Dodgers News

Friday, October 30, 2009

Looking to 2010...

I wanted to wait until the World Series was over before looking ahead to next season, but it seems like I'm falling behind in that department while other bloggers have already touched on it. Of course, being last in line to make some noise in that department, my sentiments might seem like I'm basically using other opinions as my own. But I assure you, my opinions below are solely my own.

Heading into the 2009 season, it appeared that starting pitching could be their achilles heal. As it turned it out, the rotation as a whole was better than advertised, finishing tops in baseball with a 3.41 ERA. Clayton Kershaw emerged as the "ace" of the staff with his 2.79 ERA, and veteran Randy Wolf was better than expected with a 3.23 ERA. But Chad Billingsley, who went into the season as the "ace," took a step backwards, and injuries limited Hiroki Kuroda to just 20 starts in 2009.

All that said, it wasn't enough to get the Dodgers past the Phillies in the NLCS despite their NL-high 95 wins. The same inconsistencies the Dodgers got from most of their starters turned out to be their demise against the Phillies: issuing far too many walks. (And this was actually a problem for the relievers, as well.)

As the team heads into next season, while it may seem like there are a lot of question marks surrounding the rotation, there really aren't that many questions.

Kershaw is on the cusp of being a top five pitcher in the NL. While he had a very good overall ERA, his splits showed his inconsistencies at home and on the road. Kershaw led the NL in ERA at home with a microscopic ERA of 1.83, but he had a 3.83 ERA on the road, and finished with just eight wins overall. If he can pitch better on the road, and cut back on his walks, the Dodgers have their "ace."

The rest of the rotation will remain unchanged, for the most part. After Billingsley and Kuroda, the Dodgers will likely turn to Jon Garland, acquired at the end of August for depth, assuming both parties agree on the mutual option in Garland's contract for next season. If that happens, and it's very likely it will, the rotation still doesn't look too shabby, and they'll have just one hole in the rotation to fill.

Randy Wolf will be a Type-A free agent, which means any team that signs him, will have to cough up a top draft pick as compensation to the Dodgers. They'll likely offer him arbitration because it would appear he won't accept anyway, meaning they could get another draft pick in return for him. And with the type of season he had in 2009 for the Blue, you can bet he'll want more than a one-year, $8MM deal he signed last off-season, something the Dodgers are unlikely to do again. And Vicente Padilla, as well as he pitched since he was signed in mid-August, seems to be a bit too risky and likely won't be back.

That said, Ned Colletti will have to scour the thin free agent and trade markets for a middle-to-back-end-of-the-rotation guy to fill the last rotation spot. There have been suggestions that the Dodgers could offer up a package to get SP Josh Johnson and 2B Dan Uggla from Florida, but the Dodgers farm has thinned out a bit over the last couple of seasons because of trades, and they're unlikely to move anyone off the major league roster in any deal. But if they can pull off such a deal, they kill two birds with one stone. Otherwise, they'll have to look at free agency for both positions.

Second base would appear to be an easier hole to fill. Orlando Hudson and Ronnie Belliard are both free agents, and Hudson, like Wolf is a Type-A. Hudson basically falls into the same boat as Wolf, so even if they offer him arbitration, chances are he won't accept. After being replaced as the everyday second baseman in August by Belliard, it would appear Hudson wants no part of the Dodgers again. And Belliard's age makes him an unlikely candidate to return as an everyday replacement.

Assuming the above scenario plays out, the Dodgers could then turn their attention to Mark DeRosa. DeRosa is a lot like Hudson in that he's a "gamer," and his versatility in the lineup and around the infield could make him very attractive to the Dodgers. Like Hudson last off-season, DeRosa could be just the type of player that gets the team over the hump. And he could be available at a very reasonable price, as well.

On the other hand, filling out the rotation could be tricky. John Lackey would appear to be the most logical fit for the Blue off the free agent list, but his asking price could steer them away from him. And a Roy Halladay trade could be costly as far as the minor leagues, and even the current roster goes, so that seems unlikely, as well.

The rest of the starting pitching market is fairly thin, but there are some intriguing players on the list, mostly guys coming off injuries. After Colletti was burned by the Jason Schmidt contract, it would appear he would be very cautious about signing injury-prone pitchers to deals longer than one or two years. But, iff they're available at the right price, and they're willing to take a one plus incentives or a one plus one deal, Rich Harden or Ben Sheets could be nice low-risk, high-reward options.

The rest of the lineup, assuming Manny does exercise his player option which he's likely to do, will remain unchanged, unless they opt to use Russell Martin and/or James Loney as trade bait to improve the offense, which struggled immensely in the second half and during the post-season to hit with runners on base and in scoring position.

Even with his three-year decline, the Dodgers aren't going to find much else to replace Martin. But because Martin has shown flashes of power and the ability to hit for average in the past, his .250/.352/.323/7/53 line seems horrid, when in reality, it's really not that horrid for a catcher. Still, he can be better.

Loney is a whole other story. If you look around the league and compare his numbers to other first basemen, Loney isn't even on the radar, especially in the power department. While he might be a solid .280-.290 hitter with a great glove, his .750-ish OPS is just downright brutal for a regular, everyday first baseman in the NL. In fact, his OPS was among the worst in the NL for all regular, everyday first basemen. First base is supposed to be a power position. If you aren't getting 25-30 home runs minimum from your first baseman, it's time to find a way to improve there. Loney's shown flashes of power, especially on the road this season, so the Dodgers will probably give him another year to see if it really develops.

The bullpen appears to be intact for next season as well, with Jonathan Broxton, George Sherrill, Hong-Chih Kuo, Ramon Troncoso and Ronald Bellisario. The only real question is what they do with free agents Guierrmo Mota and Jeff Weaver, if anything. Weaver could be brought back as the long-man/spot-starter.

Only the bench would appear to need some rework again, as the entire bench core of Mark Loretta, Doug Mientkiewicz, Jim Thome, Juan Castro and Brad Ausmus (minus Juan Pierre, of course) are all free agents. Thome is all but headed back to the AL to be an everyday DH again. I would think one or two of the other guys, Belliard included, could be back on cheap one-year deals.

But because the Dodgers have eight key players (Andre Ethier, Matt Kemp, George Sherrill, Jonathan Broxton, Chad Billingsley, James Loney, Hong-Chih Kuo and Russell Martin) eligible for arbitration, with six or seven of them due hefty pay-raises, it wouldn't be a surprise if the Dodgers were not very active in the free agent market this winter as far as the top free agents go.

Colletti and Joe Torre have both indicated that the rotation and second base will be their off-season priorities, and knowing Colletti, he'll look to fill those needs while "flying under the radar."

Ethier Clutch... Again!

