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Lotte Giants

Baseball club from South Korea

Lotte Giants

Baseball club from South Korea

FieldValue
nameLotte Giants
native_name롯데 자이언츠
native_name_langko
established
locationBusan
logoLotte Giants.svg
cap_logoLotte Giants cap.svg
leagueKBO League (1982–present)
retired_numbers10, 11{{cite web
urlhttp://www.ohmynews.com/NWS_Web/View/at_pg.aspx?CNTN_CD=A0001634507&PAGE_CD=&BLCK_NO=&CMPT_CD=A0101
titleIron arm Choi Dong-Won becomes Busans everlasting number 11
lastYoon
firstHyun
date30 September 2011
access-date26 October 2011
publisherOhmynews.com
languageko
colorsWhite, red, sky blue and navy blue
seriesKorean Series
series_champs1984, 1992
mascotNoori, Ahra, Pini and Win-G
ownerLotte Corporation
managerKim Tae-hyoung
website

| access-date=26 October 2011

  • Sajik Baseball Stadium (1986–present)
  • Ulsan Munsu Baseball Stadium (2014–present)
  • Gudeok Baseball Stadium (1982–1985)
  • Masan Baseball Stadium (1982–2010)

The Lotte Giants () are a South Korean professional baseball team based in Busan. They are a member of the KBO League. The Lotte Giants are owned by Lotte Corporation.

From 1982 through 1985, they played at Gudeok Baseball Stadium and since then have played at Sajik Baseball Stadium. They have won the Korean Series twice, in 1984 and 1992. The team drew about 1.38 million spectators during the 2009 season, a record which remains as the highest attendance in a single season in any South Korean sports league. They are often called the Busan Seagulls () because the official bird of the city of Busan is the seagull, and their main fight song is Moon Seung-jae's "Busan Seagulls".

History

Old mascot emblem

Origins

The Lotte Giants were founded as an amateur baseball team of the Korea Baseball Association in Seoul, South Korea, on 6 May 1975. On 22 February 1982, the Giants became professional and moved to Busan, the second-largest city in South Korea.

1980s

The Lotte Giants made their KBO League debut against the Haitai Tigers at Gudeok Baseball Stadium on 28 March 1982. They defeated the Tigers 14–2, but finished the year in fifth place out of six teams with a .388 winning percentage. Choi Dong-won, Ryu Du-yeol and Sim Jae-won of the South Korea national baseball team postponed joining the Giants to play for the country in the 1982 Amateur World Series, held in Seoul.

In 1984, the Giants won their first Korean Series title in the third season after the KBO League was launched. They beat the Samsung Lions 4–3 in the Korean Series. They were led by Choi Dong-won, one of the most dominant pitchers in the Korea Professional Baseball league, who finished the 1984 season with 27 wins, 223 strikeouts, and a 2.40 ERA and won the regular season MVP Award. In the 1984 Korean Series, he appeared in five out of seven games, had a 4–1 record (one shutout, three complete games, and one five-inning relief appearance), and pitched 40 innings in ten days.

The Giants made one of the biggest trades in KBO League history after the 1988 season when they sent their star pitcher Choi Dong-won and Kim Yong-chul to the Samsung Lions, and received hitter Jang Hyo-jo and pitcher Kim Si-kin.{{cite web |access-date=7 September 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121005103804/http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/special/2011/09/181_94409.html |archive-date=5 October 2012

1990s

The Giants made it back to the Korean Series in 1995 and 1999, losing both times. They have not appeared in the Korean Series since 1999.

2000s

From 2001 to 2007 the Giants did not qualify for the postseason, finishing in last place for four consecutive years (2001–2004). In mid-2001, the Giants' manager Kim Myung-seong, who had been in charge of the team since 1998, died of a heart attack. He was replaced by Woo Yong-deuk.

Late in 2007, the Giants signed American Jerry Royster to become the manager of the Giants, making him the first-ever non-Korean to take the helm of one of South Korea's professional baseball clubs.{{cite news |access-date=14 September 2010

Popularity and attendance

Fans cheering for the Giants at Sajik Baseball Stadium in 2011.

The Giants are one of the most popular teams in the Korea Baseball Organization. According to a Gallup Korea's survey conducted in 2011, the Giants were voted as the most popular team three times in a row. In 1991, they became the first Korean team to attract more than one million spectators to their home games during a season. In the 2009 season, they set the all-time record of home attendance of 1,380,018 fans. In the 2011 season, they also led the league in the total home attendance with 1,358,322 fans at 67 home games. The average attendance was 20,273 fans per game, meaning the stadium was 71% full on average per game. From 2008 to 2012, they drew over 1 million fans for five consecutive seasons.

