Font Size
15px

Returning to the first base dugout from the batter's box, to the surprise of many journalists and dia both on-site and in front of the TV, Manny Machado did not show the frustrated breakdown they expected after being easily struck out by Lin Guanglai;

Instead, the young star from Baltimore was simply removing his gear piece by piece while carefully recalling the details of that last at-bat.

Even though Machado, with his quick wit, maintained a dismissive attitude towards Lin Guanglai during interviews with the dia, in truth, only he and his team knew the extent of research the Baltimore Orioles had conducted on the Yankees, especially Lin Guanglai, recently.

Although many of the videos were from Lin Guanglai's ti in Nippon Professional Baseball, they revealed his abilities far surpassed those of other Japanese players—because of this, Machado already had certain expectations of Lin Guanglai's capabilities in his mind;

As for sticking to his previous assertions during interviews, on the one hand, he truly had enough confidence in his abilities to believe he could defeat Lin Guanglai; on the other hand, it was the pride of youth unwilling to concede easily to anyone.

However, only when he faced Lin Guanglai as a batter in a real ga did Manny Machado clearly realize that seeing sothing is one thing, but actually doing it is entirely different.

At least from his perspective, dealing with Lin Guanglai now was no easier than trying to walk away unscathed against future Hall of Fa pitchers like Kershaw and Verlander;

Not to ntion, Lin Guanglai had the advantage of timing and harmony and had not pitched a single ball in the United States, rendering him a blank slate to data analysis teams of many teams, with no sufficient samples to formulate strategies.

The only good news might be that today's starter Kevin Gausman seed to be in great shape, and in the following top of the second inning, he once again, with the help of the infield defense, got the slow-start Yankees lineup out three up, three down—in this inning, Machado, who was just struck out, also regained so confidence and feel for the ga through defense.

But the confidence he had just reestablished was soon shattered again in the next half-inning by Lin Guanglai—

"Strikeout, strikeout, and another strikeout! Lin from Asia has completely dominated the mound in his MLB debut! The Orioles' hitters have no answer for him! What a brilliant pitching display, that sinking trajectory was sheer art, a perfect curve only Michelangelo could carve!"

The Arican broadcaster's footage was replaying the mont:

The baseball thrown by Lin Guanglai suddenly sank over 30 inches in front of ho plate, catching the Baltimore Orioles' batters off guard, and eliciting shocked expressions from the ho crowd behind ho plate.

Consider this: Lin Guanglai was not facing so faceless Major League player this inning; the Orioles' cleanup hitter Chris Davis is a top-tier slugger who, at his peak, could hit 53 ho runs in a single season and consistently deliver over 35 ho runs if healthy over the past five seasons—

Yet even such a formidable slugger couldn't last long against Lin Guanglai, going down with a clean and straightforward strikeout.

It wasn't until then that many Major League players and audiences realized that the off-season's hype and public opinion, aside from the dia's sensationalist headlines, were indeed accurate in their reports on Lin Guanglai's abilities!

"Look at the expressions on Arican fans in the broadcast footage, clearly shocked by the pride of our Nippon Professional Baseball..." The Japanese comntators felt a sense of satisfaction and pride. "And this is not all his skills—dear viewers, in the next top half of the inning, Lin Guanglai, taking part as a dual player and batting seventh, will have his first at-bat of his Major League career!"

As if sothing occurred to him, the comntator's voice rose several pitches: "Before this, in his debut at any level, Lin Guanglai managed at least one ho run—in the United States this year, at Baltimore's Oriole Park, can he continue this miraculous record?"

Amid the not-yet-dispersed noise of Oriole Park, Lin Guanglai donned his batting gear and slowly walked to the left batter's box on the right side of ho plate, positioning himself in a batting stance—having the data-gathering materials on hand and having watched six full at-bats from the dugout, Lin Guanglai had developed so thoughts.

First, a battle of endurance was necessary—after all, Gausman was a key starter in a Major League team's rotation and was off to a great start today; breaking through against him all at once was clearly impossible, especially with those regular fastballs exceeding 100 mph, sothing Lin Guanglai rarely encountered in Japan.

But no matter how good his condition was, the ceiling of his raw strength was evident here:

Kevin Gausman might hold a mainstay role in a mid-tier team like the Orioles, but he wasn't a pitcher at the pinnacle of Major League hierarchy;

You are reading Baseball: A Two-Way Player Chapter 658 15: Youth Without Limits on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.