Even with the season over, Andre Ethier is still winning. In online fan voting on MLB.com, Ethier was named MLB Clutch Player of the Year. Ethier, who hit a career-high 31 home runs this season while driving in 106 to go along with 42 doubles and 96 runs scored, led the Majors with six walk-off hits, including four home runs.

From MLB.com:

Ethier's six walk-off hits were the most in one season for a Major Leaguer since at least 1974, one more than David Ortiz's five for Boston in 2006, Ken Hrbek's five for Minnesota in 1987 and Cory Snyder's five for Cleveland in 1987. The four walk-off homers were the most for any player in a season since at least 1974.

Ethier had three walk-off hits in June alone: June 5, a two-run double that beat Philadelphia, 4-3; June 6, his second home run of the game coming in the 12th inning of a 3-2 win over Philadelphia; and June 29, a two-run homer in the 13th inning to beat Colorado, 4-2.

But he also hit two homers against San Diego in a 6-4 win June 9; he had a two-run triple in a 6-4 win over Anaheim June 20; and his first three-homer game with six RBIs in an 8-2 win over Seattle June 26. On the month, he slugged nine of his team-high 31 homers.

Non-Dodger On-Field Moves

Got two more that I forgot to mention earlier in the week:

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

No Manny Saga This Winter

According to SI's Jon Heyman, in a move that doesn't come as a surprise to anyone, Manny will exercise his $20MM player option for 2010 and remain with the Dodgers. Manny had the option to opt out after this season, but it would be hard-pressed to think anyone else would give him more than what his option is worth. His 50-game suspension probably put a wrench into that anyway, as well, so the smart thing for Manny at this point was to exercise the option.

As the McCourts Turn...

This whole divorce thing has become pretty laughable at this point, and it's only been two weeks since we first learned of Frank and Jamie's separation. I, for one, am not really into all this behind-the-scenes brew-ha-ha and the gossip that comes along with it, but I feel it is my duty to keep what readers I might have informed on what's going on in Dodgertown, USA.

But instead of giving you all the details myself, and sitting here and passing judgment on the whole thing since it's basically 'he said, she said' stuff at this point, I thought the best thing to do would be to provide any available link with all the latest on the soap opera as it happens.

So for your pure enjoyment and entertainment reading, here's today's update. And it's a doozy!

World Series Finally Starts

And unfortunately, it won't involve the Dodgers in any way. But it's baseball for at least four more nights, and maybe up to seven more. So, with that said, who are you rooting for? Who do you think will win?

It's kind of tough to pick against either team given that both have very potent offenses. But both teams are getting great pitching from their aces (C.C. Sabathia and Cliff Lee) in particular, so it will be interesting to see if either of them can slow down the other team's offense or if either offense can break down the other team's ace.

I'm still on the fence as for who I want to see win, but being a National League guy, I think I'd like to see Philly win again despite the fact they completely shut down the Dodgers. However, I think in the end, the Yankees will prevail in seven games. There's my prediction!

Now let's play ball!

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Yankees Are World Series Bound

For the first time since 2003, the Yankees are heading back to the World Series after beating the Angels 5-2 in Game 6 of the ALCS. The Yankees will take on the Phillies, who beat the Dodgers in the NLCS for the second straight year in five games and are looking to repeat as champions. Game 1 is Wednesday night in New York.

Organizational Moves

Three teams are expected to make official announcements this week regarding front office and on-field managerial moves:

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Here Comes the Rain Again...

Lots of it apparently. Game 6 of the ALCS has been washed out in New York and will now be played tomorrow.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Goodbye 2009...

We hardly knew ya.

Three Innings Left...

To make a valiant comeback. Do they have it in them?

Tonight's Lineup

  • Furcal, 6
  • Belliard, 4
  • Ethier, 9
  • Manny, 7
  • Kemp, 8
  • Loney, 3
  • Martin, 2
  • Blake, 5
  • Padilla, 1

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Umpire Talk Again

I'm not going to sit here and harp again on how bad the umpiring has been in the post-season this year, but the umpires were about as bad as I can ever remember during tonight's 10-1 Yankees win over the Angels in Game 4 of the ALCS.

How Tim McClelland didn't see that both of the two Yankee runners at third base were off the bag when they were both tagged is beyond me. Why he was watching the catch in the outfield instead of the runner getting ready to tag from third to score makes no sense to me either. And that pickoff at second base? The runner was out by a foot. How do you miss that?

None of these calls really affected the game, but you still have to get those calls right.

A Day to Regroup

And that's basically what the team did today. Regroup. No time to dwell on last night, according to Matt Kemp. They've been here before, and they know what they need to do: win one game. Just worry about tomorrow.

The players still have faith. Sure, last night was tough to swallow, but the task ahead of them is simple, and at least Manny knows this isn't over by any stretch of the imagination. His 2004 Red Sox were down three games to none to the Yankees in the ALCS and the came all the way back to win the series, winning the last two in the Bronx.

So as daunting of a task as they have in front them, it is doable. And the only to do it? Just win one game. One game at a time. They might need to win three, but they gotta win one first. And they gotta win another after.

Meanwhile, while the team went through some workouts today in Philly on an off day before Game 5 tomorrow night, the team went ahead and took care of some administrative personnel by locking up GM Ned Colletti to a long-term deal.

At the same time, hitting coach Don Mattingly had a phone interview for the Indians managerial vacancy. Whether he wants or gets the job or is even seriously considered for the position remains to be seen. But Mattingly claims he's ready to manage, and when Joe Torre took over to manage the Dodgers before last season and brought Mattingly with him from New York, word then was Mattingly was being groomed to be the Dodgers manager after next season, when Torre is expected to retire.

We'll find out soon enough.

Back on the field, Game 5 tomorrow pits Cole Hamels, the winner in Game 1, against Vicente Padilla, who shut down the Phils in the Dodgers Game 2 win.

The game plan is simple: one win.

Monday, October 19, 2009

"Deja Vu All Over Again"

Well, maybe I should have watched the first eight innings and missed the ninth due to the Kings hockey game here in Dallas tonight. At least they didn't choke away their game tonight.

I'm seriously ill to my stomach right now over what I just saw.

I couldn't resist while at the Kings game tonight. Before I left for that game, I set the DVR in one of the rooms to watch the Dodgers when I got home. My original plan was to avoid the Dodger game and getting the score any way possible while at the Kings game. But before I left, I decided to set up a text alert from ESPN.com for all the scoring plays of the Dodger game. Still, I thought I would try to avoid the texts. But I couldn't.

I was disappointed when I got the first update: "PHI Home Run Bottom 1st - PHI 2 LAD 0 - R Howard homered to right, J Rollins scored."

