Archives for posts with tag: Rockies
Dodgers pitcher Zack Greinke

Dodgers pitcher Zack Greinke

A big woo-hoo for that game, am I right?

Zack Greinke’s one-hit complete game shutout was a thing of beauty and a joy for at least the next five days (until his next start).

Greinke finally looked like the ace he was supposed to be all along. He even got a hit and stole a base like it was no big deal. Easy peasy!

Spectacular performance even though watching it on Fox is not the same as having Vin calling the shots. (I love Eric Karros, but there is just something about the melodious Master Scully.)

I think it is hysterical that, yesterday, after the Dodgers lost, 3-0 — one of only four losses in 21 games — the pundits said, “Wow, they played like their old selves. Let’s hope they’re not slipping back into bad habits.”

Every team has to lose one once in a while. Lighten up, Lyons.

Even though we didn’t gain any ground on the D’bags today, we didn’t lose any either. It doesn’t mean we will stay behind them forever.

One more game ’til the All-Star break. Go Dodgers!

Mark Ellis dives for the bag on a pickoff attempt by the Rockies.

Mark Ellis dives for the bag on a pickoff attempt by the Rockies.

Second baseman Mark Ellis (I LOVE this guy!) knocked in four of the six runs for the Dodgers last night in a 6-1 rout of the Colorado Rockies at Dodger Stadium. It came a day after a 5-hour, 14-inning marathon in which the Dodgers came out on top, 7-5, sweeping the first-place Arizona Diamondbacks,  regaining a .500 average and moving to within 1½ games of the division lead.

Yasiel Puig didn't make the All-Star Final Vote, but he's certainly making his mark on the Dodgers' season.

Yasiel Puig didn’t make the All-Star Final Vote, but he’s certainly making his mark on the Dodgers’ season.

Our boys are now 16 for their last 19. That is a phenomenal run, and the contributions are coming from all corners: Yasiel Puig’s tenacity, Hanley Ramirez’s power, all the starting pitchers’ control, Andre Ethier’s glove, Juan Uribe’s grit, you name it. Everything about the Dodgers is working right now. Even Brandon League didn’t give up all of the six-run lead he was given in last night’s game (just one solo homer). That’s saying something.

The only thing that didn’t work was the Final Vote attempt to get Puig into the All-Star Game. He fell short of Freddie Freeman (who?) of the Atlanta Braves in the biggest fan voting extravaganza of all time, apparently. At least for baseball. Freeman managed to get almost 20 million votes, and I hear Puig wasn’t too far behind. I voted for Puig, but I didn’t go crazy about it. I was watching TV and submitting over and over until my hand got tired, and I got bored. Then I decided to let the rest of Dodgers Nation do some of the work.

Oh well, Puig will have plenty of time to be an All-Star. For now, I’m just glad he’s our star.

Juan Uribe was on fire against his former teammates, knocking in seven runs in the Dodgers' 10-2 rout of the Giants.

Juan Uribe was on fire against his former teammates, knocking in seven runs in the Dodgers’ 10-2 rout of the Giants.

Juan Uribe had seven, count ’em 7, RBIs when the Dodgers beat the Giants, 10-2, at AT&T Park last night. What a delicious morsel of victory that is. I always delight in San Francisco’s utter annihilation. They are so smug with their “Beat L.A.” chants and World Series rings and all. I have my fingers crossed for a sweep, but just two wins will be enough for me.

Too Much Is a Good Thing
Now, about our outfield. It was being touted as too full of great players, once Carl Crawford got activated yesterday from the DL. You have Andre Ethier, Matt Kemp, Yasiel Puig and Crawford vying for three spots in the outfield, and they are all great hitters and great defenders.

Well, Puig of course is a sure thing. He is too hot and too talked-about not to play right field every single day. So the other three All-Star players will rotate in left and center. It’s not a bad thing to be able to have three players of that caliber either A) playing left or center while one of the others takes a day off, or B) sitting on the bench waiting to hit the big Manny-sized grand slam at just the right moment.

However, there is a difference in attitude that must be pointed out.

Andre Ethier is the kind of player I would want on my team.

Andre Ethier is the kind of player I would want on my team.

Andre Ethier is game to do anything the Dodgers suggest, even moving freely from his usual right field to center when Kemp was hurt and then to left when Kemp returned to the Puig-ified outfield.

Here’s what Ethier has had to say about sharing duties, instead of having his place assured every game:

“Even the days when I’m not in there, I want to learn stuff on the bench, because your days off are a good opportunity to learn up here, also.”

I heard one of the Dodger broadcasters say that Ethier offered to learn how to play shortstop, if it would help the team win.

Carl Crawford doesn't have the right attitude, as far as I can tell.

Carl Crawford doesn’t have the right attitude, as far as I can tell.

By contrast, here is how Crawford reacted to Don Mattingly’s little pow-wow with his millionaire superstars:

“Will I accept being a platoon player? I don’t think so, but at this point, I have to do what I’ve got to do.”

That’s the team spirit! I’ll do, grudgingly, what I have to do to get along.

I think Ethier is a much stronger team player than Crawford, and that is what this little game is all about.