Dodger Thoughts

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

Tag: Joc Pederson (Page 7 of 11)

What wood you do: A Dodger Insider special

What wood you do

In today’s special Dodger Insider online feature, broken bats are broken down by magazine freelancer Chris Gigley, who talks to Yasmani Grandal, Joc Pederson and Scott Van Slyke about maintaining and sacrificing their tools of the trade.

Our inaugural special, “Inside the #RallyBanana,” can be accessed here, and our “Meet the Originals” package on the 50th anniversary of the MLB draft can be found here.

Check it all out, and don’t forget, there’s more content like it in the June edition of Dodger Insider magazine, available at all Dodger Stadium team stores.

— Jon Weisman

You get a save! And you get a save!

[mlbvideo id=”165403283″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

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.

[mlbvideo id=”165431883″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

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.

[mlbvideo id=”165240783″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

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.

[mlbvideo id=”164869783″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

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.

‘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 …

[mlbvideo id=”155725883″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

[mlbvideo id=”155824383″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

Read More

Joc Joc Joc Joc Joc

[mlbvideo id=”144587883″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

June 2015 coverBy Jon Weisman

Though the Dodgers, with Kenley Jansen unavailable, were unable to finish off the Rockies on Wednesday, it shouldn’t be lost that Joc Pederson delivered his fifth straight game with a home run.

Pederson has tied the Dodger record for most consecutive games with a homer — and is the first rookie to do so, after veterans Roy Campanella (1950), Shawn Green (2001) and Matt Kemp (2010) and Adrian Gonzalez (2014-15).

With 109 games left in the season, Pederson is already tied for 10th place on the Dodgers’ all-time single-season home run list for rookies, with 17. He is tied with Giancarlo Stanton for second place in the NL in home runs, one behind Bryce Harper.

The 23-year-old has raised his 2015 OPS to .998, fifth in the National League. He is sixth in the Major Leagues, third in the NL and second among NL outfielders in wins above replacement, according to Fangraphs.

And, he’s the cover story in the June issue of Dodger Insider magazine. Make sure you pick up a copy at Dodger Stadium the next time you stop by.

In case you missed it: Home Run Dopey

[mlbvideo id=”141829583″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

Dodgers at Rockies, 5:10 p.m.
Joc Pederson, CF
Justin Turner, 3B
Adrian Gonzalez, 1B
Howie Kendrick, 2B
Andre Ethier, RF
Yasmani Grandal, C
Alex Guerrero, LF
Jimmy Rollins, SS
Mike Bolsinger, P

By Jon Weisman

I strongly recommend you read Eric Stephen’s piece at True Blue L.A. today on the Dodger offense, which is starting to take on criticism for hitting too many home runs. Yeah, really.

At the heart of the problem is the increasing circulation of the misleading statistic that 49 percent of the Dodger offense has been produced by home runs (117 of the Dodgers’ 238 runs have been driven in by homers) — which conveniently ignores how the guys who scored ahead of the home runs get on base.

I guess the fear is that somehow, if the Dodgers score too many runs on home runs, then they’ll be in trouble in October when the home runs don’t come so easily — as if somehow walks, hit-and-runs and stolen bases in the playoffs somehow are a piece of cake.

Let’s find other things to think about …

  • Tonight’s Dodger game has been — shocker, I know — delayed by rain. No cancellation is expected.
  • Hector Olivera is expected begin his professional career Thursday with Double-A Tulsa in a 5:05 Pacific game against Midland.
  • Yasiel Puig is expected to start his rehab assignment with Rancho Cucamonga in a 6:30 p.m. game at Lancaster. His last rehab assignment began three weeks ago but was cut short May 8.
  • Ian Thomas, the 26th man on the roster for Tuesday’s doubleheader, has been returned to Triple-A Oklahoma City.
  • In the wake of Joc Pederson’s awesome power display Tuesday, Jeff Sullivan of Fangraphs looks at Joc Pederson’s awesome power.
  • ESPN’s Home Run Tracker, updated through Tuesday, is a lot of fun to look at today.
  • Talk about batting 1.000 …

‘I am speechless — I am without speech’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d8XhiaUE9xg&feature=youtu.be&t=17s

By Jon Weisman

How can something be so exhilarating and so exhausting at once?

How can Joc Pederson hit two homers and a triple in one day … and his team still be one strike away from two losses?