But it got better from there. And by the time we left American Airlines Center after the Kings 4-1 win over the Stars, I was actually looking forward to coming home to watch the game. It was 4-3 Dodgers.

When I did get home, the Dodgers were hitting in the top of the ninth inning with the same score. Both Matt Kemp and Andre Ethier promptly struck out against Brad Lidge. Then it was Jonathan Broxton's turn.

I hadn't known until I got home that Broxton had actually gotten the last out of the eighth inning. So when he got the first out of the ninth, I thought the game was in control. But it wasn't, and then all hell broke loose.

Matt Stairs came up and was issued a four-pitch walk. Probably one of those unintentional intentional walks. After what happened last year, Broxton probably wanted nothing to do with Stairs. No problem. Sets up a possible game-ending double play, right? But then he hits Carlos Ruiz with the next pitch. First and second, one out. Double play possibility still intact. Broxton gets pinch-hitter Greg Dobbs to softly popup to Casey Blake at third. Ok, two out. Then the unthinkable happened.

After fouling off a pitch, and taking one outside, Jimmy Rollins ended the game on nearly an identical pitch that Stairs hit last year in Game 4 that gave the Phillies a 3-1 series lead then. Russell Martin was set up for a pitch on the lower outside corner of the strike zone, and instead, Broxton planted a fastball right over the middle, and Rollins hit a double into right-center field to end it.

Final score: Phillies 5, Dodgers 4. Series: Phillies 3, Dodgers 1. This is all too eerily familiar.

Now the Dodgers have to do something that's not easy to do in the post-season: come back from a 3-1 deficit to win a series. And against the defending World Champs, no less. It won't be easy. But never say never. This team has done this all year. Resiliency is their best friend.

This is the kind of loss that's very tough to rebound from. They couldn't do it last year. They had home field advantage this year but lost Game 1. They gotta win Wednesday just to get back to L.A. to even play again. It can happen. Resiliency.

The strongest part of the team, the one advantage it looked like they had over the Phillies, their bullpen, let another game get away. Maybe the day off tomorrow will help them some. Maybe it will give them a day to get this out of their system, to refresh and regroup for Game 5. But it'll also give them another day to sulk about tonight, to think about what might have been.

I came home to see the wrong part pf the game live tonight. Now I don't even want to watch the rest of the game on the DVR. The best part. Can you blame me?

This one hurts. This one stings. This one bites.

Because, as Yogi Berra once said, it's "deja vu all over again."

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Well, That Was Lovely...

Talk about a butt-kicking... the Blue were never in tonight's Game 3. Cliff Lee stymied them all night, pitching eight shutout innings while striking out 10. Hiroki Kuroda was slammed for five runs in a little over an inning plus, and the Phillies offense never looked back. The Dodger offense never found its groove against Lee. There's really no reason to even mention the final score, but for the record: Phils 11, Dodgers 0.

Moving on to Game 4 tomorrow night, Randy Wolf opposes Joe Blanton. The Dodger offense has got to get it going early. If Randy Wolf can neutralize the Phillies left-handed hitters, Dodgers should be in good shape to even the series back up at two games apiece.

Game 3

As the ALCS shifts back to Southern California from New York for its Game 3 tomorrow afternoon in Anaheim, the NLCS has settled into a bone-chilling Philly for the next three games.

Tonight's line-up:
  • Furcal, 6
  • Belliard, 4
  • Ethier, 9
  • Manny, 7
  • Kemp, 8
  • Loney, 3
  • Blake, 5
  • Martin, 2
  • Kuroda, 1

Friday, October 16, 2009

All Even!

More on the Dodgers dramatic 2-1 win a bit later while I gather some thoughts together, but in the meantime, for your viewing pleasure, a snapshot of TBS on top of things as the ninth inning got underway...

Juan Pierre had just entered the game to take over in left field for Manny...


Some Random Thoughts from Game 1

The Dodgers lost the game 8-6, in large part because of two two glaring problems that has plagued this team off and on throughout the season: walking too many hitters and leaving too many runners on base.

Clayton Kershaw was cruising through four innings before the wheels fell off the barrel in the fifth. In that inning alone, he walked three batters and threw a post-season record three wild pitches. Two of those walks eventually scored. When the inning started, the Dodgers had a 1-0 lead. At the end of it, the score was 5-1 Phils.

In the eighth inning, George Sherrill walked the first two batters he faced and they both scored as well. A 5-4 game was suddenly 8-4.

Between Kershaw and Sherrill, they walked seven batters total. You can't expect to win many games when you walk that many hitters.

The offense did its part most of the night. Six runs is usually enough for this pitching staff and bullpen to squeeze out a win. But against an offensive juggernaut such as these "Phightin' Phils," six runs usually just keeps you in games.

The Dodgers left a total of 10 runners on base. Between the 14 hits and three walks they were issued, leaving 10 runners on base is far too many. They had chances in the first, sixth and seventh innings to get at least one, maybe two runs. They left two runners in the first, they loaded the bases in the sixth with two out and didn't score, and they stranded a lead-off double in the seventh inning. If they get one hit in the first and seventh innings, or one in the sixth, thats two more runs they could have had.

In a nutshell, as much as the win was a team effort for the Phillies, the loss was just as much of a team effort for the Blue. But there were some positives that came out of the loss.

The Dodgers showed resiliency all night. Every time they fell behind, they didn't quit. They rallied each time to get the game close again.

When they fell behind 5-1 in the fifth, they responded by scoring three of their own, capped by a booming Manny home run. In the eighth, after Raul Ibanez's home run gave the Phils the 8-4 lead, the Dodgers battled back by scoring two more off Ryan Madson, and they came pretty darn close to getting more when Manny came up again with the deuces wild, as Vin Scully would say. With two on, two out and two in, Madson battled Manny, pounding him inside mostly, and eventually getting him to ground out harmlessly to Chase Utley at second.

As I mentioned earlier, the offense wasn't silent last night. James Loney and Andre Ethier each had three hits, and both battled against season trends. Loney had just one of his 13 home runs at Dodger Stadium this year. He hit one last night. Ethier was just a .194 hitter against lefties, but had two hits last night against them. And Manny? Well, I'd say Manny's back. It took a while but he's swinging the bat in the last two or three games about as well as he has all year.

Outside of Sherrill's hiccup in the eighth, the pen was as good as it had been all year. Sure, if Sherrill doesn't give up the Ibanez home run, the Dodgers probably win the game. He could have still given up the home run even with out the walks, and things might have been different. But the rest of the pen was stellar last night, and if they have the chance in Game 2 to do it all over again, the Dodgers won't hesitate to do it again.

