Lee Seung-yuop

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Lee Seung-yuop
2017 09 01 삼성 vs SK 굿바이 라이온킹 2 (2).jpg
First baseman
Born: (1976-08-18) August 18, 1976 (age 45)[1]
Daegu, South Korea
Batted: Left
Threw: Left
Professional debut
KBO: April 15, 1995, for the Samsung Lions
NPB: March 27, 2004, for the Chiba Lotte Marines
Last appearance
KBO: October 3, 2017, for the Samsung Lions
NPB: October 18, 2011, for the Orix Buffaloes
KBO statistics
Batting average.302
Home runs467
RBI1,498
Hits2,156
Doubles464
NPB statistics
Batting average.257
Home runs159
Runs batted in439
Hits686
Doubles138
Teams
Career highlights and awards
hide
Medals
Men's baseball
Representing  South Korea
Olympic Games
Bronze medal – third place 2000 Sydney Team
Gold medal – first place 2008 Beijing Team
World Baseball Classic
Bronze medal – third place 2006 San Diego Team
Asian Games
Gold medal – first place 2002 Busan Team
Lee Seung-yuop
Hangul
Hanja
Revised RomanizationI Seungyeop
McCune–ReischauerRi Sŭngyŏp

Lee Seung-yuop (born August 18, 1976) is a retired baseball player, who spent most of his career with the Samsung Lions of the KBO League. At the age of 26, he became the youngest professional baseball player in the world to hit 300 home runs. He formerly held the Asian home run record of 56 homers in a season, established in 2003 while playing for Samsung in the KBO. The record was broken by Wladimir Balentien of the Tokyo Yakult Swallows, on September 15, 2013, when he hit his 56th and 57th Home Runs of the season against the Hanshin Tigers of the Nippon Professional Baseball League. He holds the KBO records for career home runs, runs scored, RBIs, total bases, slugging percentage and OPS. Combined, across the KBO and NPB, Lee has also recorded more hits than any other native-born South Korean player.

Professional career[]

Lee started his career with the Samsung Lions of the KBO League in 1995 and played with them for nine seasons. He was the first player in the KBO League to hit 50 home runs in a season when he clubbed 54 in 1999. He set the single-season home run mark with 56 in 2003.

In 2004 Lee signed with the Chiba Lotte Marines of Japan's Pacific League for two years. He signed a one-year contract with the Yomiuri Giants for 210 million yen, including a 50 million yen signing bonus, for the 2006 season. He batted fourth and played first base there. He explicitly showed interest in making a move to Major League Baseball.

He had a slow start in Japan. Lee hit just 14 home runs and drove in 50 runs while batting .240 in 100 games. In the next season, he greatly improved, making 30 home runs and 82 RBI while batting .260 in 117 games.

He was selected to play for the Korea national baseball team in the inaugural World Baseball Classic in 2006. He batted .333 and led all players in the tournament with 5 home runs and 10 RBI. This has increased speculation that an MLB team might eventually sign him. However, Lee was under contract to play with the Yomiuri Giants for the 2006 season.

On 1 August 2006, Lee became only the third professional baseball player to hit 400 career home runs before the age of 30 (others include Sadaharu Oh and Alex Rodriguez).[2] In the 2006 season, he batted .323 with 41 homers.

On August 3, 2006, a report on MLB Radio on XM satellite radio stated that the New York Yankees and Lee had agreed to start negotiations during the offseason after the 2006 regular season. The South Korean daily Chosun Ilbo had reported on July 19 that the Yankees had expressed interest in the slugger.[3]

After the conclusion of the 2006 season, Lee re-signed with the Yomiuri Giants, citing that he wishes to win a Japan Series with the team. However, a clause allowed him to be a free agent if the Giants won the series.

After being released by the Giants at the end of the 2010 season, Lee joined the Orix Buffaloes of Japan's Pacific League in December 2010.

On 5 December 2011, Lee rejoined his former team Samsung Lions, signing a one-year deal.[4]

He played with the Lions until his retirement at age 41 at the end of the 2017 season. Despite his age, Lee hit 143 home runs between 2012 and 2017. In his retirement game, he hit multiple home runs and retired like Lee Seung-yeop.[5]

2008 Summer Olympics[]

Lee played for the South Korean national team in the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing. Slowed down by an injury to his left thumb, Lee struggled in the preliminary rounds, limited to 3-for-22 (.136) with two runs batted in and no home runs, before coming alive in the medal round games against Japan and Cuba.

