Baseball is a game of habit. There are basic rules such as out count, runner position, and score difference, which must be followed as a habit in each situation. Every such play brings together to make the team solid.

A noticeable scene came out in the Kiwoom-Hanwha match held in Daejeon on the 10th. After Hanwha took the lead in the second inning with two outs and a full base hit by No. 4 Roh Si-hwan led to an ordinary ground ball in front of the third baseman. Kiwoom third baseman Kim Hwi-jip, who received the ball, had to speed up when he came forward a few steps and tried to step on the base, because Hanwha Hwang Young-mook, who was the runner of second base, almost reached third base by sliding after sprinting.
Presumably, Kim Hui-jip, the third baseman, had a close game that he had not expected until the moment of catching the port. The third umpire declared safe. The decision was unchanged even after the video was read at the request of Kiwoom’s bench.
Hwang Young-mook fully completed the basic skills needed for the situation. Anyone could tell that it was an ordinary ground ball to the third base. Even if the third baseman Kim Hui-jip threw to the first base without directly stepping on the third base, he would have easily caught the out count. Runners who mechanically react to the direction and speed of the ball on the premise of an out count are more likely not to sprint in such a scene. This is because they calculate the situation in advance when an inning ends while watching the ball according to their long-standing habit. Even while watching an ordinary ball, Hwang did not assume that the out count would increase, and ran to the third base as best he could. He created a safe timing by desperately sliding in from the legs. Thanks to this, third baseman Choi In-ho was also recognized for his score. While Noh was rolling to the third base, no one could have guessed it.
The hero of the game on the day was Peraza, a foreign hitter at the Hanwha Eagles who hit a finishing solo home run in the bottom of the 10th inning, when the game was 4-4. However, it is hard to predict how the result would have gone without Hwang Young-mook’s basic skills, which led the Hanwha Eagles to score the third run in the second inning. Moreover, the Hanwha Eagles won the game on the day, which ended its losing streak and was able to rebound, and ended the game against Kiwoom in the weekend with a winning series.
If you watch Hwang Young-mook’s play recently, you can see the desperate need not to miss the precious opportunity that has come your way in many places. In the Daejeon game on April 27, when Doosan and Hanwha faced each other, I had the opportunity to talk to Hwang Young-mook through an interview with a leading player after broadcasting the broadcast.
There was a loud echo during the interview that day. The question I asked at the time was, “When you look at your movements in the ground, you look serious every moment, but what kind of mind are you playing with now?” Hwang’s answer at the time was, “Now that I joined a professional baseball team through a difficult process, the opportunity is so precious to me. That’s why I can’t afford to have fun,” and added, “Laughter on the ground is a waste of money and a luxury for me. That’s why I have to be serious.”
A team builds competitiveness by summing up the power of each member. In addition, sometimes a single play that contains the desperation of each member can lead to changes in the entire team. It was a day when Hwang Young-mook left a message. At the end of a game, any team often faces a situation where one or two points are regrettable. Hwang Young-mook’s base learning is a scene that anyone can refer to at least once.
BY: 토토사이트