Keep in mind, the only thing Dodgers lost was one game, and home field advantage. Remember 1988... the Dodgers lost the first game that year in the NLCS at home to the heavily favored Mets. They won Game 2, and went on to win the series in seven games, despite losing two at home. In a seven game series, anything is possible.

That said, down 0-1, they'll turn to Vicente Padilla this afternoon to do battle with former Dodger Pedro Martinez. And you can bet the fans will have a field day with him if the Dodgers push him around today. Today's lineup...
  • Furcal, 1
  • Kemp, 8
  • Ethier, 9
  • Manny, 7
  • Loney, 3
  • Blake, 5
  • Belliard, 4
  • Martin, 2
  • Padilla, 1
Game time is T-minus two hours and 37 minutes...

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Tonight's Lineup

  • Furcal, 1
  • Ethier, 9
  • Manny, 7
  • Kemp, 8
  • Blake, 5
  • Loney, 3
  • Belliard, 4
  • Martin, 2
  • Kershaw, 1
Game time is T-minus 22 minutes...

Game 1 Pre-Game Thoughts

Random blurbs...
  • Only two changes were made to the roster from the LDS to the LCS. As noted yesterday, Hiroki Kuroda was named the starter for Game 3 in Philly. The domino effect trickled down to Jon Garland, who was bumped off the roster. Chad Billingsley will pitch out of the pen. Jeff Weaver was replaced by left-hander Scott Elbert. Weaver is battling the flu-bug, which has also hit Russell Martin and hitting coach Don Mattingly.
  • The War of the Roses, Part II: Dodger owners Frank and Jamie McCourt are separating and apparently headed for a bitter divorce. Once source claims both have 'lawyered up'. If the Padres situation was any indication last year, a divorce could force the McCourts to sell the team.
  • Former Dodger Pedro Martinez will get the nod for Philly Friday afternoon at the Ravine against the Blue in Game 2.
Game time for Game 1 is T-minus five hours and seven minutes.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Dodgers Set NLCS Rotation

Joe Torre announced today that the Dodgers will start Clayton Kershaw in Game 1 tomorrow night at the Ravine, followed by Vicente Padilla in Game 2, Hiroki Kuroda in Game 3 back in Philly and Randy Wolf in Game 4.

Personally I'm a bit surprised they opted with Kershaw in Game 1. I was hoping, and thinking, they'd go with Kershaw in Game 2 so that he'd get two starts at home, the second being a possible Game 6. But it looks like Torre wanted to go with the hot hand in Game 1, thus Kershaw gets the nod tomorrow, followed by Padilla.

All that said, Chad Billingsley will likely pitch out of the pen, with Jon Garland likely off the roster for the series, although the final roster has not yet been submitted. Torre said they will wait until the last minute when the roster is due to determine final decisions.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

NLCS Set

So while I was getting my U2 on last night at the Dallas Cowboys new stadium in Arlington, Texas, the Phillies were busy disposing the Rockies at Coors Field. With a three-run ninth inning rally, the Phillies ended the Rockies season with a 5-4 win, winning the NLDS series in four games to advance to the NLCS against the Blue.

The NLCS starts on Thursday night with a 5:07 PM PT start. All NLCS games will start at 5:07 PM PT except Game 2, which is slated for a 1:07 PM PT start Friday afternoon.

The Phillies have also announced their Game 1 starter will be Cole Hamels. The Dodgers are still undecided as the availability of Hiroki Kuroda becomes more apparent. Roster decisions are also still up in the air because of Kuroda. Randy Wolf, Clayton Kershaw and Vicente Padilla are all but locks for the rotation. Kuroda is expected to throw a simulated game today at Camelback Ranch, and if all goes well, he'll likely be added onto the roster, probably bumping either Chad Billingsley or Jon Garland off the roster.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

ALCS Set

The Yankees also completed a three-game ALDS sweep, finishing off the Twins tonight, 4-1. They will host the Angels in New York in the ALCS starting on Friday.

Dodgers are slated to start their NLCS on Thursday at Dodger Stadium against the winner of the Rockies/Phillies series, which is 1-1. The Phillies have a 5-4 lead in the sixth inning in Denver tonight in Game 3. Game 4 is set for tomorrow night.

Angels Join Dodgers in LCS

And they did it in dramatic fashion, too. Down to their last strike against the Red Sox in their Game 3 match-up today at Fenway, the Angels rallied for three runs off Boston closer Jonathan Papelbon to eliminate the Red Sox in a three-game sweep and move on to the ALCS for the first time since 2005.

The Angels will face the winner of the Twins/Yankees series which concludes tonight in Minneapolis with New York up two-games-to-none.

Pleasure Reading

While I'm working on my next topic/entry here, Five Reasons Why the Dodgers Beat St. Louis, I wanted to share this blurb from Jon Weisman over at Dodger Thoughts. Weisman took notice, as did I but I didn't think anything of it, that most of the Cards fans at last night's game left early when it became apparent they were going to lose the game and the series.

Why is this important? Well, it's not, really, but Cards fans are known around the league to be the best baseball fans in the world, and here they were filing out of Busch Stadium early. And as Weisman points out, and he's been saying this for a long time, as have I (just not in writing anywhere), fans of all teams leave early at every ball park, but for some strange reason, only Dodger fans get the heat for it.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Matt Kemp Blog

If you want some good reading from inside the clubhouse, check out Matt Kemp's post-season blog over at MLBlogs.

It's a Sweep, and it's on to the NLCS!

What a great win all-around by the Blue tonight, but most of all, what an amazing pitching performance by Vicente Padilla tonight.

Padilla was masterful for seven shutout innings, and got some early run support as the Dodgers went on to beat the Cards 5-1, sweep the series in three games, and advance to the NLCS for the second consecutive year, the first time they've done that since the 1977 and 1978 seasons.

Manny and Andre Ethier provided plenty of offense, each collecting three hits and a couple of RBI. Ethier fell a single short of hitting for the cycle.

And so now we wait for Philly or the Rockies!

Game Three Preview

Is Orlando Hudson a forgotten man all of a sudden? Joe Torre has opted to go with the same lineup tonight as Games 1 and 2.

Furcal, 6
Kemp, 8
Ethier, 9
Manny, 7
Loney, 3
Blake, 5
Bellisario, 4
Martin, 2
Padilla, 1

Joel Pineiro is pitching for the Cards tonight. If he's on his game tonight, expect a lot of ground balls. If Vicente Padilla is on his game, expect a lot of over-powering, dominating heat. Game time is a tad over two hours away.

Snowed Out in Denver

Update (3:49 PM CT): With the extra day because of the snow out, the Phillies have announced that J.A. Happ will start Game 3 tomorrow instead of Pedro Martinez, who was originally slated to start Game 3 today.

