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Chiang Tai-chuan | |||||||||||||||
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Catcher/Outfielder | |||||||||||||||
Born: Chiayi County, Taiwan | October 26, 1960|||||||||||||||
Batted: Right Threw: Right | |||||||||||||||
CPBL debut | |||||||||||||||
March 12, 1993, for the Uni-President Lions | |||||||||||||||
Last appearance | |||||||||||||||
October 19, 1996, for the Uni-President Lions | |||||||||||||||
CPBL statistics | |||||||||||||||
Batting average | .278 | ||||||||||||||
Home runs | 5 | ||||||||||||||
Runs batted in | 118 | ||||||||||||||
Teams | |||||||||||||||
As player
As manager As coach | |||||||||||||||
Career highlights and awards | |||||||||||||||
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Medals
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Chiang Tai-chuan (Chinese: 江泰權; pinyin: Jiāng Tàiquán; born 26 October 1960 in Chiayi County, Taiwan) is a Taiwanese retired professional baseball player and baseball coach. He is best known for being the first baseball player to compete in three consecutive Olympic Games: in the 1984, 1988 and 1992 Olympics where he won a bronze medal in 1984 (as a demonstration sport) and silver medal in 1992.[1]
A member of China Times Eagles' amateur forerunner Black Eagles since 1990, after the 1992 Summer Olympics Chiang planned to join CPBL along with this soon-to-be-professionalized club. However, in November 1992, the Eagles accidentally traded him to Uni-President Lions due to its unfamiliarity with CPBL's trading rules. Chiang stayed with the Lions until the end of 1996 season. Before CPBL's 1997 season started, he planned to transfer to then just-established Koos Groups Whales, but also in this time CPBL expelled him after it was determined that he was involved in The Black Eagles Incident. Chiang was forced to retire after this scandal and he later found a coaching job in the China Baseball League.