Dodger Thoughts

Jon Weisman's outlet for dealing psychologically with the Los Angeles Dodgers, baseball and life

Month: June 2015 (Page 4 of 7)

You get a save! And you get a save!

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By Jon Weisman

The boxscore of today’s 4-2, 12-inning Dodger victory will show Kenley Jansen getting his ninth save of 2015, but anyone who saw Joc Pederson’s bottom-of-the-ninth catch knows that he’s just as deserving.

For that matter, so is Adrian Gonzalez, who emerged from a flurry of double-play grounders this weekend to drive in the tying run in the eighth inning and the winning runs in the 12th.

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For that matter, so is J.P. Howell, Chris Hatcher, Adam Liberatore, Juan Nicasio and Josh Ravin, who with Jansen combined for 7 1/3 innings of shutout relief.

For that matter, so is Andre Ethier, who didn’t score after tripling in the second inning but certainly did after homering in the seventh.

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For that matter, Pederson’s first-inning catch of this Matt Kemp drive with one on in the first inning was a save in its own right.

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I’d even like to throw a save at newly engaged Mike Bolsinger, who cruised through the first 14 outs and two strikes, before hitting the speed bump that would never stop bumping.

Well done, lads.

Big crowd on Dodger injury rehab train

SVS 051115js291

Dodgers at Padres, 1:10 p.m.
Joc Pederson, CF
Yasiel Puig, RF
Adrian Gonzalez, 1B
Howie Kendrick, 2B
Yasmani Grandal, C
Andre Ethier, LF
Jimmy Rollins, SS
Alberto Callaspo, 3B
Mike Bolsinger, P

By Jon Weisman

Scott Van Slyke and Joel Peralta began their rehab assignments Saturday, as Ken Gurnick of MLB.com notes.

The timing of Van Slyke’s return is noteworthy in part because the Dodgers will use a designated hitter for the first time this season when they play Monday and Tuesday at Texas. Alex Guerrero seems like an obvious choice, but Van Slyke could also figure in the mix as he works his way back into active duty.

(Update: Don Mattingly told reporters today that the Dodgers planned to have Van Slyke play left field for Single-A Rancho Cucamonga today and first base Monday, then take Tuesday off and be activated in Los Angeles on Wednesday if all goes well.)

The Dodgers are scheduled to face righties Yovani Gallardo and Chi Chi Gonzalez in Arlington. The 23-year-old Gonzalez has a 0.42 ERA after three career Major League starts, totaling 21 2/3 innings, though with only eight strikeouts.

Here’s an excerpt from Gurnick’s update:

Van Slyke, healing from a strained mid-back muscle, went 1-for-4 with a double and strikeout as a designated hitter against Stockton in his first rehab game.

Peralta, healing from a pinched nerve in his neck, reached his pitch limit after two-thirds of an inning, charged with one run on two hits in his second rehab appearance.

The list of Dodgers lined up for injury rehab assignments with Rancho Cucamonga in the next few days includes Paco Rodriguez (elbow spur), who shows up there Monday, Brandon Beachy (Tommy John surgery) on Tuesday, and Brandon League (right shoulder impingement), who goes back to back both of those days.

Peralta, out since April 23, has allowed no runs or inherited runners to score in his 5 2/3 innings this season, scattering two singles and three walks while striking out four.

An activation of League from the disabled list is expected around June 24, according to J.P. Hoornstra of the Daily News, who separately notes that Beachy is expected to use the full 30 days available to him for his rehab assignment, which would place his arrival in the Dodger rotation no sooner than July 17, the first day after the All-Star Break.  No doubt, the sequence of the Dodger rotation will depend on the use of Zack Greinke and/or Clayton Kershaw at the Midsummer Classic.

In addition, Pedro Baez has been throwing bullpen sessions at Camelback Ranch “but is probably still a week away from starting a rehab assignment,” according to Bill Plunkett of the Register.

Adam Liberatore and Josh Ravin are the two current Dodger relievers who have spent time in the minors this season, but if the Dodgers want to make room in the bullpen for Peralta, Rodriguez, League and Baez, they’d have to carve out more space.

If Van Slyke, Peralta, League, Beachy, Rodriguez and Baez are all activated over the next month, that would turn over nearly 25 percent of the active roster. And that doesn’t factor in Carl Crawford, in Arizona recovering from his oblique injury, and Hector Olivera, whose MLB debut is still expected in the coming weeks.

* * *

Josh Sborz, drafted 74th overall by the Dodgers last week, was profiled by Cash Kruth at MLB.com after striking out five in three shutout innings for Virginia at the College World Series on Saturday.