**********
Yeah, that's not a typo. Snow. In Denver. In October. Well, we shouldn't be surprised, should we? Anyway, Game 3 of that series scheduled for tonight has been postponed due to snow and cold weather. Game time temps were expected to be at about 26º. The game will now be played tomorrow, with Game 4 moved to Monday. Game 5, if the series goes that far, is still slated for Tuesday in Philly.

Friday, October 9, 2009

Ridiculous Umpiring

Is it me, or is the umpiring really becoming a problem? Tonight was the second night in a row we've seen horrible calls made by the umpires in these playoffs.

Not to take anything away from the Yankees win tonight, or the Angels last night, and it didn't appear as if either of last night's calls in the Red Sox-Angels game would have made a difference either, but the umpires really need to get their heads, and eyes, checked.

Last night, the Angels got two gift infield hits when Howie Kendrick was ruled safe, twice, on separate plays at first base when replays clearly showed he was out on both plays. CB Bucknor, who's well known around the league as one of the worst umpires, ruled both times that Red Sox first baseman Kevin Youkilis didn't have his foot on the bag when Kendrick crossed it running down the first base line. Replays showed otherwise. And Red Sox manager Terry Francona let it be known during the game, and after, that he was not happy with either call.

And tonight was just... inexcusable. With the score tied 3-3 in the top of the 11th inning with no outs, Joe Mauer hit an opposite-field fly ball that was slicing away from Melky Cabrera in the left infield corner. Cabrera got his glove on it, but left field umpire Phil Cuzzi called it foul. There was no argument from Mauer, Twins manager Ron Gardenhire or anyone else on the Twins. Replays showed Cuzzi in position, intently watching the foul line and in clear view of the play. The ball landed about a foot inside the line in fair territory even after Cabrera got his glove on it. Mauer would eventually single up the middle, and wind up at third on the next two hits. With the bases loaded and no outs, the Twins eventually failed to score, and the Yankees won in the bottom of the inning on a Mark Teixeira walk-off home run.

Sure, the Twins had an opportunity to get a bunch of runs, but they should have had at least one, anyway, because Mauer would have eventually scored from second after the next two hits. Teixeira's home run would have tied it.

What really bothers me most is that the umpires played a big role in both games; their bad judgments impacted the games. I realize human error is part of the game, and no umpire wants to be known as the one who got a call wrong that affected the outcome of a game. But these games are too important. It's imperative that these calls are right.

The past two nights are not the first or second time it's happened either. There's a long list of incidents where the umpires have dramatically affected post-season games.

Their are two incidents that come to mind. The most recent is the 1996 ALDS game between the Orioles and Yankees when Derek Jeter's flyball was ruled a home run at Yankee Stadium when a fan clearly reached over the wall and caught the ball and robbed the Orioles of an out. The other incident is the 1985 World Series game between the Cards and Royals when Bruce Sutter's foot was clearly on first base but the umpire ruled his foot was off the bag and the Royals runner was awarded the base.

In both instances, as well, as last night's and the two the night before, instant replay would have been very crucial. The Jeter home run would have been overruled under today's instant replay rules without a doubt. But I don't know if baseball will ever consider expanding instant replay in the post-season to include disputing a fair or foul call down the line or a judgment call at first base. I, for one, am not a big fan of expanding instant replay any more than where it already is, but after last night and the night before, maybe MLB should take another look at instant replay and consider expanding it for post-season because calls like last night and the two the night before are inexcusable, and unacceptable.

Garland Trade Completed

As expected after much speculation, the Dodgers sent infielder Tony Abreu to Arizona today to complete the August 30th acquisition of pitcher Jon Garland.

Vin Scully's Call

Took a while, but I finally found it! Here is the legendary Vin Scully's call of the action tonight in the ninth inning, starting with James Loney's at-bat, all the way to Mark Loretta's walk-off... with video from TBS.

Enjoy!

Thursday, October 8, 2009

White Towels to Blame... Say What?!

It's obvious Adam Wainwright was disappointed and frustrated by this lost tonight, which is understandable, and he's probably just looking to deflect blame for tonight's loss off of Matt Holliday, but his post-game comments that the fans waving white towels were the reason Holliday misplayed James Loney's liner tonight is a bit far-fetched.

Are we to believe, that with the Dodgers all but dead, even when Loney hit the ball, and facing a loss, that the fans at the stadium were waving those white towels in a frenzy before Holliday misjudged that liner? Holliday even acknowledged that he lost it in the lights. So why did Wainwright feel the need to put the blame on the Dodgers for handing out white towels instead of Dodger blue towels? Why did he feel the need to blame the fans for waving those towels when even video replay showed they weren't being waved until after the ricocheted off Holliday?

The towels played no part in the outcome of the game, whether Wainwright, or the good folks on MLB Network, or even ESPN, want to believe that. It's a shame that the Dodgers, or to some effect, the fans, will somehow be blamed for this because of those white towels. But hey, if that's what's going to make Wainwright feel a little better about all of this, then so be it.

Are You Kidding Me?!?!

Wow! Unbelievable! "I don't believe what I just saw!"

(Photo courtesy of AP)

They were dead. There were two outs. The third out of ninth inning was all but official. But then something funny happened. Matt Holliday got crossed up. The Dodgers got life. And, well, we all saw what happened after that.

James Loney's liner was supposed to be the last out that would send the series back to St. Louis even at 1-1, but Holliday appeared to have lost the ball in the lights and it him right above the cajones, ricocheted off him and rolled about 15 feet away in front of him. Loney wound up at second.

The key at bat though, in that inning, was Casey Blake. Blake was in a 1-2 hole and worked out a huge walk after fouling off several pitches following the Holliday error. Ronnie Belliard then came up and took Ryan Franklin's first pitch into center field as Juan Pierre, running for Loney, scored the equalizer from second. Martin then drew a four-pitch walk from Franklin, and the stage was set for Mark Loretta.

Loretta was 0 for 15 in his career against Franklin. But tonight, that didn't matter. He blooped Franklin's second pitch into shallow center over the head of Cards shortstop Brendan Ryan.

And to think this all happened after Adam Wainwright had pretty much shut the Dodgers down offensively for eight innings. Clayton Kershaw was stellar, too. As was the Dodger pen, again.

Holliday and Andre Ethier traded off solo home runs early in the game, and the game remained tied until rookie Colby Rasmus doubled off Kershaw in the seventh inning to score Mark DeRosa from first base. But Rasmus got greedy and tried to stretch it into a triple and the relay was cut off by Loney near the mound, and Rasmus was hung out to dry at third like a dead duck. Cards manager Tony LaRussa was visibly frustrated by Rasmus's over-aggressiveness.

