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Top Korean Prospect (2022) ~ Won Bin Cho – 5th National POWER SHOWCASE Underclass Champion – Globe Life Field ~ November 6th through the 8th, 2020.
AWARDS:
Underclass Champion
Most HR’s Hit During Preliminary Round – 15
Overall HR Total – 26
Longest Distance – 485ft
Babe Ruth – Colossus of Clout – 485ft
DERBY RESULTS:
Preliminary Round – 15
Finals – 11
Total HR’s – 26
Consecutive – 3
Longest Distance – 485ft
HitTrax Top Exit Velocity – 113.5MPH

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Won-Bin Cho Stats & Scouting Report – Baseball America

Get the latest stats, rankings, scouting reports, and more about FCL Cardinals player Won-Bin Cho on Baseball America.

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Source: www.baseballamerica.com

Date Published: 12/22/2022

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Watch now: Won-Bin Cho the scouting report he gives on …

Won-Bin Cho, one of the Cardinals’ newest minor-leaguers and the first amateur from Asia signed by the club, gives a scouting report on his …

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Source: www.stltoday.com

Date Published: 12/28/2022

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Who Is Won-Bin Cho? – Cardinals – Saint Louis Sports

Cho comes from South Korea and will play outfield. He is listed as a center fielder and he proves a lot of power in his bat. Cho is one of …

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Source: www.saintlouissports.com

Date Published: 9/14/2021

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Cardinals Won-Bin Cho has swing similar to this MLB superstar

Cho, regarded as arguably the top Korean high school prospect, is a five-tool player with elite power. He was scouted heavily by assistant …

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Source: redbirdrants.com

Date Published: 6/9/2022

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Prospect Won-bin Cho’s journey from South Korea to Cardinals

The player was Won-bin Cho, who had moved from South Korea to the U.S. in hopes of signing a contract with a major-league organization. Starting …

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Source: www.ksdk.com

Date Published: 5/14/2021

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South Korean Prospect Won-Bin Cho Signs with Cardinals

Ahhh…just saw it in passing. Hadn’t actually seen a scouting report. Top. User avatar.

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Source: gatewayredbirds.com

Date Published: 11/1/2022

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Won-Bin Cho – OF – St Louis Cardinals – 66744

Cardinals signed Korean OF Won-Bin Cho. … Cho, a South Korean high school baseball prospect, withdrew from the Korea Baseball Organization draft last August to …

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Source: www.nbcsportsedge.com

Date Published: 3/30/2022

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Cho Won-bin’s rookie draft application, considering going to …

[스포츠서울 | 윤세호기자] Cho Won-bin (18, Seoul Convention High School), one of the … KBO, SSG instructed to submit a police report…

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Source: www.newsdirectory3.com

Date Published: 9/30/2021

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Khán giả mong chờ vào sự trở lại của Won Bin trong năm 2022

Won Bin từng là gương mặt “hot” của Hàn Quốc rất được khán giả Châu Á yêu thích hơn một thập kỷ qua. Tuy nhiên, nam diễn viên nhiều năm qua …

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Source: laodong.vn

Date Published: 3/29/2021

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주제와 관련된 더 많은 사진을 참조하십시오 Top Korean Prospect (2022) ~ Won Bin Cho – 5th National POWER SHOWCASE Underclass Champion – 2020.. 댓글에서 더 많은 관련 이미지를 보거나 필요한 경우 더 많은 관련 기사를 볼 수 있습니다.

Top Korean Prospect (2022) ~ Won Bin Cho - 5th National POWER SHOWCASE Underclass Champion - 2020.
Top Korean Prospect (2022) ~ Won Bin Cho – 5th National POWER SHOWCASE Underclass Champion – 2020.

주제에 대한 기사 평가 won-bin cho scouting report

  • Author: POWER SHOWCASE
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  • Date Published: 2021. 2. 5.
  • Video Url link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aAD42KYikds

Watch now: Won-Bin Cho the scouting report he gives on himself as a player

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Who Is Won-Bin Cho?

The St. Louis Cardinals could have made a splash with their most recent signing. Check out our article to find out who Won-Bin Cho is.

Who Is Won-Bin Cho?

While owners and the players association argue over the coming seasons, any news is good news right now for the St. Louis Cardinals. This last weekend, tryouts and workouts were held for foreign players. The Cardinals picked up 12 free agents, including 17-year-old, Won-Bin Cho.

