Park Hyun-june (Korean박현준; Hanja朴顯俊; born September 22, 1986, in Jeonju, North Jeolla Province) is a South Korean pitcher. He previously played for the SK Wyverns and the LG Twins in the Korea Baseball Organization. He bats and throws right-handed.

Park Hyun-june
Pitcher
Born: (1986-09-22) September 22, 1986 (age 37)
Jeonju, North Jeolla Province, South Korea
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
KBO debut
April 4, 2009, for the SK Wyverns
Last appearance
October 2, 2011, for the LG Twins
KBO statistics
Win–loss15–14
Earned run average4.87
Strikeouts190
Teams

Amateur career edit

In 2005, Park enrolled in Kyung Hee University after graduation from Jeonju High School. Park started to garner attention in 2007 when he pitched a no-hitter against Wonkwang University in the group round of the college national championship (fall league) on September 12.

In 2008, as a senior at Kyung Hee University, Park led his team to win the college national championship (spring league) and earned MVP honors, tossing a two-run complete game victory in the final and posting a 3–0 record and a 0.87 ERA through the tournament. In July 2008, Park was selected for the South Korean collegiate national baseball team to complete in the World University Baseball Championship as a starter in the Czech Republic, when he was one of the most disappointing pitchers on the team. He racked up a win against Chinese Taipei in the round-robin phase, which assured South Korea a spot in the semifinals. However, he finished the tournament with a 6.61 ERA and 15 runs allowed in 16.1 innings.

Notable international careers edit

 Year  Venue Competition  Team  Individual Note
 2008     Czech Republic   World University Baseball Championship  4th  1-1, 6.61 ERA (4 G, 16.1 IP, 12 ER, 16 K) 

Professional career edit

SK Wyverns edit

Park was drafted by the SK Wyverns in the second round (8th pick, 16th overall) of the 2009 amateur draft. In the 2009 season, Park appeared in just 14 games as a setup man and posted a 5.82 ERA in 17 innings. After the season, Park was called up to the South Korean national baseball team and competed in the Baseball World Cup, where he was 1–0 with a 1.80 ERA appearing in 4 games as a relief pitcher.

Park was selected for the 26-man roster of the Wyverns' first team at the start of the 2010 season. However, he was relegated to the minor league after posting an ERA of 12.50 as a relief pitcher.

LG Twins edit

On July 28, 2010, Park was traded to the LG Twins. The Twins immediately moved Park from bullpen to the starting rotation of the Twins' first team, where he emerged as one of the Twins' reliable starters for the next season racking up 2 wins with a 5.76 ERA in 9 games as a starter. After the 2010 season, Park was selected for the South Korean national baseball team to compete in the Intercontinental Cup held in Taichung. He hurled a complete game to lead South Korea to an 8-1 win over Japan in Round 2 of the competition.

2011 is largely considered to be Park's breakout season, in which he pitched to a 13–10 record and a 4.18 ERA.

Game-fixing scandal edit

Prior to the 2012 season, Park was suspended by the KBO League due to his involvement in a match fixing scandal during the 2011 season.[1] He was accused of accepting bribes in return for trying to fix baseball games. He was later banned permanently from playing in the KBO League.

Notable international careers edit

 Year  Venue Competition  Team   Individual Note 
 2009     Europe   Baseball World Cup 9th  1-0, 1.80 ERA (4 G, 5.0 IP, 1 ER, 8 K) 
2010    Chinese Taipei   Intercontinental Cup  6th  1-0, 2.89 ERA (2 G, 9.1 IP, 3 ER, 6 K) 

Pitching style edit

Park is a sidearm pitcher with an 87-91 mph sinker (tops out at 94 mph), a slider, and a forkball.

References edit

External links edit