And so now, the series goes back to St. Louis with the Blue up 2-0. The Cards have history against them, as no N.L. team has ever come back from an 0-2 deficit in a best-of-five series.

I'm still in shock!

If It Ain't Broke...

Don't fix it. After last night's win, Joe Torre has opted to go with the same lineup for tonight's Game 2 against Adam Wainwright.

Furcal, 6
Kemp, 8
Ethier, 9
Manny, 7
Loney, 3
Blake, 5
Belliard, 4
Martin, 2
Kershaw, 1

Dodgers Strike First

It wasn't pretty early, but the Dodgers eeked out a 5-3 win tonight in Game 1 of their NLDS series with the Cardinals. Both Randy Wolf, making his first ever playoff appearance in his 11 year career, and Cy Young candidate Chris Carpenter, struggled.

Between the two teams, they left a Major League record 30 men on base for a nine inning playoff game. The Dodgers left 16 men on base, which was pretty amazing in itself that they managed to get at least that many on base against a pitcher like Carpenter.

But credit the Dodger pen for shutting down the Cards for five plus innings. They did get a run off Jonathan Broxton in the ninth inning, but by then, the game seemed to be in hand.

It looked early on like this was going turn into a long night, and an even longer series, at least for the Dodgers. The Cards got a run in the first with the bases loaded after Matt Kemp couldn't come up with a routine blooper that landed harmlessly in front of him. But Wolf got out of it inducing an inning-ending double play.

Things shifted pretty quickly when the Dodgers grabbed a 2-1 lead after three pitches by Carpenter after a Kemp home run to center field.

The lead didn't really do much to ease Wolf, even after the Dodgers added another run in the third, as he was gone when he couldn't get out of the fourth inning. The turning point in the game came when Jeff Weaver came in to relieve Wolf after the Cards added a run and promptly loaded the bases with two outs. Weaver got Ryan Ludwick on a comebacker to the mound to end the inning, and the Dodgers settled down from there, at least, on the hill.

Still, though, the Dodgers were getting runners on base left and right, and leaving them there. But they did manage to squeak another run out in the fifth inning, and by the end of that inning, they had 11 hits against Carpenter. They would add yet one more run off three Cardinal relievers in the sixth inning, leaving the bases loaded yet again. In all, the Dodgers left them loaded three times.

Ronald Bellisario, Hong-Chih Kuo and George Sherrill kept the Cardinal bats at bay for the most part in the sixth, seventh and eight innings. Kuo did give up two hits but the Cards couldn't do anything with them. With two outs in the eighth, Joe Torre wasn't taking any chances, and summoned Broxton to face Albert Pujols, who grounded out harmlessly to third.

In the ninth, Ludwick singled to right after Matt Holliday popped out to second. Ludwick then took second as Yadier Molina struck out. With two out, Kemp misplayed a Mark DeRosa flair for a double and Ludwick scored. Broxton then struck out pinch hitter Rick Ankiel to end the game.

The game lasted almost four hours, and it would turn out to be the longest nine inning game in N.L. playoff history. And it won't be a game that will be very well remembered for much else other than a win that gave the Dodgers the series lead.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Torre on Game 1 and NLDS Roster Decisions

Jon Weisman over at Dodger Thoughts has all the quotes from Joe Torre regarding his decision to go with Vicente Padilla in Game 3 over Chad Billingsley, starting Ronnie Belliard over Orlando Hudson in Game 1, and perhaps Game 2, says Mike Scioscia's Tragic Illness, and also some other roster decisions for the first round, including Ken Gurnick noting Jeff Weaver's inclusion, Blake DeWitt's omission, and the status of Hiroki Kuroda should the Dodgers advance to the NLCS.

What a Game!

If you missed the just-concluded "play-in" playoff game between the Tigers and Twins, then you missed perhaps the best game of the year! A back and forth, see-saw battle all night, the Twins prevailed 6-5 in 12 innings to win the A.L. Central, and will travel to New York to take on the Yankees in the ALDS starting tomorrow night.

Wow! That's about all I can say about this game, just wow!

That's a very good, resilient team they have over there in Minnesota. And I might add, I've always like Ron Gardenhire as a person, as a great baseball guy, and as a manager in particular. A job well done, no doubt.

On paper, it looks like a landslide for the Yankees against the Twins, but don't count them out. They've got the league MVP (in my opinion) in Joe Mauer, two "gamers" in Orlando Cabrera and Michael Cuddyer (one of my favorite players), a very good power hitter in Jason Kubel, and one the game's best closers in Joe Nathan.

Should be a fun series to watch.

Game One Notes

The Dodgers have announced their Game 1 lineup, as noted here by Jon Weisman over at Dodger Thoughts.

Furcal, 6
Kemp, 8
Ethier, 9
Manny, 7
Loney, 3
Blake, 5
Belliard, 4
Martin, 2
Wolf, 1

They've also announced that Vicente Padilla will start Game 3 on Saturday in St. Louis, and if the series goes to a Game 4 on Sunday, Chad Billingsley will get the nod. Padilla and Billingsley will follow Wolf and Clayton Kershaw, Games 1 and 2 starters.

I'm somewhat surprised by the Padilla selection ahead of Billingsley, but it is what it is.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Breaking Down the Series Against St. Louis

I was going to use the off day tomorrow and Tuesday to break down the upcoming series vs. the Cards, but Mike Scioscia's Tragic Illness beat me to the punch tonight, so I'll use their post as a guideline for what I was going to point out anyway.

MSTI basically touches on four key points, and they're pretty simple, too.
  1. The Cards were the worst hitting team in the Majors this season against left-hended pitchers. It's pretty amazing to think when they have two of the league's best hitters in Albert Pujols and Matt Holliday, both righties, but alas, it's true, the team as a whole can't hit lefties. And not by coincidence, I don't think, the Dodgers are throwing two lefties at them in the first two games in Randy Wolf and Clayton Kershaw.
  2. Two of the Dodgers starting pitchers, Wolf and Chad Billingsley, as well as Jonathan Broxton, who have faced Albert Pujols the most, have done very well against Sir Albert in the past. Between the three pitchers, they've held Pujols to just eight hits in 47 ABs, with only two extra base hits. (Holliday, on the other hand, has done very well against Wolf and Billingsley.)
  3. The Dodgers have historically done very well against Adam Wainwright. The four Dodger regulars who have faced him the most have had a lot of success against him. Andre Ethier is 5 for 16 against him (.313) with a home run; Rafael Furcal is 7 for 16 (.438) against Wainwright; Russell Martin is 7 for 14 (.500) against him; and James Loney is 4 for 14 (.286) against him with a home run.
  4. The Cards don't have a very balanced lineup in that they rely heavily on Pujols, and more recently, Holliday, as well, to provide the bulk of their offense. MSTI has two charts up that show the percentage of which hitters are relied upon the most in both offenses, and it's pretty staggering when you see how much more balanced the Dodger lineup is, when it's clicking, of course. Only two of the Cards hitters provide more than 10% of the team's offense while five of the Dodger hitters provide more than 10%. So if you can neutralize Pujols and Holliday, you have a pretty good chance of preventing the Cards from scoring a ton of runs.
And I'm gonna throw in one more point here:
  • In head-to-head match-ups, the Dodgers hit .266 against Cardinal pitching, but scored just 19 runs in the seven games. The Cards hit just .218 against Dodger pitching, but scored 31 runs in the seven games. The Dodgers ERA against the Cards this season was 3.72, not great, but not bad either, while the Cards recorded a 2.48 ERA. Four of the seven games were decided by two runs or less, with two of the games decided by four and five runs. The one real big blowout was a 10-0 win by the Cards in St. Louis.

