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Post by 88bulldog on Oct 7, 2018 1:58:56 GMT
Puig likely out of lineup Sunday. Newcomb now starting, he's a lefty, and Doc annoyed about the delayed steal attempt.
I'm guessing we see Freese at 1B and Cody to the OF.
Newcomb almost no hit us in July.
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jrgreene6
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Post by jrgreene6 on Oct 7, 2018 21:41:11 GMT
Puig likely out of lineup Sunday. Newcomb now starting, he's a lefty, and Doc annoyed about the delayed steal attempt. I'm guessing we see Freese at 1B and Cody to the OF. Newcomb almost no hit us in July. Guess we’ll see Matty Kemp tonight; that works for me. Everybody say it with me now: Buehler, Buehler, Buehler? Anyone? Anyone? GO DODGERS!!!
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 8, 2018 0:25:28 GMT
Two innings & two double plays. I think Buehler had a five pitch first though.
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 8, 2018 0:39:57 GMT
Has anyone seen Ferris? There's an imposter out there.
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20DodgerMiracle24
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Oct 8, 2018 2:08:10 GMT
Two innings & two double plays. I think Buehler had a five pitch first though. Buehler has been perfect tonite but for that bad 2nd inning.
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 8, 2018 2:26:06 GMT
Two innings & two double plays. I think Buehler had a five pitch first though. Buehler has been perfect tonite but for that bad 2nd inning. And we just got taken deep by a great hitter after not capitalizing on a bases loaded situation.
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jrgreene6
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Post by jrgreene6 on Oct 8, 2018 4:01:50 GMT
Six runs on four hits for Atlanta. Horrible at bat by Manny. How many did we leave on base tonight - 15, 20?
Another abysmal night of hitting with RISP. Puig with another goose egg (even though he didn’t start).
Nine walks to go with seven hits and an error - gotta score more than five with gifts like that.
Ferris completely out of character tonight - let’s hope we get a better version his next start.
Who goes tomorrow? Hill? Bulllpen? C’mon, boys! I’m ready to scoot up the Milwaukee later this week.
GO DODGERS!!!
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 8, 2018 4:28:58 GMT
Six runs on four hits for Atlanta. Horrible at bat by Manny. How many did we leave on base tonight - 15, 20? 9. 1-9 W/RISP. Atlanta left 2. 1-1 W/RISP. I'm encouraged by Buehler's in-game recovery. He looked like a deer in the headlights that one inning.
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 30, 2018 16:46:22 GMT
After Series loss, Kershaw ponders opt-out
By Ken Gurnick MLB.com @kengurnick Oct. 28th, 2018
LOS ANGELES -- Sandy Koufax's last Dodgers start was a World Series loss, so Clayton Kershaw will be in familiar company if he chooses free agency and Sunday night's 5-1 defeat to the Red Sox that eliminated the Dodgers from the World Series doubles as Kershaw's Los Angeles farewell.
Kershaw has three days to decide whether to exercise a contract opt-out and walk away from the final two years and $65 million of his contract, but it was obviously not the first thing on his mind Sunday night.
"This was a tough one for us tonight, it really was," said Kershaw. "Myself, personally, you know, it was tough. David Price pitched a great game and I got outpitched and we lost the game. I've got three days now to think about all of that stuff before anything happens. And so it will be an eventful three days for me, and I'll try to figure it out.
"I haven't made the decision yet. We have three days to talk, between us and the Dodgers, see what happens. And then we'll go from there."
Kershaw's future was nearly as prominent a topic in the Dodgers' somber postgame clubhouse as a second World Series defeat in as many seasons.
"Clayton is the Dodgers," said Rich Hill. "He's the heart and soul of this organization. You look at a guy like that, put it on the line for so many years and had so much success here, I just hope they do the right things."
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, who also has a contract issue to be resolved, addressed Kershaw's importance to the franchise in his postgame message to the club.
"I did mention Clayton by name as far as his legacy with the Dodgers, and what he's done for the organization, the fan base," said Roberts. "Wearing this jersey, Clayton exemplifies what it is to be a Dodger and to be a man of character.
"So whatever decision he makes, that is with him and his family. But for me to be on his team for three years I've learned a tremendous amount from him, and I'll take that going forward. This one hurts for him. This one hurts for all of us. But the effort, the preparation, all the hard work that he has put in and his teammates, for me is unparalleled."
But Kershaw still doesn't have a ring.
"There's only one team that can win and we know that, but it just hurts worse when you make it all the way and get second place," he said. "So having done that two years in a row now, it doesn't make it any easier. I'm proud to be part of a group that did get to go to the World Series two years in a row. Proud of that. Proud of what we were able to accomplish this year as a team. And anytime you lose the last game when you're in the playoffs, it's no fun. So, yeah, just some disappointment right now for sure."
