Lin Yi chuan
Yi-Chuan Lin (conceived November 11, 1985) is a Taiwanese baseball player who plays with the Fubon Guardians in the Chinese Professional Baseball League.
He was the primary position player to be named Rookie of the Year and MVP in the Chinese Professional Baseball League that year.
Lin appeared for the Taiwan national baseball group in the 2005 Asian Baseball Championship, which he drove in grand slams. He hit .250/.294/.313 as low maintenance third sacker in the 2005 Baseball World Cup. In the 2006 Intercontinental Cup, he hit .135/.158/.162 as the beginning third baseman for Taiwan. He batted .306/.342/.500 in the 2007 World Port Tournament – he tied Sidney de Jong for fifth in the competition in grand slams , tied Yosvani Peraza for sixth in runs and was sixth in RBI. His hostile generation was like the USA's third baseman, beat prospect Pedro Alvarez. He helped Taiwan win a Silver Medal. In the 2007 Baseball World Cup, Lin went 0 for 1 as the reinforcement third baseman to Tai-Shan Chang.
Lin hit .130/.231/.174 for Taiwan in the 2008 Final Olympic Qualification Tournament as the beginning third baseman. Regardless of his battles, they won a spot in the 2008 Summer Olympics. Lin had a couple cautious blunders in a misfortune toward the South Korean national baseball group. In the second inning, he didn't get to a grounder by Dae-ho Lee that correspondents said was inside his range. Later in the inning, he again did not get this show on the road to a ball in short proximity of third hit by Jin-man Park. The two plays, combined with a Che-Hsuan Lin miscue, added to two Korean runs and the win.
Lin was the top pick in the 2007 CPBL draft, taken by the Sinon Bulls. He had played for the novice Fubon Bull already. He didn't play in 2008, as he was satisfying his military duty. In late 2008, he reported that he would not like to play for Sinon when he left the military and that he needed to remain a beginner. Lin altered his opinion and marked with Sinon in March 2009, inking an arrangement with a marking reward identical to $145,000. That was the second-biggest reward in CPBL history, behind Chung-Nan Tsai and even with Chang-Wei Tu, Chih-Yuan Chen and Yi-Cheng Tseng.
Lin was 0 for 8 with two strikeouts as one of Taiwan's most noticeably awful entertainers in the 2009 World Baseball Classic.
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