
Photo: Rico Shen / CC BY-SA 4.0 (source: Wikimedia Commons)
My Take
Peng Cheng-min is one of those players whose name carries real weight in Taiwanese baseball, and I find his career hard not to admire. Nearly two decades with the CTBC Brothers in the Chinese Professional Baseball League, from 2001 to 2019, is the kind of loyalty you rarely see anymore. He moved between right field, first base, and designated hitter, which tells me he was the sort of dependable bat a team builds around rather than a one-trick specialist. That he stepped into coaching afterward feels natural to me. He strikes me as a figure who became part of the league's identity itself.
Overview
Peng Cheng-min, (traditional Chinese: 彭政閔; simplified Chinese: 彭政闵; pinyin: Péng Zhēngmǐn; Wade–Giles: Peng2 Cheng1 Min3; born 6 August 1978 in Kaoshiung, Taiwan), is a Taiwanese former professional baseball player and baseball coach who was a right fielder, first baseman, and designated hitter for the CTBC Brothers of the Chinese Professional Baseball League from 2001 to 2019.
Summary adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
1. Profile
- Name (English)
- Peng Cheng-Min
- Name (Japanese)
- 彭政閔
- Reading
- 不明
- Born
- August 6, 1978 (age 47)
- Zodiac / Chinese zodiac
- Leo / Horse
- Origin
- Kaohsiung, Taiwan
- Blood type
- Private
- Height
- 183 cm
- Agency
- Private
- Occupation
- baseball player
2. Background
- Elementary school
- Private
- Junior high
- Private
- High school
- Private
- University
- Private
3. Relationships
- Spouse
- Private
- Children
- Private
- Parents
- Private
- Siblings
- Private
4. Personality
Motto
Private
6. Links
- Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/chia23_peng/
- Wikipedia (Japanese)https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%BD%AD%E6%94%BF%E9%96%94
Baseball player — see all → · More people from Taiwan →
7. About this entry
Tags
- Last updated
- 2026-06-02
Facts are limited to publicly available information up to 2024; non-public items are marked "Private / Unknown". English text is machine-assisted (facts translated by Sonnet, "My Take" written by Opus 4.8). The Japanese page is the source of record.