Kershaw allowed home runs to Steve Pearce, Mookie Betts and J.D. Martinez in Game 5, but he also lacked needed support after David Freese's homer leading off the bottom of the first inning. Kershaw was charged with four runs in seven innings.
"When he did make a mistake," said Roberts, "they hit it out of the ballpark."
The Dodgers already were trailing on a two-run homer in the first inning by eventual series MVP Pearce, although Kershaw was more critical of the preceding single by Andrew Benintendi on an 0-2 pitch.
"He didn't hit it that hard, but he shouldn't be able to make contact on a 0-2 slider," said Kershaw. "I left that one up. That's what cost you."
Kershaw complained after Game 1 that his slider -- which had become his primary pitch this year after a drop in fastball velocity -- wasn't sharp. He didn't seem to trust it in this game, throwing it a season-low 27 percent of the time according to Statcast™. A fastball in the low-90s to a team with hitters like Boston, well, Kershaw summed up that equation.
"Not a lot of margin for error," he said. "I made a few mistakes tonight and sometimes you just wish they'd find a gap or find a single or something like that. And they went over the fence tonight. That's the story of the game."
Kershaw -- a three-time National League Cy Young Award winner, seven-time All-Star and the 2014 NL MVP Award winner -- has an un-Kershaw 9-10 record and a 4.32 ERA in the postseason (1-2, 5.40 in the World Series). That included his Game 1 loss in Boston last week, when he allowed five runs in four-plus innings. In Game 5 he struck out five without a walk.
The Dodgers have lost four of the six postseason starts that Kershaw has made with his team facing elimination.
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 30, 2018 17:48:24 GMT
www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/LAN/LAN200910150.shtmlClayton got hammered. Wasn't this the game he was getting pinched in? Anyway, he had thrown 72% fastballs during the regular season, 6.9% sliders 16.8% curves & 4.3% changeups. This game he threw 65% fastballs, 22% sliders & 9% curves. I don't see any changeups. Did he abandon the curve & changeup? His fastball averaged 95.0 mph. During the season it was 93.9 mph. www.brooksbaseball.net/pfxVB/pfx.php?month=9&day=29&year=2018&game=gid_2018_09_29_clemlb_kcamlb_1%2F&pitchSel=453192&prevGame=gid_2018_09_29_clemlb_kcamlb_1%2F&prevDate=929&league=mlbwww.baseball-reference.com/boxes/PHI/PHI200910210.shtmlwww.brooksbaseball.net/pfxVB/pfx.php?month=10&day=21&year=2009&game=gid_2009_10_21_lanmlb_phimlb_1%2F&pitchSel=477132&prevGame=gid_2009_10_21_lanmlb_phimlb_1%2F&prevDate=1021&league=mlb61% fastballs, that averaged 94.7 mph, 31% sliders, just 3 curves (8%) & no changes. www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/SLN/SLN201310180.shtmlwww.brooksbaseball.net/pfxVB/pfx.php?month=10&day=18&year=2013&game=gid_2013_10_18_lanmlb_slnmlb_1%2F&pitchSel=477132&prevGame=gid_2013_10_18_lanmlb_slnmlb_1%2F&prevDate=1018&league=mlb63% fastballs. It was 60.7% during the regular season. He averaged 92.6 mph during the regular season. He threw it 93.9 mph this fine day. ONE changeup. 23% sliders (on a par with his regular season totals). 8% curveballs (12.5% during the regular season), but just 3 for strikes. www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/LAN/LAN201410030.shtmlwww.brooksbaseball.net/pfxVB/pfx.php?month=10&day=3&year=2014&game=gid_2014_10_03_slnmlb_lanmlb_1%2F&pitchSel=477132&prevGame=gid_2014_10_03_slnmlb_lanmlb_1%2F&prevDate=103&league=mlb60% fastballs (55.4% during the regular season & at 94.2 mph as opposed to 93.0 mph), 28% sliders (29.4%), but he was throwing them 1.1 mph faster, 12% curves (14.3% during the regular season) & no changeups. He seemingly abandons his off-speed pitches in pressure situations. His knuckles must be white from gripping the ball. So much adrenaline.
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 30, 2018 17:59:35 GMT
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 31, 2018 18:02:56 GMT
Kershaw must make opt-out choice today
By Ken Gurnick MLB.com @kengurnick 32 minutes ago
LOS ANGELES -- Clayton Kershaw has until midnight ET (9 p.m. PT) tonight to exercise the opt-out in his contract and become a free agent. If he does not, he will fulfill the final two seasons of his deal with the Dodgers.
Kershaw, 30, originally signed a seven-year, $215 million contract in January 2014 that included a player option to become a free agent after five seasons. If he opts out, he walks away from $65 million guaranteed over the next two seasons.
