Landers slugger Choi Jeong ‘proud’ of breaking KBO home run record, eyes new milestone


SSG Landers star Choi Jeong has never been one to toot his own horn when it comes to his achievements in the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO). The 37-year-old third baseman is modest and unassuming by nature.

On Wednesday, though, Choi accomplished something that he can brag about without feeling embarrassed: he became the all-time home run king in KBO history.

Choi smacked a solo home run off Lotte Giants starter Lee In-bok in the top of the fifth inning at Sajik Baseball Stadium in the southeastern city of Busan. It gave Choi 468 home runs, putting him past former Samsung Lions slugger Lee Seung-yuop on the career home run list.

“This is such a tremendous honor. It still hasn’t hit me yet I’ve set this record,” Choi told reporters after the Landers rallied for a 12-7 victory. “I never even thought about this record when I started out. I am proud of myself.”

Before the start of the season, Choi had said he wanted to get the record out of the way as quickly as possible, so that he could be out of the li
melight and just focus on the rest of the season. As he neared Lee’s mark this month, Choi repeated that tune.

With the record finally his after his 10th homer of 2024, Choi said he was both happy and relieved.

“I knew I needed 10 homers, and I was worried that the pressure would keep building up if that 10th home run didn’t come soon enough,” Choi said. “I feel fortunate that it came so much earlier than I’d expected. I will now be able to shift the focus back on the team and the season.”

Choi admitted he had been distracted for a while as he closed in on the record. The KBO began using a specially marked ball for every Choi at-bat as he closed in on Lee’s record, so that the home run record could be properly authenticated after it was caught by a fan. That arrangement made Choi feel uncomfortable.

“They changed the ball every time I came to the plate, and I felt sorry toward opposing pitchers because they had to throw the new ball just for me,” Choi said. “So for one reason or another, I had trouble con
centrating at times. I am just glad I got the job done tonight.”

Choi’s home run ball traveled 110 meters to left field, but the player said he wasn’t sure it would leave the yard when it left his bat.

“This stadium has high fences, and I ran hard to first base in case the ball bounced off the wall,” Choi said. “As I rounded the bases, I felt a little embarrassed. It would have been nice to have hit it at home in Incheon (just west of Seoul), but I am just glad I got this out of the way.”

One other regret Choi had at the moment was that the home run came with his team still trailing. Choi’s homer cut the deficit to 7-5, and cleanup Han Yoo-seom followed Choi with his own solo homer to make it 7-6. The Landers came back to win by five runs, but Choi wasn’t sure if his team could pull off the comeback after he hit his homer.

“I was hoping I wouldn’t hit it with the team down in the game, because I figured I would really hate that kind of situation,” Choi said. “I didn’t have good swings in earlier at-bats,
and then that home run seemed to come out of nowhere. I am just glad we rallied to win the game.”

Choi suffered an ill-timed injury last Wednesday, a day after tying Lee’s mark, when he took an errant pitch to his left side. It was Choi’s 330th hit-by-pitch, an all-time KBO record by a mile.

The initial diagnosis was a broken rib, which would have sidelined Choi for a few weeks. But the following day, the Landers said Choi had only sustained a bruise. He ended up missing just four games. He was in the lineup for Tuesday’s game, which was called off after four innings due to rain.

“Once I found out I only had a bruise, I thought I’d be back pretty fast. And I wanted to get my feel back while playing games,” Choi said. “I thought I could get my rhythm back within three or four days, unless I missed an extended period of time.”

Now in his 20th season, Choi took a moment to reflect on his journey so far and called himself “a lucky guy.”

“I want to thank my parents for giving me these abilities,” Choi said. ”
I also feel lucky because I’ve been hit by so many pitches and yet I’ve never suffered a serious injury that forced me to miss a season. Some players suffer broken bones when they get drilled by pitches, but I’ve been able to stay on the field the whole time. I really feel very fortunate.”

Hardly one to chase numbers, Choi let on that he wants to go for 500 home runs.

Lee Seung-yuop once said Choi should keep playing into his 40s and go for 600 home runs. Choi said he doesn’t think he could get to 600, but 500 is doable.

“I want to change my mindset a little bit and set a long-term goal,” Choi said. “I want 500 home runs.”

By hitting his 10th homer of this season, Choi extended his own record of reaching double figures in homers to 19 consecutive seasons. Choi said it’s the one record of his that he doesn’t want to see broken because it represents his consistency.

