Archives for posts with tag: D’backs

I am personally relieved the game is over, after seeing five hit batters.”
— Vin Scully

Dodgers Juan Uribe and Clayton Kershaw, left, are after the head of D'backs pitcher Ian Kennedy, right, who had just beaned Dodger pitcher Zach Greinke, the fourth hit batter of the game, so far.

Juan Uribe, Ronald Belisario and Clayton Kershaw, left, are after the head of D’backs pitcher Ian Kennedy, right, who had just beaned pitcher Zach Greinke, the fourth hit batter of the game.

I’m pretty sure a lot of people feel exactly the opposite of the way Vin feels. And I admit, it was good to see some fire in the bellies of people like Ronald Belisario and Josh Beckett. I never thought Belisario cared that much about his team or his teammates, but he was out there kickin’ ass and callin’ names during the seventh-inning skirmish.

Now, let me just say that Ian Kennedy is someone I know a little. I played Blackjack with him at a Puerto Rican casino, and Steve has caught waves with him, both in the Caribbean and the Pacific. I would like to think he wasn’t trying to hurt anybody; he works for Kirk Gibson, so some quid pro quo plunking is expected of him. But then Vin Scully said Ian had the most hit-batters of any National League pitcher last year. That bothers me some.

I abhor violence, I cringe when I see people hurt in any way. My sensitivity is apparently part of my nature, because I’ve been this way since I was a kid. But after I became a mother in 1986, it became ridiculous. I can’t help thinking that every person (even a bad guy) is somebody’s child. It’s very difficult for me to watch any movie or TV show without shutting my eyes for a great deal of it. And I know hitting a guy with a baseball is a long way from shooting him with a rifle, but a baseball going 92 mph can be as lethal as a bullet if it hits somebody in the right (or wrong) place.

I’m hoping, as I’m sure Vin Scully is, that this violent feuding doesn’t carry over to tonight. Baseball is a game of strategy and wit. It’s an intelligent game that can be beautiful in its simplicity. It’s not a game where brutality is an asset. Leave that to football and hockey.

Kenley Jansen has been named Dodger closer, replacing the disastrous Brandon League.

Kenley Jansen has been named Dodger closer.

Closing time

Finally, maybe we have a guy who can close a game. Manager Don Mattingly named Kenley Jansen the new Dodgers closer, replacing the disastrous Brandon League.

Ten pitches, three outs, Dodger victory. Way to go, Kenley.

Dodger pitcher Chad Billingsley

Dodger pitcher Chad Billingsley

It wasn’t Chad Billingsley’s fault that the Dodgers didn’t win again. He pitched six decent innings. He gave up three runs, but he kept the Dodgers in the game. He couldn’t help it if the batters weren’t able to bring anybody home.

“We don’t have any problem getting the hits,” said Dodger Manager Don Mattingly after losing to the Padres, 6-3, on Jackie Robinson Night. “We’re just having trouble cashing them in.”

Ya think? The Dodgers have 114 hits so far this season, tied for eighth among Major League teams. They have scored 37 runs. That’s 27th place in the league. They have left 109 men on base in 13 games. That’s more than eight stranded runners per game.

The Dodgers left nine on in the first game with San Diego since the melee that cost us Zack Greinke. Once again, Ronald Belisario got the loss, not that he cares. His laissez-faire demeanor just irks me.

It hurts more to lose after coming from behind to tie it up than it does to just be bad from the start. When you tie it up, it feels like the mo-mo has changed and you’re going to go on to win. But then Skip Schumaker hits into a double-play with two men in scoring position, and the momentum dies before your very eyes. Depressing.

This is how I remember Harrison Ford when I met him in 1977.

This is how I remember Harrison Ford when I met him in 1977.

Another thing that was depressing: In 1977, I met Harrison Ford at a cast and crew screening of “Star Wars.” He was young and handsome and not yet famous. When I saw him toss the first pitch to Mattingly, he looked so damn old! How could so much time have passed? I still feel like a teenager!

The Arizona Diamondbacks rush Paul Goldschmidt after his game-winning single.

The Arizona Diamondbacks rush Paul Goldschmidt after his game-winning single.

Dodger pitcher Josh Beckett persuades Manager Don Mattingly to leave him in.

In the ninth inning, Dodger pitcher Josh Beckett persuades Manager Don Mattingly to leave him in.

Guggenheim’s gonna want its money back if the Dodgers keep playing like that.

Josh Beckett pitched really well until he didn’t. And Arizona took advantage in the bottom of the ninth with a double, a base-on-balls and Paul Goldschmidt’s walk-off single to right.

I don’t know what else to say.