Dagger to the Heart

At the request of one of our readers, I shall endeavor to bring back some not so good, and some good moments in Dodger history, the close, but not close enough games, and the ones where we snatched victory from defeat. And we will go back a few years to do so, and bring back some good, and not-so-good memories.

The Dodgers won pennants in 1916 and 1920. They played Babe Ruth’s Red Sox in 16, and the Cleveland Indians in 20. They lost both series but were never really close to clinching in any of the games. Memorable moments were the beginning of Ruth’s world series record scoreless inning streak, and an unassisted triple play pulled off by Indians’ second baseman, Bill Wambsganss. That happened in Cleveland’s 8-1 win in game 5. They won the series 5-2. For the next 21 years, Brooklyn was mostly a second-division team. They at times had good players, but not very good teams.

In 1941, led by Leo Durocher and their star CF, Pete Reiser, they won the pennant by 2 1/2 games over the Cardinals. The Yankees won the series 4-1, but there was a very pivotal play in game 4. With 2 outs in the 9th, no one on base, Hugh Casey threw a pitch that Tommy Henrich swung at and missed, but the ball got by Mickey Owen the catcher and opened the door for the Yanks who capitalized and scored 4 9th inning runs and won 7-4. Had that not happened the Series would have been tied. Instead, the Yankees were up 3-1 and ended the series the next game.

In 1946, the Dodgers tied the Cardinals for the pennant, and the first-ever playoff was held. They had lost 4-0 to the Braves on the last day of the regular season, had they won that game, they would have won the pennant by 1/2 game. They had a tie, and they ended up playing 157 games including the 2 playoff games. They lost both, and the Cardinals went to the series.

The first dagger to the heart came in game 155 in 1950. Playing Philadelphia’s Whiz Kids, the Dodgers were a game back, playing the Phil’s at Ebbets Field. Robin Roberts against Don Newcombe. The teams battled for 9 innings to a 1-1 tie. In the top of the 10th, the Phil’s got 2 runners on. With 1 out, Dick Sisler, son of Hall of Famer, George Sisler, hit a 3 run shot over the left-field wall to put the Phillies up 4-1. Brooklyn had no answer in the bottom of the 10th, and the Phillies went to their first Series. They would be swept by the Yankees.

1951, Dodgers cruising. On August 11th, the Dodgers were ahead of the second-place Giants by 13 games. What happened after that led to the playoffs against the Giants. New York got red hot. The Dodgers would go 26-22 over their last 48 games. The Giants caught them on September 28th when they lost to the Phillies, then they won the last 2 games of the year, but so did the Giants.

Game 1 of the playoffs was at Ebbets Field and the Dodgers lost behind Ralph Branca 3-1. Of note was a 4th inning 2 run HR he gave up to Giants 3rd baseman, Bobby Thompson. Game 2 at the Polo Grounds was not even close as Brooklyn clubbed the Giants 10-0 behind Labine. Game 3 at the Polo Grounds, Brooklyn scored in the first and the Giants tied it in the bottom of the 7th. In the 8th, the Dodgers scored 3 runs off of Sal Maglie. Newcombe got the Giants out in the 8th. The Dodgers went down without a run in the 9th, and the Giants came to bat.

The Giants quickly got a runner on, Alvin Dark. The Dodgers, were not playing for the double play, and Don Mueller singled to right.. Irvin made an out, then Whitey Lockman doubled off the wall sending Mueller to 3rd and scoring Dark. Mueller when he slid, hurt his ankle, and Clint Hartung ran for him. Dressen went out and pulled Newcombe from the game. He had two pitchers warming up, Carl Erskine and Ralph Branca. Both pitchers were ready, but Erskine had just bounced a curve in the dirt, so Dressen opted for Branca. Willie Mays was the on-deck hitter and had struck out 3 times against Branca in game 1. But Dressen opted for Branca to pitch to Thompson. Branca’s first pitch was a strike. Then he threw a fastball on the inner half that Thompson sent over the short left-field wall winning the pennant for the Giants. It was a dark day in Flatbush.

In 52 and 53 they went to the series losing both times to the Yankees. But the 52 series was not without drama. In Game 7, the Yanks were leading 4-2 in the 7th inning. The Dodgers loaded the bases with one out. Stengel replaced Vic Raschi with lefty Bob Kuzava. Kuzava got Snider out. Two outs Jackie Robinson at the plate. The runners took off and Robinson hit a pop up to the right of the mound, Kuzava hesitated, but Billy Martin charged in hard from his position at 2nd base and caught the ball at his shoe tops. Had it dropped, the game would have either been tied or all 3 runners would have scored. Kuzava then shut the Dodgers down in the 8th and 9th and the Yankees won their 4th series in a row. They would do it again in 53 for 5 straight.

The biggest moment in 1955 came in game 7 of the World Series, and it was not a hit, but a fielding gem that saved the day. In the 6th inning, the Yankees had 2 runners on base with one out. Yogi Berra was the hitter. Yogi slashed a ball down the left-field line at Yankee Stadium. It looked like a sure double, but Sandy Amoros, who had replaced Jim Gilliam in left field raced over stuck out his glove, and caught the ball. He then turned and fired the ball to Pee Wee Reese who relayed it to Gil Hodges and Hodges tagged Gil McDougald out before he could get back to first.

3 innings later, Elston Howard grounded a ball to Pee Wee who threw him out and the Dodgers won 2-0 behind Podres. Thus earning their first World title. Hodges drove in both runs with a single and a sac fly. The next season they would win the pennant again. But their time in Brooklyn was winding down. Unable to get a new stadium built in Brooklyn, owner Walter O’Malley moved the team west after the 1957 season. Major league baseball on the west coast began.

1958 was a down season. They would finish 7th. The team was getting old. Jackie had retired, Campy was paralyzed in a car accident in January. Snider, Hodges, Gilliam, Reese, Erskine were all still there. Newcombe was not the same guy, and he would be traded to the Reds. There was some new blood coming, but they were not much help. And they played in a converted football stadium, so the dimensions were crazy. 251 feet to the left-field screen which was 30 feet high. The right-field fence was 390 away, bad news for Snider. Centerfield was about 410.

If they were going to contend in 1959, they would need an influx of new talent. They got some solid years from their vets, and contributions from a couple of players acquired in trade, most notably, Wally Moon. Maury Wills took over at SS mid-season. Reese had retired, and Zimmer was playing very badly. At the end of the season, they were tied with the 58 pennant winner, the Milwaukee Braves. So for the third time in their history, there would be a playoff. Game 1 was in Milwaukee and they won 3-2 with Larry Sherry getting the win. Game 2 was at the coliseum.

The Braves were leading 5-2 going into the 9th. But the Dodgers got off of the mat and tied the game with 3 in the 9th. Stan Williams came in and pitched the 10th, 11th, and 12th innings allowing only 3 walks. In the bottom of the 12, Bob Rush, the Braves pitcher got 2 quick outs. But then he walked Hodges and Pignatano singled. Carl Furillo came to the plate. He had entered the game earlier and was playing right field. Furillo hit a grounder up the middle that was fielded by Braves SS, Felix Mantilla. Mantilla hurried his throw to first, but it sailed past Adcock and Hodges scored from second sending the Dodgers to their first series in LA. Furillo was credited with a single and an RBI.

