Lee Junghoo hit it again! 1 hit, 2 runs, 7G hits in a row, hot August 0.3933 straight SF 50 Washington
Aug 09, 2025
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Lee Jung-hoo played as the sixth center fielder in the first of three consecutive home games against the Washington Nationals at Oracle Park on the 9th (Korea time) and scored one hit and two points in four at-bats. San Francisco won the game 5-0.
Lee Jung-hoo, who played as a seventh batter in six consecutive games in August and had hits, took the sixth batter in nine days after the game against the Pittsburgh Pirates on the 31st of last month and made another hit. If there is a regret, the hit that got on base due to an error in the third at-bat before hitting in the last at-bat was a hit, but the record keeper did not admit it.
Lee Jung-hoo took his first at-bat in the bottom of the first inning with one out and runners on the first and second bases with a 2-0 lead. Washington right-hander Jake Irvin was dragged to the full count, but a light contact of a 76.9-mile curve that fell outside the sixth pitch turned into an ordinary left-field fly ball with a launch angle of 26 degrees, a batting speed of 86.1 miles, and a distance of 287 feet.
San Francisco scored a run in the first inning with Rafael Devers' 427-foot solo home run over the center, then added a run to Matt Chapman's heavy hit with Willy Adames' infield hit and Dominic Smith's right-handed hit to lead 2-0.
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In the sixth inning, when the 2-0 lead continued, he got on base due to an error and then homered with a home run by a follow-up hitter. Lee Jung-hoo, who came to the batter's box after one out, pulled a 90.5-mile fastball that fell toward Irvin's first pitch and hit a 99.3-mile water hit that flowed along the first base line. Washington first baseman Nathaniel Law bowed down and put his glove on, but the ball passed underneath it and flowed into the right foul area. Lee advanced to second base.
The record keeper did not give a hit but marked it as a defensive error by the first baseman. Judging that it is a ball that can be caught if you have your glove accurately. Statcast considered the batting average to be 0.350. Local broadcaster NBC Sports Bay Area "Lee Jung-hoo's ball goes under the first baseman's glove. Lee Jung-hoo runs vigorously. Maybe Lee Jung-hoo will be given a double. That's not true. Give the first baseman a mistake"I was able to catch it perfectly, but I didn't, so I think the first baseman error is right," he said.
In any case, San Francisco's Lee Jung-hoo survived and took a chance, and Casey Schmidt, who appeared afterwards, pulled a curve that fell into Irvin's first pitch in the middle and connected it to a two-run shot over the left fence to widen the gap to 4-0.
Lee Jung-hoo scored a wedge after making a hit in his last at-bat. Lee Jung-hoo, who entered as the leadoff hitter in the bottom of the eighth inning, hit a hit in left-center. He lightly pushed a 90-mile fastball that flew from the full count to the outside high course for the sixth pitch against Washington's Japanese left-hander Shinnosuke Ogasawara for a 97.6-mile hit to left-center.
Lee Jung-hoo, who advanced to second base with Schmidt's groundout to the third base, then dug home when Patrick Bailey made an infield hit. When Bailey's ball became a ground ball flowing inside the third base line, Washington catcher Drew Mills caught it and threw it to first base. The throw was high and Bailey was safe.
At this time, Lee Jung-hoo turned around the third base and saw the situation on the first base, and immediately rushed home and stepped home with ease. There was no time for a panicked Washington first baseman to throw home. It was a decisive base run and a score in a 5-0 run.
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San Francisco, which has won three games in a row, has 59 wins and 57 losses, ranked third in the NL West and fourth in the wild card. San Francisco, which recently achieved its second consecutive winning series against the New York Mets and Pittsburgh Pirates, has no reason to give up its fall baseball if this is the case. 'I try as far as I can't do it' is read as the will of the players.
This article was translated by Naver AI translator.