My Favorite Dodgers: Players Who Were Dodgers For A Short Time.

Ah, love the guys who came to LA and played for a short time and made some impact. Brooklyn had a few of those two, so I will touch base on a couple of those guys, too. But sometimes, they also make very little impact. And then there are those guys who get traded or signed, and you are like, why in the world would they want that guy? Might be a former Giant or some other player you do not like. The best example for me was when they brought in Juan Marichal. There had to be some kind of forgiveness going on for that one. But his stay in blue was very brief. So I will get started… Some you might agree with, and others you might not even remember.

ALBERT PUJOLS

Pujols # 55

Albert Pujols was one of the best players in the majors for the first 11 years of his baseball career. Well over .300 BA, he hit .329 his rookie year, garnering the ROY award and finishing 4th in the MVP voting. He was a three-time MVP winner with the Cardinals and helped them win two of the three World Series they went to. The only season as a Cardinal where he hit under .300, was his last in 2011, when he hit .299. A free agent, he signed a 10-year deal with the Angels for 240 million. After getting 16 million in 2013, the contract escalated 1 million a year until it was over in 2021.

Albert never became that hitter again. He was very good, but nothing like he had been in St. Louis. They sold a lot of his jerseys, though. During his 10-year stint with the Angels, they made the playoffs once in 2014 and were knocked out in the ALDS by the Royals. Pujols hit .167 in the three games.

In 2021, Albert was in the final season of his contract with the Angels. He started the season badly, hitting .198 in 24 games with five homers. On May 13th, he was un-ceremonially released by the Angels. Four days later, the Dodgers, hoping to catch lightning in a bottle and improve their hitting against LHP, signed Pujols for the MLB minimum. The Angels said they had cut him because he wanted to play every day. Albert said that was not the case, and he would do whatever the Dodgers asked. The Dodgers, at the time of the signing, were suffering a rash of injuries. Pollock was out, so was Seager; Taylor had a sore wrist.

On May 18th, Pujols started at first base and hit clean-up, becoming the oldest Dodger ever to do so. Muncy slid over to second, and Lux went to SS. Pujols flew out on the first pitch he saw, but later in the game against Bumgarner, he delivered an RBI single up the middle to help beat the D-Backs. Albert would later credit the Dodgers with renewing his love of the game. Tio Albert batted .254 as a Dodger. He contributed 12 homers and 38 runs batted in. He had some clutch hits. He missed a walk-off homer by inches in a game against the Giants when Michael Tauchman robbed him at the wall in Dodger Stadium. When he made his return to LA last year with the Cardinals, he got a standing ovation from the crowd. The cheers were just as loud after he hit homers # 699 and 700. Probably one of the best-liked former foes who ever wore the Dodger uniform.

KEN BOYER

Boyer # 45

Sometimes your team gets a player who you have a lot of respect for. Boyer was one of those players. 7-time All-Star with the Cardinals, 5 Gold Gloves, 1964 NL MVP. What was not to like? Boyer was an ultimate team player. In 1957, he volunteered to play center field for the Cardinals so exceptional rookie Eddie Kasko could play third base. The Cardinals lost nothing in the move because Boyer led all outfielders in the NL in fielding percentage that year. The next season, Kasko was injured, and the Cardinals traded for Curt Flood to play center; Boyer moved back to third and earned his first Gold Glove award.

Boyer was one of the more consistent Cardinal players. He hit double-figure homers in all 11 of his seasons in St. Louis. His high was 32 in 1960. He started slowing down some, and the year after his MVP season, he was traded to the Mets in October of 1965 for Al Jackson and Charley Smith. He hit .266 with 14 homers for the Mets in 66. But the following year in July, he was traded to the White Sox with a player to be named later for Bill Southworth and a player to be named later. JC Martin went to the Mets, and Sandy Alomar to the White Sox.

