Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Dodgers Searching for 40 Wins

After a four game home stand where the Dodgers were swept at the hands of the sub .500 Milwaukee Brewers, the outlook for a 10 game road trip to Colorado, Philadelphia and Seattle seemed bleak (if not grueling). The Dodgers proceeded to drop two games to the Rockies in Denver, which meant they had lost 6 of their previous 7 games heading into a 4-game set with the Phillies. But after a dominant 4 game sweep in Citizens Bank Park, the Dodgers were showing signs of resiliency in the wake of Kemp-ocalypse Part II.

Then came the No-No. The Los Angeles Dodgers hadn't been no hit since they were blanked by Cincinnati in 1994. Try to guess who the starting CF for the Reds was that day?... Deion Sanders! It had been a long, long time since the blue crew had gone an entire game with out a hit. Lets put it this way, the Washington Nationals' phenom Bryce Harper was a 1 year old! But with the help of 6 different Mariners pitchers and a questionable out call on Dee Gordon in the 9th inning, history was made. And more importantly the fans in Seattle had something to get excited about while their hijacked basketball franchise was going to the finals with a different home crowd. It should be noted that the last two World Series championships ('88, '81) came during years where the Dodgers were on the wrong ends of no hitters. Is it a sign? Here's to hoping.

But the Dodgers, as they seem to do time and time again in 2012, picked up the pieces and salvaged a series win by taking both weekend games. So in a matter of 7 days the Dodgers were able to go from a club who had dropped 6 of its previous 7 to having won 6 of its previous seven. And last night, began their freeway series with the Anaheim Angels (I'm sorry they'll never be LA in my mind), with a chance to be the first team to 40. But unfortunately the sensational 20 year old rookie Mike Trout was doing what he's done since being called up, which was getting base hits, stealing bases, hitting home runs and scoring runs. Just enough to edge the Dodgers 3-2 in the 9th and give Kenley Jansen the loss.

But as the game came to a close on Monday evening, the rumors of an Andre Ethier extension began to trickle through the world of twitter. A deal that was made official this afternoon (Tuesday 6/12) in a press conference, is good for 5 years, 85 million dollars, and a club option for over 15 million in a 6th year (what would be 2018). Now that the Dodgers have locked down their two best position players through the rest of their prime, it will only be a matter of time before Clayton Kershaw gets his extension and free agents of all varieties start to see something brewing in Los Angeles. In the wake of new ownership having the pocketbook to buy a championship, the dominoes are starting to fall in a slow yet strategic manner.

Matt Kemp got his money and in addition to being the teams biggest cheerleader, became the biggest proponent of giving Andre his big extension. Now that the lefty slugger will surely play the rest of his meaningful games in Dodger blue. Now it might be time for Matt Kemp, to continue his vocal-ness towards signing more bats in the coming year.... Saaaay Josh Hamilton? Probably the highest paid outfield in the sport, but it would sure as heck be a spectacle to see those three guys bat in consecutive order. Time for Matt to buddy up with Josh in Kansas city next month. Then Prince might start thinking twice about playing out the rest of his days in bitter cold Detroit.

Dodgers are set for game two with the Angels tonight (Tuesday) at 7. They will be honoring former Dodgers catcher, and current Angels Manager, Mike Scioscia with a "Scioscia Bobble Head Night". The bobble head will naturally be of the young, slightly more slender Scioscia in his Dodgers catchers gear.

Monday, June 4, 2012

Dodgers Start It Off Right in Philadelphia

So we meet again... My apologies for the infrequency to what was becoming pretty frequent banter. So much was happening with this Dodgers club and so much was happening for yours truly at work, that I've just been flat out exhausted trying to keep up with it all. I know, I know... No excuses, blog like a champ.

ANYWAYS... as I'm typing the Los Angeles Kings have now taken a three games to none lead over the New Jersey Devils in the Stanley Cup finals. While my main concern is normally getting that big trophy with all the little flags on it in Los Angeles, it will definitely be fun seeing Lord Stanley's behemoth of a silver cup hoisted around tinsel town. As a child of the 90's, the only hockey that I've ever been interested in was the roller hockey in the cultisac after gaining inspiration from Emilio Estevez and the mighty ducks on VHS. So I haven't been glued to this series but I know some are, and for that... congrats Kings fans, its allllllmost wrapped up!

Alright Dodger fans, back to what we really care about... Baseball. Or should I say injuries with a SIDE of baseball. When we last spoke, Matt Kemp was about to make his triumphant return from a hammy issue and Juan Rivera was soon to follow. Instead what we got was about 24 hours of Kemp in uniform, before an Andre Ethier double to the Left Center gap at Dodger stadium not only scored Kemp from first base, but more importantly led to the re injury of said hamstring. So now we could now be without Matt for an even LONGER stint (rumors are that he might just wait to come back after the all-star break).

Right as Matty was making his comeback, Dodger fans were feeling good about themselves with the next-best San Francisco Giants 5.5 games back. But just as quickly, Matt was gone again and the Dodgers would then lose 6 of 7 games. A stretch that saw the Dodgers, who hadn't even lost 3 in a row in 2012, lose 5 in a row. The division lead had shriveled down to 3 games going into the morning of June 4th, and with the Giants beating up on the hapless Cubs early on Monday, the Dodgers were beginning a 4-game set with the Philadelphia Phillies. With the opposing starting pitcher Worley still in the process of coming back from injury, his pitch count for game one was set at 75. The Dodgers cracked into that count early with a 2 run first inning, and 1 run 2nd.  But as Worley settled down, Kershaw's efficient start disappeared just as quickly on a Placido Polanco 2-run home run to the porch in left field.

After the Dodgers had some grief with balls and strikes called in the middle innings. Two Dodger ejections left the away team without a manager. The rest of the game was a chess match as acting manager Tim Wallach and Charlie Manuel. The tie was broken in the 9th inning as Dee Gordon's lead off triple off of Jonathan Papelbon was followed by an Elian Hererra RBI single through the left side. The Phillies manager had called the infield in to prevent the runner scoring from third, and the ball was hit hard enough between 3rd and SS to allow Gordon to walk his way to home plate. Of all the young guns who've been thrown into action in the wake of all these injuries, Hererra has done enough to keep himself in play for an everyday roll and without his mini-stint of reliability, the Dodgers might have given up their division lead altogether. His heroic diving catch in the 9th inning, preserved Kenley Jansen's save and all but ensured he'll be in the lineup tomorrow.

While Kershaw technically might still be fighting his demons with the no-decision against a Phillies team that doesn't have much power (Howard, Utley on DL), the reality is that he did enough to keep the Dodgers in position for a late game win. He was effective enough to stick around 7 full innings in a hitter friendly park like Citizen's Bank Field. The Dodgers are now 34-21 and refuse to relinquish the MLB's best record. During a very daunting stretch of 20 games in 20 days, where the Dodgers play 4 straight in Philadelphia before flying all the way to Seattle for inter league play, getting wins on days that Kershaw starts is key. So step one has been accomplished, and the Giants are kept at bay for the time being. Its important to get wins against good teams on days where the team that is chasing you (Giants) plays a bottom dweller like the Cubs. 

See you all tomorrow on twitter for game 2 as the Dodgers try to ensure, at the very least, a series split.