“He throws strikes. He attacks you. That slider is, what, 84 to sometimes up to 87, 88 mph. It’s a pretty darned good pitch,” Virginia coach Brian O’Connor said. “So you have a lot of confidence in him that he’s going to go at them and give his best. And he’s been pretty darned near as good as you can be all year long for us.”

Aside from his fastball and slider, the 6-foot-3, 225-pound Sborz also shows solid feel for a changeup that he really doesn’t need as a reliever. Last season, Sborz posted a 2.92 ERA in 15 games (13 starts) while mostly working out of the rotation, and the Dodgers have said they plan to begin developing him as a starter.

The now is future for Zack Greinke

Oldtimers Day Luncheon

Dodgers at Padres, 7:10 p.m.
Joc Pederson, CF
Yasiel Puig, RF
Adrian Gonzalez, 1B
Howie Kendrick, 2B
Justin Turner, 3B
Andre Ethier, LF
Yasmani Grandal, C
Jimmy Rollins, SS
Zack Greinke, P

By Jon Weisman

Zack Greinke, tonight’s starting pitcher, is a well known front-office aficionado. In this piece for the Register, Bill Plunkett explores with Greinke how realistic a career in baseball would be.

Read the whole piece, but here’s a small sample:

“I’ve thought about what I’m going to do after baseball for probably the past 10 years now and that’s always been one of the possibilities,” Greinke, 31, said. “A lot of that depends on family and if I’d be willing to be away from family as much as it takes to do a job like that. Especially to do a job like that well, it takes a lot of time. And if you get pretty high up in the front office, it takes a lot of time. You’re pretty much saying goodbye to your family.”

For now, Greinke’s focus is on the Padres and maintaining his strong 2015 performance. As Eric Stephen notes at True Blue L.A., “Greinke has started 83 different innings this season, and has allowed multiple runs in just four of them, never more than two runs in a single inning.”

* * *

Tonight is the first time the Dodgers have started Joc Pederson, Yasiel Puig, Adrian Gonzalez, Howie Kendrick, Justin Turner, Andre Ethier, Yasmani Grandal and Jimmy Rollins together this season — which is essentially the Dodger starting lineup for the time being.

Myth and reality about the Dodger bullpen

St.Louis Cardinals vs Los Angeles Dodgers

By Jon Weisman

The bullpen was the Dodgers’ biggest problem last year? Why hasn’t anything been done about that?

Actually, quite a bit has been done. Including the playoffs, the 2014 Dodger bullpen threw 498 innings. Pitchers who threw 236 of those innings — 47 percent — are not with the team in 2015.

OK, but the bullpen is still a huge Achilles heel. Why isn’t it any better?

Actually, it is better. Even before Friday’s game (2 1/3 innings, two unearned runs, three hits, no walks, five strikeouts), the 2015 Dodger bullpen had outperformed last year’s.

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OK, but saying it’s better still isn’t saying much. It’s still not good.

Let’s see. It’s the No. 1 bullpen in baseball in wins above replacement, according to Fangraphs. Through Thursday’s games, no bullpen had a better strikeout rate, and only the Cardinals had a lower rate in home runs allowed.

In terms of WHIP, the Dodger bullpen ranked ninth out of 30 teams — not ideal, but certainly solid.

Now, in percentage of runners stranded on base, Los Angeles was 21st (73.2 percent), and that’s essentially where the problem is. Not very many baserunners get on, but when they do get on, they tend to score more often than most other teams allow.

You can argue that the Dodger bullpen isn’t great. It’s harder to argue that it isn’t good, and even more so to say that it’s below average. Even if a quarter of the runners who reach base are scoring, that total number who score compares quite favorably to the rest of the big leagues.

OK, but “good” isn’t good enough. Not when you plan on winning a World Series. The front office should have done more to fix the bullpen.

No one’s suggesting that the Dodgers should settle for anything less than the best possible roster. Putting aside the fact that the front office has done everything in the world to show that it’s not done tinkering with the team, it’s easy to say that more should have been done, but a lot harder to be precise about who should have been acquired.

Andrew Miller of the Yankees is one obvious name, but even Miller is on the disabled list now. And for every Andrew Miller, there’s a Craig Kimbrel. San Diego swooped in and got Kimbrel from the Braves, only for him to produce a WHIP (1.30) worse than the average Dodger pitcher and an LOB% (73.6) that’s equal.