We have discussed the events of 1962 numerous times, so I will not rehash them again. Needless to say, another heartbreaking playoff loss. 63 and 65 Championship years, 66 a pennant winner, but no drama at all in the Series as they get swept.

A few down years followed. Koufax and Big D retired, all of the former Brooklyn players were gone. New GM after Bavasi left for San Diego. New kids in the system. And the draft in 68 would yield a ton of future stars. From 67-69 the team finished in the second division. In 1970, they finished 2nd, 14.5 games out. In 1971, they finished 1 game back of the Giants. They won 5 of their last 6 but only picked up 1 of the 2 games they needed to tie the Giants.

They finished second again in 72 and 73 before cracking through and winning the Division and the Pennant in 1974. They beat the Pirates 3 games to 1 in the playoffs, and of course, lost the series to the A’s 4 games to 1. 1975 and 76 belonged to the Big Red Machine and the closest they got was a 10 game deficit in 1976.

Alston retired, Lasorda took over, and for the next 2 years, the NL West was their domain. They won 193 games and lost 131 in those 2 seasons. Beating the Reds by 10 games in 77 and 2.5 in 78. In 1979, they finished 3rd, 11.5 games back.

In 1980, Houston led for most of the year. Houston came into LA with a 3 game lead and 3 to play. On the 3rd of October, they went into extra innings and Joe Ferguson hit a walk-off HR with no outs off of Ken Forsch. Valenzuela, a rookie, got the win. The next day, Jerry Ruess pitched a complete game 7 hitter winning 2-1. That set the stage for game 3. The Dodgers had to rally from 3 runs down, and took the lead on Ron Cey’s 2 run blast off of Frank LaCorte in the bottom of the 8th. Steve Howe got the win, but Don Sutton got a save pitching 1/3rd of an inning and the teams were tied. A one-game playoff on Monday, the 6th of October would settle the issue.

The Astros scored 2 before the seats were warm. Dave Goltz, the starter gave up 4, and Rick Sutcliffe 3 more, and the game was basically over by the 5th inning. LA managed one run off of 20 game-winner, Joe Niekro, yeah, Phil’s kid brother.

In strike-shortened 81, the Dodgers had a win against Montreal in the NLCS that was won on a late HR by Rick Monday. They lost the first two games of the 81 series in New York, but won the next 3 in LA, all by one run. Valenzuela won 5-4 with a complete game, then 8-7 with Howe getting the win in relief. Jay Johnstone hit a clutch 2 run HR off of George Frazier to tie the game, they got 2 more off Frazier in the 7th. Jackson hit a solo shot off of Howe in the 8th, but that was it. In Game 5, Jerry Ruess pitched a complete game 5 hitter to beat Louisiana Lightning, Ron Guidry. Both the Dodgers runs were on solo shots, first Guererro, then Steve Yeager’s solo shot was the game-winner. Back in New York, they blasted the Yanks 9-2 for the series win and their 4th title in Los Angeles.

In 1982, they were neck and neck with the Braves, who were still in the West at that time. 1 game back in game 162. They had beaten the Braves and then won 2 against the Giants to get to that point. Since the game was on the West coast, they knew early in the game that the Braves had lost. A win would force a playoff. Bill Laskey started for the Giants, and Fernando went for LA. Fernando allowed 2 runs on 2 hits, striking out 9 but walking 5. Laskey allowed 2 runs on 6 hits, striking out 2 with no walks. The big blow against him was Cey’s 24th HR, a 2 run shot in the 2nd inning.

In the bottom of the 7th inning, Tom Neidenfuer came in for LA. He got one out but allowed 2 hits. Terry Forster came out of the pen, he got his first hitter, then former Reds star, Joe Morgan came to the plate. 2 outs, Forster hung one and Morgan hit it over the RF fence to put the Giants up 5-2. The Dodgers scored 1 more in the 8th, but the Giants had knocked them out of the race.

In 1983 and 1985 they would win the division again, only to lose in the NLCS. First to the Phillies in 83, 3-1. And then a really heartbreaking loss to St Louis in 1985. They won the first two games fairly easily and then lost the next 3 in St. Louis. Game 5 on a walk-off by Ozzie Smith of all people. Then in game 6 in LA, Tommy Lasorda, sticking with Neidenfuer, who had surrendered the Smith blast, chose to pitch to former Giant, and now Cardinal slugger, Jack Clark. The Dodgers were up 5-4. There was an open base, and Andy Van Slyke was on deck. He was also 0-4 in the game at the time. Needless to say, Clark ripped one deep into the left-field seats and the Cardinals won 7-5. Even years later Lasorda would say he would have still pitched to Clark. Me, I would have walked him. He was the one guy you did not want to beat you. It was Clark’s only HR of the series, and he was hitting .381 for the series at the time. Van Slyke was hitting .091.

In 1988, they signed Kirk Gibson as a free agent, and he would go on to have an MVP season. They got great pitching from Orel Hershiser, who won the Cy Young with a 23-8 record. Facing the Mets in the playoffs, it seemed a mismatch. The Mets owned the Dodgers during the season going 10-1 against them. They had Ron Darling, David Cone, Sid Fernandez, and Doc Gooden in their rotation.

They split the first two games in LA. And the Mets won game 3, scoring 5 runs in the 8th to erase a 4-3 lead. Game 4 was started by Doc Gooden. The Dodgers countered with mid-season pick-up, John Tudor. Tudor allowed 4 runs in 5 innings giving up 2 HRs. John Shelby had driven in 2 Dodger runs in the first. Leading 4-2 going into the 9th, Gooden went back out to the mound. Shelby singled, bringing up Mike Scioscia. Scioscia connected for a game-tying HR to deep RF and after getting the next hitter, Gooden was out of the game.

Randy Myers pitched 2.1 innings of scoreless ball and was replaced in the 11th by Roger McDowell. Alejandro Pena pitched the 9th, 10th, and 11th innings not allowing a run. After getting the first two outs, McDowell served up a pitch that Gibson blasted into the Right center field seats and LA led 5-4. Tim Leary came in to pitch the 12th. He got one out, but gave up 2 hits. With the Mets threatening, Orosco came in and got an out. Lasorda then went to his ace, and Orel Hershiser got the last out for a save.

They won game 5, 7-4 behind Belcher. Lost game 6, 5-1 and won game 7, 6-0 behind Hershiser to advance to the Series. We all remember what happened in game 1. Gibson’s walk-off shot against Eckersley. It would be their last World Series for many years.

In 1991, they would finish 1 game back of the Braves. They lost 3 of their last 5 games to finish 1 back after leading by 1 on the 1st of October. After two bad seasons, they were leading the NL West when the strike came in 1994. At that time they were in the midst of their run of 5 straight Rookies of the Year. In another truncated season after the strike was settled, they finished 1st but were knocked out in the NLDS 3-0. In 1996, Lasorda was replaced as Manager mid-season after a heart attack and Bill Russell took over. They lost the NLDS again to the Reds in 3 games.

