Sometimes I wonder how Dee Gordon will survive a full season with his body intact.
— Jon Weisman
Photos taken June 20, 2014. As always, check out Jon SooHoo’s work at the LA Photog Blog.
Sometimes I wonder how Dee Gordon will survive a full season with his body intact.
— Jon Weisman
Photos taken June 20, 2014. As always, check out Jon SooHoo’s work at the LA Photog Blog.
It’s looking like it will go down to the wire in the National League All-Star voting for the starting outfield. Yasiel Puig’s lead has been reduced to 6,654 votes out of nearly 2.5 million, and his margin for a starting spot is only about 338,000, leaving Giancarlo Stanton, among others, to push him aside. Balloting for the All-Star Game ends July 3.
Yah! pic.twitter.com/KoiJHzOUWg
— Dodger Insider (@DodgerInsider) June 19, 2014
"He's done it." – Vin Scully
— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) June 19, 2014
[mlbvideo id=”33848827″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]
By Jon Weisman
You know how when a batter’s on a hot streak, the baseball is as big as a beachball?
That’s how big the MLB scoreboard is for the Dodgers right now. Every time they look up at it lately (well, eight times in the last 10 days), the National League West-leading San Francisco Giants have eephused a big, rainbow-colored loss.
Having been bounced by the Chicago White Sox twice in 18 hours, including 7-6 this afternoon in Illinois, San Francisco has surrendered more than half of its once-proud 9 1/2-game advantage. Los Angeles can come within four games of first place if Clayton Kershaw can hold off the Rockies tonight.
“There’s no doubt you gain a little energy by creeping,” Dodger manager Don Mattingly said. “It’s like you’re chasing somebody in a race, right? And you’re getting closer … it’s never motivating when that guy’s running and you can’t see him anymore. I think the fact that we’re able to kind of get a little bit of view, I think it helps.
“But that’s only short-lived. You’ve still got to take care of business over the long haul.”
To that end, some players are closer to action:
*I might have made this up.
What’s it like to go around the bases in less than 14 seconds? Let Jon SooHoo take you inside the eyes of Dee Gordon.
— Jon Weisman
[mlbvideo id=”33780461″ width=”550″ height=”308″/]
By Jon Weisman
The Dodgervision production team gave us Dee Gordon’s time around the bases on this third-inning jaunt: 13.9 seconds, or faster than any Major Leaguer has been clocked this decade by Tater Trot Tracker.
That alone would have made it a happy night for Gordon, but he added three singles and two runs tonight against Colorado for the Dodgers. It was the third time in his career Gordon has had at least four hits, along with one game in 2011 and his five-hit game earlier this year. And he had that all done by the sixth inning.
Gordon, who entered play tonight with a season-low .321 on-base percentage, quickly bumped that up to .333 after walking in his fifth at-bat of the evening.
By Jon Weisman
A.J. Ellis dancing the can-can in a gray shirt on a catcher’s mask sidelined the Dodger catcher for a little more than two weeks, but now that he’s back, he is marching on to vintage A.J. Ellis form.
Going 2 for 2 with a walk in his first three at-bats of Monday’s Dodgers-Rockies game before grounding out, Ellis has now reached base in 20 of his past 38 plate appearances — with two doubles, six singles and 12 walks. In that stretch, he has struck out three times.
Ellis pushed his batting average above .200 for the first time since March 30, but more importantly, his on-base percentage was up to .408. Hitting with more power is the next piece of the puzzle.
By Jon Weisman
Don Normark, whose photographs helped chronicle the pre-Dodger Stadium history of Chavez Ravine, died June 5 at age 86.
Among other things, Normark’s images served as the basis for his book, Chavez Ravine: 1949 and were key to the PBS Independent Lens documentary, “Chavez Ravine: A Los Angeles Story.”
The doc itself depicts how Chavez Ravine was taken control of by the city of Los Angeles, years before the Dodgers moved from Brooklyn.
From his Times obituary by Elaine Woo:
A class assignment to find a postcard view of L.A. led him to scout the terrain above downtown. At the top of a hill, he looked down and discovered “a village I never knew was there.”
He became a familiar presence among the 1,000 families who lived in the three neighborhoods of Chavez Ravine — La Loma, Bishop and Palo Verde. Luckily for Normark, much of life there took place outside, “in public, where the stranger’s camera could see.” The residents’ acceptance of him was, he wrote in his book, “like a gift to me,” yielding evocative images of a working man with a lunchbox heading home on a winding dirt path or a grinning boy covered with broken eggshells from Easter cascarones.
Another remembrance of Normark comes from J. Michael Walker at L.A. Observed’s Native Intelligence.
