Archives for posts with tag: Ted Lilly

ZorroI feel like crying right now. Today has been a bad day. The Dodgers lost twice!

The only thing that makes the world brighter is my beautiful chihuahua, Zorro. Who could be sad and hopeless looking at this spectacular face?

I urge all Dodger fans to think of this photo each time the team loses or sucks, which means, at this rate, every day.

I feel sorry for the guys, because I like them all so much, and I know they can do and have done so much better than this in the past. All I can do now is wince every time I see those billboards touting “A Whole New Blue.” I think that’s called hubris, and the joke will stare us in the face all season.

Dodger WoesI honestly don’t know how sports writers do it. Following a team like the Dodgers, who are so painfully failing nearly every time they come up to bat (or bring Ronald Belisario on in relief), is just plain depressing. How many times can you say, “The offense isn’t producing”? How many ways can you phrase the term “leaving men on base”? It’s a chore! Right now, as I am writing this, the Dodgers are in the middle of the second game of a double-header in Baltimore. They lost the first one, 7-5, and in this one so far, they are tied at 1 in the fifth.

Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong plays to a packed house at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. Photo by Chad Sengstock

Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong plays to a packed house at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. Photo by Chad Sengstock

So I’ve decided I don’t have to write about every single game. If one is just like the day before, I’ll maybe write about something else, like the Green Day concert I went to Thursday. It was fantastic! They played the Sports Arena, and the place was jam-packed. Billie Joe Armstrong was in great form and seemed to really be enjoying himself (although I wonder what inhaling all that pot smoke means for his sobriety.) It was a great way to spend a day without Dodger baseball. Unlike this “Whole New Blue,” Green Day never disappoints.

Former Dodger first baseman Eric Karros

Former Dodger first baseman Eric Karros

The only thing that didn’t suck about Wednesday’s game was that Eric Karros was on Think Blue TV to introduce the game. It was the first time I’ve seen him all season.

The former Dodger first baseman usually co-hosts the broadcast with Gary Miller before Dodger games that are shown on KCAL-9.

Besides being one of my favorite Dodgers ever, Karros has a very interesting perspective on certain aspects of the game. Having been not only a player but a Dodger under Tommy Lasorda among other managers, Karros brings first-hand, inside-the-locker-room experience to his analysis. He tells the viewer what certain players are probably feeling, and a lot of the time, it is not what I would have expected.

For example, yesterday, Dodger Manager Don Mattingly made workhorse centerfielder Matt Kamp take the day off. One of the few things Kemp can pride himself on so far this year is his perennial record as active Major Leaguer with most consecutive games played. But Kemp’s been struggling after off-season shoulder surgery, so Mattingly wanted him to clear his head with an off-day. Well, Karros talked of his own experience in a similar situation, saying that he hated it when managers made him sit. He always wanted to contribute, and once threatened to demand a trade just because Davey Johnson made him stay on the bench for one game.

In the end, Karros admitted that it was usually a good thing to take the pressure off a struggling player, because the struggle just gets worse the more frustrated the player becomes. So it didn’t help yesteday that when he was called on to pinch hit, Kemp struck out swinging with the bases loaded.

So the Dodgers are one under .500 (7-8), in fourth place ahead of the lowly Padres (5-10), who just swept the bejeezus out of us.

But as Eric Karros said, “It’s early in the season. It’s not time to panic yet.”