(3rd LD) Landers slugger Choi Jeong becomes new KBO career home run leader

SSG Landers slugger Choi Jeong is the new home run king in South Korean baseball. Choi launched his 468th home run off Lotte Giants starter Lee In-bok at Sajik Baseball Stadium in the southeastern city of Busan on Wednesday, passing former Samsung Lions star Lee Seung-yuop on the all-time home run list in the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO). With the Landers trailing 7-4, Choi came up with two outs in the top of the fifth inning for his third plate appearance. Choi drilled a first-pitch slider and sent it into left-field seats for the record-breaking homer. The ball left Choi's bat at 145 kilometers per hour and traveled 110 meters. After Choi rounded the bases, Landers manager Lee Sung-yong greeted the veteran with a hug and a wreath of flowers. The game was put on hold momentarily for a quick on-field ceremony for Choi, who was joined by Landers captain Choo Shin-soo. Giants captain Jeon Jun-woo also offered his congratulations on Choi's accomplishment. Choi's solo home run cut the deficit to 7-5, a nd Han Yoo-seom went back-to-back with a solo blast of his own to make it a 7-6 game. The Landers rallied with four runs in the seventh and two more in the ninth to win 12-7. Choi finished 1-for-5 with the home run, an RBI, a walk and two runs scored. He popped out to first in the first inning and flied out to left in the second inning. Choi came up twice during the four-run seventh inning, drawing a walk in his first plate appearance and then popping out to first. Choi grounded out to shortstop in the top ninth. This was Choi's first game since last Wednesday, when he suffered a bruised rib after taking an errant pitch to his left side. Choi was initially diagnosed with a hairline fracture in his left rib, but further tests Thursday revealed only a bruise, which still forced Choi to miss the next four games. Choi was back in the starting lineup Tuesday. But that game was called off before the start of the top fifth due to heavy downpours. Choi had doubled in the first inning. Choi suffered that rib inj ury a day after drawing level with Lee with a solo home run. This was Choi's 2,185th game. Lee retired in 2017 after hitting a couple of homers in his final, 1,906th game. With 10 home runs this season, Choi is halfway to becoming the first KBO hitter to smack at least 20 home runs in nine consecutive years. Choi, 37, has spent his entire 20-year career with the Landers franchise. He made his KBO debut in 2005 as an 18-year-old, when the team was called the SK Wyverns under a different corporate owner. Choi followed that up with 12 home runs in 2006 and has reached double digits in homers in every season since then. That 19-year run is the longest such streak in KBO history. Lee, now manager of the Doosan Bears, had been the KBO's home run king since belting his 352nd home run on June 20, 2013. According to the Landers, a Seoul-based Kia Tigers fan named Kang Sung-gu caught Choi's home run ball in the left field. The Landers said Kang had been in Busan on a business trip and decided to attend Wednesday' s game, even though it didn't feature his favorite team, because he knew Choi was one home run away from the record. Kang donated the ball to the Landers in exchange for a number of gifts. The package includes two season tickets for the rest of 2024 and the entire 2025 seasons, a bat signed by Choi and a giant ball signed by all Landers players. Kang will also receive a 1.4 million-won (US$1,017) online voucher for E-Mart, a retail affiliate of the Landers' corporate owner, Shinsegae Group, a 500,000 won voucher for SSG.com online mall, a 750,000 voucher for Josun Hotels and Resorts and free drinks for a year at Starbucks. Kang told reporters after the game that his younger brother is a Landers fan. Source: Yonhap News Agency