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San Diego Padres signs Star Korean ShortStop Seong-Ha Kim and Pitcher Yu Darvish

Padres sign Ha-Seong Kim to four-year contract

Kim will become the first Korean-born position player in club history

SAN DIEGO – The San Diego Padres have signed infielder Ha-Seong Kim to a four-year contract with a mutual option for the 2025 season, Executive Vice President/General Manager A.J. Preller announced today. To make room for Kim on the 40-man roster, the Padres designated Greg Allen for assignment.

In 138 games with the Kiwoom Heroes of the Korean Baseball Organization (KBO) last season, Kim batted .306 (163-for-533) with a career-high 30 HR, .397 OBP, .921 OPS, 24 doubles, 109 RBI, 23 stolen bases, 111 runs scored and 75 walks to just 68 strikeouts. Among all KBO players, the 25-year-old ranked 3rd in runs scored, 5th in stolen bases, 6th in walks, 8th in total bases (279), 9th in RBI, 10th in HR, 11th in hits and OPS, 12th in AVG and 13th in SLG (.523). Kim also led his club in HR, RBI and runs. Defensively, he appeared in 96 games at shortstop and 55 games at third base.

Over a seven-year KBO career with the Heroes (2014-20), Kim posted a .294 (940-for-3195) average with a .373 OBP, .866 OPS, 191 doubles, 23 triples, 133 HR, 575 RBI, 381 walks, 134 stolen bases and 606 runs scored in 891 games. A native of Bucheon, South Korea, Kim earned the KBO Golden Glove Award at shortstop in both 2018 and 2019 and has played all four infield positions during his career (776 at SS, 106 at 3B, 6 at 2B, 1 at 1B). He was originally selected by the Heroes in the 3rd round of the 2014 KBO Draft from Yatap High School in Seongnam.

https://www.mlb.com/press-release/press-release-padres-sign-ha-seong-kim-to-four-year-contract

 

 

 

As he was introduced by his new team Thursday, Yu Darvish said he was shocked by his trade to the San Diego Padres and grew emotional talking about his time with the Cubs and the bonds he created in Chicago.

“With what’s happening with the coronavirus, and the money the Cubs have, I wasn’t thinking about being traded,” Darvish said Thursday through an interpreter. “And also, they are a winning team and I thought we would be able to compete.”

Darvish, however, is excited about joining a “strong” Padres team that should challenge for the National League pennant.

“I’ve been having my kids watch highlights of the Padres’ lineup on YouTube,” the right-hander said. “They’re a strong team, and I’m really excited to watch batting practice.”

Darvish said he has pitched better over the past 18 months than at any time in his career. He finished second in Cy Young voting this past season after going 8-3 with a 2.01 ERA, and he credited his improvement to a decision to work slow and “be himself.”

“The Cubs were telling me to prepare however I wanted to prepare,” Darvish said. “The Cubs let me be myself. That helped me back to form.”

He was traded along with Victor Caratini, his personal catcher, to San Diego for starter Zach Davies and four prospects earlier this week. The move came one day after the Padres acquired lefty Blake Snell from the Tampa Bay Rays.

Darvish’s mom once told him that she thought he would play for the Padres, but he said he didn’t think that would materialize after signing a six-year, $126 million deal with the Cubs.

With Chicago in cost-cutting mode, however, that premonition came true. Darvish hopes to find the same chemistry with his teammates in San Diego as he did in Chicago.

“A lot of [Cubs] people reached out to me and everyone was pretty shocked and felt bad,” Darvish said. “So this reality is great. I’m excited to play for the Padres.”

The 34-year-old Darvish said he found out about the trade on Twitter, though his representatives knew there was a possibility he could be moved that day.

“My first year with the Padres, going into spring training, I really want to be open and meet everybody,” said Darvish, who already has a relationship with Padres general manager A.J. Preller from their days with the Texas Rangers.

Darvish was asked what his trade might mean for Japanese baseball fans who reside in San Diego.

“With coronavirus and everyone being a little down with what’s going on in the world, I just hope to build excitement and help build happiness to the Japanese people around me,” Darvish said.

https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/30630369/emotional-yu-darvish-caught-guard-chicago-cubs-trade-excited-san-diego-padres

 

 

 

 

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