Archive for the ‘Los Angeles Dodgers’ Category

Four Dingers Derail The Dodgers

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

John Lannan threw 5.1 innings of five hit ball and the Nationals stroked four home runs to down the Los Angeles Dodgers, 7-2 at Nationals Park on Monday. Ian Desmond led off the game with a home run, Michael Morse hit two and Jayson Werth hit one to lead the Nationals’ attack. The Nationals assault was in stark contrast to the problems they’ve been having at the plate over the last two weeks.

All of the Nationals’ homers except for one came in the first inning, and off of Trolley righty Hiroki Kuroda. John Lannan, meanwhile, threw 94 pitches in registering his ninth win against 11 losses. Lannan later said that he was anxious to go deeper into the game, but couldn’t convince Nats’ skipper Davey Johnson to keep him in. “I felt good and I wanted to keep battling,” Lannan said after the win. “But my pitch count was high. It was a hot day. Our bullpen was fresh. I understood why.”

Michael Morse’s two home runs gave him 26 for the year — to go along with 82 RBIs. The first baseman/left fielder is clearly the team’s MVP for 2011, having put together his best season of his late blooming career. Jayson Werth took time to compliment Morse after the win on Monday. “I’m really happy for him,” Werth said. “This game is not easy. We had similar parts of our career as far as the age. I can appreciate it. I think he always had it in him.” Werth’s game is also improving, after a tough 2011 and what has accounted for nearly a year-long slump. Werth hit his 18th home run of the year in the first inning, and notched his 52nd RBI.

Those Are The Details, Now For The Headlines: There’s been a changing of the guard in Florida, where the Marlins have struggled not only to put fans into the seats, but to put a good ball club on the field. The Marlins started to unravel after 6-7 fireballer Josh Johnson went out with a shoulder injury and the team cratered during a mid-June losing streak (they lost 18 of 19, and eleven in a row) that saw the rehiring of steady-as-she-goes Jack McKeon . . .

The return of Johnson will help next year, but it’s not likely to be enough. Last night on MLB Network, the irascible Larry Bowa said there had been a “changing of the guard” in Florida. Shortstop Hanley Ramirez “is no longer the face of the franchise,” Bowa said — “it’s Mike Stanton.” That sounds right. Yesterday, Ramirez was told that he will need surgery on his left shoulder . . .

(more…)

GWRBI (GS) In Houston

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

It wasn’t so long ago (the Nationals were playing out in Los Angeles, to be specific) that we wrote about walk-off grand slam home runs. They’re really, really unusual — a walk-off grand slam that results in a single run victory has happened (by our count) just 25 times in major league history. A two out walk-off grand slam is even more unusual. And, as we noted in our previous post, an inside the park walk-off grand slam home run has happened just once.

Which makes last night’s walk-off grand slam off the bat of Brian Bogusevic in Houston (albeit, on a 2-2 and not a 3-2 count, but wouldn’t that be something) even more special. The fact that thousands more watched it live than normally would have (during an MLB “live look-in”) is stunning.

The GWRBI (GS) came off the arm of Chicago reliever Carlos Marmol and sent the fans in Houston into ecstasy, and it was a bomb: Bogusevic scorched the ball to dead center and it hit above the yellow home run line in Minute Maid Park. A shot. The grand slam gave the Astros a 6-5 victory.

The feat in Houston wasn’t the only walk-off of the night. Garrett Jones hit a walk-off against the Cardinals in Pittsburgh, Juan Pierre hit a walk-off single in the 14th inning in Chicago to give the Pale Hose a win over the Naps, Mark Kotsay hit a GWRBI single in the ninth to lift the Brewers over the Los Angeles Deadweights, and Martin Prado provided a single to notch an 11th inning walk-off in the Braves’ win over the Wadda-We-Gonna-Do-Now McCoveys in Atlanta.

That’s five walk-offs in a single night in baseball, equaling the season record of five set back in late May. Still . . . still, the Houston walk-off was the most uplifting (so to speak) and jaw-dropping. Oh, and Bogusevic’s walk-off grand slam was hit by a pinch hitter . . .

