There’s talk of Josh Lindblom being brought up to the majors, but no official announcement arrived as of 1 p.m. Hope your long weekend is treating you well.
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Mark J. Terrill/APRejected “Lost” scripts: Smoke-monster attacks Chavez Ravine.
We should all be relieved that no one appears to have been harmed by the storage-area fire in the vicinity of the Dodger Stadium right field reserved level, but all the jokes people were able to make – “Something’s on fire, but it isn’t Dodger bats,” “McCourt’s burning the place down for the insurance money,” “Sure won’t be a problem finding empty seats for the fans to move to” – just tended to depress me. There’s too much to make fun of. The feckless 6-1 loss to the Marlins didn’t help.
Quite a pitchers duel between the Angel and Twins.

At the end, it was less a victory than an exorcism.
The anti-homer curse against James Loney – gone. Andre Ethier’s near-month-long power outage – gone.
And the electrified way the Dodgers poured out of the dugout after Dioner Navarro’s game-winning pinch-hit single in the bottom of the ninth gave them a 3-2 victory over Florida, the way Matt Kemp came over not just to praise Navarro but to bury him in his arms as well, showed a group of players keen and desperate to get about a thousand monkeys off their backs.
The easy argument is that the Dodgers have stopped caring, in the wake of their obvious flaws, ceaseless injuries and exhausting off-the-field drama. None of those issues have gone away, but if they didn’t care about winning, they wouldn’t have been so over the moon about a victory that only raised their record to 23-29.
They have been fighting – other teams as well as themselves. There were the two rallies against San Francisco last week, followed by the shocking, Russ Mitchell-led comeback against the White Sox. They were one strike away from victory against Houston on Monday, then lost in the bottom of the ninth, then did so again Wednesday.
They haven’t won a game by more than two runs since May 17. They haven’t won a game by more than three runs since May 10. They’ve still only won nine games in a month that has been uphill since it started with a 7-0 loss to San Diego.
They can’t even claim the most exhilarating win in the National League West on Friday – finishing third behind Arizona rallying from a 6-0 deficit against the Astros and the Giants riding a grand slam from a player in his first major-league game to a comeback victory over Milwaukee.
They just suit up with the understanding that every game counts.
When Ethier’s pinch-hit single gave the Dodgers a short-lived lead in Houston on Monday, Clayton Kershaw roared in elation. When Ethier hit his home run in the sixth inning, Aaron Miles lifted Jamey Carroll so high, he nearly threw him over the dugout. When Navarro delivered what was only the seventh hit all year by the Dodgers with the bases loaded, you’d have thought they’d broken the bank in Vegas.
They care as much as you do, if not more. This is a team dying to make something happen, if only it can.
Hoping he gets off to a faster start than Rafael Furcal, the Dodgers have activated Casey Blake from the disabled list. Russell Mitchell will head to Triple-A.
At 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, I’ll be appearing on a panel, “True Blue: Roundtable Discussion on the Future of the Dodgers,” at L.A. Live’s ESPN Zone with former Dodger Jay Johnstone and ESPN AM 710 personality A Martinez. Come on down …
What would your all-healthy Dodger 25-man roster look like, using players currently in the organization? Here’s mine:
Starting pitchers (5): Clayton Kershaw, Chad Billingsley, Hiroki Kuroda, Ted Lilly, Rubby De La Rosa
Bullpen (7): Jonathan Broxton, Hong-Chih Kuo, Kenley Jansen, Matt Guerrier, Vicente Padilla, Javy Guerra, Scott Elbert
Starting lineup:
Jamey Carroll, 2B
Rafael Furcal, SS
Matt Kemp, CF
Andre Ethier, LF
Jerry Sands, RF
James Loney, 1B
Casey Blake, 3B
Rod Barajas, C
Bench (5): A.J. Ellis, Juan Uribe, Aaron Miles, Marcus Thames, Jay Gibbons
This was actually harder to do than I thought it would be, particularly with the pitching, where I left off Jon Garland, Blake Hawksworth and Mike MacDougal. All three have been decent-to-good this year, but I decided to go with the potential of youth. (Again, this is a world where no one gets hurt.)
