Monday, September 26, 2016

Can Dodgers get over the playoff hump?

In dramatic fashion, the Dodgers clinched the National League West for a fourth straight year last night, winning 4-3 on a 10th inning walkoff homer by Charlie Culbertson.

In Vin Scully's last broadcast at Dodger Stadium, the Dodgers earned another spot in the post season.

Now the questions come.

Can the Dodgers go deep into the playoffs or will they make an early exit?

Can Clayton Kershaw overcome his playoff woes and pitch effectively in the month of October?

Do the Dodgers have enough pitching and hitting to get past Washington and Chicago to make it to the World Series?

No one knows the outcomes, but my guess is the Dodgers will get past the Nationals. They are 5-1 against the Nats this year and Steven Strasburg, Daniel Murphy and Bryce Harper, all key pieces for Washington, are less than 100 percent with nagging injuries.

The Dodgers have been on fire in the second half and are playing with a lot of passion. Kershaw (12-3) is strong and rested and Kenta Maeda (16-9) and Rich Hill (12-5) give the Dodgers a starting rotation capable of winning each time out.

The Dodgers biggest area of improvement has been in the bullpen, where Joe Blanton, Adam Liberatore, Pedro Baez, Luis Avilan, J.P. Howell, Ross Stripling and Kenley Jansen have turned around what was the Dodgers major weak point in years past.

In addition, Dave Roberts has starters Julio Urias and Jose DeLeon ready if he needs more pitching.

Ask the Giants how important a bullpen can be.

As for Kershaw, his back injury forced him to sit for 2.5 months. He seems to be recovered and will enter the playoffs looking his dominant self.

As for hitting, the Dodgers have shown good power with Yasmani Grandal (27), Justin Turner (27), Corey Seager (26) and Joc Pederson (26) flexing the long ball.

Seager should win the Rookie of the Year award and Adrian Gonzalez, Turner, Josh Reddick, Yasiel Puig, Howie Kendrick, Chase Utley, Andrew Toles and Andre Ethier give the Dodgers a lot of options to create favorable matchups.

Puig has been a different man since being exiled to Oklahoma City and Ethier is just getting his timing back after a season-long bout on the DL with a leg fracture. Toles has emerged as a valuable tool and Reddick has warmed up since coming over in the Oakland trade.

If the Dodgers do get past the Nats they will likely face the Cubs, everyone's favorites to win it all this year.

It may be Chicago's year but they still have to win it on the field.

Friday, September 23, 2016

A night for Vin

Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully, wrapping up an amazing 67-year career at the microphone, took center stage tonight in Chavez Ravine.

Composer John Williams had the baton for the national anthem and all-time great southpaws Sandy Koufax and Clayton Kershaw, among others, were on hand to pay tribute.

Scully and his wife were escorted to the dugout on a blue carpet ringed with Dodgers.

Scully is being recognized this week for his masterful life of broadcasting baseball games. But in actuality, Scully is being honored for being the storyteller who would artfully weave pieces of the players lives into the games we watched and listened to, making the experience a rich and memorable one.

It's seems like yesterday I was a 12-year old Little Leaguer listening to Scully on the radio call the game on summer nights in Bell Gardens, California.

Many a summer night I fell asleep listening to Scully paint wonderful pictures of the exploits of players like Koufax, Don Drysdale, John Roseboro, Maury Wills, Steve Garvey, Wes Parker, Ron Cey, Manny Mota, Willie Davis and Tommie Davis, to name a few.

The pictures Scully painted gave me a vivid image of the games being played in Chavez Ravine.

That was a lifetime ago, but it seems like yesterday.

Scully will broadcast these last Dodgers home games this weekend then wrap up his career calling the Dodgers versus Giants in the city by the bay next week.

Vin, thanks for the memories.

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Scoreboard watching and different time zones

When your team is in a pennant race, you watch the scoreboard.

When the Yankees are blanking your Dodgers you gaze at the scoreboard and wonder if San Diego can knock off San Francisco two nights in a row to preserve the lead in the standings.

Living on the East Coast with our team on the West Coast often means waiting until morning to see the results of a game that started at 10:10 p.m. Eastern.

The Giants blew a ninth-inning lead to lose to the Padres last night, easing the pain of a 3-0 shutout to the Bronx Bombers. I didn’t know about it until this morning.

MLBTV’s online package provides highlights and condensed games for the fan who can’t get enough and the MLB Channel is chock full of highlights and analysis.

But you still gotta sleep.

For the Dodgers, the pennant race is now down to 17 games after today’s rubber match with the Yanks.

The Dodgers have four games in Arizona; three at home against the Giants; four at home against the Rockies and finish the season on the road with three against the Padres and three games in San Francisco.


I will sleep when the playoffs are over.

Monday, September 12, 2016

Keeping my cool in Miami

For the last several years I have made my annual trip to see the Dodgers by driving from Carson City, Nevada to San Francisco to see the Dodgers face off against the Giants at AT&T Park, a stunning stadium on the bay.

