Hye Seong Kim – MLB Trade Rumors https://www.mlbtraderumors.com Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:50:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 MLB Tenders Status Check On KBO Infielder Hyeseong Kim https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2024/10/mlb-tenders-status-check-on-kbo-infielder-hyeseong-kim.html https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2024/10/mlb-tenders-status-check-on-kbo-infielder-hyeseong-kim.html#comments Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:50:39 +0000 https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/?p=828742 The Korea Baseball Organization announced last night that MLB has tendered status checks on two players: second baseman Hyeseong Kim and first baseman/catcher Baek-Ho Kang (h/t to Dan Kurtz of MyKBO.net). That indicates both players are on the radar of at least one MLB team, though only Kim seems likely to make the jump this offseason.

A status check is the process used when an MLB team shows interest in a Korean player. MLB does not reveal the identity of the team or teams that requested the check. It is not an official opening of the posting process, which begins a 30-day window for a KBO player to negotiate with big league clubs.

The status check doesn’t mean that a player is going to come to MLB, though it’s a necessary first step for any player who eventually does so. Last offseason, status checks presaged postings and MLB deals for Jung Hoo Lee and Woo-Suk Go. MLB also conducted a status check on free agent reliever Deok Ju Ham, but he elected to re-sign with his KBO team a few weeks later.

Regarding Kim, the status check is a formality. The lefty-hitting infielder (not to be confused with MLB free agent Ha-Seong Kim) has prepared for a move to MLB since last winter. Kim has played parts of eight KBO seasons with the Nexen/Kiwoom Heroes. The Heroes announced in January that they would make him available to major league clubs during the 2024-25 offseason via the posting system. Kim hired CAA as his representation in June.

The 25-year-old hit .326/.383/.458 across 567 plate appearances this year. He’s a career .304/.364/.403 hitter. KBO pitching is much weaker than it is at the major league level. Scouting reports generally suggest Kim profiles as a utility player. MLB teams enamored with his glove could view him as a low-end regular at second base. He doesn’t have a ton of power upside, as this year’s 11 home runs represent a career high. Kim will very likely be posted later in the offseason. Last year, the Heroes waited until early December to post Lee. The LG Twins did the same with Go.

Kang, who plays for the KT Wiz, is reportedly not interested in pursuing an MLB opportunity at this time. Kurtz points to a Korean-language report from Sports Kyunghang in which team officials say that they confirmed with Kang that he intends to remain with the Wiz despite the status check. (The status check is only an indication that an MLB team is interested in the player, not the other way around.) Kang hit 26 home runs with a .289/.360/.480 batting line this season. FanGraphs wrote last offseason that Kang had plus power but projected as a first baseman with questions about his pure hitting ability as an MLB prospect.

]]>
7
KBO Infielder Hyeseong Kim Hires CAA Ahead Of Expected Posting For MLB Teams https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2024/06/kbo-hyesong-kim-hires-caa-agency-posted-mlb-teams.html https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2024/06/kbo-hyesong-kim-hires-caa-agency-posted-mlb-teams.html#comments Mon, 03 Jun 2024 23:19:44 +0000 https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/?p=812587 Infielder Hyeseong Kim, who stars for the Korea Baseball Organization’s Kiwoom Heroes, has hired CAA Baseball to represent him ahead of his expected move to Major League Baseball in the upcoming offseason, reports Jeeho Yoo of South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency. (Kim’s name is commonly written as Kim Hye-Seong or Hye-Seong Kim, but Yoo further notes via X that CAA specifically informed him the infielder will go by Hyeseong Kim if he indeed moves to North American ball.)

Kim, who’ll turn 26 next January, is old enough and has enough experience in a major foreign league to be considered a “professional” under Major League Baseball’s international standards. He’ll be exempt from international amateur free-agent bonus pools and thus able to sign a major league contract for any length and dollar amount with an interested team.

The former double-play partner of current Padres infielder Ha-Seong Kim, the younger Kim is  a lifetime .301/.361/.398 hitter in 876 games with the KBO’s Heroes. One of the primary knocks on his MLB outlook throughout his pro career has been a lack of power, but he’s begun to change that narrative in his age-25 campaign. The lefty-swinging Kim has appeared in 50 games and taken 224 plate appearances this year but has already set a new career-high with eight home runs. (He’d previously hit seven homers in two different seasons, including 2023.) Overall, Kim is slashing .309/.366/.471 this season — his fourth consecutive season with a .300 or better average.

Kim has also picked up seven doubles and a triple this season in addition to going 15-for-16 in stolen bases. The 6.7% walk rate Kim has posted so far in 2024 is a career-low — perhaps a sign of a more aggressive approach as he tries to showcase for MLB teams, speculatively speaking — but his minuscule 9.8% strikeout rate is also the lowest of his career. Kim has dropped his strikeout rate in every season of his pro career, beginning with a 25.2% mark back in 2018. He’s now seen as a hitter with plus contact skills, well above-average speed — he’s 195-for-226 (86.3%) in career stolen base attempts — and a strong glove in the middle infield.