In May of 1968, the Sox released him, and he signed with the Dodgers 8 days later. Boyer went on to play in 83 games for the Dodgers that year. He split time between 3rd and 1st base. He hit .271 with 6 homers for a pretty bad Dodger team. In 1969, age and injuries caught up with him, and he only appeared in 25 games. After the season, the Dodgers released him, and Boyer retired.

He wanted to be a manager and accepted a position with the Cardinals as a minor league coach. He then went to the big club as a coach for two seasons before returning to the minors to start his managing career. The Cardinals fired Red Schoendienst in 1977 and replaced him with Vern Rapp. Boyer was disappointed and joined the Orioles as manager of their AAA team. When Rapp was fired after a 6-11 start in 78, Boyer replaced him. He would manage the rest of that season, the full season in 79, and then in 1980, in June, between the games of a doubleheader, with the team off to an 18-33 start, he was fired and replaced by Whitey Herzog.

Boyer never garnered much Hall of Fame support. In his 15 years on the ballot, he never got more than 22%. He died at the age of 51 in September of 1982 of lung cancer. He’s a gritty player and a total team guy. An excellent third baseman.

DICK ALLEN


Dick Allen # 15

Dick “Don’t call me Richie” Allen was one of those players you just loved to hate. He was the Phillies’ first ” Black Superstar”. Much like Reggie Smith in Boston, he played in a town not so kind to players of color. He was pretty controversial right from the start. He was the NL ROY in 1964, and he could hit a ball a mile. The first two years in Philly, he played exclusively at third base. He was not the greatest fielder in the universe, making 67 errors in 322 games.

The Phils moved him to the outfield in 67 part-time. He played 47 games in left and 91 at third. In 1968, they moved him back to third, resulting in 35 more errors. In 68 he played primarily in the outfield and in 1969, they moved him to first base. He had begun wearing a batting helmet on the field to protect himself from projectiles thrown from the stands. He would continue that practice for the rest of his career.

Over his time in Philly, he was involved in several controversies accredited to his behavior and disdain in later seasons for his manager, Gene Mauch. He finally told the Phillies owner it was him or me, and the Phillies fired Mauch. Dick did not get along any better with his replacement, Bob Skinner. He missed games, and showed up late for meetings, and finally, the owner agreed to trade him after the 1969 season.

He was traded to the Cardinals on October 7th, 1969, in what would be one of the most historic trades in MLB history, and he was not the reason why. In the deal, he and Jerry Johnson and Cookie Rojas were sent to St. Louis for Byron Browne, Joe Hoener, Tim McCarver and Curt Flood. Flood would refuse to report to the Phillies and in a historic court case, challenged the reserve clause, which tied players to their teams for basically life. Willie Montanez and Jim Browning were sent to the Phillies to complete the trade the next season.

Meanwhile, Dick split time between first base and the outfield hit 32 homers, and drove in 101 runs. But an injury late in the year limited him to 122 games. Rumors circulated that the Cardinals were unhappy with his recovery from the injury. Whatever the reason, five days after the season ended, Allen was traded to the Dodgers for Ted Sizemore and Bob Stinson. Cardinal management insisted the trade was based on a need for more balance on the team. Sizemore, the ROY in 1969, was there to replace the aging Julian Javier.

Because of the trade, the Dodgers were considered a possible pennant contender. Allen would be supplying the power they had been lacking for several years. His love affair with the Dodgers had begun when he was a youth. His family used to go to Pittsburgh when the Dodgers would play the Pirates and they lived 30 miles away. So, putting on the Dodger uniform was special for him. He was a large part of the Dodger success that year according to Dodger coach, Danny Ozark. He did everything he was asked to do.

But the rub was Allen wanted no part of Walter O’Malley’s public-relations commitments. He thought it distracted attention from the team’s mission of winning ballgames. The Dodgers and Giants engaged in a spirited run for the pennant but finished a game back. Allen finished with a .295 average, 23 homers, and 90 runs batted in. Did not matter, he was traded for the third time in three years to the White Sox for Tommy John on December 2nd, 1971. Rumors would surface later that he and Dodger manager Walter Alston did not get along. Allen went on to an MVP season for the Sox in 72. He played there two more seasons before going back to the Phillies for two years and then finishing his career in Oakland in 1977 at the age of 35. Dick passed away on Pearl Harbor Day, Dec 7th, 2020, at the age of 78. He has not been elected to the Hall of Fame.