How can his team still be down by three with two out and two strikes on the batter … and win the game?

[mlbvideo id=”142495683″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

Doctor, my eyes … my eyes are fried.

If you’re a Los Angeles Dodger fan, this was a first for your team.

Since moving to Los Angeles in 1958, according to Elias Sports and the Dodger public relations department, the Dodgers had hit five other grand slams after two were out in the ninth. Four of those were in tie games.  After the only previous two-out, come-from-behind grand slam in the ninth inning, the Dodgers still lost the game. Todd Benzinger’s heroic blast on September 4, 1992 was not enough to prevent a ninth-inning collapse and the Dodgers falling to 54-80 in that misbegotten season.

Kenley Jansen made sure that didn’t happen again.

[mlbvideo id=”142604183″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

How in the world is Guerrero doing this? Ten home runs in 98 at-bats. A 1.011 OPS.

And how in the world is Pederson doing this? Home runs in four straight games. A .971 OPS, at age 23. On pace (forgive me) for 50 homers.

[mlbvideo id=”141942183″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

Pederson and Guerrero have combined for 26 home runs, and the season has 110 games to go.

Not for nothing, the three players who got the hits ahead of Guerrero’s slam had batting averages of .212 (Alberto Callaspo), .211 (Jimmy Rollins) and .125 (Chris Heisey).

And let’s not forget Josh Ravin, who came up today and made his big-league debut after 209 games across 10 seasons in the minors, threw five pitches at a combined 494 miles per hour — and got the win. He is the first National League pitcher since 2006 to get an MLB win with only five career pitches.

Screen Shot 2015-06-02 at 10.13.55 PM

 

Oh, it’s a scene, man. It is a scene.

Gonzalez, Pederson losing ground in All-Star vote

[mlbvideo id=”115767783″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

By Jon Weisman

Adrian Gonzalez still leads the National League All-Star balloting at first base, but as was the case in 2014, Arizona’s Paul Goldschmidt has begun cutting into Gonzalez’s lead.

Ahead by nearly 450,000 votes a week ago, Gonzalez leads Goldschmidt by about 313,000 votes now.

In addition, Joc Pederson fell from sixth to 10th in the outfield race, despite continuing to lead NL center fielders in WAR. Pederson, who a week ago was 356,000 votes out of a starting spot in the NL outfield, now trails current No. 3 Giancarlo Stanton of Miami by more than 620,000 votes.

The best news for the Dodgers this week is that Yasmani Grandal has moved into the top five at catcher, though he still trails San Francisco’s Buster Posey by more than a million ballots.

See below for the current leaders …

Read More

Dodger Insider magazine — June 2015 edition

June 2015 cover

June sidebar altBy Jon Weisman

Joc Pederson has been embraced by his Dodger teammates as quickly as he has taken the National League by storm.

Pederson, who has a higher OPS at this stage of the campaign than any previous Dodger Rookie of the Year Award winner, is featured on the cover of the June 2015 issue of Dodger Insider magazine, which once again offers more than two dozen stories, plus games and photos galore.

Andre Ethier’s comeback season is also explored in this month’s issue, which includes something truly unique: a special player-behind-the-camera showcase of second baseman Howie Kendrick’s photography.

But wait, there’s more: We also look back at the Dodgers’ 50-year history in the MLB draft with a package that spotlights not only Dodger broadcaster Rick Monday (MLB’s first-ever amateur draft selection) but also the little-known saga of the Dodgers’ inaugural draft pick, Bakersfield High infielder John Wyatt.

The June 2015 Dodger Insider magazine is available at all Dodger team stores. To subscribe, visit dodgers.com/magazine. Orders taken through June 11 will begin with the July issue.

In case you missed it: New stat places A.J. Ellis No. 1 in game-calling

San Diego Padres vs Los Angeles Dodgers

For more photos from Friday, visit LA Photog Blog.

By Jon Weisman

Dodger catcher A.J. Ellis — who was thrust into action midway through Friday’s 2-1 victory over San Diego after Yasmani Grandal was injured — has taken some grief in recent times for not being a strong pitch framer. However, according to a report by Harry Pavlidis for ESPN.com, Ellis ranks No. 1 in Major League Baseball in a new statistic measuring game calling: game-calling runs above average (GCAA).

