Park Chul-soon
Park Chul-soon | |
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Pitcher | |
Born: (1956-03-12)March 12, 1956 Pusan, South Korea | |
Batted: Right Threw: Right | |
Professional debut | |
MiLB: 1980, for the Stockton Ports | |
KBO: 1982, for the OB Bears | |
Last appearance | |
MiLB: 1981, for the El Paso Diablos | |
KBO: 1996, for the OB Bears | |
MiLB statistics | |
Win–loss | 11–12 |
Earned run average | 4.30 |
Strikeouts | 143 |
KBO statistics | |
Win–loss | 76–53 |
Earned run average | 2.95 |
Strikeouts | 648 |
Teams | |
As player
As coach
| |
Career highlights and awards | |
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Park Chul-soon | |
Hangul | 박철순 |
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Hanja | 朴哲淳 |
Revised Romanization | Bak Cheolsun |
McCune–Reischauer | Pak Ch'ŏlsun |
Park Chul-soon (Korean: 박철순; Hanja: 朴哲淳; also spelled Cheol Sun Park, Bak Cheol-sun; born March 12, 1956) is a former South Korean pitcher in the KBO League who played for the OB Bears. Park batted and threw right-handed. He was the second South Korean player to sign with a Major League team and play in the minor leagues after Lee Won-Kuk.[citation needed]
Amateur career
Park attended Daeseong High School in Daejeon and Baemyung High School in Seoul. After high school Park went on to pitch for Yonsei University, where in 1979 he excelled in a Korean-American university baseball championship, which led to him being signed to a contract by the Milwaukee Brewers.[citation needed]
Professional career
Minor League Baseball
Coming to the United States in 1980, Park pitched for the Class-A Stockton Ports and then the Double-A El Paso Diablos. During his two years in the Minor Leagues, Park finished 11–12 with a 4.30 earned run average.[1]
KBO League
Returning to South Korea, Park joined the OB Bears of the newly formed Korea Baseball Organization. He quickly established himself as the best pitcher in the league, at one point winning an all-time record 22 games in a row, and finishing the season with 24 wins, a 1.84 ERA, and 108 strikeouts. He won the inaugural KBO League Most Valuable Player Award as well as the Pitching Triple Crown.[citation needed]
Injuries, however, sidelined Park for most of 1983 and all of 1984. Returning to the league in 1985, he earned the nickname "Phoenix," but never pitched more than 116-⅔ innings in another season. Converted to a reliever, but still injury-plagued, he eventually pitched 13 seasons in all for the Bears. In August 1994, at age 38, he set a KBO record for being the oldest pitcher to throw a shutout when he beat the Taepyeongyang Dolphins. (The record was late broken by Song Jin-woo.)[citation needed]
Park retired after the 1996 season to become the Bears' pitching coach, where he remained until 1998.
Park Chul-Soon's number 21 was retired by the Doosan Bears in 2002.[2]
References
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Korea Baseball Organization (Official website)
- v
- t
- e
- 1982: Park Chul-soon
- 1983: Lee Man-soo
- 1984: Choi Dong-won
- 1985: Kim Seong-han
- 1986: Sun Dong-yol
- 1987: Jang Hyo-jo
- 1988: Kim Seong-han
- 1989: Sun Dong-yol
- 1990: Sun Dong-yol
- 1991: Chang Jong-hoon
- 1992: Chang Jong-hoon
- 1993: Kim Seong-rae
- 1994: Lee Jong-beom
- 1995: Kim Sang-ho
- 1996: Koo Dae-sung
- 1997: Lee Seung-yuop
- 1998: Tyrone Woods
- 1999: Lee Seung-yuop
- 2000: Park Kyung-oan
- 2001: Lee Seung-yuop
- 2002: Lee Seung-yuop
- 2003: Lee Seung-yuop
- 2004: Bae Young-soo
- 2005: Son Min-han
- 2006: Ryu Hyun-jin
- 2007: Danny Rios
- 2008: Kim Kwang-hyun
- 2009: Kim Sang-hyun
- 2010: Lee Dae-ho
- 2011: Yoon Suk-min
- 2012: Park Byung-ho
- 2013: Park Byung-ho
- 2014: Seo Geon-chang
- 2015: Eric Thames
- 2016: Dustin Nippert
- 2017: Yang Hyeon-jong
- 2018: Kim Jae-hwan
- 2019: Josh Lindblom
- 2020: Mel Rojas Jr.
- 2021: Ariel Miranda
- 2022: Lee Jung-hoo
- 2023: Erick Fedde