Dodger Thoughts

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

Month: June 2014 (Page 6 of 6)

When Kings were fools

STADIUM SERIES-LOS ANGELES KINGS VS ANAHEIM DUCKSBy Jon Weisman

The Los Angeles Kings, the darlings of the city and a sports league right now, played at our fair Dodger Stadium on January 25 and, despite no small amount of pomp and electricity surrounding them, more or less stunk it up. They were shut out, 3-0. It was the Kings’ fifth straight loss, midway through a stretch when they would lose nine out of 10.

If you ignored the NHL’s scoring system for overtime losses and looked strictly at won-lost records, the potential Stanley Cup champions were 30-28 four months ago.

The Los Angeles Dodgers, darlings of no one right now, were 30-28 four days ago.

With many more games to play.

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Video: Vin Scully remembers Don Zimmer

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Video: Vin Scully and the Dodgers’ 10,000th NL win

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Tonight, the Dodgers celebrate the franchise last month’s 10,000th National League victory with a commemorative pin giveaway. The video above, narrated by Vin Scully, seals the deal.

— Jon Weisman

Memories: 42 years since 42

72_retired_numbers

Today is the 42nd anniversary of the Dodgers retiring No. 42 (in addition to Nos. 32 and 39), on June 4, 1972.

Here’s to Jackie, Roy and Sandy.

— Jon Weisman

Josh Beckett no-hitter: Game-used ball up for bid, benefiting Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation

Beckett No-Hitter Ball Front

By Erin Edwards

It’s time to win a Dodger baseball. Dodger fans, this is your chance to own a piece of Dodger history and help the youth of L.A.

We all held our breath May 25 when Josh Beckett threw the 11th no-hitter in Los Angeles Dodgers history. The Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation is auctioning a game-used ball from the no-hitter, autographed by Beckett — along with a special Dodger Stadium experience — at dodgers.com/auctions.

The benefits from the auction will help fund programs such as Dodgers RBI, which gives underserved youth the opportunity to play baseball and softball, School Fuel, which provides breakfast to for Los Angeles Unified School District students, and much more.

Act now! You have the opportunity to bid on a one-of-a-kind experience to mark this amazing moment in Dodger history. The winning bidder will receive the following:

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Sandy Koufax at the plate, age 8

Dare we ask: Is the Dodger bullpen back?

LOS ANGELES DODGERS V CHICAGO WHITE SOX

Monday’s Jon SooHoo photo highlights can be found at LA Photog Blog.

White Sox at Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.
Dee Gordon, 2B
Andre Ethier, CF
Yasiel Puig, RF
Hanley Ramirez, SS
Adrian Gonzalez, 1B
Matt Kemp, LF
Chone Figgins, 3B
Drew Butera, C
Dan Haren, P

By Jon Weisman

Drew Butera hasn’t pitched for the Dodgers since May 17, and while there was romance to the idea that he was an untapped weapon as a backup reliever, I think the Dodgers are happy that he hasn’t had to shed the catchers’ gear lately.

In fact, since the Dodgers were blown out by Arizona, 18-7, on that Saturday 17 nights ago, the Dodger bullpen has started to find itself.

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Yasiel’s latest honor: NL Player of the Month

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By Jon Weisman

It’s no surprise, to say the least, but Yasiel Puig has been named National League Player of the Month for May.

Puig won the NL triple crown for the month, leading the league in batting average (.398) and RBI (25) while tying Giancarlo Stanton of Miami in home runs. He reached base in all 28 games (with hits in 26) and also led the league in hits (43), total bases (79), extra-base hits (19), on-base percentage (.492), slugging (.731) and wRC+ (240). His 17 walks and 10 doubles were each tied for sixth in the NL for the month. He was also a stalwart on defense, highlighted by his full-sprint, diving catch in New York on May 22.

The award comes the day Puig began earning his first career NLPOM honor, in June 2013.

Puig surges to lead in NL All-Star outfield vote

WHITE SOX VS DODGERSBy Jon Weisman

On the anniversary of his arrival in the Major Leagues, Yasiel Puig has risen from fifth place to first in the latest update of National League All-Star balloting — thanks to more than 500,000 votes in less than a week.

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The phenom’s curse

PIRATES VS DODGERS

Sunday’s Jon SooHoo photo highlights can be found at LA Photog Blog.