In the semifinal game against Team Japan, Lee hit a dramatic go-ahead two-run home run in the bottom of the eighth inning off reliever Hitoki Iwase, which proved to be the winning runs in Korea's 6–2 win.

In the gold medal game against Cuba, Lee hit a two-run home run in the first inning off Cuban starter Norberto González to help Korea defeat Cuba and win the gold medal.[6]

Career statistics[]

Career statistics in KBO League[]

Season Team G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB SF BB HBP K GIDP E AVG SLG OBP OPS
1995 Samsung 121 365 55 104 29 1 13 73 0 9 33 4 54 4 8 .285 .477 .345 .822
1996 122 459 57 139 32 6 9 76 4 6 34 5 42 10 5 .303 .458 .354 .812
1997 126 517 96 170 37 3 32 114 5 5 49 6 79 10 4 .329 .598 .391 .989
1998 126 477 100 146 32 2 38 102 0 8 78 5 97 4 3 .306 .621 .404 1.025
1999 132 486 128 157 33 2 54 123 10 4 112 12 114 7 0 .323 .733 .458 1.191
2000 125 454 108 133 33 0 36 95 4 3 80 7 113 5 2 .293 .604 .404 1.008
2001 127 463 101 128 31 2 39 95 4 3 96 12 130 6 4 .276 .605 .412 1.017
2002 133 511 123 165 42 2 47 126 1 2 89 15 109 11 4 .323 .689 .436 1.125
2003 131 479 115 144 23 0 56 144 7 6 101 10 89 11 5 .301 .699 .428 1.127
2012 126 488 84 150 28 2 21 85 6 6 59 4 101 10 4 .307 .502 .384 .886
2013 111 443 62 112 24 8 13 69 3 8 30 2 94 8 0 .253 .395 .298 .693
2014 127 506 83 156 30 0 32 101 5 2 40 0 77 10 0 .308 .557 .358 .915
2015 122 470 87 156 28 1 26 90 2 6 40 6 71 10 0 .332 .562 .387 .949
2016 142 542 91 164 32 2 27 118 5 8 65 8 89 7 0 .303 .518 .380 .899
2017 135 472 65 132 30 5 24 87 1 8 47 6 85 7 2 .280 .517 .347 .864
Total 1906 7132 1355 2156 464 28 467 1498 34 76 953 102 1344 120 39 .302 .572 .389 .960

Career statistics in NPB[]

Season Team G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB SF BB HBP K GIDP E AVG OBP SLG OPS
2004 Lotte 100 333 50 80 20 4 14 50 1 3 42 3 88 6 4 0.240 0.328 0.450 0.779
2005 Lotte 117 408 64 106 25 2 30 82 5 3 33 1 79 9 2 0.260 0.315 0.551 0.886
2006 Yomiuri 143 524 101 169 30 0 41 108 5 7 56 5 126 5 3 0.323 0.389 0.616 1.003
2007 Yomiuri 137 541 84 148 29 2 30 74 4 1 38 1 119 8 5 0.274 0.322 0.501 0.823
2008 Yomiuri 45 153 21 38 4 0 8 27 1 0 11 6 37 3 0 0.248 0.324 0.431 0.755
2009 Yomiuri 77 223 33 51 9 0 16 36 1 1 28 5 65 1 3 0.229 0.327 0.484 0.811
2010 Yomiuri 56 92 13 15 1 0 5 11 1 0 12 3 26 0 2 0.163 0.280 0.337 0.617
2011 Orix 122 394 28 79 20 0 15 51 0 6 32 0 121 8 4 0.201 0.257 0.365 0.622
Total 797 2668 394 686 138 8 159 439 18 21 252 24 661 40 23 0.257 0.324 0.494 0.818

Variety shows[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Seung-yeop Lee". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved May 26, 2018.
  2. ^ 이승엽, 400호 홈런 폭발 (in Korean). YTN. 2006-08-01.
  3. ^ Digital Chosunilbo (English Edition) : Daily News in English About Korea Archived May 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Slugger Lee Seung-yeop rejoins former S. Korean team". Korea Herald. 2011-12-05. Retrieved 2011-12-05.
  5. ^ "[SS포토]이승엽, 은퇴 경기 멀티 홈런의 순간". sports.news.naver.com (in Korean). Retrieved 2020-05-03.
  6. ^ "Korea clips Cuba to take baseball gold". Reuters. 2008-08-23. Retrieved 2008-08-23.

External links[]

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