It's pretty safe to say that while most people are probably going to pick the Cards to win this series because of Pujols, Chris Carpenter and Wainwright, the Dodgers are no slouches when it comes to matching up with the Cards. Sure, the Dodgers don't have an "ace" like Carpenter, although Kershaw might be the pretty darn close, but they do have a very balanced lineup where, when it's clicking on all cylinders, any one hitter in the lineup can beat you on any given night.

The Dodgers finished the regular season with the best team ERA in the Majors, the best bullpen ERA in the Majors by far, the best rotation ERA among all of the playoff teams, the fourth most runs scored in the N.L., and the highest batting average in the N.L. Their defense wasn't too shabby either, having recorded the fourth fewest errors in the N.L. And probably the most important stat of all, at least I think so, they finished with the best run differential in baseball at +169. And it wasn't even close in the N.L. All of the Dodger marks above were higher and better than the Cards, including the starting pitching.

So there's certainly a lot of reasons to be optimistic about the post-season, and especially about their chances with St. Louis in the first round, regardless of St. Louis's 5-2 record against the Dodgers this season. And keep in mind the Cards played the Dodgers when the Dodgers weren't playing well in August.

And finally, one other note. The Cards struggled just as much, if not more, than the Dodgers did down the stretch, losing eight of their last 10. Point is, plenty of teams have had success in the post-season even after stumbling to the finish line. The 2000 Yankees lost 15 of 18 to end the regular season, and won the World Series. The 2002 Angels, 2006 Cards and 2007 Red Sox also had similar struggles and still won. Perhaps 2009 will be the Dodgers turn.

162 Down...

With a 5-3 win this afternoon, the Dodgers finished the regular season with a 95-67 record and a .586 winning percentage, their most wins and best winning percentage since 1985. The 1988 World Series championship team finished 94-67 (.584). They also finish with the best record in the N.L. by two games over Philly who had 93 wins. Colorado, the Wild Card winner, finished three back with 92 wins, and St. Louis, the Dodgers first round opponent, finished four back with 91 wins.

Vicente Padilla made a strong case for a spot on the post-season roster with a solid five inning performance, striking out 10 in the process while channeling Clayton Kershaw, who was just a masterful during last night's division clincher.

Dodgers Announce NLDS Starters

Update (3:09 PM PT): Game 1 has just been announced to start at 6:37 PM PT on Wednesday, with Game 2 slated for 3:07 PM PT on Thursday.

**********
Vin Scully just announced that the Dodgers have announced that Randy Wolf will pitch Wednesday's opener against St. Louis at Dodger Stadium, and Clayton Kershaw will start Game 2 on Thursday. We haven't heard anything from St. Louis regarding their starters, but we can assume it will be Chris Carpenter and Adam Wainwright the first two games.

As for today's game, Brad Ausmus is the acting manager in a trend started by Joe Torre to allow one of his players to manage the final game of the regular season. Mike Borzello is the acting pitching coach today, with Mark Loretta as the acting bench coach, Jim Thome and Juan Castro the duo-hitting coaches and Jeff Weaver today's bullpen coach.

Also for got to mention this yesterday. J.P. Ricciardi and Kevin Towers were both relieved of all of their duties, including GM, by Toronto and San Diego, respectively.

It's A Clincher!



It wasn't pretty, and it took six days longer than expected, but the Dodgers have finally clinched the West and home field advantage throughout the N.L. playoffs with a 5-0 trumping of the Rockies. Clayton Kershaw was "magnifico" through six shutout innings, striking out 10 in the process. The offense finally showed up with some clutch hitting in the seventh inning. And for the first time since 1977-1978, the Blue have repeated as West Champs.

(Photo courtesy of AP)

So the first round is now set. The Dodgers will host the Cards starting Wednesday, and the Rockies will travel to Philly as the Wild Card for a five-game series, also starting Wednesday.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Kuroda Out for NLDS

It was just reported a little while ago that Hiroki Kuroda will miss the NLDS with what is being called a small disk herniation in his cervical spine. He's technically listed as day-to-day but the Dodgers aren't taking any chances with him. Chad Billingsley will likely move into the NLDS rotation as the third starter, with either Jon Garland or Vicente Padilla as the fourth. Padilla has also been named Sunday's season-finale starter against the Rockies.

Post-Season Thoughts

So I was sitting here doing some work, while brainstorming on the side, possible playoff scenarios, match-ups and roster decisions for the Dodgers. I was trying to decipher all the possible tie-breakers and started getting a bit of a headache because there were so many possibilities. It didn't occur to me that MLB.com might have already touch on this, with what just three games left in the season for everyone involved. So I went to MLB.com and lo and behold, one of their knowledgeable columnists broke it all down for us.

After reading through it all, I was getting an even bigger headache, primarily from trying to get a grasp on the three-way tie-breakers when I finally gave up and came to one conclusion: If the Dodgers win two games this weekend, and it's certainly possible based on the pitching match-ups tonight and tomorrow, then all of those tie-breaker scenarios will all be for naught because the Dodgers will have clinched home-field advantage with two wins.

Having said all that, the Dodgers still have some homework to do and decisions to make as far as the post-season roster is concerned. And a lot of those decisions will be based on who their first round opponent is.

This much we know: roughly two-thirds of the roster is all but a given. And based on last year's post-season, we can almost assume they will go with 11 pitchers instead of the 13 they've been carrying much of the season. So with that said, these are the guys we know will be on the roster, assuming everyone is healthy and ready to go:

Line-up (8): Rafael Furcal, Orlando Hudson, Manny Ramirez, Matt Kemp, Andre Ethier, Casey Blake, James Loney, Russell Martin.