The managerial carousel started in 1998. Russell was let go and Hoffman took over in the interim. FOX now owned the team and traded Piazza. Davey Johnson took over as the skipper in 99 and Kevin Malone became the new GM. But the results were not good. After 2 years of Johnson, Jim Tracy took over in 2001 and Dave Wallace became the GM. They finished 3rd in 01, 3rd in 02, and 2nd in 03, but they were 15.5 games out. No drama there. Finally, in 2004 they returned to the playoffs winning the West by 2 games. There was some drama though. They were trailing the Giants, 3-0 in the next to last game of the season. In the bottom of the 9th, they scored 7 runs to pull 3 games ahead and clinch the division. Steve Finley, a mid-season pickup hit a walk-off Grand Slam to win it. Again they were punched out in the NLDS 3-1 by the Cardinals. They also had a new owner, one LA fans would come to despise, Frank McCourt.

In 2006 they made the playoffs via the wild card. Grady Little was the new manager, and Ned Colletti had become the GM. Some new blood was filtering into the system and players who would have an impact were being signed and traded for. They got beat again, this time by the Mets, 3-0.

2007 they could not repeat as division champs and after the season, Joe Torre became the manager. In 2008 they won the division, mainly because of a mid-season trade that brought slugger Manny Ramirez to LA. Mannywood became a “THING” and his explosive bat helped LA win. They beat the Cubs in the NLDS and then faced the Phillies in the NLCS. Down 2 games to 1, they were ahead in game 4 in LA, 5-3 going into the 8th. The Phillies scored 4 to take the lead, the last 2 on a 2 run shot by PH Matt Stairs off of Broxton. It was his only at-bat in the series. The next day they lost 5-1 and the series was over.

In 09 they won the division again, and lost to the Phils in the NLCS 4-1 again. 10, 11, and 12 they finished 4th, 3rd, and 2nd. Mattingly had become the manager in 2011. In 2013, they started the run they have been on for the last 8 years, There have been some bumps in the road, a couple of daggers to the heart. Losing Ramirez in the playoffs after being hit by Joe Kelly in 13, Matt Adams 3 run shot off of Kershaw in game 4 of the NLDS when he was cruising through 6 against the Cardinals. Murphy’s 6th inning solo shot in game 5 off Greinke giving the Mets the win.

But the last couple have been feel-good shots, Culberson’s walk-off in Scully’s last broadcast at Dodger Stadium. Walk offs on three straight days in 2019 against the Rockies by 3 rookies, Beaty, Verdugo, and Smith. Smith’s first career HR, a walk-off against the Phillies. Bellinger’s go-ahead and winning shot against the Braves in the NLCS, Kike’s game-tying shot the same game. And finally, Betts solo blast in game 6 of the World Series to put LA up 3-1 and help get them their ring after 30 plus years of waiting.

There you have it, some good and not-so-good endings. Over the years I have been able to see many. And I have seen all 7 of their championships. So that puts me way ahead of long-suffering Cubs fans.

This article has 129 Comments

  1. After all the pain Dodger fans have been through, we have been in heaven for the past nine years and we still bitch about everything. We have so much to be thankful for. Let’s go… DODGERS!

  2. Bear thank you for doing the research and this article is an amazing piece of history. I learned so much that I didn’t know in the era’s that I wasn’t able to view for myself, especially the early years 1910’s – 1960’s. I can’t imaging how long this took so I am very appreciative that you did all the leg work. Thank you my friend!!

      1. Yes, I shared in many of the painful moments and it makes me more appreciative of the less painful moments. We’ve had a rich history of good times and bad times and I have enjoyed them all. I read this article 3 times and the ones that I lived took me back to that time in my life. It was a walk down memory lane for sure and I look forward to more memories good or bad. Thank you again.

        1. No problem my friend. I do remember throwing the remote at the TV in the drivers lounge at the trucking company I worked for when Stairs took Broxton deep. I was just totally POED. it was a very painful moment.

  3. At OKC last night, TutTut was 3-4 last night with his 10th HR.

    He has his BA up to .255 and OPS to .863.

    1. Love Arte Johnson, He had a good game, but Tropeano probably wanted to crawl under a rock. 6 runs, 2 earned on 2 hits. Ouch.

      1. I doubt that. Quack can be nasty. But he did not show that the other day. He will probably not be in LA long.

  4. I am not sure, but I believe in 1950, Duke snider was thrown out at the plate trying to score from second base on a single. He was thrown out by Richie Asburn, who was NOT known for having a good arm. That run would have won the pennant

    1. 1950, and it was Cal Abrams that was thrown out at the plate. The run would have not won the pennant, only tied for it. Same game that Sisler hit his HR in.

  5. There was another year I am not reading here. In the next to last weekend they beat SD to get a big lead. up with four 4 to play. Lost to Giants , then 3 straight to SD on last weekend. All close pitchers duels. So end up tied. Lost 1 game playoff to SD. So ended up wild card and lost 3 straight to Atlanta in first round.

    1. 1996 2 up with 4 to play, lost 1 to the Giants and 3 straight in San Diego so the Padres won the division. There was no playoff with SD, never has been. Dodgers have had playoff games with St Louis, the Giants, twice, the Braves, Houston and the Rockies. Over the last 4 games, they lost 2 late. With a 1 game lead, they lost the next to last game when the Pads overcame a 2-0 deficit late and won 4-2. Finley hit a 6th inning solo shot off of Nomo to tie it. Then they scored 2 off of Driefort for the win. The next day, they battled for 10 innings with no score. In the top of the 11th, Chris Gwynn, the former Dodger hit a 2 run double off of Chan Ho Park. That was the ball game. Not included simply because they were the wild card and the Braves swept them with little drama. That they made it to the playoffs after the el foldo the last 4 games made the whole thing anticlimactic. They had split 4 with the Padres the previous week and were only up 1/2 game when they left SD. They won the first two against the Giants and were up 2.5 games. Game 3 was no pitchers duel or close. Giants won 6-1 and LA headed home up 2 with 3 to play. It takes a lot of research just to find some of this stuff, so yeah, I missed a couple. Sue me.

      1. Thanks Bear. I know how much effort you put into this work and I appreciate it.

        My memories start in ‘59. I had many favorite players on that team, I was a pitcher/catcher in Little League so I liked Roseboro and Koufax, though Drysdale was the clear leader of the pitching staff. My grandfather took me to several games, he knew baseball and loved talking about it. He taught me what to watch for, and said Snider was the best hitter, Charlie Neal and Jim Gilliam were the two best natural baseball players on that team. They did all the little things, made the routine plays look easy and knew how to put together good at bats. At first I didn’t know what that meant. But with patience grandpa explained what to look for. In ‘59 after watching a 23 year old Koufax strike out 9 in 6 innings he quietly said “this kid is about to figure it out and he’s going to be great”. I was 11. Figure what out? “How good he is”.