Billingsley Swats The Nats

Monday, July 25th, 2011

With Chad Billingsley on the mound in the top of the 1st inning, the Washington Nationals loaded the bases with no outs — with Billingsley reeling from a walk, a hit batter and two singles. But the Nationals could only muster a single run in that inning, as Billingsley ended the threat with three straight strikeouts, and went on to tame the Nationals and secure a 3-1 L.A. victory.

The Nationals’ defeat brought the team to a disappointing 3-6 record on their Atlanta-Houston-L.A. road trip as they headed home for a crucial set of games against their N.L East opponents. “We should have [broken it open] in that first inning,” Nationals manager Davey Johnson said. “We couldn’t put the ball in play with nobody out, and that hurt us. And then Billingsley settled down and pitched an effective ballgame. We swung and missed a lot today.”

Like Billingsley, Nationals starter Jason Marquis was shaky in the early going: the Washington righty gave up two early runs, but then settled down to pitch six innings, while giving up three runs on five hits. “It was a battle,” Marquis said of his outing. “I was trying to keep my team in the game as best as possible. I had some unfortunate breaks. That’s the way the game goes. We just weren’t able to break through.” How effective was L.A.’s pitching? The Nationals were only able to muster two hits for the entire game, and never had another one after the first inning.

Those Are The Details, Now For The Headlines: There are all kinds of grand slams — there are regular grand slams, there are walk-off grand slams (a victory when a grand slam provides a walk-off victory by more than a single run), there are “ultimate” walk-off grand slams (a walk-off grand slam that gives a team a victory by a single run), there are inside-the-park walk-off grand slams (you get the idea), and then there are “ultimate” walk-off inside-the-park grand slams.

(more…)

Pitching Ineffective In L.A. Loss

Sunday, July 24th, 2011

Major pieces of the Washington Nationals’ pitching staff collapsed on Saturday in Los Angeles, leading the way for a dramatic one run L.A. walk off win in the ninth inning, 7-6. The Nationals’ game began to unravel in the bottom of the third, with Washington enjoying a 6-2 lead. That might have been enough on any other night, but it was not enough on Saturday.

In the bottom of the third, the Dodgers’ mounted a three run comeback that culminated in a double off the bat of pitcher Ted Lilly that scored Juan Rivera and Juan Uribe. The Lilly double ended starter Tom Gorzelanny’s three inning outing, as he was replaced in the fourth by lefty long reliever Ross Detwiler. “It was awful pitching — plain and simple,” Gorzelanny said following his outing. “I couldn’t throw anywhere in. I was leaving balls up. I wasn’t able to command the fastball.”

But Gorzelanny wasn’t the only Nats’ pitcher who performed poorly. After 2.2 solid innings from Detwiler (whose performances are cementing his spot in the bullpen), and with the Nationals still holding a 6-5 lead, Henry Rodriguez allowed the Dodgers to tie the Nationals at six. Witn one out in the bottom of the seventh, Rodriguez walked Dioner Navarro and Rafael Furcal, then launched a wild pitch to the backstop that allowed pinch runner Eugenio Valez to score.

Sean Burnett came in in relief of Rodriguez and successfully put out the fire but, after an effective eighth inning, Nats’ reliever Ryan Mattheus couldn’t hold L.A. The Dodgers scored in a walk off in the bottom of the ninth inning on a double from Rafael Furcal that scored Trent Oeltjen. Davey Johnson was irriated, but philosophical about the loss: “It was just a bad outing for a couple of guys,” he said.

Those Are The Details, Now For The Headlines: Ryan Zimmerman has weighed in on a potential trade for B.J. Upton. “B.J. is a very talented player. I think a lot of people still think he is going to improve a lot. He has all the tools. He is one of those guys who can run, throw and hit for power. He is a very gifted athlete . . . ”

(more…)

Nats Derail The Dodgers, 7-2

Saturday, July 23rd, 2011

Southpaw pitcher John Lannan threw 6.1 lights-out innings, homered into the right field seats, and then watched as Washington’s ace relief corps derailed the Los Angeles Dodgers, 7-2 in the City of Angels on Friday night. The win brought the Nationals to 3-4 on their current road trip, and provided a badly needed win after the team dropped two of three in Houston.

