Archives for posts with tag: D’acks
Just four fans playing at the Ravine.

Just four fans playing at the Ravine.

What a great couple of days! The Dodgers sweep the Twins in Minnesota, while on their home turf, I and a few friends of mine play around in their clubhouse.

The day after the franchise’s 10,000th win, Michelle Rubin of the Dodgers Pride Rewards team led me, my husband, Steve, and our friends John Woodard and Tina Brugnoletti through the empty bowels of Dodger Stadium to the dugout and into the cages inside for an hour of batting practice. It was spectacular! I even found out I could hit!

I won this perk at a preseason event for season ticket holders, something I never thought possible because — as I have said many times in the past — no one ever wins anything in the Top Deck. I guess it really is a Whole New Blue. Now if we could only see it on TV. (More about that next week. We are giving the Donald Sterling debacle a little time to cool down before we start our latest round of fan rallies over the Time Warner fiasco.)

Matt Kemp's batBut back to the Ravine. What a beautiful place it is, breathtaking at every turn. And in the cage, the TV was on so we could watch the Dodgers taking the first of two wins in Minneapolis while swinging away with Matt Kemp’s own ash bats, covered with pine tar and the Bison’s big fingerprints.

We just romped like kids, and I found out why Hanley Ramirez keeps hurting his thumb. A year or so ago, I broke my right thumb, and swinging that bat brought back a twinge of pain. But it was worth it, I tell you.

OK, OK. I was suspicious at first that the Dodgers picked me for this prize to get me to drink the blue Kool-Aid and stop criticizing $tan Ka$ten and the Dodgers’ new management. For one day, that’s exactly what I did.

Tim Federowicz, leaving for AAAlbuquerque, stopped for a photo in the stadium elevator.

Tim Federowicz, leaving for AAAlbuquerque, stopped for a photo in the stadium elevator.

On the way out, we rode the elevator with Tim Federowicz, our backup catcher who was sent to AAAlbuquerque. He was leaving with his bags and looked a bit down, but he was extremely nice and friendly. I told him we would see him when he came back, which I was sure would be soon.

It was quite a day, and I am grateful to the Dodgers organization for the opportunity to feel part of the club.

 

 

Dodger fans rallying to voice their protest on the Time Warner deal at Short Stop bar in Echo Park on Apr. 16, 2014. (Lawrence K. Ho/Los Angeles Times)

Dodger fans rallying to voice their protest on the Time Warner deal at Short Stop bar in Echo Park on Apr. 16, 2014. (Lawrence K. Ho/Los Angeles Times)

Though closer Kenley Jansen looked more like Brandon League out there in the ninth, the Dodgers held on to prevent a sweep by the Giants, winning 2-1 in a weird Thursday afternoon game by the beautiful San Francisco Bay.

Too bad it wasn’t available to most of us on TV. Good thing I have a phone with MLB At Bat, the only app I gladly pay for every year, just in case I can’t reach a radio or television set.

My old L.A. Times colleague (and my good friend) Chris Erskine has started the ball rolling on a protest movement, rallying True Blue Fans, like me, to take to the streets (or in this case a bar around the corner from Dodger Stadium) and let $tan Ka$ten and those Time Warner terrorists know that WE WANT OUR DODGERS ON TV!

Among Chris’ points in this great article from today’s paper: This deal jumped the shark, stripped the fans of watching what could be Vin Scully’s last year, and needs a top-level peacemaker, say Bill Clinton, to step in and get the two sides back to the bargaining table.

Dodger fat cat $tan Ka$ten need to get his monocle out of his ass and see how unhappy his precious fans are.

Dodger fat cat $tan Ka$ten need to get his monocle out of his ass and see how unhappy his precious fans are.

But in the meantime, $tan Ka$ten’s lip service is just a lot of hot air. Before the season, he said: “I am now concerned that some fans are not going to be able to see games. And that’s disappointing and shouldn’t be happening.” I call bullshit on this one! If Ka$ten thought even once about the fans, he wouldn’t have taken away the 50 completely free games (nearly one-third of the season) we all got every year on broadcast TV. I miss Tuesdays on KCAL-9, I miss Eric Karros’ and Gary Miller’s bobbing heads. 

I got news for you, Mr. Moneybags (aka Ka$ten), we Dodger fans are not going to bail your ass out of this one. We aren’t going to switch providers (many of us don’t even have the option). We aren’t going to force our own providers to bend over for TWC. You and the terrorists are going to have to figure out how to get the Dodgers into my home all by yourselves.

I’m sure I’ll end up paying way too much for it in the long run anyway.

 

 

Rally host Chris Erskine vents to Fox reporter Olga Ospina at the Short Stop on Wednesday night.

Rally host Chris Erskine vents to Fox reporter Olga Ospina at the Short Stop.

So our star right fielder has a hit out on him, our Cy Young winner (well, one of them) is on the D.L., and most Angelenos can’t watch what could be Vin Scully’s last season calling games. It’s a weird year to be a Dodger fan.

We can’t do anything about Yasiel Puig’s death threats from Mexican drug cartels except duck if we hear gunshots. We can’t fix Clayton Kershaw’s back, we just have to wait patiently like he is. We can, however, express outrage and disappointment at the miserable fiasco that is SportsNet LA.

Last night, while the Dodgers were losing, 2-1, to the dreaded Giants, I joined my friend, L.A. Times columnist Chris Erskine, at a rally to let Dodger management and Time Warner Cable know we want our Dodgers, and we want them now!

Here is an excellent Fox 11 report on the protest, which was also covered by KNBC and KCAL:

The salient points raised by Erskine and his legion of diehard Dodger fans are that:

● Dodger management promised to make things better for fans that withstood the Frank McCourt era, and cutting a deal that blacks out 70% of all L.A. fans from seeing the games on TV is more about the Big Green Bucks than the True Blue Fans.

● This could be Vin Scully’s last season announcing games, and most of us can’t watch them. Three innings before Charley Steiner and Rick Monday on radio is just not enough Vin. No Vin? It’s a Sin!

● It’s not the fans’ job to put pressure on the cable companies to make a deal. We are the ones who are going to have to pay for it in the long run, we shouldn’t have to be the ones getting it done in the short run.

$tan Ka$ten and TWC better start realizing how angry Dodger fans are. And if they can get Angels games on TV, some Dodger fans might just start switching their allegiance from Blue to Red.

Now is the time to cut your losses and get a deal done that puts the Dodgers back on everyone’s televisions.

ENOUGH WITH THE LIP SERVICE, THINK ABOUT THE FANS!

And by that I mean ALL fans, not just the rich ones.