[mlbvideo id=”33676413″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]
[mlbvideo id=”33593415″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]
Clayton Kershaw on A.J. Ellis: “Who could have thought his vertical jump was high enough to hurt his ankle on that catcher’s mask?”
— Jon Weisman
Yasiel Puig has widened his lead among outfielders in the latest National League All-Star balloting update.
Puig is now more than 200,000 votes ahead of second-palce Giancarlo Stanton and nearly 300,000 ahead of the next two outfielders, Carlos Gomez and Andrew McCutchen. Only Colorado shortstop Troy Tulowtizki has more NL votes than Puig.
The 23-year-old right fielder was out of the money when the initial tallies came in, but then surged to first place by about 50,000 votes last week.
Fans looking to see Puig start the game shouldn’t become complacent, however, as the voting can shift dramatically week to week.
Meanwhile, Adrian Gonzalez remains in first place among first basemen despite a 1-for-26 start to June, but Paul Goldschmidt is coming on. The Arizona slugger, who a week ago was in fourth place and more than 150,000 votes behind Gonzalez, has eliminated about a third of that deficit.
Dee Gordon, Juan Uribe and Hanley Ramirez all rank the same as last week. Gordon has increased his margin over Brandon Phillips of Cincinnati, but the Pirates’ Neil Walker reduced his gap from 165,000 votes to 121,000.
Two weeks ago, David Wright and Uribe were nearly even in third and fourth place among third basemen. But while Uribe has been sidelined with a hamstring injury, Wright has zoomed to the lead.
By Jon Weisman
Jamie Romak gets a surprising start at first base today at Cincinnati, as the Dodgers rest slumping Adrian Gonzalez, while keeping Scott Van Slyke in center field ahead of Andre Ethier.
Gonzalez has been such a mainstay at first base since coming over from Boston, and Van Slyke such a logical understudy, that you just don’t expect to see someone like Romak there. It got me wondering about other rare cameos at first base for the Dodgers — in particular, when Steve Garvey was around.
Garvey played nearly every game at first base for the Dodgers from 1974-82, but not every inning. Here’s who backed him up.
Innings by Dodger first basemen, 1974-82
Steve Garvey: 12,346 1/3 out of 12,724 1/3 (97.0 percent)
Mike Marshall: 90
Pedro Guerrero: 66
Bill Buckner: 49
Rick Monday: 44
Ed Goodson: 35
Ken McMullen: 19
Boog Powell: 15
Jay Johnstone: 13
Reggie Smith: 13
Gail Hopkins: 12
Greg Brock: 8 2/3
Vic Davalillo: 5 1/3
Gary Thomasson: 3
Tom Paciorek: 2
Joe Simpson: 2
Derrel Thomas: 1
* * *
Some trivia from Sunday’s game:
By Josh Tucker
By now, you know Yasiel Puig is a big kid – he loves toys, teddy bears, and minions. Puig really likes minions.
Anyway, the Dodgers landed in Colorado last night, and the first thing on Puig’s itinerary was to find and play with snow. So this morning, he took an adventure to the mountains — and without further ado, here is video of Puig building a snow castle:
It turns out, Yasiel Puig was building a giant “L.A.” because he loves you. Watch:
Page 11 of 63
What happens when three old friends in crisis fall into an unexpected love triangle? In The Catch, Maya, Henry and Daniel embark upon an emotional journey that forces them to confront unresolved pain, present-day traumas and powerful desires, leading them to question the very meaning of love and fulfillment. The Catch tells a tale of ordinary people seeking the extraordinary – or, if that’s asking too much, some damn peace of mind.
Brothers in Arms excerpt: Fernando Valenzuela
October 22, 2024
Catch ‘The Catch,’ the new novel by Jon Weisman!
November 1, 2023
A new beginning with the Dodgers
August 31, 2023
Fernando Valenzuela: Ranking the games that defined the legend
August 7, 2023
Interview: Ken Gurnick
on Ron Cey and writing
about the Dodgers
June 25, 2023
Thank You For Not ...
1) using profanity or any euphemisms for profanity
2) personally attacking other commenters
3) baiting other commenters
4) arguing for the sake of arguing
5) discussing politics
6) using hyperbole when something less will suffice
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9) typing "no-hitter" or "perfect game" to describe either in progress
10) being annoyed by the existence of this list
11) commenting under the obvious influence
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1991-2013
Dodgers at home: 1,028-812 (.558695)
When Jon attended: 338-267 (.558677)*
When Jon didn’t: 695-554 (.556)
* includes road games attended
2013
Dodgers at home: 51-35 (.593)
When Jon attended: 5-2 (.714)
When Jon didn’t: 46-33 (.582)
Note: I got so busy working for the Dodgers that in 2014, I stopped keeping track, much to my regret.
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