On the bench, I dropped Tony Gwynn, Jr., on the theory that the Dodgers couldn’t afford the luxury of a defensive replacement/pinch-runner who couldn’t even out-hit Miles. I went the on-base talents of Ellis, and (given mostly few alternatives) the power potential of Uribe, Thames and Gibbons.
It’s not such a bad team if it could stay healthy, and if Loney could ever start to hit like he’s capable of. Too bad both of those things aren’t likely to happen, especially with Colorado, San Francisco and San Diego reeling. (Arizona is the one team taking advantage.)
What would you do differently?

Kevork Djansezian/Getty ImagesRamon Troncoso – rising.
So, by now you know that the Dodger Cogs and Dogs rankings have always been a mixture of subjectivity and objectivity. For today’s batch, there was an additional factor throw into the mix: exasperation.
In more cheerful news, Single-A Rancho Cucamonga scored 25 runs Wednesday, with Angelo Songco hitting for the cycle.
Today | 5/5 | 4/28 | 4/7 | Player | Comment |
1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | Matt Kemp | According to Fangraphs, the best CF in the NL in 2011. |
2 | 4 | 4 | 1 | Clayton Kershaw | Will contend for NL strikeout title, but I’m guessing not wins. |
3 | 3 | 3 | 4 | Hiroki Kuroda | Rough outing Sunday lifted his ERA above 3.00 and slowed his All-Star bid. |
4 | 2 | 2 | 3 | Andre Ethier | Enters the final days of May with one homer, no doubles in the month. |
5 | 9 | 6 | 5 | Jamey Carroll | Leads MLB shortstops in OBP. |
6 | 6 | 7 | 18 | Chad Billingsley | His 0.64 HR/9 is best by a Dodger since Hershiser (minimum 800 IP). |
7 | 16 | 14 | — | Jerry Sands | Fourth on the team in RBI, and closing in on Uribe. |
8 | 11 | 11 | 13 | Mike MacDougal | Pitched three consecutive days for first time since September ’09. |
9 | 13 | 9 | 6 | Rod Barajas | Kemp and Barajas have combined for 19 of Dodgers’ 36 HR. |
10 | 17 | 18 | 14 | Ted Lilly | Despite allowing 10th homer in 11th start, moved ahead of Garland in ERA. |
11 | 5 | 8 | — | Jon Garland | ERA rose from 3.55 to 4.75 in last start. |
12 | 8 | 10 | 25 | Juan Uribe | From May 13-18, went from five to 11 walks. |
13 | 20 | 21 | 20 | Aaron Miles | Last Dodger to bat at least .280 with OBP below .300: Wilton Guerrero. |
14 | 12 | 12 | 8 | Matt Guerrier | Gave up first extra-base hit of 2011 to a lefty in ninth inning Weds. |
15 | 10 | 15 | 22 | Blake Hawksworth | Struck out two in shutout inning Wednesday for Rancho Cucamonga. |
16 | 7 | 5 | 10 | Casey Blake | Reached base 29 times in his 14 games. |
17 | 18 | 20 | 24 | Kenley Jansen | Ferocious strikeout rate should help him avoid pulling a Yhency. |
18 | 30 | — | — | Jay Gibbons | Second-most total bases (51) in Dodger history for player with below 30 career hits. (Marlon Anderson) |
19 | — | — | — | Javy Guerra | Unscored upon in five of six appearances. |
20 | 21 | 22 | 15 | A.J. Ellis | .443 OBP in Albuquerque, 12 walks, four strikeouts. |
21 | — | — | — | Scott Elbert | Opponents are 1 for 11 with one walk this year. |
22 | — | — | — | Rubby De La Rosa | Pedro Martinez shut out Reds in eighth and ninth inning of MLB debut. |
23 | 32 | 23 | 17 | James Loney | 0-for-4 Wednesday ended 10-game hitting streak. |
24 | 15 | 19 | — | Vicente Padilla | June will come with only 8 2/3 innings under his belt. |
25 | 19 | 16 | 9 | Jonathan Broxton | For a guy who claimed not to be hurt for so long, sure out a long time. |