DAVID FREESE

David Freese was a World Series MVP when he was with the Cardinals in 2011. He was also the MVP of the NLCS. He was 28 at the time and playing in St. Louis, which he considered his hometown. He had an outstanding post-season for the Redbirds. He hit three homers against the Brewers in the NLCS. He drove in 9 runs while batting .545.

Because the home team was still decided by who won the All-Star game, St. Louis hosted games 1-2-6-7. In game 6, Nelson Cruz hit a solo homer to put the Rangers up 6-4. It was his 8th post-season homer that year, tying him with Carlos Beltran and Barry Bonds. In the 9th inning, with the Cardinals a strike from being eliminated, Freese drove home Berkman and Pujols with a triple. The Rangers went back up by 2 in the 10th, and the Cardinals again in the bottom of the inning with 2 outs and 2 strikes on Berkman, when his single knocked in John Jay with the tying run. Ryan Theriot had a run-scoring ground-out before Berkman’s hit brought St. Louis within one.

The Cards kept the Rangers off the board in the top of the 11th, and Freese came up leading off the inning. Mark Lowe was pitching for the Rangers; the count went to 3-2, and Freese hit the next pitch over the center-field fence for a game-winning homer. He joined four other players, Boone, Ortiz, Fish, and Puckett as the only players to hit an extra-inning walk-off homer when their team was facing elimination.

Freese was traded by the Cardinals to the Angels after the 2013 season with Fernando Salas for Peter Bourjos and Randal Grichuk, who was traded back to the Angels last week for prospects. He spent two seasons with the Halos, then became a free agent and signed with the Pirates. At the August 31 deadline in 2018, Freese was sent to the Dodgers for minor leaguer Jesus Valdez.

Although he only played 19 games for the Dodgers, he hit .385 with 2 homers and 9 driven in. In the post-season, he hit .500 against Atlanta in the NLDS. 1-2. But that one hit, a double, drove in 3 runs. In the NLCS again he had a homer and 2 runs batted in. Against the Red Sox in the World Series, he was one of the few Dodgers who actually had a good series. He went 5-12, .417, and had a homer and an RBI.

In 2019 Freese would hit .315 for the Dodgers in 79 games. He had 11 home runs and 29 driven in. He did spend significant time on the IL. But when he was on the field, he produced good numbers. He hit well in the NLDS loss to the Nationals, 4-8. After the season, he was granted his free agency. He is still listed as a free agent since he has not formally announced his retirement.

This article has 109 Comments

  1. A good and big win for the Blue yesterday. Especially after that fiasco on Saturday. Came right back at them to secure at least a series split. With a win today we can most likely distance the Padres for good as far as the division is concerned. Hope Tony has his good game today.
    Surprised Roberts trotted Almonte right out there again. Confidence builder !?
    Lynn did a fantastic job giving us 6 ip with only the one HR given up.
    I liked the squeeze play a lot. That is good fundamental baseball. Take the run when its out there. And then Freddie capped it off with the bomb after one of the greatest at bats I have seen in some time. Amazing talent!

    Cartaya with his 15th long ball yesterday. Hopefully he comes out of his slump before the season is over at Tulsa.
    Pepiot 4 IP, 2 runs. Vargas with two hits, Busch with 3. Keep raking, boys!

    Go Dodgers!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    1. The squeeze was nice. And it prevented Barnes from swinging the bat!
      OK, sorry about the snark.
      Good fundamental baseball. Might help Barnes get back on track. There’s still a lot of season left, and Will Smith needs to get some rest.
      Hoping to get out to Rancho later this week to see the next generation…

        1. Hey Bear, I loved you bios today. Really well done. Sometimes your stuff reminds me of Joe Posnanski’s player bios from “The Top 100” which are great.
          I have some great Dick Allen stories. Through all the turmoil and misunderstandings, Mike Schmidt loved the guy. And I think he became like a player counselor after his retirement. Some would find that odd.