Here’s a fun task: Try quantifying something as ephemeral as game-calling. Well, after a decade of research, that’s just what we’ve managed to do — by crafting a statistical model that attempts to quantify the value of everything from stolen-base prevention and directing pace of play to identifying hitter tendencies like swing behavior in various game situations and knowing which batters expand hit zones in RBI opportunities. Sound complicated? Oh, it is. But based on these factors, and controlling for others, we can now quantify, in runs saved, how well catchers manage their pitchers. …

… Ellis is the best game caller in the business, and now we can actually prove it. His game-calling alone saved the Dodgers 38 runs from 2012 to 2014, though he gave back 19 of those runs with everything else he did behind the plate (see below). Does it hurt to be Ellis? At times, perhaps. But at least now, when that ninth foul tip slaps his once-unheralded (but now-appreciated) inner thigh, it might not sting quite so much.

There’s not a whole lot of detail in describing the methodology behind GCAA, so we’ll see how it stands up to scrutiny. Update: On his Twitter feed, Pavlidis has been adding to the discussion.

Grandal, meanwhile, is uncertain for tonight’s game after being hit in the face in consecutive innings Friday by Yangervis Solarte’s bat and a Matt Kemp foul ball. Triple-A catcher Austin Barnes was removed midway through Oklahoma City’s game Friday in case he needs to be called up. Ken Gurnick of MLB.com has more details.

In other developments …

  • Hyun-Jin Ryu spoke to reporters post-surgery Friday, and revealed that there was knowledge about his labrum tear two years and 344 innings of 3.17 ERA ago. ” Ryu, his left arm in a sling during a Dodger Stadium news conference, said he was always able to pitch with it and figured he’d be able to again after it flared up in Spring Training,” wrote Gurnick.
  • Yasiel Puig and Carl Crawford are not much closer to returning to the Dodger outfield, Don Mattingly told reporters Friday. Puig, who has an .845 OPS in 50 plate appearances, has felt tightness trying to even jog.
  • Double-A Tulsa righty pitcher (and converted outfielder) Blake Smith was traded by the Dodgers to the White Sox for right-handed pitcher Eric Surkamp. Both are 27 years old. In 53 2/3 career MLB innings, Surkamp has a 6.20 ERA with 33 strikeouts against 98 baserunners. For Triple-A Charlotte this year, Surkamp has a 2.81 ERA with 30 strikeouts against 28 baserunners in 25 2/3 innings.
  • Carlos Frias’ ongoing adjustments are the subject of Daniel Brim’s piece on Carlos Frias today at Dodgers Digest.
  • The Dodgers’ offensive scoreless-inning streak ended at a record-tying 35 innings with Andre Ethier’s RBI double in the fifth, though they didn’t score an earned run until Joc Pederson’s game-winning homer three innings later.
  • Chris Hatcher, who threw 1/105th of the pitches that Zack Greinke threw, was credited with his first career Dodger victory.
  • Kenley Jansen struck out two in his perfect ninth inning. His K/9 dropped to 21.0.
  • Pederson has struck out four times in his past 39 plate appearances (10.3 percent). Prior to that in 2015, he had struck out 43 times in 127 plate appearances (33.9 percent).

[mlbvideo id=”127025883″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

In case you missed it: Bobblesplash

[mlbvideo id=”125609583″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

By Jon Weisman

These bobblehead ads just get better and better — with more special effects! Which mini-Dodger will get the Emmy?

Here are a few quick items that popped up recently …

  • Hyun-Jin Ryu had his surgery to repair a torn labrum in his left shoulder Thursday, and Ken Gurnick of MLB.com has the update.

    … The degree of Ryu’s tear (and presumably any accompanying damage) is being portrayed by the club as relatively minor. By comparison to the high rate of return to success for Tommy John patients, the record of pitchers returning from shoulder labrum operations to reclaim their prior form is checkered.

    The injury was once considered career-ending, but recent medical advances have improved the chances.