26 | 22 | 13 | 19 | Marcus Thames | Gibbons has surged ahead with eight hits to Thames’ six. |
27 | 27 | 29 | — | Dioner Navarro | Went 4 for 12 subbing for Barajas in Houston. |
28 | 14 | 17 | 12 | Tony Gwynn Jr. | This month: 1 for 24 with two walks, one steal. |
29 | 25 | 27 | 11 | Xavier Paul | In 3-for-25 slump for Pittsburgh. |
30 | 29 | — | — | Russ Mitchell | Most total bases (19) in Dodger history for player with below 10 career hits. |
31 | — | — | — | Juan Castro | In 17th MLB season, got 600th career hit Saturday. |
32 | 26 | 26 | — | John Ely | Has 3.78 ERA, compared to 6.19 for spring rival Redding. |
33 | 35 | 33 | — | Ramon Troncoso | The impossible dream – out of last place. |
34 | 28 | 30 | 21 | Hector Gimenez | Has same birthday as my brother, and one more career hit. |
35 | 31 | 31 | — | Jamie Hoffmann | Isotopes’ HR leader with nine this year. |
36 | 23 | 24 | 7 | Rafael Furcal | They say he was rushed back, but he was 5 for 13 with three walks in Alb. |
37 | 33 | 27 | 26 | Ivan De Jesus Jr. | Has one double, no HR in 51 AB for Albuquerque. |
38 | 24 | 25 | 16 | Hong-Chih Kuo | Last May, pitched 10 2/3 innings, six baserunners, no runs, 15 K. |
39 | 34 | 32 | 23 | Lance Cormier | Lefties were 5 for 28 against him. |
Tony Jackson of ESPNLosAngeles.com passes along the following:
HOUSTON — Veteran major league right-hander Ian Snell signed a minor league contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday, barely two months after he retired during spring training. Snell had gone to camp with the St. Louis Cardinals but failed to make the club.
DeJon Watson, the Dodgers’ assistant general manager for player development who signed Snell, said Snell initially will go to the team’s spring-training complex in Glendale, Ariz., to get his arm back into shape after the two-month layoff, then eventually will report to the Dodgers’ Triple-A Albuquerque affiliate.
Snell, 29, last pitched in the majors last season for the Seattle Mariners, going 0-5 with a 6.41 ERA in eight starts and four relief appearances and also spending some time in Triple-A. Originally a 26th-round draft pick by the Pittsburgh Pirates, Snell has a career major league mark of 38-53 in seven seasons, with a 4.80 ERA.
From 2004-2008, Snell struck out 7.7 batters per nine innings in the majors. That fell to 5.4 over the past two years, covering 191 1/3 innings.

There were some bright spots today. And most days this year with the Dodgers, isn’t that all we can look for?
Matt Kemp singled, doubled and homered. Dioner Navarro went 2 for 4 and made a run-saving tag at the plate on a potential wild pitch. Javy Guerra came right back from his Tuesday save with a shutout inning.
But even though the sun occasionally peeks through, just for a moment here and there, the fog won’t lift on this Dodger team, which fell to 22-29 with a 2-1 loss in the bottom of the ninth.
J.R. Towles, who had the game-winning hit and went 3 for 4, had been in an 0-for-32 slump entering the game.
Get slapped in the face enough times, it can even make you laugh …
Tony Jackson of ESPNLosAngeles.com has an update on Hong-Chih Kuo:
… (Kuo) appears to have regained his command while throwing off a mound at the team’s spring-training facility in Glendale, Ariz.
“He has been throwing a lot,” Dodgers manager Ned Colletti said. “He is at about 90 percent intensity and having no problems with his command. We’ll see where we go from here.”