          1. Yes, they would, His story reminds me a lot of Reggie Smith who also had a lot of problems with the Boston fans. It was a love-hate relationship, and the Boston press was less than kind to him.

  2. On more minor league notes:
    Wilman Diaz bat keeps smoking. 3-5 with 2 HRs, now batting .403 at RC. Young man has awesome raw power.
    Josue dePaula 1-3 with 2 BBs, 2 runs scored plus 1 sb.
    And Luis Rodriguez coming to life finally too. 3-4 , now batting .270.

    Keep it up, kids!

    Go Dodgers!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  3. Clayton Kershaw pitched a bullpen session on Sunday in preparation for joining the Dodgers rotation this week, with the only thing left to decide is what day he starts.

    From Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register:

    Coming off the Injured List and rejoining the rotation is next. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts acknowledged the plan is for Kershaw to make his first start since June 27 “some time in the middle of the week.”

    “We’ve got to figure out this rotation for Arizona, for Colorado and talk through it,” Roberts said. “But now I feel good in saying for him to make a start this week is most likely going to happen.”

    Whether Kershaw starts Wednesday in Phoenix or Thursday in Los Angeles, it will be more than six weeks since his last start, on June 27 against the Rockies, sidelined on the injured list with shoulder soreness.

  4. Thanks Bear. Growing up just outside Philly I was a huge Phillies fan and back then “Richie” Allen was my favorite player. He swung that huge 40 oz bat. He was a man among boys. Along with Johnny Callison, Jim Bunning and Chris Short. Blowing that huge lead late in 65 for the pennant one of my huge disappointing moments! Mauch was a tyrant

    1. It was 64. 6.5 game lead with 12 games to go and they blew it to Cards. Including a 10 game losing streak. Heartbreaking! A lot of great memories at old Connie Mack Stadium!

      1. I remember a game I heard on the radio where the Dodgers were playing the Phils at Connie Mack. I think it was in 1960. Vin was calling the game and Frank Howard came up. Around the third pitch, he hit a ball to left field that Vin said was still climbing when it left the stadium. Had to be 500 plus. Vin said something about being in orbit. He could paint such vivid pictures of places with words.

    2. You are welcome, Cassidy. I was surprised the Dodgers only kept him for a year. They had little power back then. But they also needed pitching, so Tommy John was a nice addition. I am pretty sure he was traded on the orders of O’Malley. Same as with Maury Wills after 1966. Wills begged out of the post-season trip to Japan, citing injuries to his legs. When O’Malley found out he was in Vegas playing his banjo, he told Bavasi to get rid of him.

  5. https://theathletic.com/4752610/2023/08/06/dodgers-lance-lynn-rotation-trade/
    What does Lance Lynn give the Dodgers? ‘You’re going to get a warrior’

    “A person that will never quit,” said Joe Kelly, Lynn’s teammate at two different stops, who has known the burly right-hander since they were teens. “You’re going to get a warrior.”

    “Every pitcher experiments,” Lynn said, “but just finding ways to implement it into the game, it’s been fun at times this year but been challenging at times. Earlier this year, I got myself in trouble using some stuff where I wouldn’t have used it, or it just didn’t work.

    “I’ve got all the pitches I need to get people out.”

    1. And Mark, you didn’t mention Yarborough in your list of deadline pick ups yesterday. He pitched pretty darn well the other night. And so many of the so called big named deadline pitching pick ups had awful first outings!

    2. Lynn blasted the White Sox culture the other day. He really called them out. 2-0 as a Dodger with 4 earned runs given up. All solo home runs.

  6. I like that every Homer we hit was a two out Homer. I think they were all two strikes too.

    1. I was watching in a sports bar without the volume on, so at least there was that.

      Still, having the entire television screen taken over by A-Rod during a live broadcast so he can talk about himself seemed too much even for ESPN, and watching David Wells chiming in remotely from his home, complete with the messy kitchen in the background, was just that added touch.