Cho comes from South Korea and will play outfield. He is listed as a center fielder and he provides a lot of power in his bat. Cho is one of many Asian players that have gone through the Cardinals organization in the last two decades. So Taguchi, Kwang Hyun Kim, and Seung Hwan Oh are just a few names to mention that had impacts at the major league level.

Cho was set to be a high draft pick and star power in the KBO but withdrew in order to sign with St. Louis. Cho stands at 6’2” and 200 pounds. As a junior in high school, he hit .357 with three homers and 17 RBIs in 19 games. His senior year he hit .367 with 2 home runs and 12 RBIs in 18 games.

Cho put on a show at Globe Life Stadium in Arlington, Texas during his workout in 2020 for high school athletes. The video below shows his round of batting practice from the 2020 workout.

Other Prospects

The Cardinals also signed shortstop Jonathan Mejia, the 14th ranked player on MLB.com’s Top 50 International Prospects. Also on that last with Luis Rodriguez, who ranks at #26. Seven of the 12 players the Cardinals signed were pitchers. The Cardinals will be looking for plenty of arms to help in the coming years.

Rookie Ball

Most of these players that signed will start in the rookie league and work their way up from there. The potential that some of these players possess makes these signings very interesting. From rookie ball, if they are good enough, we could see these players placed in Palm Beach or Peoria.

As a resident of the Peoria area, it would be great to see some of these top-end prospects day in and day out. With a team that has a good amount of prospects already, there has been a lot of talent sent through Peoria. Jordan Walker ended the season in Peoria last year. We have seen Nolan Gorman, Kramer Robertson, and many other former Cardinals make their way through Peoria.

Henny

If you saw the signing of Won-Bin Cho, you more than likely saw his agent’s dog, Henny. As always, the hard-hitting journalism of Jeff Passan answered the questions we all had. Henny is a three-year-old Golden Retriever and he was in many pictures with Cho.

Henny took the hearts of many and now brings more popularity to the signing of Cho. Cho will be an interesting prospect to watch in the next few seasons to see how he progresses. We will have more to report as Spring Training comes closer if the owners and players association come to an agreement.

Cardinals’ Won-Bin Cho has swing similar to this MLB superstar

John Mozeliak looks on from the stands during a game against the Cincinnati Reds at Busch Stadium on July 28, 2015 in St. Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Dilip Vishwanat/Getty Images)

How the St. Louis Cardinals team name has evolved since the 1800s

How the St. Louis Cardinals team name has evolved since the 1800s by Greg Simons

St. Louis Cardinals’ international free-agent signing Won-Bin Cho has a swing similar to Corey Seager, the Rangers’ $325 million superstar addition.

The St. Louis Cardinals had a tame offseason before the lockout, signing Steven Matz to a four-year deal, and re-signing T.J. McFarland while losing Luis Garcia to the San Diego Padres.

Matz, who signed a $44 million deal, solidified the Cardinals’ rotation and gives them the best group of starters the team has had in years. But Matz is not the offseason move that has fans buzzing most.

Meet Won-Bin Cho.

Cho, regarded as arguably the top Korean high school prospect, is a five-tool player with elite power. He was scouted heavily by assistant general manager Matt Slater, who has led the Cardinals’ advanced efforts to scout more internationally. While he’s not believed to be close to debuting in the majors, his tools jump off the screen. I mean, just look at this swing.

“Anybody else see Corey Seager in this swing?” Redbird Rants’ Kyle Jasper asked.

“I can see it, Seager’s stride is a little longer though,” Redbird Rants’ Dane Aerne-Moore opined.

I see bits of Seager in Cho’s swing, too, and I’ll make one thing clear: We’re not saying that Cho is the next Seager. But that his swing resembles any bit of Seager’s is incredibly promising for the Cardinals, with the star left-handed hitter signing a $325 million deal with the Texas Rangers this winter.

Cho, 17, appears to have more raw power, however, as he walloped 15 home runs in the Power Showcase home run derby in 2020. He withdrew from the KBO draft to make himself eligible for the international signing period and now, will be taking his talent – and his elite looking swing – to the Cardinals.

Won-bin Cho’s journey from South Korea to the Cardinals – and some of the people who made it happen

“The Cardinals signed a five-tool player with very high drive and motivation. A lot of the tools are there. He just needs time to refine them.”

JUPITER, Fla. — Yinie Kasuya was sitting in her car outside the Full Count baseball training facility in suburban Atlanta when she was surprised by a knock on her window.

