Jung Hoo Lee puts on a show for his 'Hoo Lee Gans'
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SAN FRANCISCO -- Giants fans are falling hard and fast for Jung Hoo Lee.
The Giants celebrated the return of their starting center fielder by introducing a new Jung Hoo Crew section for weekend home games, but the fan support has continued to grow organically during the middle of the week.
On Monday night, a new fan club known as the "Hoo Lee Gans" -- a clever play on the word ¡°hooligans¡± -- showed up in the Oracle Park stands to cheer on Lee. The 26-year-old Korean star didn¡¯t disappoint, as he found himself in the middle of the action in a 2-0 series-opening loss to the Reds that snapped the Giants¡¯ seven-game winning streak.
Lee made two sliding catches in center field to help back a stellar start from Logan Webb, who struck out 10 over seven scoreless innings, and then extended his on-base streak to nine games to start the year after reaching on a two-out single that sparked a last-ditch rally against Reds ace Hunter Greene in the bottom of the ninth.
¡°Jung Hoo is playing great baseball,¡± manager Bob Melvin said. ¡°He¡¯s running well. He¡¯s getting good jumps. He¡¯s playing great defense. He¡¯s swinging the bat.¡±
Greene needed only 83 pitches to work eight scoreless innings and had a shot at a Maddux after retiring LaMonte Wade Jr. and Willy Adames on eight pitches to open the ninth, but Lee -- buoyed by the 30,138 fans who chanted his name to the beat of a drum -- helped spoil his effort by lining a 99.7 mph fastball to right field to give the Giants only their fourth hit of the game.
Matt Chapman followed with a six-pitch walk to get Greene¡¯s pitch count up to 104 and finally force him out of the game, but Heliot Ramos then lined out to left field to seal San Francisco¡¯s first shutout loss -- and only second defeat -- of the year.
¡°We¡¯re playing great baseball,¡± Webb said. ¡°Tonight sucked, that we lost. It¡¯s weird to say, but if there¡¯s any way to lose a game, it¡¯s like that. It¡¯s a guy going out there and pitching a hell of a game against us. That¡¯s baseball. ¡±
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With Webb and Greene both dealing in a rematch of their Opening Day faceoff, the game remained scoreless until Blake Dunn delivered a two-run double in the eighth, though Lee came close to putting San Francisco on the board in the sixth.
After Willy Adames reached on a two-out single, Lee smoked a 99.6 mph fastball from Greene deep out to right-center field, but the 103.7 mph drive ended up dying at the warning track. The ball traveled a projected 384 feet and would have been a home run in 19 out of 30 MLB ballparks, per Statcast.
¡°I felt it was going to go over, but the wind was blowing in, so we can¡¯t do anything about the environment,¡± said Lee, who¡¯s batting .333 with an .885 OPS out of the three-hole for the Giants this year.
Lee is still getting used to playing at Oracle Park after missing most of last season with a left shoulder injury, but he already seems to be adapting well to center field here. He raced in to make a sliding grab and rob TJ Friedl of a potential leadoff hit in the top of the first inning and then made a similar play to take a hit away from Jeimer Candelario to start the fifth.
¡°It's super exciting,¡± Webb said. ¡°He's only scratching the surface of his abilities, and it's fun for all of us to watch because it's a pleasure to see him keep getting better.¡±
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Lee¡¯s play on both sides of the ball thrilled the Hoo Lee Gans, a group of 51 fans (a nod to his jersey number) who earned plenty of screen time on the Oracle Park scoreboard after wearing matching white T-shirts and fire-inspired wigs. Lee said he didn¡¯t see the group since they were sitting in the third deck, but he appreciated the wave of support he¡¯s received from fans over the Giants¡¯ first homestand of the year.
¡°Starting from last season, I didn¡¯t play too much, but coming in here right now, I can feel that the love from the fans is amazing,¡± Lee said via interpreter Justin Han.