After a full base chance with no outs, a valuable wedge RBI, Lee Jung-hoo jumped to second place in the SFNL West for three consecutive hits
Jul 08, 2025
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Lee Jung-hoo started as the seventh center fielder in a home game against the Philadelphia Phillies at Oracle Park on the 8th (Korea time) and recorded 1 hit and 1 RBI in 4 at-bats. Lee Jung-hoo contributed 3-1 by hitting a ground ball to bring in runners in the second half of the game, when the thin ice match continued.
Lee Jung-hoo missed the game against Athletics the previous day. It was a measure taken by manager Bob Melvin considering his jagged condition, but it did not show a cool hit.
The batting average remained unchanged at 0.243 (80 hits in 329) and added one RBI to reach 37 for the season. The OPS decreased slightly from 0.706 to 0.704.
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Lee Jung-hoo, who then entered the batter's box, misled the bat on an 86.2 mile changeup that fell outside the sixth pitch of opponent left-hander Christopher Sanchez at the ball count of 2B2S. The change-up of the 5th and 6th pitches was a ball that fell below the strike zone in a row, but all the bats went out.
In July, the batting balance seems to have collapsed as the pioneering eye has become dull. Lee Jung-hoo will have two hits, three strikeouts, one out and one sacrifice fly in eight at-bats with the bases loaded this season. Three strikeouts stand out.
Fortunately, San Francisco scored the first run when third baseman Chapman homered when Luis Matos grounded out to shortstop.
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In the sixth inning with one out and one on the first base, the leadoff runner was out by hitting an infield grounder. Sanchez pulled a sinker in the middle of 95.3 miles of the first pitch, but it flowed in front of second baseman Bryson Statt at 94.4 miles, forcing first baseman Schmidt out of second base. In San Francisco, Matos then grounded out to third base and the inning ended.
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San Francisco, which widened the gap to 3-1, failed to score additional points in the continued first and second bases with one out. Closer Camilo Doval, who took the mound in the top of the ninth inning, then gave up one walk to the leadoff hitter, but he handled the follow-up hitters with a straight hit to the second base and a double play to keep the two-run victory.
San Francisco, which won three consecutive games, marked 50 wins and 42 losses and moved to second place in the NL West, narrowing its gap with the leading Los Angeles Dodgers to six games.
This article was translated by Naver AI translator.