    Comeback stories range from successes Roger Clemens and Curt Schilling to unfortunate endings like Jason Schmidt, Mark Prior and Mark Mulder. The most recent successful return from the operation is Yankees pitcher Michael Pineda. …

  • On the anniversary of his initial callup to the Major Leagues, shortstop Erisbel Arruebarrena was suspended by the Dodgers for the remainder of the 2015 season due to repeated failures to comply with his contract. More from Gurnick here.
  • The Dodgers’ 31-inning scoreless streak is put into historical context by Eric Stephen of True Blue L.A.
  • Hey, we could use some positive news. Here’s one: Joc Pederson’s swing gets an analytical love note from Ryan Parker of Baseball Prospectus.
  • David Schoenfield of ESPN.com’s Sweet Spot looks at the relative strengths and weakness of the Giants and Dodgers going forward.
  • Bill Shaikin of the Times looks at the fortunes and misfortunes of the Dodgers’ next opponent, San Diego.
  • Here’s a history of the eephus pitch, from Jonah Keri at Grantland.
  • At age 38, twice former Dodger lefty Randy Wolf is pitching for Toronto’s Triple-A affiliate, and he tells John Lott of the National Post (via MLB Trade Rumors) that he’s just “enjoying the moment,” regardless of whether he returns to the Majors. “When you retire you can do a lot of things in your life,” Wolf said. “But as far as the baseball aspect, it’s like death. You’re going to be dead a lot longer than you live.”

Unlucky Joc: Pederson making better contact with worse results

Arizona Diamondbacks vs Los Angeles Dodgers

Dodgers at Giants, 7:15 p.m.
Joc Pederson, CF
Jimmy Rollins, SS
Howie Kendrick, 2B
Adrian Gonzalez, 1B
Scott Van Slyke, LF
Yasmani Grandal, C
Andre Ethier, RF
Alex Guerrero, 3B
Carlos Frias, P

By Jon Weisman

Joc Pederson is in his first slump of the 2015 season, though oddly, he’s been making better contact than when he was hot.

Through May 7, when talk of him being the ultimate Three True Outcomes hitter was peaking, Pederson had nine home runs, a .427 on-base percentage and a .674 slugging percentage, while striking out in exactly one third of his plate appearances (37 of 111).

May 7 was the day at Milwaukee that Pederson walked twice and then singled in the ninth inning, ending his streak of seven consecutive hits that were home runs. It was quite the transitional moment.

Since then, Pederson is 4 for 31 with one homer and five walks, but he has struck out a relatively reduced 21.6 percent of the time (eight times in 37 plate appearances).

Pederson has a .136 batting average on balls in play in those nine games, compared with a .350 BABIP in his first 28.

In his past five games, Pederson has been particularly unlucky. Across 19 plate appearances, Pederson has one homer, one hit-by-pitch, two strikeouts — and, on balls in play, one single and 14 outs (seven flies, seven grounders).

On top of everything else, he has zero walks in his past 26 plate appearances — the longest walkless stretch of his young career.

It’s almost as if Pederson wanted to reverse the conversation about himself. Baseball’s Three True Outcomes poster child has gone to the opposite … set of posters.

Perhaps a happy medium awaits.

Shelter from storm gave way for Dodgers

[mlbvideo id=”115827783″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]
A sole Dodger fan shows his support during the rain delay. Jill Weisleder/LA DodgersBy Jon Weisman

For the third time in four days, the Dodger bullpen surrendered a lead, and for the second consecutive night, the offense couldn’t bail them out.

Thursday’s 5-4 loss to Colorado left a soggy sting, coming after the 85-minute rain delay and Brett Anderson’s second consecutive triumph over the elements.  After pitching the five-inning rain-shortened complete game in Denver last week, Anderson struck out a season-high eight at unusually wet Dodger Stadium.

Los Angeles Dodgers vs Colorado RockiesFor the month of May, Anderson has a 1.10 ERA and 13 strikeouts against 19 baserunners in 16 1/3 innings. Opponents have a .645 OPS against him.

“My breaking ball was the most consistent it has been,” Anderson said, according to Eric Stephen of True Blue L.A. “My slider was the best its been all season. I was able to throw it back foot to righties more consistently and get some swings and misses.”

While Juan Nicasio shined after the rain delay with four strikeouts in 1 2/3 innings and Chris Hatcher found quick redemption from a rough Wednesday outing with a perfect eighth, Yimi Garcia, nearly flawless in 2015 before this week, gave up his second ninth-inning homer in as many appearances — this time on a 2-1 fastball that, as Don Mattingly said, just missed its spot.

[mlbvideo id=”116086783″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

“I thought his stuff was good again,” Mattingly said. “Threw the ball in the wrong area. If we throw the ball where we want, I feel like we get him there.”