“I need your help,” Ariel Polanco, one of the hitting instructors, told Kasuya when she rolled down the window.

Kasuya’s oldest son, Jin, a freshman in high school, had trained with Polanco for years and he knew she spoke fluent Korean. Polanco needed somebody to translate what he was trying to teach a young Korean who had started training at the facility a few weeks earlier.

“Usually I don’t go in, I just wait in the car,” Kasuya said. “But he was trying to explain some techniques, and he asked me to translate.”

The player was Won-bin Cho, who had moved from South Korea to the U.S. in hopes of signing a contract with a major-league organization.

Starting on that day last October, Kasuya became just one of the many people who played a key role in Cho’s journey from South Korea to where he is now, in Jupiter, Fla., taking the first steps in his professional career, one he hopes will find him playing for the Cardinals in a few years.

“It takes a lot of people to put something like this together,” said the Cardinals’ Matt Slater, a special assistant to the general manager for player procurement. “Maybe that’s why we had never done it before, signing an amateur player from Asia. Now we’ve broken that ceiling.”

Here is the story of the agent, the host family, the scouts and, most importantly, the player, who all were involved in making Cho’s journey possible.

The agent

Han Lee knew that because of travel restrictions in South Korea during the pandemic, the only way that Cho would be able to attract interest from scouts was if he was able to move to the United States.

“Our employee in Korea tracked him down and said if he wanted to do it, we could help,” Lee said. “I got introduced to him in August. Everything kind of came together pretty quickly. The main reason behind bringing him over here was so he could get exposure.”

Lee was quickly impressed by Cho’s commitment in agreeing to leave his family and home, pulling his name from the Korean Baseball Organization draft, to pursue a dream he had had for years to play baseball in the United States, all before Cho turned 18 last August.

Although he wasn’t a pro baseball prospect, Lee knew a little bit about the challenges that Cho was going to face just in moving halfway across the world, especially when he didn’t speak English.

“I can personally relate,” Lee said. “I came as a foreign exchange student 20 years ago. I know what he first felt when he came to America. I put him in situations where he was uncomfortable. I put him in the hitting facility in Atlanta where we train.

“There were times where I actively took a step back just so he could go through those awkward interactions.”

Lee knew his mission was to get Cho in front of MLB scouts, and to let them see, and project, what Cho could offer to an organization willing to invest in him – a sweet left-handed swing, a body that could develop into a power hitter, the ability to run and throw well enough to play center field.

It was a skill that wasn’t as immediately obvious, however, that Lee thought would separate Cho from some other prospects, no matter what part of the world they were from.

“His will and determination,” Lee said. “He’s a very confident kid. He’s obsessed with working out, doing any baseball related activity – to a point where I was telling him, ‘You need to learn how to scale it back a little bit.’

“I think that’s going to be key in him thriving here in the U.S.; his work ethic, motivation and determination to succeed. Guys have to have that (when moving to the U.S.). They can’t be overwhelmed by the environment. They can’t be overwhelmed by the language and the different culture.”

Lee and his wife brought Cho into their home, trying to help him adjust culturally to what living in the U.S. was going to be like. Lee took him out to dinner, and tried to teach Cho what he needed to do when the day came that he was on his own, because that environment is much different than it is in Korea, Lee said.

“I told him when we were done eating, you had to ask for the check,” Lee said. “I wanted him to experience it himself, so I left him there and went to the restroom. It turned out he ended up asking the busboy for the check, and that kid said a bunch of things Won-bin didn’t understand.

“It was a teaching moment for him. Little things like that are hard to teach unless you actually go through it. I emphasize those things because I don’t want him to go out to eat and feel uncomfortable. Now he can go to Chipotle and order on his own.”

There were other times when Lee and Cho were together that Cho would not understand something and looked to Lee to translate for him.

“I would just shrug,” Lee said. “Figure it out – whether you have to point or repeat what you’re asking for. It’s just what you have to go through. I can’t help you with these basic steps. He’s very intitutive and very quick to pick things up.”

While Lee put an emphasis on learning those off-the-field skills, he also knew what was going to be of more immediate interest to teams – Cho’s baseball skills. He saw how hard Cho worked at his game, sometimes trying to do too much.

“When he was staying at my house, he’d work out all day then at night he would be in my living room practicing his swing,” Lee said. “I wouldn’t have been able to tell him to do that, because then I would be forcing it. He would hit at the facility for hours. There were many days where he would hit twice a day because that was just what he wanted to do.

“I represent more than two dozen players now and he has a work ethic and drive that I see in 30-year-olds, not in an 18-year-old kid. I’m not exaggerating when I tell you I had to tell him to stop working out sometimes. He just feels a need and a drive to do that.”

As the first few months passed, Lee was able to get scouts to come look at Cho. He could tell the Cardinals had a great deal of interest. Lee had a longstanding relationship with Slater stemming from his representation of former major-leaguer Josh Lindblom, who also pitched for five years in Korea.

Lee was able to find teams for Cho to join last fall, again to get him in front of scouts. The more the Cardinals saw, the more interested they became in trying to sign him.

The host family

Jin Kasuya had told his mother about Cho, and how impressed he was when he watched Cho work out at the Full Count facility.

Reluctant to go in the facility even when Polanco asked for her help translating, Yinie Kasuya thought it was going to be an awkward situation.

“It’s just weird for a mom to go in there,” she said. “It just happened naturally. Our first meeting he (Cho) was so polite. He was very humble and respectful. I really liked his personality. I had a really good first impression meeting him.”

Kasuya had moved to the U.S. from South Korea when she was 7. In addition to speaking fluent Korean, she also is fluent in Mandarin Chinese and she could tell immediately that Cho was comfortable speaking with her.

“I felt like I was talking to my son,” she said. “Jin was 15 and he was 18. He had been here for a while and I could sense a little bit of loneliness; he didn’t say it but I could sense it.

“I knew the feeling of not being able to speak the language and communicate. I felt really bad for him because I knew what he was going through.”

Kasuya took Cho out to eat with her, Jin and her younger son. Soon, he began spending more and more time at their house.

“He even told me, ‘I don’t know why, I just feel so comfortable here,’” she said.

Kasuya’s motherly instincts took over, and when Lee called one day and asked if it would be possible for Cho to move in with her family while he was still waiting to sign with a team, she said yes.

“I was just thinking if my son ever went to a different country and he was 18 and he was having to face all of this, I would want someone to be there for him,” Kasuya said. “I never really thought of anything other than as a mom. I wanted him to be comfortable.”

Like Lee, however, Kasuya also established some rules for Cho if he was going to be living at her house – and made sure Cho knew what would be required of him.

“We’re a normal family,” she told Lee. “I’ve got rules. I’ve got teenagers.

“If you live here I’m going to treat you like my sons. Culturally in Korea they don’t tell kids to do a lot of chores. It’s a completely different lifestyle. Usually the mom does everything.”

Kasuya gave Cho his list of chores – taking out the trash; emptying the dishwasher, cleaning up after himself. In reality, as Lee had done, she was helping him learn what he would need to do once he was on his own.

She taught him how to fry an egg and how to make a simple salad, lessons she had already taught her two sons. She was impressed by how willing Cho was to learn about the American way of life.

Kasuya also was impressed by Cho’s dedication to making his dreams come true.

“I really have respect for him,” she said. “He’s only 18 and he’s very disciplined. I told my sons, ‘Look at him, he’s a role model.’ Jin is a baseball player too, and he looked at Won-bin as a big brother.”

When Lee and Cho went to Mexico for several days so Cho could obtain a work visa before spring training, they returned to Atlanta on the day of Jin’s first game of the season. Only a freshman, he is the starting shortstop on the varsity team and already has made a verbal commitment to play at the University of South Carolina.

“Won-bin told me he was going to be there, and I told him you don’t have to,” Kasuya said. “He said, ‘I’m going to see him. They came straight from the airport and got there for like the last two innings. It was so touching, so sweet.”

Kasuya made certain that Cho called his mother often, or at least sent a text message, just to let her know that he was doing OK. She also has talked with Cho’s parents, and they plan to meet for the first time in July when they travel from South Korea to Florida.

“If my son was out of the country, I would want to hear from him to say everything was good,” Kasuya said. “Just one sentence can make a mom’s day.”

Cho is now sending those messages to Kasuya as well.

“He’s getting so mature now,” she said. “We’re very excited for him.”

The scouts

Cho first put himself on the Cardinals’ radar in November 2020 when he won a home run derby at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, the home of the Texas Rangers.

When Lee let the team know that Cho was pulling his name out of the KBO draft, and moving to Atlanta, the Cardinals interest – at least in wanting to see more of him – got stronger.

The more they saw Cho, and the more scouts they had see him, the more they liked what they saw.

Three scouts – Clint Brown, Brian Hopkins and Joe Almarez – all traveled to Atlanta to watch Cho last fall. So too did Moises Rodriguez, an assistant general manager in charge of international scouting, and Slater, who made two trips to see him. Slater sent video of Cho’s batting practice to Russ Steinhorn, the Cardinals’ minor-league hitting coordinator, to solicit his opinion.

Slater has long been involved in the Cardinals’ scouting of players in the Far East, being involved in many of the signings of players leaving the Japanese and Korean pro leagues.

“Every one of the scouts I sent in there came back to me, not knowing what the other scouts had said, and said, ‘You should see this guy on the bases. You should see how he handles himself in the on-deck circle,’” Slater said. “He’s just a very focused, committed young man.

“He really wants to do this. I already knew that when he took himself out of the KBO draft. He took a big risk. He had a lot of good friends on his high school team who got drafted. He would have been drafted. He took a risk, during Covid, at only 17 years old.”

As much as Slater and the other scouts liked Cho’s focus and passion, the biggest factor in deciding whether to sign any player comes down to his ability, and what the scouts think he will turn into in the future.

“He was so balanced at the plate with projectable power and a major-league body,” Slater said. “We liked his swing. We liked his approach. It really got down to his drive and his focus.”

Rodriguez looked at Cho with the same eyes he watches young prospects every year in Latin America. There was a lot that he liked as well.

“Everything was very positive about him,” Rodriguez said. “He flashed some power. He had a good stroke. He had a good approach. He checked a lot of boxes.

“He shows hitter’s instincts at the plate. He was just 18. You can see him progressing a lot more. We thought there was some upside there we could capture. We’re betting a bit on our player development system.

“He didn’t have a ton of structured game history, but that fits with the nature of international scouting. A lot of times we are trying to evaluate the raw tools and see if they translate. … You do a lot more projection and dreaming. It falls right in line with how we do a lot of our international evaluation. …There were a lot of things on top of his ability that made him attractive.”

Before the Cardinals submitted a formal offer, Slater and Rodriguez went to lunch with Cho and Lee, trying to get to know more about him and his background. They followed that up with a zoom call with Cho’s parents in South Korea.

“They were very meticulous in their process,” Lee said. “It was pretty obvious to see from the steps that they were taking that they cared for the player.”

When the international signing period began in January, the deal was finalized and Cho became a Cardinal.

“This is going to take three, four or five years for him to become what we think he can become,” Slater said. “Ideally he becomes Shin-Soo Choo (who left South Korea as an amateur and played 16 years in the majors) or someone like that, an impact major-league player.

“Our scouts really believed in him. Moises believed in him. I believed in him. We’re going to see where this goes.”

The player

Cho’s earliest baseball experiences in South Korea came as a pitcher. When he was 16, he thought a better career path would be as a hitter.

The only problem was that Cho wasn’t in the type of physical shape he needed to be in to play every day in the outfield. For the first time in his life he started to lift weights. He began running a lot and changed his diet.

Over a three-to-four month span, Cho lost about 40 pounds.

“I moved to a new school and in the transition had a new mindset,” Cho said through his team-appointed interpreter, James Bae. “I first thought with this body I can’t play good enough baseball. That was the moment I wanted to be dedicated to baseball.”

The power showcase in Texas cemented Cho’s desire to pursue a career in the U.S.

“I was so determined, it wasn’t a difficult decision (to leave Korea),”Cho said.

The hardest part, Cho said, was waiting to actually sign the contract with the Cardinals – and watching his friends getting selected in the KBO draft.

“Mentally it was the most challenging (time),” Cho said. “I didn’t doubt my ability, but it was challenging to see my friends going to the pro teams (in Korea) and I was just waiting. That was the hardest part.”

Now that Cho is in Florida wearing a Cardinals uniform, however, that worry has passed – and now he is concentrating every day on improving his skills.

He is facing pitchers who throw faster than those he faced in South Korea. He is playing with and against older players, and even players his same age who have played in a lot more games, against better competition, than has faced.

“The players here throw harder and are bigger and stronger,” Cho said. “When I go to the plate, it makes me a little more excited. I am looking forward to the experiences I am going to get.”

Cho already has realized one important factor about his own performance, something it often takes young players more than a month in spring training to understand. It speaks to his knowledge and appreciation of the game.

