Kang Min-ho
Kang Min-Ho |
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Lotte Giants – No. 47 |
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Catcher |
Born: (1985-08-18) August 18, 1985 |
Bats: Right |
Throws: Right |
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Professional debut |
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KBO: September 19, 2004 for the Lotte Giants |
KBO statistics (through mid-2011) |
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Batting average |
.277 |
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Home runs |
87 |
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RBI |
359 |
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Teams |
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Kang Min-Ho (Hangul: 강민호, Hanja: 姜珉鎬) (born August 18, 1985 in Jeju City, Jeju-do, South Korea) is a catcher who plays for the Lotte Giants in the Korean Baseball Organization. He contracted with Giants as a Free Agent player for 0.75 billion on 13 November 2013.[1]
Amateur career
Kang attended Pocheol Technical High School in Pohang, Gyeongsangbuk-do, South Korea. In 2003, he was selected for the South Korea national junior team and competed in the 5th Asian Junior Baseball Championship held in Bangkok, Thailand. As a starting catcher, Kang helped South Korea win their second Championship title.
Notable international careers
Year |
Venue |
Competition |
Team |
Individual Note |
2003 |
Thailand |
Asian Junior Baseball Championship |
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Professional career
After graduation from high school, Kang made his pro debut in 2004, drafted by the Lotte Giants in the 2nd round (3rd pick, 17th overall) of the 2004 KBO draft.
In the 2006 KBO season, he became a starting catcher, appearing in all 126 regular season games. Kang was the youngest starting catcher to play all regular season games in the KBO history.
Kang offensively broke out in the 2008 season. He finished 19th in batting average (.292), 5th in home runs (19) and 6th in RBI (82), and led the Giants to their first post-season appearance since 2000. He won his first Golden Glove Award. Kang was the first catcher of all time to win a Golden Glove Award as a Giants catcher.
Kang participated in the 2008 Olympic Games held in Beijing, China, selected for the South Korea national baseball team, where he served as backup to Jin Kab-Yong. However, Jin was injured during a game against the Netherlands, and Kang took over as the starting catcher at the next game. He did a successful job for replacing an injured Jin Kab-Yong during the rest of the competition and eventually leading South Korea to the gold medal.
Awards and honors
- 2008 Golden Glove Award (Catcher)
- 2011 Golden Glove Award (Catcher)
- 2012 Golden Glove Award (Catcher)
Notable international careers
References
- ↑ "민호 롯데 잔류 선택… 4년 75억 역대 최고 금액". kyeongin. Retrieved 13 November 2013.
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| Active roster |
- 0 Kim Joo-hyeon
- 3 Oh Seung-taek
- 5 Son Yong-seok
- 6 Mun Kyu-hyeon
- 7 Park Jun-seo
- 8 Jeon Jun-woo
- 9 Lim Jong-hyuk
- 10 Ha Jun-ho
- 12 Kim Min-ha
- 13 Hwang Jae-gyun
- 14 Kang Young-sik
- 17 Shim Soo-chang
- 18 Kim Dae-woo
- 19 Hong Sung-min
- 20 Kang Seung-hyun
- 21 Song Seung-jun
- 24 Kim Moon-ho
- 25 Choi Jun-seok
- 26 Jang Sung-woo
- 30 Choi Dae-seong
- 31 Son Ah-seop
- 32 Kim Seung-hye
- 33 Jung Hoon
- 35 Lee Myung-woo
- 36 Park Jong-yoon
- 38 Chong Tae-hyon
- 39 Hwang Dong-chae
- 42 Kim Sa-hoon
- 43 Koo Seung-min
- 45 Lee Jung-min
- 46 Chris Oxspring
- 47 Kang Min-ho
- 49 Bae Jang-ho
- 51 Lee Seung-hwa
- 54 Moon Dong-wook
- 56 Sin Bon-ki
- 59 Baek Min-gi
- 60 Lee Chang-jin
- 61 Heo Jun-hyeok
- 63 Ko Do-hyeon
- 65 Lee In-bok
- 66 Hwang Jin-soo
- 67 Kim Sung-bae
- 91 Lee Sang-hwa
- 93 Cho Hong-seok
- 94 Shim Kyu-beom
- 96 Kim You-young
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| Inactive roster | |
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| Coaching Staff | |
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- Manager 81 In-sik Kim
- Bench coach 80 Sung-han Kim
- Pitching coach 79 Sang-moon Yang
- Hitting coach 78 Soon-chul Lee
- Third base coach 77 Joong-il Ryu
- First base coach 76 Min-ho Kim
- Battery coach 75 Sung-woo Kang
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- Manager 75 Joong-Il Ryu
- Bench coach 79 Sang-moon Yang
- Hitting coach 78 Jung-Tae Park
- Hitting coach 86 Han Soo Kim
- Pitching coach 77 Yong Duk Han
- Battery coach 80 Dongsoo Kim
- Defensive coach 76 Ji-Hyun Ryu
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