Results tagged ‘ Jeff Kent ’

No Kuo?

Greg Maddux got his 355th career win in the Dodgers 2-1 victory tonight over the Giants tonight, but the bigger story for Dodgers fans was the no-show by Hong-Chih Kuo.  Kuo warmed up briefly and then disappeared, which is a bad sign for his chances of making the playoffs.  Tonight was supposed to be a test for his tricep problem, and apparently things didn’t go well.  This means the Dodgers will probably go into the post season without their main lefty setup guy.  On the season, Kuo was 5-3 with a 2.14 ERA over 80 innings.  Those are numbers you hate to be missing when you need them most.

On the positive side, Rafael Furcal is looking better each time out, and I would be shocked if he didn’t start at short during the playoffs.  He went 2-for-4 tonight. Jeff Kent extended his hitting streak to 4 games since coming back, and apparently he really wants to play in the post-season because the arguement he is making in his favor is strong.

Kudos to Blake DeWitt for carrying the team offensively tonight, not exactly what you would expect to see from a rookie 2nd/3rd baseman hitting .265, especially when your starting left fielder is Manny Ramirez.  DeWitt went 3-for-4 with a home run, 2 RBIs, and a walk.

Pablo Ozuna got some playing time in the outfield tonight.  It looks like Joe Torre is testing him in the outfield in an attempt to circumvent using 5 outfielders in the playoffs.  This, along with Ozuna’s usefulness as a pinch runner and infield defensive replacement, looks like a move to free up a spot for Jeff Kent.  If this is the case, the bench is going to be pretty stacked with veteran pinch hitters.  You’ve got Jeff Kent 21st on the all-time doubles list, also with 377 career homers and 1518 career RBIs, Nomar Garciaparra .314 lifetime batting average, and Juan Pierre active stolen base leader. Not bad.  Of course none of that could have occured had the “backup guys” not stepped up when the starters got injured, or in Pierre’s case lost his platoon spot when they picked up Manny.  Pierre was platooning in left with Andre Ethier before Ethier won the starting job in right by hitting .301 with 20 homers.  Casey Blake was acquired to fill in for an injured Garciaparra at 3rd.  Blake is hitting .252 with 10 homers in 206 at-bats.  And our favorite, Blake DeWitt took over at 2nd, despite being a natural 3rd baseman, and had a great rookie year, hitting .266 with 52 RBIs in 364 at-bats.

And last but not least, Takashi Saito looks like a lock for the playoff closing position as he picked up his first save since coming off the DL by retiring the side in order in the 9th.

Clown Car

Yesterday the Dodgers squeezed 27 players out of a regular-sized dugout and lost 6-5 in 10 innings. Most of the starters were out after a few innings, and we got to see a lot of guys play, presumably so Joe Torre can figure out his post season roster. 

Rafael Furcal was about the same as the last two games, solid in the field, but unable to get a hit.  He is showing good range, almost getting a glove on a ball straight over second.  He wasn’t shifted in the least from what I could tell, so he went a long way fast.  Most of his at-bats have included near hits, so those have to start dropping eventually.  He showed a little more pop, flying out to left probably about 260-275 deep, which is the farthest I’ve seen him hit a ball since coming off the DL.

If I’m Joe Torre, Jeff Kent is my pinch-hitter in the playoffs, period, and I don’t even like Jeff Kent.  He’s gotten a hit in every game since coming back, and cranked a 2-run homer last night, so obviously his power is still there.  I still like Blake DeWitt at second.  On top of that, Kent is very slow because of his knee, and that has to be killing his range in the field.  However, down by a run with the pitcher’s spot coming up, Jeff Kent is the guy I’m putting in, and I don’t even like him.

I know Joe Torre loves experience over youth, but if a guy ever made a case to forget about that, it’s James McDonald.  He has not allowed a run in his first 6 innings in the bigs, and since he started in the minors, he’s fitting in easily as a middle reliever.  If I’m making this roster, McDonald has a spot if Hong-Chih Kuo is still having problems with his arm.  Listen to me Joe, and listen good.  If it comes down to it, you take McDonald.  I don’t care what arm he’s throwing with, and I don’t care if he’s a rookie.

2008 NL West Champs!

Arizona got creamed by the Cards 12-3, which means the Dodgers won the division before their game tonight even started.  Accordingly, Joe Torre went right to work, utilizing the last games of the season to prepare for the playoffs.  Jeff Kent and Rafael Furcal both started the game, played 3 innings and got a couple of at-bats a piece.

