Lee Jung-hoo, who went 1 for 5 and collapsed by 260%, but starts 3 hard hits againSF 71 Milwaukee
Aug 24, 2025
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Lee Jung-hoo played as a leadoff center fielder in Game 2 of the three away games against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on the 24th (Korea time) and recorded one hit in five at-bats. San Francisco won 7-1, ending a four-game losing streak.
Lee Jung-hoo, who was silent the previous day with no hits in four at-bats against Milwaukee and ended his hit streak in 10 consecutive games from the 12th to the 22nd, had hard hits with a batting speed of more than 95 miles.
As a result, Lee Jung-hoo's batting average fell to 0,259 (121 hits in 467 at-bats), which was maintained for a week, and the OPS decreased from 0.734 to 0.731 with the OPS.
In his first at-bat in the top of the first inning, Lee Jung-hoo pulled Milwaukee right-hander Freddie Peralta's fastball in the middle of the second pitch for 93.5 miles, but he was thrown out by a ground ball to the second base. It was a hard hit of more than 100 miles with a batting speed of 100.8 miles.
In the third inning, trailing 0-1, he entered as the leadoff hitter and retired with a short fly ball to left field. In the ball count of 2B2S, Peralta's change-up, which fell into the middle of 88 miles on his fifth pitch, seemed to have lost the timing, and the hit missed by the weakly turned bat appeared high in the outfield in left-center. The batting speed is 87.4 miles.
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However, the inning ended in vain because the next batter, Rafael Devers, hit a double play by the second baseman at the first pitch.
With a 3-1 lead in the sixth inning, the second base with two outs hit a grounder to shortstop and remained silent again in the scoring position. It hit right-hander Grant Anderson's 94.1 mile sinker, but it was missed and became a ground ball that flowed weakly toward the shortstop.
Lee Jung-hoo, who took the lead in the eighth inning with a 7-1 lead, hit right-hander Carlos Rodriguez's 90-mile cutter well, but was out with a deep fly to center field. It flew at a firing angle of 21 degrees and a batting speed of 95.4 miles, but was caught at 350 feet.
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In the seventh inning, Schmidt's three-run shot in left-center and Patrick Bailey's timely hit combined to score four points to widen the gap to 7-1.
San Francisco starter Logan Webb pitched six innings of five hits and one run, winning 12 wins (nine losses) this season, lowering his ERA to 3.13.
This article was translated by Naver AI translator.