Showing posts with label L.A. Dodgers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label L.A. Dodgers. Show all posts
Thursday, October 9, 2008
Dodgers Look To Stay Hot in Philly
The National League Championship Series begins tonight, as Derek Lowe takes the mound for the Dodgers against Cole Hamels and the Phillies in Philadelphia. I mentioned the starting pitching of the Dodgers yesterday, but the return of Rafael Furcal to full health has also been crucial to the late-season surge exhibited by L.A. His table-setting presence at the top of the lineup eases pressure on Russell Martin, and we saw just how effective he could be as he gave Carlos Zambrano fits in Game Two of the NLDS series against the Cubs. Besides Furcal, Manny Ramirez's presence has provided not only instant barrages of offense, but has helped Andre Ethier see better pitches and allowed him to find his stroke on his way towards a strong September. I do believe the Phillies will swing the bats better in this series, but Jimmy Rollins must be the catalyst at the top of the lineup because I don't think Charlie Manuel can rely on his big boppers to carry the load.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Starting Pitching Has Dodgers Primed
Twenty-five years later, the Los Angeles Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies meet again in the National League Championship Series. While the Phillies received some strong starting pitching efforts in their NLDS series with the Brewers, I give the edge slightly to the Dodgers in this series because of their own starting pitching. Derek Lowe is 4-0 in his last six postseason starts. and he was as excellent a pitcher in baseball in August and September. His hard sinker is beautiful and his slider has been on the last few months. Chad Billingsley has a moxy about him that I like, and Hiroki Kuroda was very good against the Phillies this season. And will the Phillies' offense be able to produce--Dodgers starting pitching aside?
Trail Blazers center Greg Oden made his NBA debut last night, playing his first game since the 2007 national championship game with Ohio State. Oden finished with 13 points and 5 rebounds in 20 minutes of play and looks to finally be healthy again. I've had reservations about Oden's chances for NBA success--and I know it was just a preseason NBA game--but the kid looked good. By the way, Rudy Fernandez looked good, too. Kevin Pritchard is building a really nice team in Portland that has a lot of versatility, size and skill.
Trail Blazers center Greg Oden made his NBA debut last night, playing his first game since the 2007 national championship game with Ohio State. Oden finished with 13 points and 5 rebounds in 20 minutes of play and looks to finally be healthy again. I've had reservations about Oden's chances for NBA success--and I know it was just a preseason NBA game--but the kid looked good. By the way, Rudy Fernandez looked good, too. Kevin Pritchard is building a really nice team in Portland that has a lot of versatility, size and skill.
Labels:
Greg Oden,
L.A. Dodgers,
NLCS,
Philadelphia Phillies
Friday, October 3, 2008
Windy City Blues As Sox, Cubs Fall
The Tampa Bay Rays opened up postseason play for the first time in franchise history in style Thursday afternoon in St. Petersburg, defeating the Chicago White Sox 6-4 in Game One of their American League Division Series. The Rays overcame a third-inning DeWayne Wise three-run homer behind two Evan Longoria blasts, a solid James Shield start and another commanding bullpen outing. The atmosphere at Tropicana Field was raucous--and the place was shockingly filled to capacity. To the fans' credit, though, they were into the game from the very first pitch to the very last celebrated Rays punchout.
Meanwhile, White Sox starter Javier Vazquez continued to show manager Ozzie Guillen that he indeed is not a big-game pitcher. Guillen questioned Vazquez's ability to deliver in big games before the start of a crucial series with the Minnesota Twins two weeks ago, and Vazquez responded with a poor start. Thursday afternoon at Tropicana, Vazquez gave up six earned runs in 4 1/3 innings, putting the Sox in must-win mode early this evening when Mark Buehrle takes the hill against Scott Kazmir in Game Two.
But unquestionably the biggest story of the day is the shocking ineptitude of the Chicago Cubs in the 2008 postseason. Already trailing in the series after an absurdly poor Game One performance by Ryan Dempster, Carlos Zambrano went from dominant in the first inning to putrid in the second as five Dodgers runs crossed the plate--aided by two head-scratching Cubs errors on potential double-play balls--stunning and silenting a raucous Wrigley Field crowd. For the second consecutive game, the Cubs' offense was nowhere to be found. But the Dodgers certainly brought their clout, as Russell Martin's three-run double highlighted the five-run second, and Manny Ramirez hit his Major League-record 26th postseason homer. Holding a 2-0 lead in the series puts L.A. in an enviable position. Teams that have held a 2-0 lead in the NLDS are unbeaten in 16 series, and have gone onto sweep 13 times.
Meanwhile, White Sox starter Javier Vazquez continued to show manager Ozzie Guillen that he indeed is not a big-game pitcher. Guillen questioned Vazquez's ability to deliver in big games before the start of a crucial series with the Minnesota Twins two weeks ago, and Vazquez responded with a poor start. Thursday afternoon at Tropicana, Vazquez gave up six earned runs in 4 1/3 innings, putting the Sox in must-win mode early this evening when Mark Buehrle takes the hill against Scott Kazmir in Game Two.
But unquestionably the biggest story of the day is the shocking ineptitude of the Chicago Cubs in the 2008 postseason. Already trailing in the series after an absurdly poor Game One performance by Ryan Dempster, Carlos Zambrano went from dominant in the first inning to putrid in the second as five Dodgers runs crossed the plate--aided by two head-scratching Cubs errors on potential double-play balls--stunning and silenting a raucous Wrigley Field crowd. For the second consecutive game, the Cubs' offense was nowhere to be found. But the Dodgers certainly brought their clout, as Russell Martin's three-run double highlighted the five-run second, and Manny Ramirez hit his Major League-record 26th postseason homer. Holding a 2-0 lead in the series puts L.A. in an enviable position. Teams that have held a 2-0 lead in the NLDS are unbeaten in 16 series, and have gone onto sweep 13 times.
Labels:
Chicago Cubs,
Chicago White Sox,
L.A. Dodgers,
Tampa Bay Rays
Thursday, October 2, 2008
Dodgers Slam Cubs in Game One
Wow. At some point we really do have to wonder if the multiple curses of the Chicago Cubs are for real. Pitcher Ryan Dempster had been absolutely dominant at home all season long, yet he walks seven Dodgers--including the bases loaded--before James Loney belted a grand slam to absolutely take the life out of the Wrigley Field capacity crowd. The Dodgers, who won only 84 regular season games, beat the Cubs 7-2, and the North Siders now must turn to Carlos Zambrano in Game Two tonight to even up the best-of-five series at one game apiece. Dodgers starter Derek Lowe gave up a two-run home run to Mark DeRosa--and that was it. I know postseason experience is often overrated, but the former World Series champion looked in command all night in pitching L.A. to a huge Game One win.
Labels:
Chicago Cubs,
Derek Lowe,
L.A. Dodgers,
Ryan Dempster
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