Since moving to Florida last fall, my options have changed. This year, getting my Dodgers fix meant a drive down I-95 to see the Dodgers square off against the Miami Marlins in beautiful Marlins Park, which opened in 2012.

I saw games with old friends, Jay and Lou, and even worked in a visit to my mother-in-law in Indiantown up in Martin County.

Some impressions:

  • Marlins Park is a top-notch stadium. I fell in love with the retractable roof and the air conditioning system that maintained a cool 75 degrees inside as it sweltered outside.
  • Jose Fernandez is a beast. He struck out 14 Dodgers in a 4-1 win and was consistently hitting the gun at 97-98 miles per hour.
  • Rich Hill was perfect for seven innings on Saturday night but was pulled for health considerations by Dave Roberts. Roberts has his eye on October but it was still a tough decision. Hill is now 3-0 as a Dodger and has yet to allow a run. He's 36 but has been a godsend to the L.A. pitching staff.
  • Clayton Kershaw showed the rust from being on the shelf for two plus months, giving up a homer and getting hit in a short three-inning appearance on Friday night. Give him a few starts and if his back holds up he will be nails down the stretch.
  • Joc Pederson launched a moonshot in the 5-0 win on Saturday and followed it with a laser to right field the same night. He is coming along just fine.
  • Cory Seager has a sweet swing and deserves to be in the running for Rookie of the Year and has an outside shot at MVP.
  • Yasiel Puig may be growing up. He is playing within the framework of the team and made a highlight reel catch to preserve Hill's perfecto. 
The Dodgers dropped two of three to Miami this weekend while the Giants were sweeping the D-Backs. Their lead in the NL West has shrunk to three games with a critical series starting tonight in the Bronx. 

Ya gotta love a pennant race.

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Greinke gets a harsh welcome at Dodger Stadium

Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Zack Greinke bolted for the desert last off-season, signing a huge contract to join the D-Backs and break up the one-two punch of Kershaw and Greinke.

So there was a little nostalgia and emotion on tap when Greinke took the mound against his old team on Labor Day.

Greinke didn't finish the fifth inning.

The former Cy Young Award winner gave up eight runs on nine hits, including five round-trippers by the Dodgers.

The big blowup came in the fifth inning when the Dodgers clubbed four dingers with Joc Pederson, Cory Seager, Justin Turner and Yasmani Grandal teeing off against Greinke.

Here was a pitcher who went 19-3 last year with a 1.66 ERA. He was 17-8 in 2014 and 15-4 in 2013. He used to own Dodger Stadium.

They say you can't go home.

Zack Greinke sure couldn't.

Monday, September 5, 2016

Dodgers pitching cavalry is coming

Dodger rookie right-hander Jose DeLeon made his debut in Chavez Ravine yesterday, tossing a six-hitter over six innings and getting a 7-4 win behind home runs by Yasiel Puig and Yasmani Grandal.

DeLeon showed why his the top pitching prospect in the Dodgers organization, striking out nine and showing great composure on the mound. He and Julio Urias could anchor the Los Angeles pitching staff of the future.

DeLeon's start marked the 15th different starting pitcher for the Dodgers this season, the most in the major leagues.

Injuries have decimated the Dodgers pitching corps but the organization responded by acquiring Rich Hill from Oakland and bringing up Urias and DeLeon to bolster the staff.

The Dodgers erased an eight-game deficit to the Giants and now hold a three-game lead over San Francisco as the season enters the final stretch.

Clayton Kershaw, who hasn't pitched since late June, completed a rehab assignment in the minors on Saturday and will take the hill Friday night in Miami against the Marlins. If Kershaw can regain his form and stay healthy, Dave Roberts will have Kershaw, Hill, Scott Kazmir and Kenta Maeda along with DeLeon and Urias to call on.

Urias is believed to be on an innings limit and could come out of the pen for the Dodgers, which has been stellar this season.

Hill, since recovering from a deep blister injury, has been spot on, winning two games and posting a 0.00 ERA for Los Angeles. On the season, Hill is 11-3 with a 1.94 ERA. Maeda, who squares off against Zack Greinke and the Diamondbacks tonight, leads the staff with 13 wins.

Kazmir is also expected to come off the DL after suffering a neck strain. He also threw a rehab assignment last week.

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Toles making most of his second chance

Dodgers rookie Andrew Toles was the hero last night, slugging a ninth-inning, two-out grand slam to give the Dodgers a come-from-behind 10-8 victory over the Rockies and avoid a sweep in Denver.

Toles was a third round draft pick of the Tampa Bay Rays in 2012 after playing college ball at Tennessee. He was dismissed from the team his sophomore year.

Toles sat out of baseball last year after being cut by the Rays and spent some time working in a grocery store to pay the bills.

Dodgers exec Andrew Friedman was at Tampa Bay when Toles was drafted and kept in touch. That contact resulted in Toles joining the Dodgers organization and he shined in the minors, earning a call up to the bigs this summer.

In his 58 at bats in the major leagues, Toles is hitting at a torrid .397 clip while showing good speed on the bases and in the outfield as well. He has hit three dingers, none more dramatic that last night's grand salami.