It was a shame that the Dodger fans who braved the entire night of rainball weren’t rewarded, but all part of the ebb and flow of the season.

One piece of trivia: Joc Pederson, who went 0 for 5, has started 35 games this season. Thursday’s game was only the second time he didn’t have a walk, home run or strikeout, and the first since April 10.

Video: Someone order the Joc on two slices of Pederson?

[mlbvideo id=”104266283″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

[mlbvideo id=”104420183″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

[mlbvideo id=”104524583″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

By Jon Weisman

The Dodgers lost tonight, 6-3, but as a consolation prize, Joc Pederson hit his eighth and ninth homers of the year –- his sixth and seventh homers since his last single. In between, he also made another crazy catch.

It’s just crazy, man.

The last MLB player who homered for seven straight hits was Jay Bruce in June 2013, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. The last Dodger was beloved first baseman in June 2005.

Screen Shot 2015-05-06 at 8.06.13 PM

(Man, how good a season is Adrian Gonzalez having that his OPS is still 110 points higher than Pederson’s?)

As Pederson delivers again, Dodger bullpen on 19-inning scoreless streak

By Jon Weisman

With homers in four straight games, including a game-tying shot in tonight’s 5-4 Dodger victory over Arizona, Joc Pederson is on a planet by himself these days …

… but can we also spare a congratulatory moment for the Dodger bullpen?

Bullpen

Pederson pops up — to leadoff, that is

For photos from Tuesday, visit LA Photog Blog – here and here.

Giants at Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.
Joc Pederson, CF
Jimmy Rollins, SS
Howie Kendrick, 2B
Adrian Gonzalez, 1B
Scott Van Slyke, LF
Andre Ethier, RF
Yasmani Grandal, C
Juan Uribe, 3B
Zack Greinke, P
Notes: Don Mattingly told reporters that Carlos Frias would start Friday’s game against Arizona and Scott Baker would start Saturday. In addition, Brandon McCarthy confirmed to reporters he will undergo Tommy John surgery Thursday, with Dr. Neal ElAttrache performing the operation.

By Jon Weisman

Five weeks ago, I tweeted out the above prediction about Joc Pederson roaming the Dodger batting order. With more than five months to go in the season, I’m nearly halfway there.

Pederson, whose batting prowess this season was discussed here Sunday and Monday, has been moved up from the Nos. 7 and 8 spots to leadoff for tonight’s game.

Frankly, I was tempted to bet Pederson would go nine for nine, figuring it wasn’t out of the question that he might bat ninth in an American League park, but the Dodgers don’t play a road interleague game until June 15 at Texas, and I figured Pederson’s days at the bottom of the order would be over by then.

Pederson enters tonight sixth in the National League in weighted on-base average (wOBA, .428) and fourth in OPS (1.014).  As noted Sunday, his stats would be impressive even accounting for the walks he has drawn batting eighth with the pitcher on deck.

Will he ever reach the in-between spots of the order? Based on the Dodgers’ ever-changing roster and needs, and whether he gets increased playing time against southpaws, I wouldn’t rule it out.

Five other players tonight – Jimmy Rollins (second), Howie Kendrick (third), Adrian Gonzalez (fourth), Yasmani Grandal (seventh) and Juan Uribe (eighth) – are also in new lineup slots for 2015. Don Mattingly commented to reporters this afternoon that there has been input from the front office toward the Dodgers’ efforts to come up with an ideal lineup configuration. (Mattingly added that he feels Grandal has been pressing.)

Despite its difficulties against Giants ace Madison Bumgarner, the Dodger offense is hardly in crisis, ranking first in the NL in wOBA and weighted runs created (wRC+) by a wide margin. But it is an oddly stratified offense through 20 games, with none of tonight’s starters offering an OPS between .680 and .880.

In short, as far as 2015 is concerned, there isn’t really an average player in that lineup.

Screen Shot 2015-04-29 at 4.24.39 PM

The reality, however, is that these extreme differences will smooth out over time, and the lineup changes don’t make that much of a difference as you might believe. In fact, this gives me a chance to offer a sneak preview of an article examining batting orders in the May edition of Dodger Insider magazine, written by Mike Petriello of Dodgers Digest. (Click each image below to enlarge.)

Read More

Page 7 of 11

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén