Shocked by the collapse of the 270 percent range! Where did superstar Lee Jung-hoo go? No hit for 5, latest 7G 0.148SF 23SD
Jun 04, 2025
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Lee Jung-hoo was silent with no hits in five at-bats in the second game of the three consecutive home games against the San Diego Padres at Oracle Park on the 4th (Korea time).
His batting average fell from 0.275 to 0.269 (63 hits in 234) as he played no-hit games in five at-bats for the fourth time this season. The 270 percent range also collapsed. OPS also fell from 0.755 to 0.739.
Since the game against the Detroit Tigers on the 28th of last month, he has only hit 0.148 (4 hits in 27 at-bats) in the last seven games. The RBI has not been added on the 15th day since the game against the Kansas City Royals on the 22nd of last month, and the score has not been added on the 11th day since the game against the Washington Nationals on May 25. The batting order has been jagged for the past 10 days, with 3 → 4 → 3 → 2. The local media, which praised Lee Jung-hoo for securing a 'Superstar' at the beginning of the season, also cooled down.
Lee Jung-hoo had one hit against San Diego the day before, but lost face by striking out three times in five at-bats. It is no exaggeration to say that it is a slump.
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Lee Jung-hoo took the batter's box in the third inning when front hitter Elliott Ramos hit a two-run home run over the middle wall with one out and second base. But he pulled a 93.4 mile fastball in the middle of Buckert's second pitch and was grounded out to first base. The batting speed was 93.2 miles, which was a relatively good hit.
In the fifth inning, the first base with one out hit an 83.8-mile slider that fell to the low course in the middle of Bergert's seventh pitch in the full count, but the hit and raised to 47 degrees was caught by center fielder Jackson Merrill, who ran forward. And in the seventh inning, when the 2-0 lead continued, he was out with a weak center fielder fly with two outs and a runner on first base.
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In the end, the game was decided by the extension. San Diego turned the tide 3-2 in the top of the 10th inning when Jake Cronenworth hit a right-handed hit.
On the other hand, San Francisco's inning ended as Ramos grounded out to shortstop in the bottom of the 10th inning with one out and third base, and Lee Jung-hoo hit a good hit against right-hander Jeremiah Estrada, but the inning ended as he hit a ground ball in front of the shortstop.
San Francisco, which lost 2-3 from behind, remained in third place in the NL West with 33 wins and 28 losses.
This article was translated by Naver AI translator.