Kuo Tien-hsin Extends Consecutive Stolen Base Streak to 22, Setting a New CPBL Record
Wei Chuan Dragons outfielder Kuo Tien-hsin successfully stole a base in the bottom of the first inning today, achieving 22 consecutive stolen bases across seasons and breaking the Chinese Professional Baseball record. This also brings his career total to 90 stolen bases.
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: April 17, 2026 at 20:23
- 🔍 Collected: April 17, 2026 at 20:31 (8 min after Published)
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 18, 2026 at 21:50 (25h 18m after Collected)
Wei Chuan Dragons outfielder Kuo Tien-hsin successfully stole a base in the bottom of the first inning today, achieving 22 consecutive stolen bases across seasons, breaking the Chinese Professional Baseball record. This also brings his career total stolen bases to 90.
The Dragons played against the CTBC Brothers at Tianmu Baseball Stadium today. Kuo Tien-hsin, batting first, hit a single and quickly attempted a stolen base. The game was briefly paused, and Kuo removed the second base bag for the team to keep as a memento of this historic moment.
Kuo has not failed a stolen base attempt since May 23 last year, breaking the previous league record of 21 consecutive stolen bases set by Chen Jui-chen between 1998 and 1999, which was 26 years and 193 days ago. (Edited by Hsieh Ya-chu) April 17, 115
Choose to stand with facts. Your sponsorship is the power to protect news freedom.
Download CNA's 'One-Minute News' app for instant updates.
Text, images, and videos on this website may not be reproduced, broadcast, or transmitted without authorization.
The Dragons played against the CTBC Brothers at Tianmu Baseball Stadium today. Kuo Tien-hsin, batting first, hit a single and quickly attempted a stolen base. The game was briefly paused, and Kuo removed the second base bag for the team to keep as a memento of this historic moment.
Kuo has not failed a stolen base attempt since May 23 last year, breaking the previous league record of 21 consecutive stolen bases set by Chen Jui-chen between 1998 and 1999, which was 26 years and 193 days ago. (Edited by Hsieh Ya-chu) April 17, 115
Choose to stand with facts. Your sponsorship is the power to protect news freedom.
Download CNA's 'One-Minute News' app for instant updates.
Text, images, and videos on this website may not be reproduced, broadcast, or transmitted without authorization.