        I learned baseball watching the Dodgers and listening to my grandpa. Great memories for me.

        1. Thanks Badger, much appreciated. How about this memory from 1959, and I listened to this on my transistor radio with Vin and Jerry making the call. On August 31, Koufax faced the Giants at the Coliseum, Sandy struck out 18 breaking Dizzy Dean’s NL record, and tying Bob Feller. Dodgers fell behind 2-1 on a HR by Willie McCovey, who was a rookie. They tied the game, and finally, in the 9th inning, Koufax and Gilliam singled. Wally Moon came up and hit a 1-1 pitch from Al Worthington over the screen for another moon shot and LA won 5-2. He would do it again against the Cubs in 1962. I went to several games in 1959 with the home I was living at. We usually sat down the RF line in the knothole section. Players looked like ants most of the time. Snider was my favorite, but I developed a real affection for Moon and Maury Wills. Met Gilliam when they came out to the players parking lot. He talked to us for about 5 minutes before leaving. Little trivia, What number was Roseboro wearing in 1959?

          1. He might have been wearing 44 then, but I wore #8 when I caught in Little League and I’m sure it was because of him.

            Wally Moon was a very good hitter for quite a while. He faded after 30 but ended his career with a .289 average and an OPS over .800, which wasn’t a thing back then but a career OBP of .371 sure was. He could pepper that screen as he could go the other way easily but he also took advantage of the cavernous center and right center in the Coliseum, leading the league in triples in ‘59.

    2. In 1962, they were up 4 games with 8 to play. They lost 6 of the 8 to tie SF for the lead. They had a one game lead going into the last game against St Louis with Podres pitching and lost, 1-0. They had lost 2-0 the day before behind Drysdale. Koufax got lit up the first playoff game, 8-0, they then won game two 8-7 with Williams getting the win. Then the 9th inning rally that beat them in game three 6-4 with Williams getting the loss. That and 1951 were the two times they blew 4 game leads with 10 or fewer games left. In 1946 they and the Cardinals were pretty much neck and neck down the stretch.

  6. Wow Bear, just when I think you can’t possibly do any better….you do! I especially loved the “ancient” history recap of our beloved boys even more than the modern day recap. I didn’t recognize many of the names which means I learned quite a bit. I did remember this guy named Erskine though. Lol

    But what really got my heart to skip a beat is when you mentioned “Sal Maglie’s” name. He was friends of my Italian family in Western New York and I even remember visiting him once. He gave me an autographed baseball on that occasion….and not just his autograph either. What a moment that was for me…probably not even 10.

    Anyhow, these articles of yours are much appreciated. Thanks again.

    TM

    1. Sal “The Barber ” Maglie. Pitched 10 full seasons in the majors for 5 different teams, Giants, Dodgers, Indians, Yankees and Cardinals. Spent most of his career with the Giants, 7 years, parts of 2 seasons with the Dodgers. Parts of 2 with the Yankees and Indians one part of 1 with the Cardinals. 119-62 record with a 3.15 ERA. Struck out 862 in his career. He was 19-11 as a Dodger with a 2.89 ERA. 13 complete games and 4 shut outs. He pitched 2 games in the 56 series against the Yanks going 1-1, both complete game efforts. Before he came to Brooklyn, he was a hated nemesis. He had a 23-13 record against the Dodgers with a 3.39 ERA. He had 19 complete games and 5 shut outs against them. His nickname came from pitching inside giving hitters a close shave, hence, The Barber. One of those not too happy he was a team mate, but happy not to have to hit against him anymore was Jackie Robinson. They had a couple of dust ups when Maglie was a Giant. The Dodgers had picked him up for cash in May of 1956 from the Indians. Sal passed away on the 28th of December, 1992 at the age of 75. He is buried in Niagara Falls, New York.

      1. I’m not sure if you know this, but he was banned from playing in the majors for 5 years! Go figure….here is what Wikipedia said about that….. It would be five years before he returned to the major leagues, as he joined the Mexican League for more money in 1946 and was subsequently banned from Major League Baseball (MLB) for five years by Commissioner Happy Chandler. Not until he was 33 in 1950 did Maglie become a full-time pitcher in the major leagues.

        Kind of harsh, don’t you think? Lol

        1. That was when a Mexican business man raided the major leagues for players. He was banned until 1950. He went 18-6 for NY that season. So the ban was 4 years. Guys name was Jorge Pasqual and his brothers. They wanted the league to compete with MLB. 22 players jumped to the league. Luis Olmo, Mickey Owen, Danny Gardella, and Roland Gladu were exe Dodgers who jumped. 16 of the players returned to the major leagues. The salaries were larger and gifts and other incentives offered. Chandler stepped in after Browns SS Vern Stephens left, he played 2 games and returned so he was not on the list. In 1949, Gardella and others returned and sued MLB on anti trust grounds for reinstatement. Not wanting the reserve clause challenged, which bound a player to his team in perpetuity, they paid Gardella 60,000.00$ and lifted the ban. Phil Rizzuto alluded to the league which he almost signed with for 10,000$ and a Cadillac, when he made his HOF induction speech.

        2. The other time that happened was when the Federal League started up in 1913 as a minor league, and played as a major league in 14 and 15. It left it’s mark on Major League baseball. Wrigley Field was originally Weeghman Park and was built for the Chicago Whales. Several major league players jumped to the league and Hall of Famer Joe Tinker managed the Whales, Mordecai Brown the St Louis team and Bill Bradley the Brooklyn team. The league went belly up after it’s suit against the National League declared that baseball did not fall under the anti trust laws.

  7. Bear, the details that you uncover for your articles are amazing. As a Dodger since 1958 it was fun and agonizing to relive some exciting moments in Dodger history. That 1962 loss to the Giants was my first major baseball disappointment as a kid. The neighborhood kids and moms had gathered at our house for the game. To sit and watch that game slip away was devastating. None of could believe what had happened. Also, I have a vivid memory of Finley’s grand slam HR. I don’t remember the pitcher, but he was a hard throwing LH. He threw what looked like a 100 MPH fastball and Finley timed it perfectly and hit a monster HR. Finley dropped the bat and raised his arms in the air and that was that. Awesome. So, thanks again for all your hard work and diligence. How lucky are we here at LADT?

    1. Thanks Ted, the pitcher was Wayne Franklin. A lefty who had been originally drafted by the Dodgers in the 36th round of the 1996 draft. He was obtained by the Giants in a trade with the Brewers on the 30th of March in 2004. He was originally a starter, but the Giants used him almost exclusively out of the pen. He was 2-1 with a 6.69 ERA. Oddly, he was not the losing pitcher. Chad Hermanson got tagged with the loss. As a Dodger farm hand Franklin got to High A Vero Beach in 1998 where he was 9-3. Unprotected he went to Houston that winter in the rule 5 draft. He was traded to Milwaukee in 2000 when the Astro’s acquired Mark Loretta.

  8. Wow Bear if only you were my history teacher in high school! Let’s do to the Giants this year what they did to us in 51 and chase them down for the pennant! Bellinger hitting fastballs again will go a long way towards getting that done!