Furcal is progressing.  His first game back, his swing looked a little slow and he struck out.  Although he didn’t get a hit tonight, he did come close, and he got the bat on the ball both times without any problems.  He hasn’t driven a ball yet, but he has come very close to having two balls drop in for hits.  There were no problems with fielding, but he wasn’t put in any tough defensive positions either.  Hopefully his back and his hamstring hold up after the start, and he’ll continue to get playing time during the up coming series with the Giants.

Kent is 2-for-3 since coming back from knee surgery.  I don’t like Jeff Kent, but the guy can hit.  In three at-bats he has shown himself to be the best pinch hitting prospect for the post season, with the possible exceptions of Garciaparra and Pierre.  He will need a pinch runner, so it is somewhat questionable whether or not the extra baggage with have any effect.  However, for those that see him as a detriment to the post season squad, I would just remind them of a certain famous home run by a quite hobbled Kirk Gibson in ’88, and look where that went.

The guys on the Dodgers deserved this win.  I think a lot of the guys who start now were highly underappreciated in the last couple seasons because they were rookies.  This is their team now, and their victory.  Congratulations guys, here’s to the team sticking together, and many more victory celebrations to come.  The Dodgers have some good vets, and a lot of young talent.  It’s an exciting combination.

Schizophrenic

The Dodgers can’t quite decide who they are.  Are they the team that just barely beat Pittsburgh and then got spanked by San Francisco, and earlier on lost 8 straight and got swept by the Phillies?  Or are they the team that just pounded San Diego the last two games, earlier WON 8 straight, and swept the Phillies?  This question must be answered in time for the playoffs.

I went to the game tonight, which was a lot more fun to watch than the game they lost 7-0 to the Giants.  The place was a complete mad house when Manny Ramirez came up with the bases loaded in the 4th inning.  Unfortunately, he grounded out to kill the rally.  The crazy thing about that guy is that his next time at bat he hits a two-run homer, almost to say “my bad” for the out in the 4th.  The crowd went pretty nuts then too.  Jeff Kent was cheered during his pinch hit single.  I booed.  Rafael Furcal made a plate appearance after an extended standing ovation, and came within inches of getting a hit, but the ball went foul.  Despite striking out, he was cheered back into the dugout.  I cheered too.  He also got some time in the field, but didn’t touch the ball.

Kemp-Martin continues to work.  Combined they went 5-for-9 with 2 runs, 2 RBIs and a walk.  So since the new lineup has been in place they have gone 9-for-16 with 4 runs, 2 RBIs, and 4 walks.  The team has hit a collective .425 with 14 walks, 6 doubles, 4 home runs, and 22 runs in that same 2-game span.  Despite the fact that San Diego’s pitching is absymal, I would still say that this is pretty decent evidence that the new lineup fits.

The magic number is down to 1, and with 4 games left, I would say the division title is just about a lock for the Dodgers, especially the way Arizona has been playing lately.  Stranger things have happened in baseball, but I don’t have any worries about what will happen in San Francisco to close out the season.  Hopefully more appearances by all the guys that need work before the playoffs.

Take Me Out To The Ball Game

My wife and I went to the Dodgers embarrasing display at home last night.  Here’s the play-by-play.  Traffic into L.A. stunk, which I assume was due to it being Friday night.  The last game we went to was on a Tuesday and traffic was better.  There weren’t any problems a little patience couldn’t handle.  We were parked on the other side of the stadium from our seats, naturally.  No complaints there, that is probably due to my complete ignorance concerning the 10 million gates at Dodger Stadium and how to reach them.  I’m assuming there is only one entrance gate? That’s probably a bad assumption, but I have no clue.

Once inside the stadium, we found our seats, 2nd row from the very top of the 3rd tier(reserve level).  They were cheap.  The view was ok, I could still tell what was going on at the plate. Although my wife, who is blind, needed binoculars.  No matter, she spent the entire game taking pictures of Andre Ethier in the dugout, and reporting to me his activities.  I purchased the venerable Dodger Dog, of course.

Not one, but TWO guys proposed to their girlfriends on the jumbotron during the game.  I felt bad for the second chick, because the guy didn’t bail out after his idea was stolen by the first guy.  It doesn’t have much punch when someone else just proposed the exact same way, IN FRONT OF YOU, 20 minutes ago.

The stadium was pretty packed.  As is typical in L.A., half the crowd didn’t show up until the third inning, and thanks to a great showing by the Dodgers, half the crowd had left by the 7th.  But excuse me, was I at Dodgers Stadium, or the big A?  Because I thought REAL fans went to Dodger games.  This is type of thing you expect from flaky Orange County Angels fans.  I was vocal with my disappointment, but no one cared.

