2022 KBO MVP Lee Jung-hoo signs with San Francisco Giants: reports


 Baseball player Lee Jung-hoo bows to his fans after a game against Samsung Lions at Gocheok Sky Dome in Seoul, Oct. 10. Yonhap

Former Korean league most valuable player (MVP) Lee Jung-hoo has signed with the San Francisco Giants, reports claimed Wednesday.New York Post columnist Jon Heyman tweeted Tuesday evening (U.S. local time) that Lee agreed to a six-year deal worth $113 million. Other U.S.-based reporters tweeted out the information, though the Giants have yet to announce the signing. Reports claimed Lee, 25, has an opt-out clause after the fourth season, meaning he can become a free agent.

If it’s made official, the deal would be the biggest contract awarded to a posted KBO player, surpassing the six-year, $36 million pact signed by pitcher Ryu Hyun-jin with the Los Angeles Dodgers before the 2013 season.Lee had been posted for Major League Baseball (MLB) clubs earlier this month after spending seven seasons in the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) with the Kiwoom Heroes. Lee had until 5 p.m. Eastern Time on Jan. 3 to sign a deal under the KBO-MLB posting rules.

The outfielder won the 2022 KBO regular season MVP award after leading the league in batting average (.349), hits (193), RBIs (113), on-base percentage (.421) and slugging percentage (.575).Once the deal is made official, Lee is expected to address the Giants’ hole in the outfield while offering strong bat-to-ball skills that made him among the best hitters in the KBO.He has a career .340 batting average, the highest mark in the KBO’s 41-year history among players with at least 3,000 plate appearances.

For his career, Lee has 383 walks and struck out only 304 times in 884 games.He missed most of the second half of this year due to an ankle injury but posted a solid .318/.406/.455 line across 86 games, with 23 strikeouts and 49 walks. He batted just .218 in April, the lowest 커뮤니티 monthly batting average of his career, before batting .305 in May, .374 in June and .435 in July. He missed all of August and September, and made one final appearance in October, when he grounded out in his lone plate appearance.

Represented by uber-agent Scott Boras, Lee had earlier been linked to the Giants and the New York Yankees, with the latter apparently pulling out of the race after trading for All-Star outfielder Juan Soto from the San Diego Padres.After shipping out Soto, the Padres were also believed to be interested in signing Lee and reuniting him with his former Heroes teammate, the Gold Glove-winning infielder Kim Ha-seong.

If the deal becomes official, Lee would be the fourth Heroes to move to MLB via posting, joining Kang Jung-ho (Pittsburgh Pirates), Park Byung-ho (Minnesota Twins) and Kim.Lee is the son of KBO legend Lee Jong-beom, who was nicknamed “Son of the Wind” for his blazing speed. In 1994, the senior Lee batted .393 with 84 steals to earn the regular season MVP honor. The Lees are the first father-son duo in KBO history to be voted MVPs.

The junior Lee isn’t considered a power hitter — his career high is 23 from 2022 but he has reached double figures in just one other season — but is a strong defender who can play all three outfield positions.KBO teams receive a “release fee” if they lose a player to MLB through posting, depending on the guaranteed value of the player’s contract.

If the guaranteed value of the deal — not counting a signing bonus or incentives — is $25 million or less, the release fee will be 20 percent of the contract. If the contract is worth between $25,000,001 and $50 million, the fee will be 20 percent of the first $25 million, plus 17.5 percent of any amount exceeding that $25 million.

If a player signs for more than $50 million, his former KBO team will receive 20 percent of the first $25 million ($5 million) and 17.5 percent of the next $25 million ($4,375,000), plus 15 percent of the amount exceeding $50 million. 


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