Bench (5): Brad Ausmus, Juan Pierre, Ronnie Belliard, Jim Thome, Juan Castro

Rotation (4): Randy Wolf, Clayton Kershaw, Hiroki Kiroda, Chad Billingsley

Bullpen (4): Jonathan Broxton, George Sherrill, Hong-Chi Kuo, Ronald Bellisario

That gives them 21 "for-sures" on the post-season roster if everyone is healthy, and based on the assumption Torre will go with 11 pitchers, that leaves three pitching spots open.

The general consensus is Wolf, Kershaw and Kuroda will be the Dodgers first three starters, provided Kuroda's stiff neck loosens up. There's still some question as to whether Chad Billingsley or Jon Garland will be the fourth starter, but based on recent performances by both pitchers, it all but appears that it will be Billingsley, which would kick Garland out to the pen, perhaps as the long man, or even completely off the roster. My guess is the latter.

As for the bullpen, Jeff Weaver has the most post-season experience in the bullpen, so he'll likely get the nod as a long-man. Roman Troncoso was hit pretty hard against St. Louis, likely the Dodgers first round opponent, in his brief stint against them this season, but he was a key part of the bullpen's success this year, so there's a good chance he'll be on the roster anyway. That leaves one more spot.

Should the Dodgers include Weaver and Troncoso, that leaves Garland, Guillermo Mota, James McDonald and Vicente Padilla for that elusive final spot. If Garland is left off, McDonald or Padilla will get the last nod, especially against St. Louis. However, if the Dodgers somehow end up playing Philly under any scenario in the first round, they'll probably take Scott Elbert over a McDonald or any of the other right-handers because he's a left-hander who would help counter the Phillies lefty-dominated line-up.

As for the line-up and bench, we know Pierre is a given as a back-up outfielder and a late-inning pinch-runner, and Ausmus will back-up Martin. The acquisition of Thome to provide power off the bench down the stretch and in the post-season (and to be the DH if they get as far as the World Series) means Doug Meintkiewicz will be left off. Juan Castro will probably be added as a back-up infielder for defensive purposes.

As for the final spot, a lot rests of the health of both Blake and Belliard, who are both nursing nagging hamstrings. If both are healthy, Blake is in the lineup and Belliard gets the last roster spot. If one of them can't make it, Mark Loretta would probably get the last spot, and if both can't go, it will probably be Loretta and Blake DeWitt.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

An Off Day Thought

Just some thoughts running through my head today after the just-completed road trip heading into the final series this weekend against the Rockies out at the Ravine.

Last night on the game chat thread on Dodger Thoughts, I let my frustration take over after just an inning and half when I errantly posted this comment:

"It's only the second inning and I can tell this is gonna be another long night... jesus... they're not even trying..."

Obviously, "not trying" was a bad choice of words. In fact, I was way off-base with those words. But it was another long night, and they did look flat last night. They only mustered one first inning single all night. That's it.

Sitting through reading that thread, and the next one Jon Weisman posted, throughout the game last night, I came to the realization that I'm not in the minority when it comes to my frustrations with the Dodgers in recent days. But not once, did I ever give up on them as it seems so many fans have. It's almost as if Dodger fans are expecting the worse to happen.

Well, what is the worse that could happen, the lose the division and head into the post-season as the Wild Card? I thought the ultimate goal was to win the World Series?

So, I went to bed last night dwelling on that first question, and then woke up to see this ridiculous column this morning by Bill Plaschke on the L.A. Times Sports webpage. It really got me thinking because amazingly, Plaschke really put things into perspective for me. In a nutshell, when he gets all worked up over something like this, you know it's much ado about nothing.

That's when it all became to clearer to me, that my sentiments all week, and even last night with my single line comment on Dodger Thoughts was, indeed, all out of frustration. But Plaschke? Well, he's really concerned about this. And so are a lot of other Dodger fans. And between the two, it prompted ESPN's Rob Neyer to write this on his blog this morning.

Neyer's advice to Dodger fans? Relax! The Dodgers are still going to the post-season. And, as I questioned three paragraphs up, does it really matter if they go in as the wild card as opposed to the division? Not when the ultimate goal is to win the World Series.

The Dodgers aren't the only team struggling. It's been noted here in this space already that both Philly and St. Louis have also struggled in the past 10-12 days, as well. They, too, like the Dodgers, have problems. Sure, the Dodgers many not have that "ace" that Philly and St. Louis have, but their rotation might just be deeper and better suited for a post-season series.

The Dodgers have also still scored the third most runs in the N.L. despite their recent struggles to score, and the most important bottom line, they have, far-and-away, the best run differential in the N.L. at a +163. That is a very telling number.

Sure, that still may not be any consolation to some Dodger fans; this past week has been hard to watch. It's been very discouraging and very disheartening. They haven't played well at all. They've made a lot of unusual mental mistakes, some costly errors, and the timely hitting that we've seen much of the season has disappeared. Maybe they're trying too hard, pressing too much to get that one win out of the way. They all but had the division clinched on Sunday until they broke down in the ninth inning. I'm sure it's tough to over come those kind of losses. Those kind of losses stay with you a long time. But they've overcome them before. We've seen it all season from them.

And the odds of winning the division are still in their favor. We've seen the match-up numbers for the Rockies pitchers for this weekend against the Dodgers (see previous post). The Dodgers have two overwhelming advantages in the first two games. And we've seen the Dodgers struggle like this before, even heading into a series against the Rockies as recent as August, and they came out of it just fine.

The Dodgers know what they need to do this weekend. They what the task at hand is. The goal, however, is to win the World Series. Nothing less. Winning the division or the wild card doesn't change that. Losing three games this weekend isn't the end of the world, and it certainly isn't the end of their season.

Rockies Clinch Berth

Colorado have clinched a playoff berth for the second time in three seasons with a 9-2 win over the Brewers, setting up a showdown in L.A. this weekend between the Dodgers and Rockies to determine the division winner and the Wild Card.

Bottom line: if the Dodgers win just one game, they'll win the division outright as they've already won the season series versus the Rockies, who would then get the Wild Card. If the Rockies win out, they win the division and the Dodgers get the Wild Card. The Dodgers have been trying for the past four days to clinch the division but have been unable to win that one game needed.

The pitching match-ups for this series:

Tomorrow: Ubaldo Jimenez (2009: 14-12, 3.52; career vs. LAD: 4-3, 6.31; career at DS: 1-1, 9.13) vs. Randy Wolf (2009: 11-6, 3.22)

Saturday: Jorge de la Rosa (2009: 16-9, 4.45; career vs. LAD: 0-5, 7.12) vs. Clayton Kershaw (2009: 8-8, 2.89; 2009 at DS: 3-4, 1.97)

Sunday: Jason Marquis (2009: 15-12, 3.95) vs. undecided