Lannan’s performance on the mound was memorable, but not nearly as memorable as his surprising home run into the right field seats, which came with two outs in the second inning. It was the first home run Lannan has hit since he was 15. “I just got a pitch to hit,” Lannan said. “I wasn’t trying to hit a home run. I was trying to put the bat on the ball and it went out. It’s kind of a blur right now.”

The Trolleys kept the game close, despite Lannan’s pitching and hitting heroics. Dodger righty Hiroki Kuroda struggled in the early frames, but then settled down to hold the Nationals to a single run lead. But his teammates couldn’t solve the Nats’ pitching, registering just three hits in their 56th loss. Kuroda, who is 6-12 (but with a snappy 3.19 ERA) has been mentioned prominently in trade talks.

The Dodgers have struggled to score runs recently, despite having some heavy hitters (including triple crown candidate Matt Kemp) in their line-up. Don Mattingly showed his frustration with his team’s lack of production during a post-game interview. “We’ve gotta put some numbers on the board,” Mattingly said. “We had the one inning there, but we just really didn’t mount a whole lot of charges after that. The main thing we have to do [as a team] is throw some numbers up there.”

The Nationals finished strong: Sean Burnett, Tyler Clippard and Drew Storen combined to hold the Dodgers’ hitless in relief of Lannan, and uber-sub Jerry Hairston collected a ninth inning grand slam that just cleared the left field fence. Hairston’s dinger put the game out of reach.

Those Are The Details, Now For The Headlines: Kuroda is the Dodgers’ lead candidate to be traded, undoubtedly for a package of prospects. The righty is a steady starter, but he’s 36. He says all the trade talk doesn’t bother him: “I have to really concentrate on the game that I pitch,” Kuroda said following his loss to the Nationals . . .

(more…)

Nats Nipped In St. Louis

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

Jordan Zimmermann pitched solidly and steadily in the second game of a day-night doubleheader, but could not come away with a win, as the Washington Nationals dropped the third game of their set with the St. Louis Cardinals, 5-3. Zimmermann threw six complete innings, and while he gave up eight hits and five runs, he kept the Nats in the game. The Cardinals Jaime Garcia and the St. Louis bullpen (thought to be the Redbirds’ weak spot), pitched better: holding the Nationals to five hits and one earned run.

The St. Louis hero was Houston retread Lance Berkman, who collected two singles, a double and two RBIs. Baseball fans remain skeptical of St. Louis skipper Tony LaRussa’s decision to set Berkman down in right field, but Berkman was been the spark for a slow-starting Cardinals’ offense. Last night’s win over the Anacostia Nine continued that early-season tradition: “The ball doesn’t know how old you are or how much experience you’ve got,” Berkman said after the victory. The Nats are set to take on the Cardinals again today, for the final game of their four game series.

Those Are The Details, Now For The Headlines: The big news in baseball is Bud Selig’s decision that Major League Baseball will take control of the day-to-day running of the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Trolleys are in a heap of trouble — with the owner looking for ways to meet the payroll. This is the second time in three seasons that this has happened: Major League Baseball took over the Rangers when its owner (Tom Hicks) ran up debts. The Texas team was then (in January of 2010) sold to a consortium of business people that included Nolan Ryan. That was last year — the year the Rangers surprised baseball and ended up in the World Series. It’d be nice if this turned out as well . . .

Don Mattingly says that the takeover doesn’t really concern the team, which still has to play well, no matter who’s in the front office. Maybe they will, but it doesn’t seem likely. The Dodgers have been doing just fine on the field — but they’re not the same team that Joe Torre took into the playoffs in 2009, and (honestly) that team (despite the 95 wins) wasn’t all that great. The difference then, particularly with just an average starting staff (Wolf, Billingsley, Kershaw, Kuroda — none of them won more than 12 games), was Torre, who stepped into retirement just as things headed south. We’re just saying . . .