Season-by-season records

SeasonStadiumLeagueFinishRegular seasonPostseasonAwardsRankGamesWinsLossesDrawsWin%BAHRERA
1982Gudeok Baseball StadiumKBO5/65/64013270.325.256593.95
4/64018220.450
1983KBO6/64/65022271.449.244783.79
6/65021290.420
1984KBO1/64/65021281.429.257713.31Won Korean Series vs. Samsung Lions (4–3)Choi Dong-won (MVP)
1/65029201.592
1985KBO2/64/65527280.491.256773.05
2/65532230.582
1986Sajik Baseball StadiumKBO5/73/75430204.600.248372.74
5/75420322.385
1987KBO3/73/75427252.519.268403.36
3/75427243.528
1988KBO3/74/75429241.546.270683.59
3/75428251.528
1989KBO7/77/712048675.421.247383.91
1990KBO6/76/712044714.388.245414.43
1991KBO4/84/812661623.496.260733.91Lost semi-playoff vs. Samsung Lions (1–1–2)
1992KBO1/83/812671551.563.288684.28Won semi-playoff vs. Samsung Lions (2–0)
Won playoff vs. Haitai Tigers (3–2)
Won Korean Series vs. Binggrae Eagles (4–1)
Yeom Jong-seok (ROTY)
1993KBO6/86/812662631.496.248293.33
1994KBO6/86/812656673.456.257584.44
1995KBO2/83/812668535.560.255653.47Won playoff vs. LG Twins (4–2)
Lost Korean Series vs. OB Bears (3–4)
1996KBO5/85/812657636.476.274724.16
1997KBO8/88/812648771.385.237754.58
1998KBO8/88/812650724.410.255864.61
1999Dream League2/82/413275525.591.2911454.18Won playoff vs. Samsung Lions (4–3)
Lost Korean Series vs. Hanwha Eagles (1–4)
2000Magic League5/82/413365644.504.2601044.02Lost semi-playoff vs. Samsung Lions (1–2)
2001KBO8/88/813359704.457.2801214.68
2002KBO8/88/813335971.265.245854.74
2003KBO8/88/813339913.300.256735.01
2004KBO8/88/8133507211.410.252884.22
2005KBO5/85/812658671.464.253834.31Son Min-han (MVP)
2006KBO7/87/812650733.407.250883.88
2007KBO7/87/812655683.447.270764.14
2008KBO3/83/812669570.548.282933.64Lost semi-playoff vs. Samsung Lions (0–3)
2009KBO4/84/813366670.496.2771214.75Lost semi-playoff vs. Doosan Bears (1–3)
2010KBO4/84/813369613.531.2881854.82Lost semi-playoff vs. Doosan Bears (2–3)Lee Dae-ho (MVP)
2011KBO3/82/813372565.563.2881114.20Lost playoff vs. SK Wyverns (2–3)
2012KBO4/84/813365626.512.263733.48Won semi-playoff vs. Doosan Bears (3–1)
Lost playoff vs. SK Wyverns (2–3)
2013KBO5/95/912866584.532.261613.93
2014KBO7/97/912859681.457.2871215.19
2015KBO8/108/1014466771.462.2801775.07
2016KBO8/108/1014466780.458.2881275.63
2017KBO3/103/1014480622.563.2851514.56Lost semi-playoff vs. NC Dinos (2–3)
2018KBO7/107/1014468742.479.2892035.37
2019KBO10/1010/1014448933.340.250904.83
2020KBO7/107/1014471721.497.2761314.64
2021KBO8/108/1014465718.478.2781075.37
2022KBO8/108/1014464764.457.2671064.45
2023KBO7/107/1014468760.472.265694.15
2024KBO7/107/1014466744.471.2851255.05
2025KBO7/107/1014466726.478.267754.75

Team

Current roster

Retired numbers

The club's first retired number is Choi Dong-won's squad number 11. Described as one of the top pitchers in the Korea Professional Baseball league, he played for the Giants between 1983 and 1988, and won the KBO MVP award in 1984. Choi died of cancer in 2011. In 2022, the club retired the number 10 in honour of Lee Dae-ho, who spent more than 15 seasons with the Giants.

[[File:KBO Retired Lotte 11.svg150px]]
Choi Dong-won

Managers

  • Park Young-gil (1982–1983)
  • Kang Byeong-chel (1983–1986)
  • Seong Gi-young (1987)
  • Eu Woo-hong (1987–1989)
  • Kim Jin-young (1989–1990)
  • Shosuke Doi (1990) (caretaker)
  • Kang Byeong-chel (1990–1993)
  • Kim Yong-hee (1993–1998)
  • Kim Myung-seong (1998–2001)
  • Woo Yong-deuk (2001–2002)
  • Kim Yong-hee (2002) (caretaker)
  • Baek In-cheon (2002–2003)
  • Kim Yong-cheol (2003) (caretaker)
  • Yang Sang-moon (2003–2005)
  • Kang Byeong-chel (2005–2007)
  • Jerry Royster (2008–2010)
  • Yang Seung-ho (2011–2012)
  • Kwon Doo-jo (2012) (caretaker)
  • Kim Si-jin (2012–2014)
  • Lee Jong-un (2014–2015)
  • Cho Won-woo (2015–2018)
  • Yang Sang-moon (2019)
  • Kong Pil-seong (2019) (caretaker)
  • Heo Moon-hoi (2020–2021)
  • Larry Sutton (2021–2023)
  • Lee Jong-un (2023) (caretaker)
  • Kim Tae-hyoung (2023–present)

References

;General

  • {{cite web |access-date=21 April 2021 |url-status=dead |archive-date=13 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210413165007/https://www.koreabaseball.com/TeamRank/TeamRank.aspx ;Specific

References

  1. (3 May 2015). "KBO clubs invest in popular cheerleading songs".
  2. {{in lang. ko [http://news.sportsseoul.com/read/baseball/969702.htm 한국시리즈 '나홀로 4승' 불꽃투, 우승 이끌다] {{webarchive. link. (26 March 2012. [[Seoul Sinmun). Sports Seoul]]. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  3. Yonhap. [https://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/2020/06/28/sports/Baseball/wyverns-manager-sk-wyverns-youm-kyoungyoub/20200628181407136.html "KBO manager's collapse shows how stressful the job is,"] ''Korea JoongAng Daily'' (28 June 2020).
  4. {{usurped. (June 2020)
  5. link. Article.joinsmsn.com
  6. "관중 현황".
  7. [http://www.koreabaseball.com/generation/generation09.asp KBO 역대관중현황 ] {{webarchive. link. (4 December 2008)
  8. link. News.sportsseoul.com
  9. (8 October 2022). "S. Korean baseball legend Lee Dae-ho retires after 22 seasons".
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