Colletti said Kuo eventually will face hitters in extended spring-training games, but that there is no target date for that to happen, nor is there a target date for Kuo to begin a minor league rehabilitation assignment, which would be a necessary precursor to him coming off the disabled list and rejoining the Dodgers bullpen. …
Elsewhere …
- Don Mattingly told reporters today that he expects Casey Blake to be activated by this weekend, and that Andre Ethier and Rod Barajas will end their day-to-day period and return to the starting lineup Friday.
- Josh Wilker writes about former Dodger Joe Simpson, Albuquerque and impending fatherhood at Cardboard Gods.
- While the Dodgers were winning in the great indoors of Houston, it got quite hairy at the Lone Star State’s other major-league ballpark Tuesday.

Julie Jacobson/APRubby De La Rosa
So, let’s say, just hypothetically …
… just hypothetically, mind you …
… that the Dodgers don’t reverse their ugly 2011 start and reach the playoffs.
I mean, I know it’s crazy, but what if an injury-riddled team with almost no offense keeps losing?
What might happen with this roster?
For starters, there’s always the possibility that Dodgers general manager Ned Colletti will try to make a midseason deal to strengthen a playoff bid, as he has done every year of his tenure, with everyone but Zach Lee and Rubby De La Rosa serving as potential trade chips. But under Colletti, the Dodgers have never entered July with a double-digit deficit in the playoff races, and that obviously seems like a much more distinct possibility in 2011. That could dissuade Colletti from his typically go-for-it mentality.
Conversely, if the Dodgers’ fade-out continues unabated, Colletti could take the opportunity to do what is never done in Los Angeles and jump start a rebuilding program with the trade of any number of veterans to serious postseason contenders for prospects. The conventional wisdom is that the bulk of Dodgers fans won’t tolerate a rebuild, but given what they’re already putting up with and how attendance is already in decline, it’s not as if much more damage can be done. And really, you have to be pretty myopic not to see the potential benefits of this path.
It wouldn’t surprise me, though, if Colletti gets caught in between the fork in the road and ends up largely standing still. Whether or not that turns out to be the case, it’s as good a launching point as any for our “what next” speculation.

Starting rotation
In the short term: The most stable part of the team this year has needed only one substitute, John Ely in the first week of the year. Ely is around if a spot start is needed, while De La Rosa would also be a candidate to be a replacement. Keep in mind, however, that De La Rosa only threw 110 1/3 professional innings last year and has already thrown 41 this year, counting his major-league debut Tuesday — they should be looking to protect him.
In the long term: Clayton Kershaw, Chad Billingsley and Ted Lilly will return next year, with De La Rosa poised to join them. Hiroki Kuroda will be a free agent, and Jon Garland has an $8 million vesting option that the Dodgers will probably be able to buy out, since he doesn’t figure to reach the required 190 innings. As was the case last year, the return of Kuroda (37 in February) will probably depend on his willingness to do a one-year deal in the U.S., while Garland would probably also have to agree to a similar contract as he had this year, which calls for a lower base salary plus performance incentives.
The imminent arrival of De La Rosa could allow the Dodgers to pit Kuroda against Garland in a negotiating stance — they make offers to both, and whichever one agrees first would get the deal. If neither one bites, the Dodgers would seek out a veteran starter, to give De La Rosa a cushion and provide depth in a place where Colletti most values it. (It would be encouraging if Lilly, 36 in January, showed some improvement between now and next year.)
Also, if injuries don’t hold him back, Lee could be in Double-A by the start of 2012 and in the majors by the end, if Clayton Kershaw’s path is any model. We’ll see.