White Sox at Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.
Kershaw CLXXXIX: Kershawnnie Get Your Gun
Chone Figgins, 2B
Matt Kemp, LF
Yasiel Puig, RF
Hanley Ramirez, SS
Adrian Gonzalez, 1B
Scott Van Slyke, CF
Justin Turner, 3B
Drew Butera, C
Clayton Kershaw, P

By Jon Weisman

“I talked about this with Rickey Henderson. Rickey Henderson could do so many things, it’s almost a curse sometimes, because we always ask for more. Yasiel hits .350 — now we want him to be a perfect basestealer. He does that — now we want him to do this. With all that talent, you think there’s still more there, and at times, we ask a lot.”

— Don Mattingly, on Yasiel Puig

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Dodger Insider magazine — June edition

June 2014 magazine cover

June 2014 highlightsBy Jon Weisman

“Where the Action Is,” a catchers’ roundtable featuring A.J. Ellis, Drew Butera and Tim Federowicz in which the trio converse in depth about baseball’s most challenging position, is the featured story in June’s Dodger Insider magazine, on sale now and also featuring a cover story on slugging first baseman Adrian Gonzalez.

Dodger Insider offers more than two dozen stories, including inside-the-game pieces on platooning, the cut fastball, basestealing (with Dee Gordon) and player development, as well as a special Father’s Day-themed piece on how Dodger players stay in touch with their families while on the road.

This month’s “Shutter Speed” photo gallery, featuring the work of Jon SooHoo and Juan Ocampo, is also striking. And Mark Langill contributed a story on memorable June moments in Dodger history, along with his monthly trivia challenge.

In all, there’s tons of content, so don’t miss out. Copies of the magazine are going out in the mail to subscribers starting today, and the digital version of this issue should be uploaded later this week.

Also, stay tuned for a video feature from the catchers’ roundtable, coming soon this month.

Cy Young, Babe Ruth, Ted Williams … and Yasiel Puig

Jon SooHoo/©Los Angeles Dodgers, LLC 2014

Yasiel Puig (Jon SooHoo/Los Angeles Dodgers)

By Jon Weisman

“I think Puig is definitely in this family of nearly mythical characters.”

— John Thorn

Ted Williams, c. 1940 (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Ted Williams, c. 1940 (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

The next time someone suggests Yasiel Puig is unlike anyone who has come before, or that he’s dangerously cavalier about baseball’s unwritten rules, think of Ted Williams.

Ted Williams, commander of respect, massively serious student of hitting … so much so that in his early years in the Major Leagues, he would take practice swings in the outfield when the other team was at bat.

“He was thought to be nearly demented,” Major League Baseball official historian John Thorn says. “He was absolutely in his own head. … Because we hold Williams in such reverence today, those who don’t have a grasp of the full history of the man will not recognize that he was made fun of when he was brought in.”

Adds FoxSports.com senior baseball editor Rob Neyer: “When Williams came up, he didn’t seem to know what the rules were. He would speak to veterans as if they were underlings or inferior to him. He would practice his swing in the outfield between pitches. These were things you weren’t supposed to do. … The culture sort of beats those things out of you, which is kind of a shame for fans.”

Williams is far from the only one. As unique as Puig has been in his first 365 days in the Major Leagues, a stroll through baseball history brings a line of baseball giants who, before they became legends, were heartily mocked or criticized.

Once upon a time, Old School was itself New School, and head-scratching, larger-than-life figures existed as much then as now, if not more so.

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June 1 pregame: Notes, notes, everywhere

PIRATES VS DODGERS

Saturday’s Jon SooHoo photo highlights can be found at LA Photog Blog.

Pirates at Dodgers, 5:10 p.m.
Dee Gordon, 2B
Andre Ethier, CF
Yasiel Puig, RF
Hanley Ramirez, SS
Adrian Gonzalez, 1B
Matt Kemp, LF
Justin Turner, 3B
Drew Butera, C
Zack Greinke, P

By Jon Weisman

We’re going full notebook for today’s pregame report:

  • After their 12-2 victory Saturday over Pittsburgh, I had some fun looking up the Dodgers’ record when scoring at least 12 runs since moving to Los Angeles. They are now 182-4 in those games.
  • Hanley Ramirez, who homered twice in a game for the second time this season, had the first 4 4 4 5 line in Dodger history (since at least 1914) and 17th in MLB history. He’s the first to do it with a stolen base in National League history.
  • Jamey Wright had the Dodgers’ first three-inning save since Ramon Troncoso in April 2009, and the first save in a game decided by at least 10 runs since Matt Herges on September 10, 2000.
  • There has been one five-inning save in Dodger history, by Charlie Hough on August 14, 1970. In his shortest start of the decade, Don Sutton was knocked out of the game after retiring only one batter and being charged with five runs. Los Angeles rallied to take the lead with Fred Norman on the mound, setting him up for the win, and then Hough allowed four runs over five innings, facing 24 batters, to pick up the unusual S.

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