      I have to say, though, that I did appreciate the umpire’s eye view camera shot occasionally. That added something a little different.

  7. Game time at 2 for me today. Gonsolin-Lugo. Don’t know what happened to Pujols photo. When I wrote the story, it was in color and there was also a photo of David Freese that has disappeared. The computer gremlins are busy today. Giants lose DeSclafani most likely for the year.

    1. That is very weird. I went back and un-published the post and then re-published it. It’s the same! 🙁

  8. Mike Lupica offers a valentine to the latest edition of the Dodgers. He has high praise for Dave Roberts, who told him that the “biggest surprise” for him has been the OF production of Peralta, Heyward and Outman, “with Mookie sprinkled in.”
    https://www.mlb.com/dodgers/news/dodgers-clicking-at-right-moment-in-season
    I’d say the biggest surprise has been Mookie’s emergence as an uber-utility guy…. but perhaps that shouldn’t have been much of a surprise. The fact that Rosario looks pretty good at 2B has me thinking that maybe Mookie should play more SS.

    1. Mookie’s been remarkable at both SS and 2nd. He obviously grew up playing middle infield and it show in all the little things he brings to the positions. Really knows the subtlies. Rosario, is new to 2nd and it shows. I respect his effort and he will improve on his pivot at 2nd which is still weak. Vargas became much better at 2nd and has a nice cross-over turn. It’s too bad he didn’t hit, but he’ll be back.

    2. We often think of “splits” in terms of a batter facing lefties or righties.
      A split I often overlook is day/night.
      JD Martinez has a pretty big day/night split, which apparently will have him getting more rest in day games. Muncy is back in the lineup at DH.
      From TrueBlueLA:
      “On the season, Martinez is hitting .204/.283/.484 in 26 day games, compared to .281/.323/.585 in night games.”

  9. Ja,Ja!! I listen the spanish broadcast @ ESPN Deportes with :

    Ernesto “NO,NO,NOOOOO” DIGALE NO A ESA PELOTA!!!! Jerez and
    “El Duque” Hernandez.

    Just fun and entertaining.

    1. If I understood Spanish, I would probably do that too! As it is, when they play the Rockies. I have to listen to the Rockies broadcast because it is blacked out on MLB.TV since I am only 124 miles from Denver. I mute the sound. Denver’s crew is the WORST. When the Giants homer and Jon Miller is doing the play by play, his call is always ” Adios Pelota!”.

  10. Jerez & Duque were in awe with the squeeze play and almost immediately pinpoint it was a blocking home situation and the fact Kike was very fortunate to not injure his shoulder in the play at home.

    Yes, Bear. Everytime there is a homerun that’s Ernesto line. So yesterday was 3 times, the more emphatic in the Freddy HR.

  11. 4:10 PM ET

    Dodgers (64-46)
    Padres (55-57)

    SP Tony Gonsolin R
    6-4 4.11 ERA
    SP Seth Lugo R
    4-5 3.54 ERA

    Confirmed Lineup
    2B Mookie Betts R
    1B F. Freeman L
    C Will Smith R
    DH Max Muncy L
    LF D. Peralta L
    RF J. Heyward L
    3B E. Hernandez R
    CF James Outman L
    SS Miguel Rojas R

  12. * I too do not enjoy the ESPN crew. Eddie Perez is an idiot living off his dad’s reputation and career. He makes stuff up and rambles on while missing little important details. Carl Ravitch doesn’t move the needle for me. He’s just okay. But I really like David Cone. He’s great on Yankee games with Michael Kay. He’s witty and knows his business.
    * I’ve said this before, to help the team, Barnes needs to be the best bunter in the league. If you can’t hit, help your team in some way. He’s lately gotten a few knocks, but he has laid down a couple of great bunts. I love the safety squeeze play. It’s practically indefensible unless the bunt is too hard or the catcher cheats like last night. The blocking the plate review was obvious. Nice job Barnes.
    * Lance Lynn just competes. He relentlessly works the edges. I love guys who love their fastball.
    * He pitched Machado differently this time. We got him on hard stuff down. He usually is a sucker for the chase breaking ball down and away. Nice adjustment.
    * Kike is playing like a kid again. He looks like a man that just got out of prison. I honestly was no a big fan of his reacquisition, but he’s proving me wrong.
    * What do we do with CT3? The answer is nothing probably, but he has a hole in his bat. With the acquisition of Kike, Rosario and Mookie’s ability to excel in the infield has made CT3 and his versatility less valuable. Especially when he’s an out waiting to happen.

