Korea Professional Baseball Bitcoin Sports Betting
Korean Professional Baseball or the KBO League is the highest level of their baseball league in South Korea. The league started back in the early 80’s and has added a couple of teams to its lineup ever since. Baseball is also a watched sported in South Korea and the teams are mostly made up of sponsored teams (owned by companies) compared to its US counterpart. Bet on the next KBO games and watch teams like LG Twins, Doosan Bears, KIA Tigers, Lotte Giants, Nexen Heroes, Samsung Lions, NC Dinos, Hanwha Eagles, SK Wyverns, and KT Wiz play. Below are the odds for the upcoming Korea Professional Baseball:
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The KBO League is the highest league in professional baseball in South Korea. It is organized by the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO). The league was founded in 1982 with six teams; today it consists of ten teams. In 2017, the KBO League was the most visited South Korean sports league with a total of over 8.4 million spectators.
The season starts at the end of March and ends in October with the playoffs and the Korean Series. Most teams are owned and named by Jaebeol, the major industrial conglomerates.
Game Mode
The Jamsil Baseball Stadium in Seoul is home to two teams, the Bears and the Twins.
In the regular season, each of the 10 teams will play 144 matches (16 against each competitor) in a total of 576 matches.
This is followed in October by the playoffs, which begin with a best-of-five series between the third and fourth. The winner then plays a best-of-seven duel against the runner-up of the regular season. The winner qualifies for the Korean Series (Hanguk Series) against the league leader, in which the championship is decided in a maximum of seven games – plus a possible draw – at the end of October.
The winner took part in the Asia Series between 2005 and 2008 in November against the champions of China, Japan and Taiwan. There will only be one match against the Japanese champions in 2009.
All-Star Game
The KBO’s All-Star Game takes place every year in mid-July, in which the best players of the league face each other as “East” and “West”. The “East” team consists of players from the SK, Samsung, Doosan and Lotte teams, while the “West” team is recruited from the squads of Kia, Hanhwa, LG and Woori. The points of the compass do not correspond to a geographical distribution: The four teams from the northwestern population centres Seoul and Incheon are divided equally between East (SK, Doosan) and West (LG, Woori).
Rules of the game
In the KBO League – in contrast to the Major League Baseball – the game result ‘draw’ possible: If there is a tie, a game in the regular season after 12 innings, in the postseason after 15 innings will be counted as a draw.
Limitation of foreign players
Teams may have a maximum of two foreign players in their squad. Foreign players come mainly from the United States, the Dominican Republic and Cuba. Successful players of the KBO often move to the Japanese NPB, where Lee Seung-Yeop and Tyrone Woods are among the best known.
History
In its young history as a professional sport, baseball was able to retain an audience alongside football and basketball.
The opening match took place on March 27, 1982 between the Samsung Lions and the MBC Blue Dragons at the Dongdaemun Stadium in Seoul. President Chun threw the first pitch.
The founding teams were:
- the Samsung Lions from Daegu,
- the Haitai Tigers from Gwangju,
- the Lotte Giants of Busan,
- the MBC Blue Dragons (MBC Cheongryong) from Seoul,
- the OB Bears from Daejeon and
- the Sammi superstars from Incheon.
In 1985 the Sammi Superstars became the Cheongbo Pintos. One year later, in 1986, the OB Bears moved from Daejeon to Seoul and shared the Jamsil Baseball Stadium with MBC Cheongryong. The Bears were replaced by the Binggrae Eagles in Daejeon and the league grew to seven teams. In 1988, the Pintos changed ownership again to Taepyeongyang Dolphins. In 1990 the MBC Cheongryong became the LG Twins and with the Ssangbangul Raiders from Jeonju in Jeollabuk-do province the league was extended by an eighth team.
There were only minor changes in the league structure in the 1990s when some teams changed ownership: in 1993 the Binggrae Eagles became the Hanhwa Eagles, in 1995 the Taepyeongyang Dolphins became the Hyundai Unicorns and in 1999 the OB Bears became the Doosan Bears. In the year 2000 there were again bigger changes, when the Raiders stopped playing. The SK Wyverns from Incheon were added and the Hyundai Unicorns moved to Suwon. In 2001 Kia took over the Haitai Tigers. Another change took place in 2008 when the Hyundai Unicorns moved to Seoul as Woori Heroes. The ninth team to join was NC Dinos from Changwon in 2013.