That’s not to say Kimbrel won’t improve as the season goes on — his uncharacteristic .353 batting average by opponents on balls in play suggests as much. But that’s not the exercise, is it? The question is, why isn’t the Dodger bullpen better now?

No doubt, there’s a perfect bullpen combination out there, just like there’s a perfect way to fill out your March Madness bracket. But given how few reliably great relievers come on the market each year and how fickle relief pitching is from year to year, it’s a fallacy to suggest that there was an obvious way to build a better bullpen than the one the Dodgers have on June 13, 2015.

But hey, maybe I’m wrong. You know what the Dodgers should do for the bullpen, this year or next, don’t keep it a secret. Let me know.

Dodgers survive and advance, 4-3

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By Jon Weisman

001 300 40x — 8

That linescore above doesn’t represent the runs scored against Clayton Kershaw in Friday’s outing. It represents the runs scored against him in his past six outings.

In those six starts since May 15, through tonight’s 4-3 victory over San Diego, Kershaw has a 2.11 ERA. And for his past four starts, Kershaw has a 0.94 ERA period: 28 2/3 innings, 14 hits, six walks (0.70 WHIP), 39 strikeouts (12.2 K/9).

And yet when Kershaw gave up a solo home run in the seventh inning of a 117-pitch outing in which he allowed seven baserunners and struck out 11 — all despite being hit by a line drive in the first, it catalyzed a sequence of events that kept him from becoming the first pitcher in 72 years to win 10 consecutive June starts, and set up a collective heart attack for much of the Dodger fan base.

This was a mistake-filled performance by the Dodgers, as Don Mattingly was the first to say in the postgame interviews. (Mattingly, of course, would be ripped in equal parts for leaving Kershaw in too long and taking him out too soon.) But as long as humans are playing the game and not robots, mistakes are part of baseball. The expectation that players should be perfect mystifies me.

From the seventh inning on, the Dodgers had their leading All-Star vote-getter get ejected, made a critical error, gave up a two-run home run and made two outs on the basepaths.

The end result: They gained a game in the National League West on the Giants, who threw Madison Bumgarner against Arizona and still lost.

Despite all the baserunning misfortune, the offense scored four runs at Petco Park.

Despite the one bad pitch to Derek Norris, the bullpen faced 11 batters, allowed zero earned runs and held a one-run lead for final two innings.

Baseball, at its essence, is about overcoming the inevitable shortcomings of its players. That’s what the Dodgers did tonight.

Gallerama: Hot shots at Kershaw

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By Jon Weisman

Clayton Kershaw stayed in the game after being struck by a Justin Upton liner in the first inning tonight — the latest in a seemingly never-ending series of shots up the middle against the Dodger ace.

Here’s a sample from the past two seasons …

Read More

Pondering Puig’s Petco pickle

Arizona Diamondbacks vs Los Angeles Dodgers

Dodgers at Padres, 7:10 p.m.
Kershaw CCXXII: Kershawrspray
Joc Pederson, CF
Yasiel Puig, RF
Adrian Gonzalez, 1B
Howie Kendrick, 2B
Justin Turner, 3B
Andre Ethier, LF
Jimmy Rollins, SS
A.J. Ellis, C
Clayton Kershaw, P
Note: Don Mattingly told reporters today that minor-league rehab starts are expected for Scott Van Slyke (Saturday) and Brandon Beachy (Tuesday).

By Jon Weisman

Yasiel Puig enters tonight’s action having reached base 10 times in his past 14 plate appearances, with three doubles, a homer and a walk. But the Dodger right fielder has been challenged by San Diego’s Petco Park in his short career.

Puig’s .273 on-base percentage and .345 slugging percentage in Legoland country aren’t terrible, but they are his poorest totals at any location where he’s had more than 20 plate appearances.

Since hitting a homer and single on April Fool’s Day 2014, Puig is 3 for 29 at San Diego with four walks, an HBP and 10 strikeouts. In 2014 road games overall, Puig had an .894 OPS.

Hector Olivera promoted to Triple-A

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HO 2By Jon Weisman

Cuban import Hector Olivera, who went 2 for 4 (while being robbed of a third hit) in a nationally televised game Thursday at Double-A Tulsa, has been promoted to Triple-A Oklahoma City.

In six games with the Drillers, the 30-year-old Olivera went 7 for 22 with a grand slam and three walks, for an .855 OPS. He also had a slick defensive play at third base in Thursday’s game, charging a ball hit down the line.

