Baseball Season Opens… in Korea!

Athena, mascot for the SK Wyverns of the Korea Baseball Organization, entertains the only lively member of the crowd during a game at Happy Dream Ballpark, in Incheon, on May 5, 2020. The “fan” is a stadium worker, and the spectators have been replaced by cardboard placards. Live audiences were banned from attending as a result of social distancing measures undertaken to fight a pandemic of the coronavirus disease COVID-19.
Photo credit: © Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images
The Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) threw out the first pitch of its 2020 regular season on Tuesday, May 5. To much of the rest of the world, the Korean league is known mainly as a source of pitching prospects for Major League Baseball (MLB) and as a place for foreign players to work on their swings. But, with most major sporting leagues shut down due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the KBO hoped to introduce fans around the world to their version of the pastime.
The Korean league includes 10 teams: the Kiwoom Heroes, LG Twins, Doosan Bears, SK Wyverns, KT Wiz, NC Dinos, Samsung Lions, Lotte Giants, Kia Tigers, and Hanwha Eagles. The regular season consists of 144 games, with each team playing the others 16 times. The top five teams make the playoffs, with the top-ranked team receiving an automatic berth in the seven-game championship series. Each line-up includes a designated hitter, similar to the rule used in MLB’s American League. Unlike MLB games, KBO games can end in ties.
Major league sports around the world have been largely shut down due to social distancing measures undertaken to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease COVID-19. In the United States, the National Basketball Association became the first major sports organization to suspend play, on March 11. MLB quickly followed, suspending and ultimately cancelling its spring training.
South Korea was able to open its baseball season at only a slight delay, thanks in part to the nation’s aggressive, coordinated response to the COVID-19 outbreak. However, the game will look a little different this year. Everyone but the players is required to wear face masks, and fans, barred from the stadium, have been in some places replaced by cardboard placards.
North American fans who want to check out the action will have to become night owls—due to the time difference, live broadcasts begin in the early morning hours in the United States. But those who stay up late, get up early, or record the game may be rewarded with an earful of a uniquely Korean baseball innovation—cheer songs. Unlike MLB players, who often pick the music played as they step to the plate, Korean players have their own unique theme songs, perhaps unsurprising for a country whose thriving pop music industry gave the world such K-pop (Korean pop music) acts as PSY, BTS, and Blackpink.