“Ever since I was young, my goal was always to be a consistent player,” Choi said. “I absolutely love the fact that I’ve been extending my own
record. My only goal for each season is to get into double figures in home runs. I am really happy to get to this point, and I feel like I can relax more at the plate the rest of this season. Every home run after this will be a bonus.”

Choi has said he doesn’t go up to the plate trying to hit home runs and imparted the same message to future sluggers looking up to him.

“If you just think about hitting home runs, you will most likely lose your battle against the pitcher,” Choi said. “You must have good fundamentals in place first. And then once you get to the pro ranks, then you can start upgrading yourself.”

Source: Yonhap News Agency

KBO gives clubs in-ear devices to track automated calls in real time


SEOUL, In light of recent officiating controversy, the South Korean baseball league announced Tuesday it has provided clubs with devices that will follow calls from the automated ball-strike system (ABS) in real time.

The Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) said all 10 clubs will each have an in-ear device that will relay calls from the ABS at the same time as the home plate umpire receives them.

The KBO implemented the ABS this season to ensure more accurate ball-strike calls. It determines balls and strikes with a tracking system, and delivers calls to the home plate umpire through an ear piece.

The KBO said any member of a team working in the dugout may wear the device. If the umpire’s call is different from the ABS call on the device, then the team official will be allowed to ask the umpire for confirmation, as long as the appeal is made before the next pitch.

If the incorrect call is made on a pitch that ends an inning, then the appeal must be made within 20 seconds.

In addition, the KBO will also em
power the designated ABS official working at each game to intervene should there be any discrepancy between the ABS call and the umpire’s decision.

The KBO decided to equip its clubs with the new device after an incident surrounding a missed call led to the dismissal of a veteran umpire last week.

On April 14, home plate umpire Moon Seong-hoon missed a “strike” call from an ABS system during a game between the NC Dinos and the Samsung Lions. Dinos manager Kang In-kwon belatedly tried to argue the call, after the league-issued tablet showed the strike call on a few seconds’ delay.

While discussing the situation, umpire Lee Min-ho, crew chief for the game, was heard on a mic during the game broadcast as telling Moon to pretend he’d heard a “ball” on his ear piece so that the entire crew could avoid further trouble.

The KBO fired Lee last Friday, and suspended Moon and another umpire from that game, Chu Pyung-ho, for three months without pay.

Kang welcomed the KBO’s decision Tuesday, thought he felt it was
long overdue.

“It will help us to be able to confirm strikes and balls in real time. It’s a shame that we could have prevented problems beforehand, and we only have this in place after some issues had already come up,” Kang told reporters at Jamsil Baseball Stadium in Seoul, before playing the Doosan Bears. “I hope we have no further problems with the ABS.”

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Ex-S. Korean weightlifter Jeon Sang-guen to receive belated ’12 Olympic bronze in Paris


SEOUL, Former South Korean weightlifter Jeon Sang-guen will receive his belated 2012 London Olympic bronze medal this summer following the disqualification of a Russian athlete for a doping violation, the sport’s national governing body said Tuesday.

The Korea Weightlifting Federation (KWF) said Jeon will be awarded his 2012 medal in the men’s +105 kilograms event on Aug. 9 in Paris during the Olympics there.

Jeon originally finished in fourth place with a total of 436 kilograms. Ruslan Albegov of Russia had taken the bronze medal at 448 kilograms.

However, Albegov was stripped of that medal in March this year due to doping, with the International Olympic Committee’s Executive Board approving the reallocation of the medal that same month.

The KWF said Tuesday reallocation plans have been finalized, and Jeon, now 43 and retired from weightlifting, will be honored a dozen years after the fact.

Jeon is one of three South Korean weightlifters who have been elevated to the podium for London 2012 following do
ping cases for their competitors.

Jang Mi-ran, currently vice sports minister, moved up from fourth place to third in the women’s +75kg event. Jang, who won the 2008 Olympic gold in that same division, has not yet received her 2012 medal.

In the men’s 94kg class, Kim Min-jae went all the way up from eighth place to the silver medal, after all three medalists, plus those who finished fourth, sixth and seventh, were disqualified after testing positive for banned substances. Kim received his silver medal in October 2019.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Ryu Hae-ran finishes 5th at LPGA major as S. Korea drought reaches 9 events


South Korean sophomore Ryu Hae-ran has recorded her best finish at an LPGA major championship, though it wasn’t enough to end the country’s title drought on the top women’s tour.