The transaction puts Olivera alongside the Dodgers’ top young prospect, Corey Seager, who went 2 for 4 with a double Thursday in Oklahoma City’s 3-1 victory over Barry Zito and Nashville. Seager now has a .356 on-base percentage and .419 slugging percentage in Triple-A, despite playing home games in the most run-depressing environment in the Pacific Coast League.

Dodgers have sight for Torreyes, designate Barney for assignment

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TorreyesBy Jon Weisman

Ronald Torreyes, a 22-year-old minor-league infielder, has been acquired from Toronto in exchange for cash considerations by the Dodgers, who also designated infielder Darwin Barney for assignment.

A native of Venezuela, Torreyes was orginally signed by the Reds as a 17-year-old in early 2010. He has a career .353 on-base percentage and .410 slugging percentage in 537 minor-league games, though he has only gone 7 for 50 with two doubles and four walks in his most recent stint, for Double-A New Hampshire.

Torreyes has played the majority of his career at second base while also dabbling at shortstop, third base and the outfield. He played for Triple-A Oklahoma City last year when it was an Astros affiliate, but is being optioned to Double-A Tulsa by the Dodgers.

The 29-year-old Barney was on the Dodgers’ Opening Day roster this year but played only two games, going 0 for 4. After being acquired by the Cubs on July 28 last year, the 2012 Gold Glove winner had a .467 on-base percentage in 45 plate appearances, lifting his career OBP to .294.

With Triple-A Oklahoma City, Barney had a .273 OBP in 121 plate appearances.

Video: Beach Bag giveaway June 17 (doing the wave is optional)

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From the team that put the Sand in Sandy Koufax and the Beach in Brandon Beachy: Dodgers Beach Bag Night opens the next homestand at Dodger Stadium on June 17.

— Jon Weisman

‘The P&P Goodtime Funbunch Supershow’

P and P

Hey kids — if you missed Wednesday’s jam-packed episode, here are the highlights!

Starring Yasiel Puig and Joc Pederson …

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Dodgers wrap up draft heavy in college righties

Diamondbacks at Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.
Joc Pederson, CF
Yasiel Puig, RF
Adrian Gonzalez, 1B
Howie Kendrick, 2B
Yasmani Grandal, C
Andre Ethier, LF
Alberto Callaspo, 3B
Jimmy Rollins, SS
Brett Anderson, P

By Jon Weisman

After taking right-handed college pitchers with six of their first nine picks, the Dodgers didn’t drift very far from that focus as the 2015 MLB Draft concluded today.

Although the Dodgers drafted five catchers between rounds 12-21, the franchise still ended up using 22 of their 42 picks overall on northpaws — 17 of them from college. (See the round-by-round list here.)

2015 draft

Jansen, Puig and more under-the-radar developments

Arizona Diamondbacks vs Los Angeles Dodgers

For more images from Tuesday, visit LA Photog Blog.

By Jon Weisman

Howie Kendrick’s home run and two-run single in the Dodgers’ 3-1 victory Tuesday over Arizona practically speak for themselves, so here are some thoughts on some other Dodgers …

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There’s never been a Dodger quite like Justin Turner

Los Angeles Dodgers vs Miami Marlins Wednesday, May 13, 2015 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles,California.  Photo by Jon SooHoo/©Los Angeles Dodgers,LLC 2015

Diamondbacks at Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.
Chris Heisey, CF
Yasiel Puig, RF
Adrian Gonzalez, 1B
Howie Kendrick, 2B
Alex Guerrero, LF
Yasmani Grandal, C
Kiké Hernandez, SS
Alberto Callaspo, 3B
Carlos Frias, P

By Jon Weisman

Justin Turner’s knee is still stiff after taking a foul ball Monday, and Joc Pederson is “a bit worn down and beat up,” so they are resting tonight along with Andre Ethier against Arizona lefty Robbie Ray.

I can barely remember how I lived before Baseball Reference’s searchable Play Index came into my life, but a perfect example of the irrational pleasures it provides me came Monday night, when I got it into my head to figure out where Turner ranked offensively in history among Dodger third basemen.

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Dodgers need your help in the All-Star vote

Jon SooHoo/Los Angeles Dodgers

Jon SooHoo/Los Angeles Dodgers

By Jon Weisman

Do you want an All-Star Game with no Dodgers in the starting lineup? If your answer is “No, I do not want an All-Star Game with no Dodgers in the starting lineup,” then get involved in the fan voting for the All-Star Game.

You can read more about the selection process here. Vote up to 35 times, like a boss.

Click the image below to enlarge the current results, which show that the Dodgers’ lone position leader, Adrian Gonzalez, has fallen into second place.

June 9 All-Star

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