  13. Seeing multiple reports that the Dodgers may be announcing that they signed Jang Hyun-seok, the #1 HS prospect out of Korea.

    This would explain the somewhat unusual trade with the White Sox for additional international bonus pool money.

    Apparently the kid throws 100 at 19. And was expected to be the first overall pick if he had entered the KBO.

    https://m.koreatimes.co.kr/pages/article.asp?newsIdx=356131

  14. A guy on Dodgers Digest (I think) pegged this a few days ago. Figured it was the only explanation for the Dodgers making that deal.
    Dodgers had success with Chan Ho Park and then Hyun-jin Ryu. We may have to get used to writing “Jang Hyun-seok,” or maybe we’ll be flipping the first and last names.
    In a few years, he might be in a rotation with Ohtani.

  15. Talked with a couple friends who are Angel fans over lunch. I feel bad for them. But they’re delusional.

    They still think the Angels can pull something off this season. They’ve lost 6 in a row. Just got swept by Seattle. Next 12 games are against the Giants, Astros, Rangers and Rays. Ohtani was seen tearing up in the dugout the other night. The fans all seam to think he still might resign with the Angels. It’s kind of pathetic.

    Not trading Ohtani in the off-season might go down as one of the greatest blunders in baseball history. Akin to selling Babe Ruth to the Yankees for $100k. The Angel have had the two best players in this generation. Trout is almost un tradable now with his decline and injuries. Unless they eat half of the $300m he is owed. Theyve decimated an already bad farm system of any pitching depth for the next 2-3 years. They have a boat anchor contract in Rendon. The best you can say about them is that they aren’t the White Sox.

    For all our over analysis of every move the Dodgers make, it’s good to be a fan on a team that we know will be competitive this season for the foreseeable future. Angel fans are looking into the abyss.

        1. 100%. I don’t root against the Angels. Their fans want to pretend there is some major rivalry between the teams. If the Dodgers Giants rivalry is a 100, the Angels Dodgers is a 3. I hope they sweep the next two series. They won’t. But I’d be happy as a pig in mud if they did.

        2. Angels collapsed again.
          Estevez had been 23 for 23 in save opportunites–and then blew his last two.
          Just brutal defeats for a franchise desperate for the postseason.

    1. Which is why they will not sign Ohtani in Free Agency.

      No way, No how.

      They can get four good to very good players for what Ohtani makes and spread out the liability!

      Signing Ohtani is a dope-fiend move.

      This is the way!

      1. Emotionally, I want Ohtani. But I agree with you.

        Unless Ohtani takes a creative deal because he’s dead set on being a Dodger, he will go elsewhere. I’m sure the Dodgers will make an offer. But it is likely going to be 6-7 years, front loaded with an opt out. And we know he will be offered at least 10 and $500 by other teams. Dodgers would be stupid to match that.

        For the the gnashing of the teeth in the off-season about the Padres and Mets leapfrogging past the Dodgers and all the anger over not trading away huge prospect capital for mediocre or near geriatric talent; here we are in 1st place by 4 games and 10 ahead of the Padres. Mets won’t even make the playoffs with their $400m payroll. Probably won’t next year either.

        AF’s way isn’t emotionally satisfying. But you can’t argue with the results. Unless you want to be as delusional as Angels fans.

        1. I don’t want Ohtani….too much drama….too much money….who needs that? Give me hard working lunch pail guys who just love the game….