    1. Thank you Cassidy. I not only love baseball history, but I love American history also. Not all of it is good, that we all know. But it is a passion for me. I really dislike it when movies get it wrong. Worst movie based on a real event, Pearl Harbor. Nothing but Hollywood fluff. Nothing more than a love story. The scenes of the attack were exciting, but when I am looking at a film where they are using modern Arleigh Burke destroyers to portray the Fletcher and other class destroyers that were really there just ruined it for me. The computer generated battleships were more realistic and they used AT-6 Trainers for the Japanese Zero’s since there are none left that are flyable in the world. Let alone the 6 that were used in the filming. And even though there were two pilots who managed to get airborne and shoot down 7 attacking planes, neither one was then assigned to Doolittle’s Raiders for the Tokyo bombing. No fighter pilot could have been multi engine qualified in the 4 month period between Dec 7th and the raid in April. Tora Tora Tora was much more accurate. I also get a little peeved when they use the wrong shoulder patches or the uniforms are wrong.

  9. Bear, another grand slam. You’re fastly becoming Captain Clutch with all these walk offs. I am not as long in the tooth as many on this site. I picked up the Dodgers as I as turning 7 years old in the 74 World Series. So, as I share this walk down memory lane, I tend to focus on the teams I spent a good time following on TV and Radio.

    I have so many great memories of the team that featured “The Infield” and of the team that transitioned ownership from the family to the corporation. Both had great players, but neither were as great as their competition. The Big Red Machine in the 70’s and the Braves in the 90’s were clearly better and were dynasties worth mentioning.

    This article makes me appreciate this team all that much more. What could have been if it weren’t for all the injuries? What a crazy year it’s been.

    Right now, we literally have an All-Star calibur player at every position like that nasty Reds team. Even they had one position player, in Cesar Geronimo that never was an All-Star. Our only position player not to win one is Will Smith, who will have several by the time his career is complete.

    Like the Braves teams, we have a rotation full of Cy Young winners. Would you take Glavine, Smoltz, Avery and Maddux over Scherzer, Bueller, Urias and Price?

    We truly have the best of both worlds right now. It isn’t hard to imagine this team going on a run that even the overachieving Giants can’t match.

    We run into a test with a surging Phillies team starting today in their yard. Good news for all the old and East Coast fans on this site that might be able to stay up late enough to watch an entire game. Harper and Hoskins are on hot streaks right now and we don’t have our best pitching lined up for this series outside of Scherzer starting game 1. Hopefully Price and TBD, aka Mitch White are up to the task and we don’t bullpen that last game ahead of a Mets team that really needs to start winning.

    JT will begin the series on the bench and Mookie will probably get a game off during the series. Belli, is starting to make a little noise and Muncy hasn’t been the same since his newborn gift arrived. We’re going to need to get a couple of players hot to start our next run. Seags is about due for a breakout and Trea Turner is a spark that has plenty of experience going head to head in this East coast swing. I hope that Pollock can stay hot and that Doc doesn’t feel the need to keep guys relevant.

    Going forward, I would imagine that Big Al will continue to get a start against left handers which will force Doc to make an uncomfortable decision. Rest Muncy or continue to play him at second against lefties. Rest Seager and slide Turner to SS to accommodate Tio and Muncy, or send Trea Turner to CF or to the bench so he can figure out if he would rather play in CF or ride some pine against lefties, who he owns on the season. First world problems indeed.

    With Duffy and Kershaw being held out until September, is Mitch White the plan to cover that 5th spot over the next month? Will Price be allowed to get into the 90’s and 100’s in terms of pitch count? Will Knebel start closing close games, or at least start warming up when Kenley begins his inning?

    It wasn’t long ago that you could get by in the pen with a long man, a lefty specialist, two setup guys and a closer. It seems a little crazy to me that so many pitchers are now required to get through each game. We’ll have a bullpen with Kenley, Kneble, Kelly, Treinen, Graterol and Bickford from the right side to start the series with Quackenbush and lefties Vesia and Bruihl to round out the staff. Right now the staff sits at 12 which is one or two players shy of what they usually have. The bench features “Team Dad” Albert, CT3, Beaty, McKinney and Barnes.

    With roster moves coming for TBD and Knebel, it will be a surprise if McKinny is DFA’s or if Beaty is optioned. Then they’ll still need to figure out how to get White back onto the roster. Will they DFA Quack or option Bruihl and go with just one lefty?

    I’m really looking forward to catching up on some sleep during this East Coast swing.

    1. Supposed to be Max, Price and Urias this series. Although the Dodger site is showing TBD for both teams. White might get a start as they play shuffling pitchers again. Knebel is supposed to be activated today. So, if they are going to use a bullpen game on Thursday, they will have to have the pitcher with the team. Hard to be sure he would get to Philly in time otherwise. Phillies players have 8 total bombs off of Max, LA has one off of Nola. Beaty hit it. If they use a BP game on Thursday, it is because they want to use Urias and Buehler the first two games in NY.

    2. DUDE …… one does not have to be “old” to need to get to bed by 11 on a work night. THAT HURT. 🙂 Now next year ( retiring at the end of this year ) it will be MUCH different.
      cheers!

          1. I retired at 62. Over the road was getting to be a chore. Back was killing me and it took longer to recover when I came back from a 3 week run.

    3. The thing I remember about the 74 series was Lasorda calling Ferguson’s game winning shot in game 2 it put them up 3-0 and the A;s scored 2 in the 9th. . Also Bill Buckner getting thrown out at 3rd trying to stretch a double into a triple, and finally, Mike Marshall, not throwing a warm up while there was a delay, Buckner was complaining about A’s fans throwing stuff on the field. Rudi then hit Marshall’s first pitch over the fence for a 3-2 lead. Buckner was thrown out in the 8th. 4 of the 5 games were decided by scores of 3-2. A’s 5-2 win in game 4 the only one that wasn’t,

  10. Just read Molly Knight’s piece. I know a couple in here don’t read her stuff, or much of any stuff really, it’s all msm and fake news, but I think she’s spot on today. Check it out if you find the time.

    60’6” is fine. Just lower the mound to 6”, take random ass strike zones out of play and watch what happens.

    1. So conservatives don’t read and are misinformed? Or just the one’s on this blog? Now that’s not condescending!

      1. Why do you think I was talking about conservatives? I never mentioned conservatives. Little bit touchy?

        I have heard a couple guys complaining about her, and the Athletic. I believe the term msm might have been mentioned by someone here. Maybe I’m wrong about that?

        1. Do not read the Athletic. Not in a position to pay for something like that. I read ESPN’s guys a lot.

          1. You have to pay for just about everything now. Even Apple news. I used to read The New Yorker, Rolling Stone, the LA Times, the New York Times and the Atlantic. Now it’s just the Atlantic, Truthout and the Athletic. Cant afford everything. My brother said National Geographic is worth the expense. I might try that. There are some terrific journalists out there. I still believe in the idea of a free press, though nearly everything is corporately owned now.