“The thing I have to keep in mind is that the results of at-bats can’t always be good,” he said. “I always have to keep in mind to do what I can do and control what I can control. I have to focus on that and stick to the basics.”

He is working on developing his English skills, going to Bae’s hotel room every night to work on understanding expressions. He knows learning the language better will help both on and off-the-field. It is the continuation of work that Cho started with Lee.

When spring training ends next week, Cho will remain in Jupiter to begin participating in the extended spring program, filled with young players, and then he is scheduled to join the rookie Complex League team when that season begins in July.

“I am planning on the long term,” Cho said. “I want to take it one step at a time. I just need to get as many at-bats as possible.”

The Cardinals will give Cho the time to do that.

“We’re going to take it slow with him,” Slater said. “He would be going through the 2022 draft if he was in the U.S. He will decide the pace. He is going to have a lot of support.”

Said Lee, “The Cardinals signed a five-tool player with very high drive and motivation. A lot of the tools are there. He just needs time to refine them.”

Photos courtesy of Yinie Kasuya, Han Lee, St. Louis Cardinals

Follow Rob Rains on Twitter @RobRains

South Korean Prospect Won-Bin Cho Signs with Cardinals

Cardinals signed Korean OF Won-Bin Cho.

Cho, a South Korean high school baseball prospect, withdrew from the Korea Baseball Organization draft last August to pursue an opportunity with a major-league organization. The lefty-hitting slugger drew plenty of interest after winning a homer derby for underclass players at the National Power Showcase in Texas two offseason ago. He doesn’t turn 19 years old until August and immediately becomes one of the most interesting prospects in the Cardinals’ organization.

Source: Cardinals Player Development on Twitter

Jan 15, 2022, 3:05 PM ET

Cho Won-bin’s rookie draft application, considering going to the US, will it be the first draft?

[스포츠서울 | 윤세호기자] Cho Won-bin (18, Seoul Convention High School), one of the biggest beasts in the Seoul area, will be on the stage of the KBO league next year. Although there was a prospect of going to the United States at first, the KBO League rookie draft application was submitted, and Seoul clubs are also watching Cho Won-bin until the end. As expected at the beginning of this year, interest is gathering whether Cho Won-bin will be selected as the first nominee in the Seoul area.

Starting this year, the KBO League has established a new draft entry system. Until last year, high school and college graduates registered with the Korea Baseball Softball Association were automatically nominated. Through the application system, players can clearly understand their intentions to advance abroad or enter college. In addition, along with the application form, students must submit, with their consent, an oath related to school violence, including a history of disciplinary action and injury, and a high school record. The club will be able to avoid losing the selection rights due to overseas expansion of rookies and college admissions. It is highly likely that problems such as withdrawal of nominations due to school violence in the past will be addressed.

As the rookie draft was changed to an application system, the player who received the most attention was Jo Won-bin. This is because there has been talk of Jo Won-bin going to the United States for several months, and there is a forecast that Cho Won-bin will not submit an application. However, it was confirmed that Jo Won-bin submitted the application before the deadline on the 14th. An official from the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) said, “Jo Won-bin has submitted an application for the rookie draft.”

The choice now rests with the club. With the full draft being implemented from the following year, the last round of selections in the Seoul area were Doosan, LG, and Kiwoom. It is known that Doosan is highly likely to nominate Seoul High School left pitcher Lee Byung-hun. However, it is not yet confirmed. It seems that the final decision will be made after watching the Seoul Convention High School and Yu Shin-go’s round of 16 match, that is, Jo Won-bin on the 17th. Doosan plans to notify LG after determining the nomination target by the beginning of this week.

That’s how great the potential is. In 17 games played until the 16th, Cho Won-bin played 79 at-bats, batting .368, 2 homers, 19 stolen bases, 12 RBIs, 21 points, and an OPS (on-base percentage + slugging percentage) of 1.070. With a height of 190 cm, a weight of 91 kg, speed and strong shoulders, he has a high potential to grow into a five-tool outfielder. Until the beginning of this year, LG seemed to focus on Cho Won-bin’s first nomination.

However, the first choice is more of a pitcher preference than a fielder. Looking back on eight years since 2014, when the first round of designation was again enforced, Doosan had 6 pitchers, LG had 7, and Kiwoom had 4 pitchers. In addition to Lee Byung-hun and Cho Won-bin, LG also placed left-handed pitcher Cho Won-tae from Sunlin Internet High School and right-handed pitcher Joo Seung-woo from Sungkyunkwan University as candidates for the first round of nominations. Kiwoom is struggling to put one more pitcher in the candidate group besides them.