So, where are the vaunted Dodgers? They have a team ERA of 4.66 (that’s fourteenth in the National League), are fourteenth in runs scored (well behind the Nationals, by the bye), and are tenth in team batting average. In the only stat that matters, they trail Colorado, San Francisco and Arizona in the N.L. West and are one-half game ahead of the Friars. Ugh. There are notable bright spots: Jon Garland is throwing ground ball outs (he made the Braves look sick last night), Clayton Kershaw is still one of the league’s premier lefties, Hiroki Kuroda has an ERA of 3.33 (and has turned into a downright frightening pitcher), Matt Kemp is hitting a torrid .426, and Andre Ethier is underrated (and batting .384). You would think Donnie could do something with that . . .

The key is probably Kemp — and for Trolley fans that’s definitely not good news. The outfielder is prone to forgetting exactly where he is and is hardly a clubhouse leader. We can put some of this down to his off-field distractions, which might have caused Kemp’s in-season troubles last year (faster than a speeding bullet, he stole 19 bases in 34 attempts . . . not great). Once upon a time former Dodger coach Larry Bowa (not exactly Sigmund Freud, is our bet) attempted to do an intervention with Matthew (something no one, we imagine, might want), but even that didn’t work. “He’s wound pretty tight,” Torre said of Kemp before departing L.A.

There’s a pattern here somewhere, let’s see if we can guess what it is. L.A.’s financial problems date from the owner’s very public divorce — with the team split between former husband and former wife. Frank (McCourt) even accused Jamie (McCourt) of having an affair, and fired her from her position with the team. Ugly. Really ugly. So ugly that it has spilled a lot of ink, ink better spent talking about runs and outs. There’s even a blog for Trolley fans called Dodger Divorce. And Kemp? Kemp’s 2010 spiral coincided with his focus elsewhere. Wags say, well . . . ah . . . they say that now that that’s done, Kemp can worry about baseball, instead of giving new meaning to the term “good with the stick.

What a mess.

The Duke of Flatbush

Monday, February 28th, 2011

There are a whole lot of people in the world who appreciate Edwin Donald “Duke Snider” more than me — and most of them grew up in Brooklyn. Snider, who died Sunday at the age of 84, came to define the Brooklyn Dodgers as few others, including Jackie Robinson and Pee Wee Reese. Snider was the original “great Dodger” in an era before Koufax or Drysdale, and lived and played with Robinson and Reese. These were those great Dodger teams that, after years of futility, dominated the National League, winning six pennants in ten years. Their names are legendary: Gil Hodges, Carl Erskine, Ralph Branca, Clem Labine, Carl Furillo, Joe Black, Roy Campanella, Don Newcombe and Jim Gilliam.

For Dodger fans, the 1950s (before their sainted heroes decamped to LA) were the golden age of New York baseball — with Snider, Mantle and Mays all in center, all contenders. Brooklyn Dodger fans still claim that Snider was the best of the three (and he was very good), but memories of Snider among Brooklyn fans have been dusted with the passage of time. Snider never got on too well with New York baseball reporters or Brooklyn diehards and when the O’Malley family beat it out of town Snider (an L.A. native) was quoted as saying he preferred it that way. He said he was misquoted (and probably was), but Brooklyn’s faithful believed it. He was “surly” and self-pitying; the book on the Duke was that he never quite lived up to his potential. Which, like much else having to do with Snider, just wasn’t true. He was better than just good and was voted into Cooperstown in 1980.

Brooklyn fans are notable for telling us how they never missed a game, loved every one of “dem bums” and supported them in everything they did. It’s not true, of course, but never mind: Snider’s immortality (never a sure thing in Brooklyn) was sealed as soon as he was missed. The same holds true for the team. The Dodgers were beloved in Brooklyn, but few went to see them play, the city would not build them a new stadium and their record for futility before the glorious days of “the Duke” would make a Cubs fan wince. “Duke Snider was proof in the flesh that great teams had once played in Brooklyn,” Howard Megdal wrote in today’s New York Times, and that about sums it up.

Well, not quite. Snider patrolled center field for the Dodgers for sixteen years (11 in Brooklyn, five in L.A.), still leads all Dodgers in HRs and RBIs, had one of the best hitters’ eyes in the game (though, paradoxically, struck out a lot), led the league in runs for three consecutive years, and in home runs (with 43) in 1956. His numbers for ’53 through ’57 are astonishing. He was an eight time all star. “Swing hard,” he told hitters, “in case they throw the ball where you’re swinging.”