Bullpen
In the short term: Expect the revolving door to continue, not just as players like Blake Hawksworth, Vicente Padilla, Jonathan Broxton and hopefully Hong-Chih Kuo return from the disabled list, but as the team decides whether Kenley Jansen, Javy Guerra, Scott Elbert or Ramon Troncoso need to spend more time in the minors. Josh Lindblom, who had 30 strikeouts in 22 2/3 innings for Double-A Chattanooga through Saturday, could get his long-awaited first shot in the majors, while other non-roster players like lefty Cole St. Clair (1.02 ERA, 16 strikeouts, 12 baserunners in 17 2/3 innings) wait in the wings. And there are always names like Jon Link …

In the long term: Even if he returns this season at peak performance, Broxton will be a free agent at the end of the year. If he’s great, the Dodgers won’t be able to pay for him, if he’s not great, the Dodgers won’t want to pay for him. Padilla will also be a free agent, and the Dodgers will probably be out of patience with his inconsistent health. Mike MacDougal qualifies as a pleasant surprise, but if he asks for seven figures in salary for 2012, the Dodgers might balk.
Kuo will be arbitration eligible and stand to earn a big raise – his mental and physical condition makes him a non-tender candidate, although if there’s any sign he’s conquered his anxiety disorder, he might be the reliever they decide to reinvest in.
Most likely to return are Hawksworth, Matt Guerrier and the rookies including Jansen, Elbert and Guerra, with the Dodgers patrolling the major- and minor-league free agent market for their usual host of candidates.
Further down the line, the Dodgers will keep their eyes on Steven Ames and Shawn Tolleson – the latter continuing his strikeout-mad ways with 13 in 7 2/3 innings since his promotion to Rancho Cucamonga.
Though the bullpen has been a lightning rod for discussion this year, this is not the place for the Dodgers to spend a high portion of their resources. They have bigger fish to fry.
Catching
In the short term: A.J. Ellis stands by, waiting for the next disabled list trip for Rod Barajas or Dioner Navarro.
In the long term: Navarro has done little to indicate he was worth his 2011 contract, let alone that he’d be worth a 2012 deal. Ellis, who will finally be out of options just before his 31st birthday, figures to settle in at last on the major-league roster. Barajas, 36 in September, will be a free agent, and though he is currently second in the team in home runs, it’s anyone’s guess whether the Dodgers will bring him back. You can’t rule it out, but the Dodgers will consider alternatives.
In the real long term, the Dodgers might finally have a new catching prospect in 23-year-old Gorman Erickson, who had a .991 OPS for Single-A Rancho Cucamonga, relying (as Ellis does) on plate discipline rather than power. But Erickson’s numbers will diminish once he leaves the friendlier confines of the California League for Double-A. Maybe he, too, will become a full-time backup in about five years.

Infield
In the short term: Injuries will likely dictate playing time for the remainder of spring and on into the summer. But should Casey Blake, Rafael Furcal and Juan Uribe actually end up on the active roster at the same time next month, it doesn’t mean the end of Jamey Carroll’s playing time. The indispensable, no-longer-a-reserve Carroll has been too productive to sit. Carroll can give those other three players rest, and if that also means Blake moves around to play some first base, so be it.
Aaron Miles, on the other hand, could go back to sixth-infielder status, which suits him, and Russ Mitchell would go back to the minors. Juan Castro can go and clear waivers.
On the other hand, if the injuries continue, we’ll just see more of what we’ve seen, with Ivan De Jesus no doubt making a return appearance at some point.
In the long term: Overhaul. Loney, due for one more arbitration-eligible raise despite his most disappointing season, will be jettisoned unless he shows some hint of power. Even his mainstream reputation as a clutch hitter has been scarred. Blake has a $6 million club option, too rich for a 38-year-old who will be a part-timer. Same story with Furcal’s $12 million club option. That leaves only Uribe among the nominal starters.
Carroll will be a free agent – and he’ll also be 38. This has been a happy marriage, and I actually like the odds of his returning, but he will get other offers. In any event, as great as he has been in 2010-11, it’d be risky to count on him as a starter in 2012 – though perhaps you could use him as a stopgap until minor-leaguer Dee Gordon is considered ready.