He would then be a free agent who could negotiate with any club, including the Dodgers, the club that drafted him in the first round in 2006. If Kershaw opts out, the Dodgers would be expected to make Kershaw a qualifying offer of $17.9 million Friday, which would provide the team a compensatory Draft pick if Kershaw signs elsewhere.
The opt-out is a perk that always benefits the player. If he outperforms the original salary of the contract, he can cash in again. If he underperforms, he passes and finishes out the remainder of his deal.
Kershaw, however, is in a middle ground that complicates his decision. At age 30, he remains one of the best pitchers in the league. But he's also had back and shoulder injuries over the past three years which are likely to have contributed to diminished velocity, which he has responded to by essentially becoming a breaking-ball pitcher, reliant on his slider.
These injuries weigh on any club considering offering him a lucrative deal, including the Dodgers in the case of an extension, with a $32.5 million annual salary a very high bar to clear in the current market.
For most of this decade, Kershaw has been the best pitcher of his generation and the greatest Dodgers pitcher since Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax, with whom he has developed a close friendship and is often compared to.
Kershaw is a three-time Cy Young winner, an MVP and a seven-time All-Star. Despite two disabled-list stints this year, he finished with a 2.73 ERA -- which would have been good for fourth in the National League had he thrown enough innings -- and went 6-1 in the second half.
But he still hasn't won a championship, and again was unable to rewrite the narrative of his postseason struggles by losing Games 1 and 5 in the Dodgers' World Series loss to Boston last week. Kershaw is 9-10 in the postseason during his career.
In 11 seasons, Kershaw has the lowest ERA and WHIP in the live-ball era. He is 153-69 with a 2.39 ERA and 1.005 WHIP. He has won five ERA titles, and led the NL in wins and strikeouts three times.
Ken Gurnick has covered the Dodgers for MLB.com since 2001.
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jrgreene6
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Post by jrgreene6 on Nov 1, 2018 3:05:10 GMT
Dodgers extend Kershaw opt decision until Friday. Sounds like they might be working on an extension. I personally hope they get it done and he ends his career in blue.
He and his family are already set for life, so I imagine it’s going to come down to how many additional years LA is willing to go and if that number is enough for Kersh.
GO DODGERS!!!
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Post by 88bulldog on Nov 2, 2018 15:59:54 GMT
Dodgers extend Kershaw opt decision until Friday. Sounds like they might be working on an extension. I personally hope they get it done and he ends his career in blue. He and his family are already set for life, so I imagine it’s going to come down to how many additional years LA is willing to go and if that number is enough for Kersh. GO DODGERS!!! Me too.
We will find out what is important to him, his Dodger legacy, money or both?
No updates yet, but if he leaves I certainly hope it's not for the Yankees. That would ruin it.
5 years $150 or $160 mill is certainly fair. We'll see what happens.
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Post by Blunashun on Nov 2, 2018 21:13:42 GMT
Clayton Kershaw Re-Signs with Dodgers on 3-Year, $93M Contract Timothy Rapp
November 2, 2018
The Los Angeles Dodgers and Clayton Kershaw agreed to a new three-year contract Friday that ensures he won't become a free agent until the end of the 2021 campaign, the team announced.
The New York Post's Joel Sherman reported the deal is for $93 million.
Kershaw had until 4 p.m. ET on Friday to decide if he wanted to exercise or decline the option in his contract. Had he opted out, he would have forfeited $65 million over the next two seasons.
The 30-year-old has established himself as arguably the top starting pitcher in baseball.
He has seven seasons with 200 strikeouts or more (and hit 301 strikeouts in 2015), six seasons with a sub-2.50 ERA, three seasons with a sub-2.00 ERA and six seasons with a WHIP below 1.00. He's thrown 175 or more innings seven times and has eight straight years of double-digit wins (2010-17).
He's led the National League in ERA five times, WHIP four times, wins three times and strikeouts three times.
He's a seven-time All-Star, three-time Cy Young winner and was the 2014 NL MVP. He was the first pitcher to earn that honor in the National League since Bob Gibson in 1968 (Justin Verlander was the last pitcher to win an AL MVP in 2011).
Suffice it to say, Kershaw's value to the Dodgers is astronomical despite a rather inconsistent postseason track record. Overall, Kershaw is 9-10 with a 4.32 ERA across 24 playoff starts, including 0-2 with a 7.36 ERA over 11 innings against the reigning champion Boston Red Sox in this year's World Series.
Despite those flaws, the Dodgers negotiated a new deal with Kershaw to keep the perennial Cy Young candidate in Southern California.
If he's able to maintain his elite level of pitching well into his 30s, that will not only be money well spent, but Kershaw may also go down as one of the most dominant pitchers in MLB history.
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