
New York compared to the first two games in the three -game series of the giants with the Yankees, on Sunday afternoon at the Bronx could also have been the Bahamas. The temperature was lifted, the sun shone and the sky presented Smally of bright blue instead of a monotonous gray uniform. With sustainable baseball conditions, striped fans went to the Yankee stage and completed the stadium.
With two swings of home, Jung Hoo Lee turned the Bronx Zoo into the Bronx Library.
Lee enjoyed the first game of several homers of his career, driving in four races when the giants (11-4) beat the New York Yankees, 5-4, and won the decisive game of the series of three games.
Lee connected his first home run at the top of the fourth entrance of the Yankees starter (8-7) Carlos Rodón, sitting on a hanging slide and throwing a non-harmful 406 feet on the fence of the right field. The lonely shot not only reduced the deficit of the giants to 3-1, but Cool San Francisco is the first success of the game. When Lee went to the plate two tickets later, he would have the opportunity to cause true damage.
The rookie Christian Koss was the entrance by eliminating a single in the painting for the first success of his career. Willy Adames took a two batters later, putting the runners first and second to read one out. Lee fell to Beind in the count, 1-2, but when Rodón left a curved ball at the top of the area, Lee cleared the fences with a three-run shot to give Francisco a 4-3 advantage that he would never lose.
Lee’s offensive was necessary on one afternoon when the AS Logan Webb did not have its best command. Webb needed 97 launches to grind in five tickets, allowing three races won and walking four batters.
Lee, who never visited New York City before this series, embraced the bright lights of Yankee Stadium all long series. The 26 -year -old marked the guideline for his time at the Bronx with a homer in his first turn of the three -game set. In total, Lee accumulated three homers, four hits, four balls per ball, seven races driven against the Yankees.
With the warning that he only played 37 games last season, Lee has already eclipsed last year’s totals in races (16), home runs (3), robberies (3), driven races (11) and doubles (8).
After a disappointing rookie season that ended last May with a shoulder injury, Lee seems that the player that the giants hoped to acquire when he signed a six -year agreement and $ 113 million. The National League is full of elite gardeners: Juan Soto, Kyle Tucker, Corbin Carroll, Fernando Tatis Jr., to name a few but read, is making an early offer of stars.
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