          2. I have tried to read some LA Times stuff on Yahoo and they always want you to subscribe, they blank out part of the story so you cannot read it.

      2. I think we all have to admit that many on this site have said they won’t read the Athletic or anything Molly writes and they have given their reasons which I won’t try to repeat here.

        1. Not to nit-pick here but……Molly Knight repeated this in her article “Bellinger dislocated his shoulder celebrating his National League pennant winning home run last October.” That’s true but it implies that this is how he originally injured the shoulder. What is never mentioned in similar articles is that this was a RE-injury. If I remember correctly, he had popped that shoulder a few times before and his move to the outfield was designed to keep him from diving for balls in the infield and risking popping the shoulder out.
          Just sayin

          1. True, but her article paints an otherwise accurate picture of the Dodger offence.

            If Turner misses a week or more it will make Bellinger and Taylor regulars. I have never been impressed with Taylor or Muncy at third but one of them is probably going to play there.

            If Taylor continues to be the guy that moves around defensively then he might be the logical guy at third. Now is not a good time to put Seager at third. He needs to hit and that would be a distraction.

            Trey, Cody, Lux, Bellinger bring speed to the team that only has Justin as a base clogger. That speed should make for a fun team to watch.

    2. All this bullspit “experimentation” by mlb & really all they have to do is go to a RELIABLE auto ump so batters learn exactly where their strike zone is & get rid of the hard shift & pretty sure A LOT would “fix” itself.
      cheers

      1. Good suggestions. The shift might be ok if you just don’t allow infielders in the outfield. This isn’t slow pitch. There’s no rover in hardball.

        1. Yep, don’t care about a soft shift. Let infielders be anywhere in the infield they want, just not on any part of the grass b4 the ball leaves the pitcher’s hand.
          cheers

      2. Who do you think will benefit more from electronic pitch calling–hitters or pitchers?

        I have always liked the concept of a pitch having to get inside strings that outline the strike zone. Just nicking the outside of the imaginary string would be a ball in my world and the electronic strike zone could be tuned to such a scenario.

        1. What’s “on the black” to you Bum?

          Pitches that nip the outer boundary of the rectangle that are called strikes, make the plate 21 or 22 inches wide. I have no problem with that and to me, that’s “on the black”.

          How they would “tune the strike zone” is one of the unanswered questions about the ABS System. How was it set in Fall Ball or where it’s been tested?

        2. Then you have to make the electronic zone a ball width outside the actual zone. If any part of the ball crosses the defined zone, it is a strike. As to the other ???, IMO it helps the batter more. Then they know EXACTLY what their strike zone is. To have a properly laid out strike zone, you need to have all players scanned as the high and low is determined by the knees & the waist or something like that. So the vertical of the zone changes with each player, the horz is always that same. Pitchers I think already know the zone for the most part, right now they have to learn where that particular ump’s zone is that day.

          1. I agree. On the black to an ump means the middle of the ball is over the black and is a strike because part of the ball is over the plate.

            2 things to keep in mind 1. The strike zone is directly over the plate. Typically the front knee is the bottom of the zone. Where the catcher receives it has nothing to do with whether it’s a strike. And 2. something even Orel doesn’t know – on a check swing it’s a strike if the bat passes through the strike zone, which is – over the plate. What the base umps are looking for is if the bat goes PAST the front of the plate. If it stops over the plate, it’s not a strike. I learned that in umpire training. I’ve never heard any announcer properly explain that.

          2. Bottom is easier than the top as stance will dictate where the top is. Bellinger’s stance raises his strike zone.

          3. Belli will definitely have a tall strike zone. The other thing I like with a “pre-determined” strike zone for each player is that guys that at 2 strikes stretch down to minimize their zone will gain nothing. Their zone will be their zone, period.
            cheers

  11. To Mark and all the the writing contributors,I just want to say a huge thank you for this blog.It helps my mind and I enjoy all the readers reply and their perspective and all the personalities.You know we aren’t gonna agree on everything,sorta like a family ,Dodger family.I just wanted to thank you the most Mark for keeping the best blog going.

  12. Oh Bear, you’ve done it again. What a great historical article on the Dodgers. I know how much you enjoy doing them, but it still takes so much time and research. I just want you to Know that it is really appreciated.

    As you know, I get lost in the 50’s often, whether it is baseball, music or just general memories. Your 1951 description made me start thinking. Every baseball fan has heard about “the shot heard ’round the world.” But what gets me more than that is the fact that the Giants were 13 games behind the Dodgers on April 11th and caught them 2 days before the regular season ended. You stated that the Dodgers finished their last 48 games with a 26-22 record. I will assume, for this post, that the Giants also had 48 games remaining. That means that means they had a 39-9 record during those games. Wow!

    Today is Aug. 10th and the Dodgers are only 4 games back with 50 games remaining. There should be no doubt in any Dodgers fan’s mind that they are certainly capable of and probably will win their division.

    1. In August and September, the Giants went 40-14. They were just simply unconscious. They had a winning record against every team but the Dodgers finishing 11-14. Their only losing month was April when they went 3-12, part of the reason Brooklyn built up such a huge lead. Dodgers built their lead on a 21-7 July, and 19-13 August. They were 1 game over .500 in September, thus the collapse. They had winning records against every team except the Pirates. They were 10-12 against the 7th place Pirates.

  13. My prediction on tonight’s lineup:

    1. Turner 2B
    2. Muncy 1B
    3. Betts RF
    4. Seager SS
    5. Smith C
    6. Bellinger CF
    7. Taylor 3B
    8. Pollock LF

  14. I am looking for us to go on a winning streak. Max with number 3 tonight.
    Go Dodgers!

  15. Bear: What an incredible walk down memory lane. I became a Dodgers fan in 1949 as a 5 year old. We lived in central Jersey and my Grandparents lived in Brooklyn. Every summer my Grandfather would take a week off and I would visit for the week and he and I would go to Ebbets Field every day.

    Yes there have been heartbreaks (Bobby Thomson is still the worst for me) but the great moments far outweigh the heartbreaks. My 3 most favorite moments are: 1. Finally winning it all for the 1st time in 1955, 2. Kirk Gibson in 1988, and 3. Sandy Koufax pitching a shutout to win game 7 of the 1965 series on 2 days rest throwing basically only fast balls since his arthritic elbow prevented him from throwing the curve.

    Think about how fortunate we are to be Dodgers fans. Except for a very few years, we have always had a great team to root for. We couldn’t have had heartbreaks if that wasn’t the case. I don’t know what the rest of this year holds and I too get extremely frustrated when bad things happen. However, I would recommend we all sit back, enjoy the ride, and continue to be thankful for being a Dodgers fan.

  16. Thank you Jay. I remember watching them on TV when they were in Brooklyn, and the excitement when they moved to LA. 58 was a dim memory, but 1959 was special. Maury Wills and Moon brought new life, Sherry was lights out from the pen, and the Duke of Flatbush hit a HR in the world series. In 2020 when Turner hit his 12th post season HR to set a Dodger record for post season HR’s I could not but think of Snider and how he was my favorite player. Meeting him and getting a signed 8X10 photo at a card show was a highlight of my life.

