A die-hard, long-time Kansas City Royals fan from Seoul who became an international celebrity after he was superstitiously credited with sparking the team’s playoff run departed yesterday for Missouri to watch the Royals appear in their first World Series since 1985.
After learning of his passion for their team, a group of US fans helped Lee Sung-woo arrange a visit to Kansas City in August so he could watch a Royals game in person for the first time.
By the time Lee returned to Seoul, the Royals, perennial also-rans, had won nine out of 10 games and were in first place in their division, and Lee had gained widespread fame among sports fans in the US and in South Korea.
The 38-year-old duty free shop employee is reluctant to make World Series predictions because of worries about jinxing the team, but he also said he can not help imagining a celebration with Royals’ players in a champagne-soaked locker room.
Despite being considered a good luck charm by the club and its fan base, Lee said in a telephone interview on Monday night that he does not feel any pressure.
“I just want to root for the team with fellow Royals fans as hard as I can,” he said. “I will try to enjoy every moment.”
Lee belongs to a generation of South Korean sports fans in their 30s and 40s who developed an attachment to US professional sports by watching a local TV network for US servicemen stationed in South Korea to guard the heavily armed border with North Korea.
Free from the obligations of supporting the “local” team, South Korean fans often developed interests in major league teams for quirky reasons. Some of them, for instance, began cheering for the New York Yankees because they thought the team had the best uniforms. Others supported the Atlanta Braves because of Fred McGriff’s exaggerated swing motion.
Lee, who has more than 21,800 followers on Twitter, said he began supporting the Royals because he fell in love with Kauffman Stadium when he saw it in the early 90s in a short highlight package shown on what was then known as the American Forces Korea Network.
“The Royals won, and they did the fireworks show afterward with the fountain and the crown logo on the stadium in the background,” Lee said. “It was amazing and beautiful.”
An official from Lee’s employer, Shinsegae Duty Free, thought that Lee’s international celebrity was both surprising and amusing.
As soon as the Royals reached the World Series, the company found itself receiving huge attention about whether it would allow Lee to attend.
Lee joined Shinsegae just a month ago in a busy time when the company is preparing a bid for a new shop at the Incheon International Airport.
“We have arranged his vacation days so that he could stay in the US throughout the run of the World Series,” company official Lee Jeong-wook said.
He added, with a laugh: “If the Royals win in four, his vacation will be cut short.”
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