Saturday, March 25, 2017

Kang having trouble with visa

Pittsburgh Pirates infielder Kang Jung-ho is having difficulty obtaining a work visa to enter the United States following his latest arrest for drunk driving in South Korea. | AP

MIAMI – Pittsburgh Pirates third baseman Kang Jung-ho, the first player to jump directly from South Korea into Major League Baseball, will not be with the team on opening day, the club confirmed Friday.

Pirates general manager Neal Huntington said Kang’s visa application was ongoing and he would not be in the team’s starting lineup for the April 3 season opener.

A Korean Broadcasting System report said Kang’s visa application had been denied and it was uncertain when or even if Kang would be able to join the Pirates this season.

“A Korean news outlet has reported on a purported development in Jung Ho Kang’s effort to secure permission to travel to the United States for purposes of continuing his career as a member of the Pittsburgh Pirates and added speculation regarding a driving incident in a ‘third country,’ ” Pirates president Frank Coonelly said.

“The facts, as we know them, are that Kang still has not been granted permission to travel to the United States under a work visa,” Coonelly said.

“We continue to work with Kang and his representatives to present materials and information to the appropriate parties in the United States government that we believe establish that Kang should be permitted to travel to the United States under a work visa.”

Kang was convicted in South Korea earlier this month after leaving the scene of a drunk driving accident on Dec. 2 in Seoul. He received a suspended eight-month jail sentence and recently filed an appeal, reportedly to be heard next month.

It was Kang’s third drunk driving arrest in South Korea, having previously been charged in August 2009 and May 2011.

Kang was third in 2015 National League Rookie of the Year voting after making his landmark jump across the Pacific Ocean to the major leagues. He batted .287 with 15 home runs and 58 runs batted in over 126 games in his first season with Pittsburgh.

Last year, Kang hit 21 homers with 62 RBIs and a .255 batting average. This year would be his third season under a four-deal contract worth $11 million.

Meanwhile, slugger Giancarlo Stanton says the World Baseball Classic gave him a feeling he’d never experienced but wants to feel again in about six months.

The tournament, which concluded with Team USA winning the gold medal on Wednesday, is the closest Stanton’s come to playing postseason baseball.

“For me it was not watching a playoff game on TV, for once,” Stanton said.

Miami hasn’t played postseason baseball since 2003, well before Stanton’s big league debut in 2010.

Over the past three weeks, he learned what it’s like to __play in games where every pitch could determine a team’s fate.

“It’s more of a do-or-die feeling every game,” Stanton said. “Having that competition level with the do-or-die was pretty cool.”

Stanton and teammate Christian Yelich, both key members of Team USA, couldn’t stop smiling while talking about the experience of becoming the first American team to win the WBC.

Now comes the calm before the grind.

It will be a while before Yelich and Stanton __play in front of the more than 50,000 fans that attended their final game victory over Puerto Rico. The combined crowds for the final seven games of their Grapefruit League schedule may not match that total.

“Obviously a Grapefruit League game atmosphere is not going to be like the championship game in the World Baseball Classic,” Yelich said. “You still have to make sure that you are preparing yourself and getting ready with your team for Opening Day, which is coming up fast. You won’t want to let that sneak up on you.”

For Yelich, the days leading up to the Marlins’ April 3 opener at Washington are about maintaining the level that allowed him to hit .310 and earn WBC all-tournament recognition.

“My process was kind of accelerated a little bit because now is the time you start ramping up innings and playing back-to-back days and going long distances,” Yelich said. “Obviously, playing nine innings for a few days in a row in that kind of atmosphere you kind of accelerated that.”

Stanton didn’t enjoy the same success as Yelich, averaging .227 with 10 strikeouts, but the slugger did have a signature moment when he bashed a two-run homer off the Western Metal Supply building in San Diego to give the USA a lead over the Dominican Republic it wouldn’t relinquish.

To Stanton, the blast showed he’s closing in on regular-season form.

“I think I’m perfect for a week left. I can get three to four at-bats per game coming up and I think I’ll be fine,” Stanton said. “I DHed a lot, so being out in the outfield will be good for me.”

Neither Stanton nor Yelich was in the Marlins lineup on Friday night when they played a Washington split squad, but their names were already written onto Saturday’s lineup card posted in the clubhouse.

The players arrived back in South Florida from Los Angeles late Thursday night, Yelich flying with his gold medal in the zipped pocket of his sweat pants.

“It was cool man,” Yelich said. “People in the airports and stuff come up to you and they’re like, ‘Thank you for representing the United States in a positive way.’ You just didn’t realize how many people cared about it.”

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