2007 was a mammoth year for the East Asia Baseball Hall of Fame with five players earning induction. They were all first ballot nods as well, led by SP Kwang-Woon Ryu (94.3%), 1B Tsukasa Kato (93.3%), and 3B/DH Hyeon-Seong Lim (90.8%). Joining them was 2B/DH Ji-Hu Kim at 81.0% and SP Liang Ran at 69.8%. No one else above 50% and only LF Jin-Uk Song was even above 1/3, getting 44.4% on his fifth ballot.

LF Yeo-Min Kwan was dropped after ten failed ballots. He had a 15-year run with Sapporo and earned 11 Gold Gloves, plus one Silver Slugger and an EAB championship in 1981. Kwan had 2483 hits, 1222 runs, 306 doubles, 254 triples, 141 home runs, 790 RBI, 1048 stolen bases, a .313/.344/.469 slash, 141 wRC+, and 85.4 WAR. Leadoff guys always have an uphill climb though with many voters favoring homers and RBI while putting limited value on defense and steals. Kwan debuted at 34.0% in 1998, but eventually fell down to 8.3% at the end.

Kwang-Woon Ryu – Starting Pitcher – Fukuoka Frogs – 94.3% First Ballot
Kwang-Woon Ryu was a 6’2’’, 195 pound right-handed pitcher from Seosan, South Korea; a city of 176,000 inhabitants on the west central coast. Ryu had pinpoint control and was considered an all-timer at placing his pitches. He needed it to make up for merely average to above average stuff and movement. Ryu’s fastball only peaked in the 91-93 mph range, but his sinker was similar, plus he had a great changeup. Changing speed and placing pitches perfectly made Ryu successful despite lacking overpowering stuff.
Ryu also had excellent stamina and was quite good at going deep into games. He also had strong durability, allowing him to rack up 4000+ innings in his career. Ryu was generally quiet and didn’t draw attention to himself, meaning he was perhaps underappreciated by many fans of his era.
In February 1980, a 16-year old Ryu signed as a teenage amateur with Fukuoka, making the move from South Korea to Japan. He debuted in 1984 at age 20 with 50 innings, showing solid promise. The Frogs made him a full-time starter after that and he was a fixture for the next nine years. Ryu usually was a starter, although they did experiment with him in a split starter/relief role at points.
Twice with Fukuoka, he led in K/BB. He also had a league best 58 FIP- in 1988, getting his highest WAR total with the Frogs at 7.8. Ryu signed a three-year, $5,000,000 extension after the 1990 season. He was reliably solid, but the lack of big strikeout numbers meant Ryu wasn’t in awards conversations. Fukuoka never made the playoffs in his tenure either, generally hovering a few games below .500.
Ryu did see his production wane a bit in his last two years with the Frogs. In 1993, he had a 91 ERA+ and only 2.7 WAR as he spent more time out of the bullpen than starting. Fukuoka decided to let him try free agency at age 30, ending his run after a decade. Ryu had a 121-117 record, 3.21 ERA, 2122.1 innings, 1918 strikeouts, 314 walks, 105 ERA+, 79 FIP-, and 46.6 WAR.
He was liked enough by Frogs management that they eventually retired his #13 uniform. Ryu also had more innings and games there, leading to being inducted in green. It was his next stop though where he had his most impressive years. Ryu signed a four-year, $8,300,000 deal with Ulsan for 1994. He added another four years and $10,320,000 after the 1996 season.
Ryu’s game aged very well and the Swallows took more advantage of his stamina. He led the Korea League thrice in complete games and twice in innings pitched. In 1996, Ryu led the league with 8.6 WAR and had career bests in ERA (2.71) and strikeouts (265), earning his lone Pitcher of the Year. He led in wins (26-10) and WAR (7.1) in 1998, earning a second place in POTY.
Ulsan was a wild card four straight seasons from 1994-97. In 1996, the Swallows put together a playoff run, winning the EAB Championship over Hiroshima. Ryu ate innings, but his playoff stats were poor with Ulsan. He had a 4-6 record, 5.02 ERA, 80.2 innings, 64 strikeouts, 11 walks, 76 ERA+, 92 FIP-, and 1.4 WAR. In the 1996 run though, he had a 4-1 record and tossed 41.2 innings with a 3.46 ERA.
Ryu looked more average in 1999 and Ulsan decided to trade him. For his time with the Swallows, Ryu had a 112-71 record, 3.38 ERA, 1655.1 innings, 1418 strikeouts, 168 walks, 113 ERA+, and 5.8 WAR. In February 2000, Ulsan sent him to Yongin for three prospects.
He was respectable with 3.9 WAR in 159 innings for the Gold Sox, but did miss much of the season to bone chips in his elbow. Yongin opted to let him go after a poor playoff start. Ryu signed for 2001 with Daegu and again was perfectly serviceable with 3.9 WAR and a 3.46 ERA in 195.1 innings. However, Ryu tore his rotator cuff late in the 2001 campaign. Instead of trying to rehab such a major injury, Ryu retired that winter at age 38.
Ryu’s career stats saw a 254-205 record, 3.29 ERA, 4132 innings, 3585 strikeouts, 525 walks, 302/506 quality starts, 163 complete games, 109 ERA+, 81 FIP-, and 90.2 WAR. His reliability meant he was the 12th pitcher to reach 250 wins and the 32nd to 3500 strikeouts. As of 2037, he’s 22nd all-time in pitching WAR. Ryu quietly built up impressive tallies and the voters were easily swayed, giving him a first ballot nod at 94.3% to lead the five-player 2007 EAB Hall of Fame class.
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