          1. You don’t think Ohtani works hard? You don’t think he loves the game?
            Um…. how do you think Ohtani became Ohtani?
            Nobody in the game works harder.
            The game can be measured in pitcher-batter duels. Ohtani outpaces the runner-up by hundreds of matchups.
            Who in the game is working harder?

      2. The certitude we find in the Book of Moron is always impressive.
        “No way, no how.”
        Let us pause and remember how, in other passages, the wise prophet informed us that Mookie should not be considered a “superstar,” that Lux should play centerfield and that a certain “4th ot 5th outfielder” was Aesop’s hare–a loser destined to be shamed by the winning tortoise that is Miguel Vargas.
        Still, the idea of spreading the Ohtani money to four “good to very good” players raises an interesting question.
        Which four?
        For starters, I would nominate Matt Chapman.
        How much would you pay to keep Julio? Would you make Will Smith an extension offer he can’t refuse? (The Braves do this stuff, but the Dodgers not so much.)
        Who else?
        If the Dodgers pass on Ohtani, how should they spend that money?

        1. You are certainly at taking things out of context and misquoting people, thinking it makes them look like a Moron when there are fingers pointing back at you. Andrew Friedman is from a finance background, and if he knows anything, it’s how to limit his exposure. While a Moron may buy 100,000 shares of one stock he will buy 5,000 shares of 20 stocks. That’s why I say No Way, No How! Remember this, Moron. We heard the same thing about Harper!

          I also said that Mookie was not putting up superstar numbers and he certainly was not. He is now. If you think he was, you exhibit why you are a Moron once again.

          I also stand by my opinion that Lux is not a SS and I think he could be a fine CF’er. Time will tell. Try and act smart – you might fool some people.

    1. He needs a little less kitty and a lot more junkyard dog in him

      The only good thing in that inning was an accurate throw by James, albeit late to the plate

  16. Padres put seven balls in play that inning. Five of them had exit velo of 100 mph or higher. A sixth was 97.6 mph…

    Per the great Eric Stephen:
    Tony Gonsolin hasn’t been right all year, he’s had trouble recovering between starts, the Dodgers won’t say specifically what physical things he’s dealing with, and he just has to go out and wear it every 5 or 6 days. What a brutal season

  17. Shootout, day games on the west coast the ball really flies. Catman’s struggles continue. Time to move him to the bullpen?

  18. Padre fans behind home plate were stunned and shocked they didn’t even move a muscle

        1. I first read it in “The Millionaire Next Door,” one of the earliest personal finance books I remember. I can picture you saying it though 🙂

  19. Maybe is time to get out Muncy and put Busch there and platoon with CT3

  20. Gonsolin is not right. Lots of hard contact again vs him. 6 runs given up . Yikes.
    He can thank his lucky star for the Dodgers offensive outburst.
    In this shape he is no option for the playoffs. No way.

    Go Dodgers!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1

  21. Look out if Outman stops striking out! And he should with his compact swing! With Busch and Vargas to follow next year!

  22. Well if these guys were a fail for AF at the deadline then I shudder to think what a good haul would look like!

    1. It’s a cliche but you kinda have to watch him everyday to appreciate him. He’s grown on me.

    1. James is now just a percentage point below .260 and a percentage point below .800 OPS

      1. Outman is also 4th behind Freddie, Mookie, and Smith with an OBP of .360 so why not put him 4th in the line up and trade places with Max??

  23. Dodgers were down 5 zip and I still saw fire in them. This team has something special.

    And Joe Kelly might be 1/50th of the player Tatis is. But he’s still that bit**’s dad.

  24. Dodgers have 51 games left after today’s win. They only play the Padres three more times. After the two-game set with the D-Backs, they have a 10-day homestand against the Rockies, 4, Brewers, 3 and Marlins. Then 6 on the road, Cleveland-Boston, back home to face Az, 3, Atl, 4. On the road for 6 games, Miami and DC. Home for the final series against SD, up to Seattle for 3. Home for 7, Detroit, 3, SF, 4, On the road to finish the year with 6, Colorado then the Giants. Lead is 4.5 over SF, 9 over Az. SD 11 games back. Freeman has 151 hits. He and Mookie only Dodgers with 100 or more. Outman has 85 for third place on the team. Bellinger is hitting .328.

