Former minor leaguer looks to reset his career

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Former minor leaguer looks to reset his career

After toiling in the U.S. minor leagues for three seasons and being away from baseball while completing his military service, Korean left-hander Yoon Jeong-hyeon is trying to press the reset button on his career and have a fresh start.

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Yoon Jeong-hyeon throws a pitch during an exhibition game against the LG Twins at Gocheok Sky Dome in western Seoul on Wednesday. [KIWOOM HEROES]

To do that, Yoon has gone back to his old delivery on the mound.

The 25-year-old is battling for a spot in the bullpen for the Kiwoom Heroes, which selected him with the fourth overall pick at last year’s Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) draft.

It was the second time Yoon had been drafted in the league. In 2012, the Lotte Giants picked him in the eighth round, and he instead opted to enroll at Dongguk University in Seoul. He dropped out during his freshman year and signed with the Baltimore Orioles.

He made his rookie league debut in 2014 but reached only as high as low-A ball in 2016. He returned home and fulfilled his two-year military service, which ended last summer.

Though he’d not played competitive baseball for two years, the Heroes still saw enough in Yoon to pick him so high in the draft. Following a month-long camp in Arizona, Yoon made his preseason debut in relief Wednesday against the LG Twins, sporting an unorthodox delivery.

With his right leg lifted when pitching from the windup, Yoon twisted his upper body - his back almost completely turned to the hitter - before throwing the ball. He didn’t have the same pause at the top when pitching from the stretch with a runner on base.

“It’s something I used to do, and I told my coaches that I’d work on getting back to that during spring,” Yoon told Yonhap News Agency on Thursday at Gocheok Sky Dome in western Seoul. “I am trying to keep hitters off balance, and I want to be more consistent with it. I think I am getting there.”

Yoon’s positive assessment of his delivery wasn’t reflected in his pitching line. He served up a two-run home run to Tommy Joseph in the fifth inning, after leaving a fastball up in the zone, and was charged with two earned runs in one-third of an inning. Yoon chose to look on the bright side, saying he was just feeling out his pitches.

“I feel great physically, and it’s getting better,” Yoon said. “I was really happy to be pitching in my first preseason game. I feel bad about letting our fans down, but there’s a lot of baseball left. I’ll try to be better the next time.”

The Heroes have yet to determine Yoon’s role, though it’s unlikely he’ll make the rotation. They could instead use him as a situational lefty out of the pen.

“My coaches told me to stay prepared, because they don’t know how they’re going to use me yet,” Yoon said. “Whatever opportunity comes up, I will try to pounce on it.”

Yoon is wearing No. 99, the same number donned by Los Angeles Dodgers’ Korean left-hander Ryu Hyun-jin. The way Yoon stood on the rubber resembled Ryu’s posture.

Ryu, former MVP in the KBO who is entering his seventh year in the majors, is arguably the greatest left-hander to ever come out of Korea. And though Yoon didn’t pick No. 99 - “The team just gave me that number,” he said - Yoon is still happy to have something in common with Ryu.

“I’ve been a fan of Hyun-jin for a long time,” Yoon said. “He’s always been a role model. I am happy to have the same No. 99.”

Yonhap
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