shocking! Lee Jung-hoo, the first MLB record player in 125 years! The two homers against the Yankees were the first of the Giants hitters ever
An astonishing record was released. Lee Jung-hoo (27, San Francisco Giants) did what no one in the 125-year history of the Major League Baseball (MLB) has done.

A second-year hitter from Korea has reached an unknown territory that even San Francisco legends such as Willie Mays, Barry Bonds, Willie McCorvey, Jeff Kent, and Buster Posey have not achieved.

Lee Jung-hoo became the first Giants (including the New York Giants) batter to hit multiple home runs in a game against the New York Yankees for the first time in the 125-year history of the Major League. It is a record that will live forever in the history of the San Francisco club and Major League Baseball.




An amazing record was revealed. Lee Jung-hoo (27, San Francisco Giants) did what no one in the 125-year history of the Major League Baseball (MLB) has done.

A second-year hitter from Korea has reached an unknown territory that even San Francisco legends such as Willie Mays, Barry Bonds, Willie McCorvey, Jeff Kent and Buster Posey have not achieved.

Lee Jung-hoo became the first Giants (including the New York Giants) batter to hit multiple home runs in a game against the New York Yankees for the first time in the 125-year history of the Major League. It is a record that will live forever in the history of the San Francisco club and Major League Baseball.




Lee Jung-hoo became a "national ball star" with his remarkable performance in the three consecutive Major League (MLB) interleague away games against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium in New York in the 2025 season, which can be called the "heart of the Major League" from the 12th to the 14th. Now the United States clearly remembers the name 'Jung Ho LEE'. This is because the impact was great.

Lee Jung-hoo hit three home runs and swept seven RBIs during the three consecutive games. The batting average for the three consecutive games was 0.444 (4 hits in 9 at-bats), and the slugging percentage reached a whopping 1.556. With four walks and an on-base percentage reaching 0.615, the OPS hit an incredible figure of 2.171.

 Shocking! Lee Jung-hoo, the first MLB record player in 125 years! The two homers against the Yankees were the first of the Giants hitters ever
An astonishing record was released. Lee Jung-hoo (27, San Francisco Giants) did what no one in the 125-year history of the Major League Baseball (MLB) has done.

A second-year hitter from Korea has reached an unknown territory that even San Francisco legends such as Willie Mays, Barry Bonds, Willie McCorvey, Jeff Kent, and Buster Posey have not achieved.

Lee Jung-hoo became the first Giants (including the New York Giants) batter to hit multiple home runs in a game against the New York Yankees for the first time in the 125-year history of the Major League. It is a record that will live forever in the history of the San Francisco club and Major League Baseball.




In the game on the 12th, when the rain cold game was declared, Lee Jung-hoo recorded one hit in two at-bats (one home run), three RBIs, two runs and two walks, including a three-run home run. On the 13th, he made one hit, one run and one walk from four times at bat, including one double.




The peak of his performance was recorded in the game on the 14th. On this day, Lee Jung-hoo hit consecutive home runs in the fourth and sixth innings. It was the first consecutive home run since his Major League debut last year. He had two hits in three at-bats (two homers), four RBIs, two runs and one walk, including two homers, leading his team to a 5-4 come-from-behind victory alone. With Lee Jung-hoo's performance, San Francisco achieved the Winning Series with two wins and one loss.

The New York Yankees, which Lee Jung-hoo faced, are MLB's most popular club and the runner-up team in last year's World Series. Their home stadium, New York Yankee Stadium, is the heart of MLB. Therefore, the game was also broadcast on the national network. This means that the entire United States witnessed Lee Jung-hoo's hard-hit march. Through this, Lee Jung-hoo certainly made an impression with 'National Star'.

However, among Lee Jung-hoo's amazing performances, it turned out that there was a new history of Major League Baseball. The multi-homer game achieved against the Yankees on the 14th was actually the first time for a batter belonging to the San Francisco Giants (including the former New York Giants).




 Shocking! Lee Jung-hoo, the first MLB record player in 125 years! The two homers against the Yankees were the first of the Giants hitters ever
An astonishing record was released. Lee Jung-hoo (27, San Francisco Giants) did what no one in the 125-year history of the Major League Baseball (MLB) has done.

A second-year hitter from Korea has reached an unknown territory that even San Francisco legends such as Willie Mays, Barry Bonds, Willie McCorvey, Jeff Kent, and Buster Posey have not achieved.

Lee Jung-hoo became the first Giants (including the New York Giants) batter to hit multiple home runs in a game against the New York Yankees for the first time in the 125-year history of the Major League. It is a record that will live forever in the history of the San Francisco club and Major League Baseball.




 Shocking! Lee Jung-hoo, the first MLB record player in 125 years! The two homers against the Yankees were the first of the Giants hitters ever
An astonishing record was released. Lee Jung-hoo (27, San Francisco Giants) did what no one in the 125-year history of the Major League Baseball (MLB) has done.

A second-year hitter from Korea has reached an unknown territory that even San Francisco legends such as Willie Mays, Barry Bonds, Willie McCorvey, Jeff Kent, and Buster Posey have not achieved.

Lee Jung-hoo became the first Giants (including the New York Giants) batter to hit multiple home runs in a game against the New York Yankees for the first time in the 125-year history of the Major League. It is a record that will live forever in the history of the San Francisco club and Major League Baseball.




SPOTV commentator Lee Chang-seop said, `Lee Jung-hoo's multi-homer game is the first ever in history, including the days of the New York Giants and the World Series.'

The San Francisco club was founded 142 years ago in 1883, based in New York City as the "New York Giants". After that, he played in the National League in New York until 1957 and faced the Yankees as a regional rival. In 1958, he moved to San Francisco and renamed himself the "San Francisco Giants".

The Giants and Yankees have met only occasionally in the Interleague or World Series because they are different from each other in the National League and the American League. But in more than 100 years, no Giants hitter has hit two home runs in a game against the Yankees.

Neither the great home run hitter Willie Mace nor Barry Bonds, whose drug controversy remains. This is what Lee Jung-hoo did. It is indeed a great achievement. This record goes down in Major League history forever. Now Lee Jung-hoo is the history of San Francisco.



This article was translated by Naver AI translator.