Who should stop Lee Jung-hoo! Third-base show returns to double lead SF 65 Milwaukee
Apr 25, 2025
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Lee Jung-hoo started as the third center fielder in the final game of the four consecutive away games against the Milwaukee Brewers at Oracle Park on the 25th (Korea time), and played one hit, two walks, one RBI and one run in two at-bats, including a double. San Francisco came from behind to win 6-5.
Lee Jung-hoo showed his strength to drive three hits against Milwaukee the previous day (24th) and raised his batting sense that almost fell into a downward trend. On the same day, he drew a series of walks on hits from his first at-bat, displaying his peak contact ability and pioneering eye.
With this, Lee Jung-hoo marked a batting average of 0.333 (32 hits in 96 times at bat), three home runs, 16 RBIs, 22 runs, 11 steals, a on-base percentage of 0.3988, a slugging percentage of 0.583 and an OPS of 0.981.
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Lee Jung-hoo then pulled Myers' 93.6-mile fastball and hit a double to the right to bring Yastremski home.
The ball, which flew like a clothesline at a launch angle of 19 degrees and a batting speed of 99.6 miles, fell on the line in front of the foul pole and hit the fence. With his 11th double of the season, Lee moved back to tied with New York Mets Pete Alonso for first place overall in this category.
However, Lee Jung-hoo failed to reach home with Matt Chapman's first baseman fly and Elliott Ramos striking out.
In his second at-bat in the third inning, he walked to base.
Leading Yastremski hits a superior solo home run to tie the game 2-2. After Adames walked on base, Lee Jung-hoo also got a straight walk from Myers. Myers didn't seem to have any intention of throwing the ball in the strike zone. The corner work was not done properly. However, San Francisco failed to score additional points after all three subsequent hitters stepped down as miscues even though it had a chance to hit the first and second bases with no outs.
In the end, San Francisco lost its lead 2-5 again in the top of the fourth inning by dedicating three points to first baseman Lamont Wade Jr.'s decisive catch mistake.
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Chapman then hit Uribe's 100.4-mile fastball, passed the ball to the fence behind the right-center fence, gradually narrowing it to 4-5. Chapman's fifth home run of the season. Lee Jung-hoo scored 22 points this season.
Lee Jung-hoo also hit a strong pitch in the sixth inning with two outs and a runner on first base, trailing 4-5, but this time, he was caught in the opponent's defense and grounded out. In one ball, left-hander Jared Koenig's second pitch high 95.5 miles sinker was blocked by opponent first baseman Jake Bowers' diving catch.
San Francisco added two runs in the bottom of the eighth inning to turn the tide.
Luis Matos stepped down as a blunder and third baseman Fitzgerald dug home with Yastremski's groundout to second base in a chance to walk lead Tyler Fitzgerald and pinch-hitter Wilmer Flores' right-handed hit. a 5-5 tie.
While Milwaukee left fielder Christian Yelich caught and missed Adames' fly to left field with one out and runners on the first and third bases, third baseman Christian Kos scored and succeeded in turning the game around 6-5.
Lee Jung-hoo, who continued to bat with one out and runners on the first and second bases, stepped down with a fly to center field.
San Francisco's closing Camilo provocation in the top of the ninth inning held a one-point lead.
This article was translated by Naver AI translator.