"You can never raise one player." There is only one story that Red Toma, who returned as a second-tier coach, emphasized by Yum Liang
"You can never raise one player." There is only one story that Red Toma, who returned as a second-tier coach, emphasized by Yum Liang
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"Red Toma" Lee Byung-kyu returned as LG Twins' second-tier manager. Manager Yeom Kyung-yeop emphasized "communication" between the first and second teams.
LG announced on the 21st that "it recruited Lee Byung-kyu, former head coach of Samsung's second division, as the head coach of Futures."
Lee Byung-kyu is a legendary figure in the LG Twins. Lee joined the team through the first round of nominations in 1997 and had only worn striped uniforms until his retirement in 2016, except for the three years (2007-2009) when he played for the Chunichi Dragons of the Japanese professional baseball league.
He played in 1,741 games and recorded brilliant records with a batting average of 0.311, 2043 hits, 161 home runs, 972 RBIs and 174 steals.
Starting with the Rookie of the Year in 1997, Lee Byung-kyu, the second-tier coach, won seven Golden Gloves, two hits, and four hits.
His back number 9 was the first LG fielder and the second in LG as a whole after pitcher Kim Yong-soo.
Lee Byung-kyu, who worked as a commentator, batting coach for LG, Geelong Korea coach, Samsung Lions chief coach and second division coach, returned to LG for the first time in three years. He will serve as a second division coach.
Yeom Kyung-yeop, who met at Icheon Champions Park on the 22nd when the closing camp was held, said, "We had a meeting today and talked about what we will order from Lee Byung-kyu, the head coach of the second division. Fostering is not something that only the second division does, but it is something that the first and second divisions do together through communication. You have to make good players in the second division and then use them well in the first division. These harmonies must turn like cogs through communication."
"You shouldn't have yours or mine. When it comes to raising a single player, it's not someone who raises him, but the entire coaching staff and front desk of the LG Twins. Because they are greedy to say, "Who raised him," internal problems arise. I hope he does well without any misunderstanding of communication in this regard," he said.
An example came out just in time for good communication. It is none other than Yong-ju. "Yong-ju is a case that was created through communication. If this player is created, 스포츠토토 it will also be helpful to team coaches. As a team coach finds a new way to practice after seeing something he has never seen before, the team coach learns another training method. That is how the coach will grow up together. After all, we will nurture them together. We can never raise them on our own," Yeom stressed once again.