  17. There is a report that says the Dodgers have to call Hamels up by Sept 2 or release him. They have one open spot on the roster, and it will probably go to Knebel later today. Game is at 5:10 my time,

    1. That’s over 3 weeks out. If he isn’t ready by then they should release him. I was hoping he’d give Urias a break this month. As in next week maybe.

    1. Today’s continue the winning streak lineup:
      T Turner
      Muncy
      Betts
      Seager
      Smith
      Pollock
      Taylor 3B
      Bellinger
      Scherzer

  18. Well MT, you got the players right, order wrong. B+

    Kelly going on the IL takes a little luster out of adding Knebel. It sure is a challenge keeping the players on this team out of the infirmary ward.

  19. Surprise! Mookie scratched and replaced by McKinney. Luckily the Phillies aren’t playing well right now.

    Doc says he can’t comment on why Kelly is on the IL. That means it’s Covid related.

    We’ll be lucky to see Mookie in the lineup for 1/3 of our remaining games.

    1. Uh, the Phillies are riding a 8 game winning streak and just swept the Mets. We miss their best pitcher though Wheeler pitched a gem on Sunday. They are giving Mookie’s hip another day off. Covid related? That is an assumption. No evidence of that what so ever, and the Dodgers have been one of the few teams unaffected by Covid outbreaks so far.

      1. JOSEPH KELLY went on the IL today & the cause is listed as COVID, hence the 10 day IL. So THAT might start being an issue IF he tested positive vs. the idiotic “contact tracing” where you are IL’d because you were AROUND peeps that tested positive.
        I guess SOMEDAY we will hear the whole story though.
        cheers
        pb+

        1. I have looked everywhere including MLBTR, and no where does it give a reason he was placed on the IL. Now maybe they will later, but as of right now there is not one single outlet saying it is Covid related. It says he was placed on the IL, not the Covid protocols IL. Two different animals.

          1. It was listed earlier today on Yahoo. I clicked on the game & they showed that b4 the lineups or anything like that. Now with the lineups posted that part is no longer there. Okay, so if you now go to Yahoo on the MLB pages and search players it shows him as out for Covid protocol.
            cheers

          2. Okay,. I saw that. But it still has not been reported by MLB. All it means is that he had a positive test. Turner had the same thing and never got sick. It is all precautionary stuff.

      2. I believe STB was being facetiously ironical. He knows the Phils are playing well.

        We will see more Covid exits the rest of the way. It’s inevitable.

      3. I apologize Bear, I forgot to raise the Sarcasm Flag, as Badger surmised.
        Yes, the Phils are red hot which makes not having Mookie or JT that much worse.

          1. Are you saying that just because Max has a good record against the Phils it doesn’t matter that Mookie and JT aren’t in the lineup?

          2. I am saying that Mookie and Turner do not have good numbers against Nola. As a matter of fact, the Dodgers have never beaten the guy, and considering the first 4 innings tonight before the rain, they won’t tonight either. Only Dodger who has homered off of Nola isn’t even playing, Matt Beaty.

  20. DODGERS ACTIVATE COREY KNEBEL

    LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles Dodgers activated right-handed pitcher Corey Knebel and placed right-handed pitcher Joe Kelly on the injured list.

    Knebel, 30, has been out of action since being placed on the injured list on April 24 with a right lat strain. He made six rehab appearances for Triple-A Oklahoma City, going 0-0 with a 1.59 ERA (1 ER/5.2 IP) and 11 strikeouts. Prior to the injury, he appeared eight games with the Dodgers, going 1-0 with a 4.50 ERA (3 ER/6.0 IP) and nine strikeouts. He is in seventh season in the Major Leagues and he is 7-11 record with 59 saves and a 3.34 ERA (90 ER/242.1 IP) and 345 strikeouts in 247 games. He was acquired from the Brewers in exchange for minor league left-handed pitcher Leo Crawford on December 2, 2020.

    Kelly, 33, is 2-0 with a 3.34 ERA (11 ER/29.2 IP) and 35 strikeouts this season. In two seasons with the Dodgers, he is a combined 7-4 with a 3.86 ERA (39 ER/91.0 IP) and 106 strikeouts. He is entering his 10th season in the Major Leagues and is a combined 50-29 with a 3.87 ERA (308 ER/716.1 IP) and 604 strikeouts. The Corona, CA native was originally drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals in the third round of the 2009 First Year Player Draft out of UC Riverside.

  21. DODGERS ADD CONNER GREENE TO 26-MAN ROSTER

    LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles Dodgers added right-handed pitcher Conner Greene to the active roster and optioned outfielder Zach Reks to Triple-A Oklahoma City.

    Greene, 26, was claimed yesterday from the Baltimore Orioles after being designated for assignment on August 7. On the season, he is 0-0 with a 14.73 ERA (6 ER/3.2 IP) with five strikeouts in three games. He made his Major League debut on July 27 against the Marlins, tossing 2.0 IP with two strikeouts. In 10 minor league seasons, he is a combined 40-48 with a 4.34 ERA (352 ER/729.2 IP) and 569 strikeouts. The Santa Monica, CA native was originally drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays in the seventh round of the 2013 First Year Player Draft out of Santa Monica High School.

    Reks,27, has played in six games for the Dodgers this season and is 0-for-10. He has spent the majority of the season in Oklahoma City, batting .312 (62-for-199) with 12 homers and 38 RBI in 53 games. In 309 career minor league games, he has batted a combined .302 (334-for-1107) with 47 homers and 1783 RBI. The Chicago, IL native was originally drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 10th round of the 2017 First Year Player Draft out of the University of Kentucky.

      1. You want a clue? Here’s a clue. He was released by the Baltimore Orioles. Here’s another clue. His ERA for them was over 14.00 and his WHIP was over 2.00. Admittedly in a very small sample size.

        Last clue: Andrew Friedman thought he was worth a look-see and maybe that’s the most important clue of all.

        1. So, you’re saying he can’t be good because the O’s released him and he must be good because Friedman signed him.

          Sounds like you don’t have a clue either Jefe. It’s ok, nobody knows so you’re in good company.

          1. I have a clue…… but I don’t have an answer.

            And in other clues Doc says another IL visit for Mookie is a definite possibility.

          2. Well, a bowling ball sinker sounds unhittable. It also sounds like it would be easy to lay of as it will be rolling on the ground for 60’. Probably go to the backstop allowing runners to advance. Who’s going to stop a 99 mph bowling ball?

            I don’t expect much out of Greene. Maybe I’ll be surprised.

            I ask again, will we ever see this team at full strength?

          3. The Orioles are stacked and we are lucky to get their crumbs. Maybe his 99mph bowling ball sinker starts above the waist and drops to just below the waist. That might explain his era.

            Where do we find a sarcasm flag? I need one here.