As is customary at Dodger games, those wearing the jerseys of the opposing team were booed and jeered ruthlessly.  If you’re one of maybe 100 people wearing a Giants shirt, of all things, amid a sea of 50,000 blue faces, you either love attention, danger, or both.  All the Giants fans in our section were booed and pelted with popcorn until a couple of the drunken defenders of Dodgerdom were booted by the evil stadium security forces.  Thusly the treacherous Giants fans were actually allowed to wallow in victory in our home.

Enough atmosphere, on to the game!  Maddux stunk, the Dodgers offense stunk, the Dodgers defense stunk, Joe Torre stunk, and the Dodgers lost 7-1.  A loss is bad enough, but Joe Torre really chapped my hide.  They’re DOWN 7-0 going into the 8th, and he pulls half the starters.  THEY GAVE UP!  Unbelievable.  Man, I didn’t pay hardly anything for those seats, but I bother to drive like 60 miles through an hour and a half of traffic, and they give up?  That burns. I was REALLY unhappy about that decision.  On top of that Pablo Ozuna hit a homer to score the Dodgers only run, just to rub it in.  For those not familiar with the Dodgers, Pablo Ozuna is the backup 2nd baseman for the Dodgers.  Not bad when you think of it that way.  However, consider that the starting 2nd baseman, Blake DeWitt, is actually the backup 2nd baseman, and former 4th-string 3rd baseman, and you get an idea of how ridiculous it was that this guy is even on the field when they’re LOSING the game during a pennant run.  I literally said to my wife “If Pablo Ozuna scores the only run of this game, I’m going to lose it”.  About a minute later, he hits a homer.  I never imagined I would ever complain about a Dodger home run, but there you have it.

Speaking of complaints.  I was reading some articles about the Dodgers. Ken Gurnick with mlb.com reports the following:

“When the inning finally ended, the sellout crowd booed its first-place
team off the field, but it was unclear whether the target was the
future Hall of Fame left fielder or the future Hall of Fame pitcher or
just normal bitterness when the Giants are in sight.”

I can say definitively, we were booing Greg Maddux for getting shelled, and Joe Torre for leaving him in long enough to give up 7 runs.  I’ve hated that acquisition since they announced it, and I know he’s played a season with L.A. before, but much like Jeff Kent, this guy is not a Dodger, and doesn’t belong on the team.  He’s a Brave, we hate the Braves.  In addition, I don’t get Joe Torre sometimes.  I know he has certain reasons for doing things, but the fans pay your salary buddy, we should be your number one concern.  You don’t leave stupid Maddux in to give up 7 runs, giving us no chance at a victory, and then twist the knife by pulling Blake and Ramirez after the 7th when you’re down by 7 runs.  Where was the white flag flying over the home team dugout?  That’s messed up.  I sat through 2 innings of subs, and didn’t get out of there until after 11pm, and I had to PAY for the experience.  Enjoy your millions, Joe!

Kent Schment

Forget the whole theory that the Dodgers are actually doing BETTER because Jeff Kent isn’t with the team.  I’ll go one better and say that he’s a complete non-factor.  GASP!  Jeff Kent, one of the best hitting 2nd basemen the game has ever known?  Yeah, but he’s old now, and let’s face it, the guy isn’t a Dodger.  He’s a Giant in sheep’s clothing.  More importantly though, since he had knee surgery, he has been replaced by one of my favorite young Dodgers, Blake DeWitt.  Now, I thought picking up Casey Blake was a great move because DeWitt was a little weak in the bat for a 3rd baseman.  But, DeWitt is pretty capable for a 2nd baseman, and it’s seems like he has adjusted to the switch remarkably.  Lets do a little comparison.  Kent has an OPS of .734, DeWitt’s is .721, so they’re pretty close.  Stretched to 550 ABs, Kent would have 52 runs and 73 RBIs.  Dewitt would have 65 runs and 73 RBIs, so DeWitt is actually MORE productive than Kent.  On top of that, DeWitt has been hitting at the bottom of the order, which means he’s a better clutch hitter too.  But it gets better because DeWitt is better defensively at 2nd eventhough he came up at 3rd.  He has yet to make an error at 2nd in 107 innings, which is impressive considering his experience with the position.  I like the youth movement we’re in the middle of. It gives me a chance to get to know the players a little, instead of constantly shuffling free agents and has-beens through the organization in hopes of landing in the playoffs.  This has been a problem with the Dodgers for a long time.  Remember the days of Garvey, Lopes, Cey, and Russell?  It’s time to bring back that type of Dodger team.  Booting Kent in favor of DeWitt is another step toward a team I can really root for, the way I have been this season.

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