Prior to the 2023 World Baseball Classic, Baseball America’s Kyle Glaser ranked Kim ninth among the top-ten MLB prospects for fans to track (landing behind current big leaguers Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Jung Hoo Lee and Yariel Rodriguez). Glaser called Kim a plus defender at second base (and a capable defender at short) with a “preternatural feel for contact,” good pitch recognition and the ability to catch up to good velocity. At the very least, he could profile as a utilityman with high-end speed and contact skills, though it should come as little surprise if there are clubs who view him as a potential regular at second base. Given his age, Kim should find big league interest — particularly if he can continue his newfound power output.

CAA most famously represents Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani but is also one of the industry’s largest firms, representing dozens of clients, including high-profile names like Willy Adames, Sandy Alcantara, Corbin Carroll, Jack Flaherty, Max Fried, Lucas Giolito, Jon Gray, Josh Hader, J.T. Realmuto and Trea Turner — among many others (as can be seen in MLBTR’s Agency Database).

]]>
25
KBO’s Kiwoom Heroes Plan To Post Infielder Hye Seong Kim For MLB Teams Next Offseason https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2024/01/kbos-kiwoom-heroes-plan-to-post-infielder-hye-seong-kim-for-mlb-teams-next-offseason.html https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2024/01/kbos-kiwoom-heroes-plan-to-post-infielder-hye-seong-kim-for-mlb-teams-next-offseason.html#comments Tue, 16 Jan 2024 16:45:49 +0000 https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/?p=798656 For the second time in five years, the Kiwoom Heroes of the Korea Baseball Organization will post an infielder for MLB clubs. The Heroes announced this week that they’ll post second baseman/shortstop Hye Seong Kim for big league clubs following the 2024 campaign (English-language link via Jee-ho Yoo of South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency).

Kim (no relation to former Heroes infielder Ha-Seong Kim, who was his double-play partner in the KBO) will be 25 years old and have seven seasons of pro experience in the KBO, thus exempting him from amateur status under MLB’s international free agency rules. He’ll be able to sign a Major League contract of any length with any team, though he’ll still fall under the purview of the MLB/KBO posting system — meaning any team to sign him will need to pay a posting/release fee to the Heroes.

Kim doesn’t possess the power that many prominent KBO free agents have been able to market when seeking to jump to the Majors. However, he’s batted .300 or better in each of the past three seasons while continually whittling down his strikeout rate and improving his walk rate. Over the past three years, Kim is a .319/.380/.405 hitter — including a .335/.396/.446 slash in 2023. He’s connected on just 14 homers since 2021 but also touts 67 doubles, 16 triples and a hefty 105 steals in 119 tries (88.3% success rate). Kim walked at a 7% clip with a 25.2% strikeout rate as a rookie in 2018, but he walked at a 9.2% rate with just a 12.4% strikeout rate in 2023. That marked his third straight year with a strikeout rate of 15% or lower.

Prior to the 2023 World Baseball Classic, Kyle Glaser of Baseball America ranked Kim ninth among international prospects to watch in that year’s tournament. Glaser called Kim a plus defender at second who can handle shortstop on occasion, adding that he has strong pitch recognition skills, a “preternatural feel for contact” and an ability to catch up to good velocity. Kim has a Gold Glove at shortstop and two at second base. As one might expect for a player with Kim’s minimal home run totals, BA’s scouting report paints him as a line-drive hitter with a knack for finding the barrel but a lack of over-the-fence power.

While the lack of power will limit Kim’s appeal in MLB free agency, he’s at the very least a high-contact left-handed bat who can handle multiple positions and deliver value on the bases. At 24 years old (25 later this month), it’s not out of the question that Kim develops a bit more power this season, though his swing doesn’t appear geared for substantial power (as seen in this 35-minute compilation of highlights from Kim at the plate this past season). He’s listed at 5’10” and 170 pounds, so Kim certainly doesn’t have a prototypical slugging frame.

There’s a ways to go before Kim is legitimately on MLB radars in free agency next winter; it stands to reason that with a major injury and/or down season at the plate, he might not test the free-agent waters at all. Still, Kim made clear that his ultimate goal is to secure an opportunity to test himself in MLB. “Just challenging myself to make it to such a big stage means a lot to me,” he told reporters (via Yoo).

Lack of power notwithstanding, Kim could draw interest as a speed/contact-oriented second baseman next winter. Glaser tabbed him as a potential big league utilityman. His age will surely hold appeal, and Kim will likely be an affordable alternative to MLB free agents like Gleyber Torres, Jose Altuve and, coincidentally, his own former teammate and double-play partner (Ha-Seong Kim), who’ll become a free agent next winter when the mutual option on his contract with the Padres is inevitably declined (likely by the player). As a potential, if not likely entrant into next winter’s free-agent class, Kim’s production will be worth keeping an eye on during the 2024 KBO campaign.

]]>
22