Lee Jung-hoo, a decisive lucky walk SF, beat the Dodgers with a bases-loaded walk in overtimeNew York M Anti-Game Car Pressure
Sep 13, 2025
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Lee Jung-hoo started as the sixth center fielder in the first of three consecutive home games against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Oracle Park on the 13th (Korea time) and recorded no hits and one walk in three at-bats.
San Francisco won 5-1 thanks to Grant McCray's walk-off grand slam in the 10th inning after a tight pitching battle.
Lee Jung-hoo, who had no hits and an RBI in four at-bats against the Arizona Diamondbacks on the 11th, failed to add a hit in two consecutive games, with his batting average falling to 0.267 (139 hits in 520 at-bats) and OPS to 0.741, respectively.
In his first at-bat in the bottom of the second inning with a 1-0 lead, Lee Jung-hoo gave his bat to a 91.8-mile splitter ball that fell outside for the fourth time in the ball count of 1B2S, but was withdrawn with a short fly to left field.
Lee Jung-hoo went out as a leadoff hitter in the fifth inning with a 1-0 lead and was out with a ground ball to the first base. Yamamoto's first pitch 74.2 miles of curve was pulled, but Freeman, the first baseman, took care of it when it was missed. In the eighth inning, when the score was tied at 1-1, he also hit a ground ball to the second base by pulling on left-hander Jack Drier's outer slider.
And in the bottom of the 10th inning of extra time, when it was 1-1, he drew a walk with one out and a third base to help win the game.
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In particular, he marks the last three consecutive games with double-digit strikeouts, and has recorded seven or more innings and 10 or more strikeouts in three consecutive starts in eight years since Clayton Kershaw in 2017He became a Juss pitcher.
San Francisco starter Justin Verlander pitched well with four hits, three walks, four strikeouts and one run in seven innings, but lowered his ERA to 3.94 without losing or losing.
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Adames hit Yamamoto's 95.7-mile fastball into the body on his second pitch and hit a double through left-center. At this time, while Dodgers center fielder Andy Pazs fumbled the ball, Devers turned third base and rushed home.
In the top of the fourth inning, the Dodgers failed to score a comeback point as all three subsequent hitters stepped down with a mistake in the chance to first and second base with no outs made by leader Freddie Freeman and Max Muncy's walk. In particular, after two outs, Pazs hit a ground ball between the third baseman and the shortstop and sprinted to first base, but he was narrowly declared out. San Francisco third baseman Matt Chapman got up quickly after a diving catch and threw it to first base, but first baseman Dominic Smith managed to catch it with his legs wide open and handle the batter by a hair's breadth. The decision did not change even in the challenge, which was conducted at the request of the Dodgers bench.
However, the Dodgers, who were being dragged 0-1, tied the game in the bottom of the seventh inning with Michael Confoto's home run. Confoto, who entered as the leadoff hitter, hit Verlander's 91.7-mile fastball in the middle of the fourth pitch, leading to a solo shot that slightly crossed the center fence. He hit his 11th homer of the season with a batting speed of 110.1 miles and a flying distance of 400 miles.
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Wilmer Flores, who then entered the batter's box, vigorously hit sweeper in the middle of right-hander Blake Treinen and sent him to the outfield. When center fielder Farggs caught it, third baseman Matos dug into the home. But it was a short fly He was thrown out by Pazs' accurate throw.
Even though the Dodgers had a chance to hit the first and second bases with no outs in the top of the 10th inning, second baseman Lotvette went wild with greed for third base when Mookie Betts flew to right field, followed by Freeman's groundout and went scoreless.
The game was decided in the bottom of the 10th inning. Lee Jung-hoo got a walk from the changed left-hander Tanner Scott in the full count and connected the chance to the first and third bases. Casey Schmidt then went to four pitches on purpose and loaded the bases. Grant McCray put an end to the blood clot with a grand slam over the left.
San Francisco continued its 14-4 streak in its last 18 games, marking 75-72. Cut the NL wild-card lead to 0.5 games against the New York Mets. The Dodgers ended their four-game winning streak.
This article was translated by Naver AI translator.