This time, I put it in No. 5, but it's silent again, batting order journeyman Lee Jung-hoo 3G consecutive hitless 0.255SF57BOS
Jun 21, 2025
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San Francisco Giants' Lee Jung-hoo was silent with no hits in three consecutive games. Lee Jung-hoo started as the fifth center fielder and recorded no hits in four at-bats in the first of three consecutive home games against the Boston Red Sox at Oracle Park on the 21st (Korea time).
Lee Jung-hoo, who failed to add a hit in three consecutive games following four hits against the Cleveland Guardians on the 19th and two hits, one walk and one score against Cleveland on the 20th, saw his batting average fall further from 0.259 to 0.255 (72 hits in 282). He hit 2 for 27 (0.074) in 7 games since the game against the Los Angeles Dodgers on the 14th.
As of today, the OPS fell to 0.734 and maintained six home runs, 34 RBIs, 44 runs and six steals. Recently, the batting order changed from No. 1 → No. 6 → No. 7 to No. 5 for the first time since his Major League debut. Lee Jung-hoo set a record of starting from No. 1 to No. 7 this season. It's the 'Tasoon Journeyman'.
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There was no hit in the second at-bat with two outs in the third inning with a 3-2 lead. Dobbins hit a high fastball well in the 94.8 miles of his first pitch to hit a line drive, but he couldn't stretch much and was caught by center fielder Sedane Raphaela. The batting speed was 92.5 miles and 303 feet.
He hit a ground ball to the first base in his third at-bat after two outs in the bottom of the fifth inning when the score was tied 5-5. He played up to seven pitches against left-hander Brennan Bernadino, but pulling an 83.8-mile slider made a missed ground ball.
He went out as a leadoff hitter in the eighth inning, trailing 5-7, and retired with a fly ball to center field. Right-hander Garrett Witlock hit an 82-mile high sweeper on the fifth pitch, but center fielder Rafaela moved slightly to the left and caught it.
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San Francisco's third baseman Mike Yastremski homered and scored the first run in the bottom of the first inning while second baseman David Hamilton missed Wilmer Flores' low fly ball with two outs.
In the second inning, the first three batters took advantage of Dobbins' control difficulties to get consecutive walks and secured a full base chance with no outs, then added one point on Christian Kos' double play and one point on Yastremski's infield hit to widen the gap to 3-0.
However, in the top of the third inning when Boston continued, Hamilton shot a two-run home run and followed it 2-3 and tied it 3-3 with Rafaella's timely hit with two outs and a third base in the fourth inning.
While San Francisco loaded the bases with no outs in the bottom of the fourth inning and the course hit another double play, third baseman Willy Adames scored to take the lead back to 4-3, but Boston turned the tide in the top of the fifth inning. Boston, which tied the game with Roman Anthony's heavy hit with one out and second base, made an error that allowed Abraham Toro's ordinary ground ball to flow under his glove with one out and first base, and second baseman Anthony homered and turned it around 5-4.
San Francisco tied it in the bottom of the fifth, but Boston scored one run in the seventh inning to take the lead again 7-5.
In the end, San Francisco, which knelt 5-7, remained second in the NL West with 42 wins and 34 losses, but the gap with the leading Dodgers (47 wins and 30 losses) widened to 4.5 games.
This article was translated by Naver AI translator.