          4. You looking for a sarcasm flag Fred? Just so happens that I sell them.
            $99.95 each and that includes your choice of colors.
            Payment in advance please, and also keep in mind that Fedex and UPS lose a lot of packages these days so wait a few months before you file your claim.

  22. Hoy inicia la gran aventura de nuestro queridos Dodgers veremos de que están hechos contra un enrachado Phili y los impredecibles Mets, lograremos una gira exitosa siempre y cuando estén concentrados en el juego y ejecuten las jugadas como la situación lo amerite, espero que preparen bien el plan de juego en cada uno de ellos, se comuniquen adecuadamente entre ellos, el lanzador y receptor no se crucen en las señales, los bateadores no se pierdan en el conteo etc… es decir juagar CONCENTRADOS. Estoy optimista, pero ésta gira marcará el destino del equipo por el resto del calendario toda vez que Gigantes y Padres tienen un calendario muy blando esta semana. Una vez más vamos con algunos titulares lesionados esperando que los reemplazantes respondan al llamado.

    1. Estoy de acuerdo en que si perdemos al menos dos juegos más esta semana, probablemente no estemos en primer lugar.

  23. 1. Not surprised to see Mookie scratched…..this off and on will last all year. Get used to it.

    2. Who the heck is Greene? First thought… If pitiful Baltimore discarded him, why do we want him?

    3. Glad to see Cody still batting 8th. Reduce pressure is always good for people who are struggling physically and mentally.

    4. We definitely need the first game with Scherzer. If we don’t win tonight, we might get swept just like the Mets this weekend. (Price and bullpen are always iffy….never more than a 50% chance with those two.)

    5. Go Big Blue!

    1. Cody hitting 7th with McKinney after him. Betts scratched and an IL stint is likely. This team is really snakebit. It is pouring in Philly, too long a delay and Scherzer and Nola will not go back out there. Phillies pen is awful.

  24. 1) Off and on Mookie – have you noticed it’s mostly off and very little on? I am absolutely no doctor, but I have my doubts that Mookie’s hip is going to get better with rest. He’s probably going to need surgery. Maybe the strategy is to play him very little for the rest of the season and then hope to get something from him for the playoffs.

    2) JT taking a few days off – should we wonder if that’s going to be more than a few days? Gavin Lux is starting at third base in his rehab game tonight. I don’t think he’s ever played third base.

    3) Someone in the Dodger echelon really likes Billy McKinney. Somebody pointed out that old friend Yoshi Tsutsugo has quite a hot bat at OKC these days, including 10 homers in 143 at bats. I realize it’s the PCL, but I think I’d rather see Yosh starting in the outfield instead of Billy. JMO.

    1. Hip pointers don’t require surgery. That means you are buying into the FAI rumor that was started here. I think you’re on something.

      1. Correct, I do not believe it’s just a hip pointer.
        Rendon just underwent surgery for hip impingement.
        Posey also underwent that procedure in 2018 although he also had a torn labrum.

        Mookie is likely to do the same. In my totally uninformed opinion, they are just delaying the inevitable.

      1. True, and that’s why McKinney is still on the roster. There are parks where you want your best defensive guys out there and he’s probably the best of the replacement guys.

  25. What’s up with McKinney getting all of these starts. I’d rather have Beaty in there.

    Off topic of today’s game but why does Doc insist on resting a player constantly. We are four games behind the Giants where is the urgency.

    Sorry if I sound like I’m bitching but I’m trying to understand the thinking.

    1. Turner and Betts are injured. So they are sitting. Turner has a bum groin and Mookie is looking like he is going to head to the IL again. No one else is getting the day off. It has been the way Roberts has done things since he got here. He rests players to keep them fresh, especially the older guys.

  26. Love having Trea Turner with us. He’s the 1st true lead off hitter we’ve had since Brett Butler. Trea and Mookie can stir up a lot of misery at the top of the order.
    One thing I noticed before the game started was Trea has had his problems with Nola. He’s 7-38 with 14’s. No big deal just an observation so I don’t expect too much from him.

  27. Thanks, Bear… Another post with a wealth of history.
    My lived memory begins in the early ’60s when Maury and Sandy became my first baseball heroes. I followed the team on in print, on the radio and TV if possible. I remember only one visit to Dodger Stadium: an absolutely heroic mom (she was pregnant with their seventh child when her husband, a Marine aviator, was killed in training accident) loaded up her VW van with her sons and a few of their pals. As I recall it, Sandy pitched and the game went into extra innings. Given the traffic and long drive ahead, the mom decided we should leave. Over the radio, we heard Vin describe the game-winning hit by Sweet Lou Johnson. (That’s how I remember it, anyway.)
    I’m writing this as the Dodgers have must moved out to a 4-0 lead over the Phillies.
    How about that Corey Seager?
    And Alex Vesia! And more lightning from Trea Turner, and strong play from Will Smith and AJ Pollock.
    And now Knebel comes in for his first game in months. And he walks the first batter he faces. And Justin Bruihl starting to warm up. And now Segura gets an infield hit, so two runners on base with no outs. And Bryce Harper coming up, with Realmuto on deck.
    Rick Monday says the humidity is at 94%.
    If the Dodgers get through this inning with a lead, I’m OK with a thunderstorm.

    1. Well 9th inning coming up and the new guy, Greene coming in to pitch. 5-0 lead on Muncy’s 23rd. If you could remember the year and who they were playing, I might be able to find the box score. Sweet Lou’s only game winner I remember was his homer in game 7 of the World Series helping Sandy win 2-0. Koufax actually scored the game winner in one of his games in 1965, I do not think Roberts can leave this guy in more than 3 hitters if he gets into trouble. First hitter got a single. Knebel struck out Harper and Realmuto. Bruihl made one pitch and got the hitter out.

  28. Harper struck out 3 times tonight, and the pitchers struck out 15 tonight. Giants leading Az 7-5 in the 9th. Belli makes a great catch and the Dodgers win! Yea! Giants wearing those ugly City connection uni’s again,

  29. D Backs score 2 and tie the Giants in the 9th. 2 outs and a new pitcher in for SF. 2 runners on for Marte. Bottom of the 9th, game tied 7-7.

  30. Evening Michael

    Didn’t know what to make of Greene.
    Had some good stuff, and some poor stuff. Much as advertised really.

    Not sure I’d want him on the mound with the game on the line.

    Great piece again today. Made me reflect how lucky we’ve been these past few years, although losing to the Cheaters seems to hurt more now than at the time.

  31. Dang Giants win another one run game! Something magical about them this year! Incredible. But I still can’t see them beating us in a seven game series if we’re healthy

  32. Went to bed leading 4-0….woke up to find we win 5-0.

    I guess I didn’t miss much….except a Muncy HR. I see our bullpen did a beautiful job, unlike their bullpen. I’m somewhat surprised to see Greene used to close. I guess Doc is thinking the bullpen will be taxed these next two games so try to rest them up as best as you can. Clearly he wanted Jansen to rest another day, perhaps thinking the fresher he is, the stronger pitcher he becomes.

    I prefer McKinney over Beaty….much better fielder and there isn’t much difference in their hitting.

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