Ryu finished alone in fifth at the Chevron Championship, the first major of the season, by shooting nine-under 279 at The Club at Carlton Woods in The Woodlands, Texas, on Sunday (local time).

Ryu held a 54-hole lead in the weather-interrupted tournament, with the third round being completed Sunday morning, but couldn’t stay out in front as she carded four bogeys and two birdies in the final round.

Ryu started her final round with back-to-back bogeys, and another bogey on the fifth pushed her further out of contention.

Ryu bounced back with birdies on the eighth and the ninth, but gave back a shot with a bogey on the 14th.

It was still Ryu’s best showing at a major. Her previous best finish was a solo eighth at the U.S. Women’s Open last year.

Among other South Koreans, rookie Im Jin-hee finished eighth at six-under, and the 2
020 U.S. Women’s Open champion Kim A-lim tied for ninth at five-under.

World No. 1 Nelly Korda won her LPGA record-tying fifth straight tournament with a two-shot victory at the Chevron for her second career major.

By shooting 13-under, with four straight rounds in the 60s, Korda joined Nancy Lopez (1978) and Annika Sorenstam (2004-05) as the only players to win five consecutive LPGA events.

South Korea has not produced an LPG winner nine events into this season. It’s the longest such drought to begin a season since 2014, when Park In-bee won the 14th tournament of the year, the Manulife Financial LPGA Classic.

In 2023, four South Korean players combined for five victories, including one by Ryu, who went on to capture the Rookie of the Year award.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Landers’ Choi Jeong likely to return from injury this week to resume KBO home run record chase


After sustaining a bruise to his left rib on an errant pitch last week, SSG Landers third baseman Choi Jeong will likely resume his chase of the all-time South Korean home run record this week.

Choi pulled into a tie with former Samsung Lions star Lee Seung-yuop last Tuesday with his 457th career home run in the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO). But Choi suffered that rib injury the very next day when he took a two-seam fastball from Kia Tigers starter Wil Crowe to his left side in the bottom of the first inning at Incheon SSG Landers Field in Incheon, just west of Seoul.

Choi exited the game with what Landers officials initially called a broken rib. After Choi underwent further tests the following day, the Landers said Choi had suffered a rib contusion, not a fracture.

The Landers did not place Choi on the injured list, as the Landers enjoyed a six-game homestand last week. Choi even took some light swings during batting practice Sunday and, according to Landers manager Lee Sung-yong, came out of the se
ssion pain free.

“He told me he’d try to get ready to play Tuesday, but we’ll have to see how he feels that day,” Lee told reporters Sunday. “If he takes harder swings, he may still feel some pain. It’s hard to say at this point exactly when he’ll be ready to come back.”

After playing all six games at home last week, the Landers will open the new week on the road in Busan, some 320 kilometers southeast of Seoul, with a three-game series against the Lotte Giants.

They will come home again Friday to host the KT Wiz for three games starting Friday.

While Choi was on the sidelines, his teammate Han Yoo-seom passed him to take the lead for this season with his 10th home run on Sunday.

The next home run will give Choi the all-time record and also extend his double-digit home run streak to a record 19 seasons.

Choi, 37, made his KBO debut in 2005 and has hit at least 10 home runs in every year since 2006. He has topped the KBO in home runs three times — 2016, 2017 and 2021.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Hitting streak ends at 11 games for Giants’ rookie Lee Jung-hoo


The San Francisco Giants’ South Korean rookie Lee Jung-hoo has seen his hitting streak snapped at 11 games.

Lee went 0-for-2 with a walk as the Giants lost to the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sunday (local time). Lee was also hit by a pitch and was caught stealing.

Lee had hit safely in each of his past 11 games, the longest such streak ever by a South Korean rookie in Major League Baseball (MLB).

During that span, Lee batted 17-for-48 (.354) to raise his batting average for the season from .200 to .289.

Lee led off the bottom of the first inning against starter Slade Cecconi with a groundout to third baseman Eugenio Suarez.

He was then hit by a 0-2 slider from Cecconi in the bottom fourth — the first time he’d been struck by a pitch in MLB — and flied out to right fielder Jake McCarthy in the bottom sixth.

In his last trip to the plate in the bottom eighth, Lee drew a walk from reliever Ryan Thompson. Lee was later caught stealing second base — the third time he’s bee
n thrown out on a steal attempt.

Lee’s batting average fell slightly to .282 after his hitless Sunday.

Source: Yonhap News Agency