The order of the nominations does not determine the fate of the players. Even if you don’t get the first nomination, you can become a superstar. Doosan, LG, and Kiwoom club officials also predicted that Cho Won-bin would be called in the second upper round even if he did not receive the first round. The second rookie draft will be held on the 13th of next month.

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Khán giả mong chờ vào sự trở lại của Won Bin trong năm 2022

Hải Long – Thứ bảy, 02/07/2022 12:00 (GMT+7)

Won Bin từng là gương mặt “hot” của Hàn Quốc rất được khán giả Châu Á yêu thích hơn một thập kỷ qua. Tuy nhiên, nam diễn viên nhiều năm qua không tham gia bất cứ dự án phim ảnh nào mà chỉ nhận lời quay quảng cáo.

Khán giả mong chờ vào sự trở lại của Won Bin trong năm 2022. Ảnh: Xinhua

Việc chăm chỉ quay quảng cáo của Won Bin khiến người hâm mộ không khỏi thất vọng bởi dường như nam thần tượng chỉ tập trung cho công việc người mẫu hơn là phát triển sự nghiệp diễn xuất. 12 năm qua, số lượng quay quảng cáo của Won Bin khá dày đặc còn tác phẩm điện ảnh thì lại là con số 0.

Nhiều khán giả bày tỏ sự trở lại của Won Bin trong năm 2022 khi có thông tin anh đã gật đầu tham gia vào một bộ phim truyền hình. Mặc dù vậy, thông tin chưa được công bố chính thức bởi vẫn còn đang ở trong vòng thương thảo giữa nam diễn viên và nhà sản xuất.

Won Bin được đánh giá cao về diễn xuất cũng như gương mặt đắt giá quảng cáo của Hàn Quốc. Ảnh: Xinhua

Bộ phim gần nhất có sự góp mặt của Won Bin là “The Man From Nowhere” ra mắt từ năm 2010. Nam diễn viên đảm nhận nhân vật Cha Tea Sik và để lại khá nhiều ấn tượng trong lòng người xem. Nội dung xoay quanh cựu đặc vụ Cha Tae-sik (do Won Bin đóng) cô độc và sống bằng nghề cầm đồ. Người duy nhất để anh mở lời nói chuyện đó là cô bé So-mi (Kim Sae-ron đảm nhận) – con gái của một người mẹ nghiện ma túy sống cùng khu phố.

Ở độ tuổi 45, nam diễn viên vẫn giữ phong độ và sắc vóc trẻ trung không thay đổi nhiều so với những năm mới bước vào nghề. Won Bin từng là nam thần nhận được sự yêu mến, quan tâm lớn của người hâm mộ kể từ khi tham gia đóng bộ phim truyền hình “Trái tim mùa thu” bên cạnh Song Hye Kyo, Song Seung Hun…

Vẻ lãng tử điển trai của Won Bin từng là biểu tượng vẻ đẹp một thời của màn ảnh Hàn Quốc. Anh cũng là một trong nam diễn viên xứ kim chi có lượng fan đông đảo khắp Châu Á.

Sinh năm 1977, Won Bin tên thật là Kim Do Jin. Nam tài tử bước chân vào nghệ thuật bằng một một vai diễn nhỏ trong “Propose” và đảm nhận nhiều tuyến vai phụ trong các bộ phim suốt 3 năm sau đó. Đến tác phẩm “Kkokji” được xem là cuộc lột xác ngoạn mục và vùng với “Trái tim mùa thu” đã đưa Won Bin nhanh chóng trở thành ngôi sao Châu Á, gương mặt đắt giá nhất nhì điện ảnh Hàn Quốc trong những thập niên 2000. Anh cũng liên tiếp được bình chọn vào Top danh sách các mỹ nam Hàn Quốc quyến rũ nhất.

Sau 5 năm tham gia nghĩa vụ quân sự, Won Bin hạn chế góp mặt trong các bộ phim và có cuộc sống đời tư khá kín tiếng. Thi thoảng anh xuất hiện tại một số sự kiện giải trí quan trọng hay lễ ra mắt giới thiệu sản phẩm mà Won Bin làm gương mặt đại diện.

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