    1. Belli totally revamped his swing for the Cubs, which begs the question, why he and/or Scoyoc never did this over Belli’s last 2 seasons in LA.

  25. Responding to Jayne Cobb’s reference to rivalries above, and I admit I may be in the minority, if the Giants are a 100 and the Angels are a 3, the Padres are at least a 120.

    The Giants don’t have any players that anyone can get excited about, either for or against. It’s a team without a personality. Don’t you want to have guys you can hate with a rivalry? That’s why I say our biggest rivalry is with San Diego and not San Fran. And it isn’t even close.

    1. Except that a couple years back when the Dodgers won 106 games, the Giants won 107…
      The rivalry is historic, dating way way back to Ebbets Field and the Polo Grounds.
      And right now, the Dodgers are in first place and the Giants are in second, even though they have zero stars. The Padres, loaded with talent, are laggards. And they just took another beat down from LA.
      To the Padres credit, they did whip the 111-win Dodgers last year.
      But why are the Giants better now?
      Must suck to be a Padres fan.

  26. Gonso won’t attack the strike zone because he knows he has only junk to offer on the mound. It’s obvious something is very wrong, and he must be replaced NOW in the rotation. Fortunately today, he got bailed out by his teammates playing a focused game against a dysfunctional Padres team going nowhere.

  27. The rivalry is for history, for the teams, for the city, not for a group of big-mouthed clown assholes!

    Saying those idiots are rivalry sounds like what one of those SD morons would say.

    And I mean that without meaning to offend anyone here.

    “I’m worried”
    Hostile environment”
    “How dangerous they are”

    I can’t stop laughing!

    1. So, you don’t think LA vs SD has become a rivalry now? I wonder what the players think…

      When you are playing against a team that has 3 superstars in its lineup- Tatis, Soto, and Machado – I think that fires up both the fans and the players.

      I am speaking for myself here, but I now “hate” SD more than SF and want to beat the snot out of them more.

  28. Outman is a marginally skilled player who–thru diligent study, hard work and the POWER of his sheer will–is fashioning himself into a good major league player, both with his bat and glove. I love seeing players like him grow before our very eyes – Inspiring stuff!.

    1. Not sure I agree.

      Not sure what “skill” exactly entails but his tools are borderline elite in terms of strength & speed.

      I guess his bat to ball skill is what you’re referring to.

  29. If there’s no injury with Tony, the Dodgers might have to use the Al Campanis philosophy on player movement by trading a player one year early rather than a year too late. Moving Tony in the offseason might be a good move, assuming they can get decent talent in return. He just doesn’t seem to be the same pitcher he was last year and with the young guns moving up to the big club I wouldn’t at all be surprised to see Tony on the move at this years winter meetings.

    1. I’m not arguing that they shouldn’t possibly move him, but I don’t think they could get much for him right now. After all, other teams can see exactly what we see when he’s out there.

  30. I really like that Joe Kelly came out with an attitude tonight. When he throws 101 and they’re over the plate he is usually lights out. Fun to watch!

  31. Yesterday’s win was one of the most satisfying for me….to be down 5-0 and to score 8 in one inning…..wow!

    Maybe AF knows what he is doing….

    Kike
    Rosario
    Kelly
    Yarbrough

    Also, I frigging love Rojas….his bat is good enough for me especially seeing what a wizard he is in the field. I’m sure our pitchers appreciate him very much

  32. These are the Dodgers that I hope show up this coming post season. I’m gonna shout that out loud enough till they hear it and redeem themselves from last season’s passiveness. Just spanking San Diego from chances to play ain’t good enough. Dodgers are nobody’s little brother! Round peg in the round hole, square peg in the square hole, etc. etc. Looks like a fit to me.

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