But will Gordon be ready next year? With a .735 OPS and 10 errors so far in his first 40 Triple-A games, there’s no way you can pencil him into the 2012 Dodger starting lineup. De Jesus also seems like a longshot to do much of note in the majors next year, if ever.
Although Jerry Sands could hold down left field, one option for the Dodgers would be to move him to the infield, where the team is much thinner. Uribe would take a second position, while the Dodgers look outside the organization for help at the two other spots. Gordon, though some might not want to hear it, could be a trade chip.
A late-breaking candidate is Scott Van Slyke, who has been playing first base for Chattanooga after starting his pro career as an outfielder. Van Slyke, 25 in July, had a .954 OPS (fifth in the Southern League) with 16 doubles in his first 42 games this year.
Outfield
In the short term: Matt Kemp, Andre Ethier and Sands, who is platooning with Jay Gibbons. Sands looked ripe to go back to Albuquerque just a week or two ago, but that notion has changed dramatically. A healthy Marcus Thames could still knock Sands down to Triple-A temporarily, but there’s going to be much more resistance to that happening now. Sands could also enter the infield mix even before 2012.
In the long term: Kemp for sure. Ethier, probably. The outfielder certainly won’t be non-tendered, and he is as likely to get a multiyear deal as any other fate. That doesn’t mean Ethier, 30 in April, couldn’t be a trade candidate in 2012, the year he becomes eligible for free agency, but as noted recently, that’s not the type of trade the Dodgers have been making.
So there’s Sands, or if he moves to the infield, Trayvon Robinson could get a shot. Roster expansion in September should provide an early peek at Robinson.
Summary
The Dodgers will need at least one front-line starting pitcher next season, whether it’s Kuroda, Garland or someone else, with an eye on possibly two. No walk in the park, but simple enough.
The starting lineup is another story. You have Kemp, Ethier and (grumble) Uribe. You probably have Sands. Maybe Carroll. Then your next two in-house options to start are Ellis at catcher and either Robinson or Van Slyke. If desperate, the Dodgers could resurrect the Sands-to-third idea.
The point is, the Dodgers are going to make some big moves in the offseason, otherwise their 2012 starting lineup could look like this:
Carroll, SS
Robinson, LF
Ethier, RF
Kemp, CF
Sands, 3B
Uribe, 2B
Ellis, C
Van Slyke, 1B
It’s gonna be an interesting offseason … five months from now.

Brett Davis/US PresswireWith the third inning extended by a Houston error, Jerry Sands hit a no-doubter blast to center field for his first career grand slam. Rubby De La Rosa struck out two of three batters in a perfect eighth-inning major league debut, and fellow rookie Javy Guerra weathered a long foul ball by Bill Hall to close in the ninth for his first career save and a 5-4 Dodger victory.
The Dodgers’ accelerated youth movement continues today with the promotion of pitcher Rubby De La Rosa from Double-A to the big leagues.
De La Rosa follows Jerry Sands as the second active Dodger who began last season in Single-A ball. (Correction: Make it three, as Kenley Jansen also qualifies.) De La Rosa has a 2.92 ERA and 52 strikeouts in 40 innings this season for Chattanooga.
He figures to be a top candidate for the starting rotation as soon as next season, but while this move will put him in the bullpen, it might help preserve an arm that had only thrown 180 professional innings before this season. Chad Billingsley and Pedro Martinez are among the starting pitchers who spent early portions of their major-league careers in relief.
In the process, the Dodgers gave up on Lance Cormier, designating him for assignment rather than sending Ramon Troncoso back to the minors and making room for De La Rosa in some other fashion.
New commenting system for Dodger Thoughts – feedback welcome
By Jon Weisman
On May 25, 2011
In Commenting
After a brief trial run Tuesday, ESPN.com introduced a new commenting interface today that Dodger Thoughts now will use. If you haven’t tried it out, please do. And once you have, here’s a dedicated thread where you can offer your feedback, your praise or pique, about the new system. Your reactions and suggestions will be passed along to the folks behind the scenes.