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Post by Blunashun on Sept 30, 2019 20:24:22 GMT
The place to discus this year's run.
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jrgreene6
Legend
Married . . . With Cats
Posts: 7,437
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Post by jrgreene6 on Sept 30, 2019 20:30:24 GMT
The place to discus this year's run. Very unlikely to happen - but I’d LOVE to see Minnesota or Tampa Bay (especially the latter) make the World Series. Short flight either way from Cincy for the weekend and I imagine fairly reasonable room rates and ticket prices in both cities. GO DODGERS!!!
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Post by truedodger on Sept 30, 2019 22:32:16 GMT
Thanks for the thread.
Let's go Dodgers!
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Post by truedodger on Sept 30, 2019 22:32:35 GMT
@alannarizzo
If the #Dodgers play Washington: Game 1 (Thursday): 5:37pm Game 2 (Friday): 6:37pm If the #Dodgers play Milwaukee: Game 1 (Thursday): 6:37pm Game 2 (Friday): 6:47pm
*All times are Pacific Standard Time
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 30, 2019 22:56:46 GMT
Breaking down Dodgers' NLDS rotation
By Ken Gurnick @kengurnick 39 minutes ago
LOS ANGELES -- Leave it to the contrarian Dodgers to set up their starting rotation for the National League Division Series with an eye on the bullpen.
While everyone else is fixated on who the Dodgers will start in Game 1, management has put off announcing that decision until an opponent is determined. It just doesn’t seem like it will be Clayton Kershaw.
Why? Because the Dodgers have three All-Star starters they trust relatively equally -- Kershaw, Hyun-Jin Ryu and Walker Buehler. But one of them could be needed in the bullpen in Game 5, and only one is properly prepared for that.
The most likely takeaway from Kershaw’s Sunday relief appearance -- on two days' rest after his previous start -- is that Kershaw will be in the bullpen on two days' rest if a Game 5 is played. For that to happen, he’d be starting Game 3. He could start Game 2 and either start or relieve in Game 5, but that would mean Ryu or Buehler would be starting Game 3 on the road. More on that later.
As for postseason relief, Kershaw is proven. He saved the Game 5 clincher of the 2016 NLDS in Washington, came on too late to rescue the Dodgers from their Game 7 loss in the 2017 World Series despite pitching four scoreless innings, and pitched a perfect ninth inning in last year’s Game 7 pennant-clincher in Milwaukee.
Ryu has not shown a willingness to pitch in relief, as Kenta Maeda has, while Buehler’s September 2017 bullpen experiment went sideways fast. The Dodgers tried it only one more time last June when Buehler returned from injury, and he gave up five runs in one inning.
So, playing out this scenario, Ryu or Buehler would start Games 1 and 5 and the other would get Game 2. Who slots in where is what apparently has decision makers in a quandary, at least until it’s determined in Tuesday’s Wild Card Game whether the Dodgers’ opponent is Washington or Milwaukee.
tarting Kershaw in Game 3 would allow Ryu and Buehler to start only at Dodger Stadium, where Ryu was 10-1 with a 1.93 ERA and Buehler was 6-1 with a 2.86 ERA. One of them would start Game 5. Kershaw was 10-2 with a 2.89 ERA at home and 6-3 with a 3.21 ERA on the road.
Game 4 on the road will be a bullpen game, apparently with Rich Hill starting, or at least pitching the bulk of the innings if his right knee holds up.
Against all competition, Ryu was more consistent this year (winning the ERA title), while Buehler has been more dominant (team-high 215 strikeouts).
In April, Ryu allowed two runs in 5 2/3 innings during his only start this year at Milwaukee. He started twice against Washington, allowing only one run in 14 2/3 innings, pitching equally effectively in Washington and Los Angeles.
Buehler didn’t pitch against Milwaukee this year, and in his two starts against the Nationals he allowed four earned runs in 12 1/3 innings. All four came in a 9-2 loss in Washington. Kershaw started once against each club, allowing two runs in six innings both times, with both starts on the road.
The Dodgers prefer to give Ryu and Buehler more than the traditional four days off between starts, but Ryu would be pitching on normal rest if he starts Game 1, while Buehler would be getting an extra day.
Maybe the pitchers’ postseason experience could shed some light on management’s thinking. Buehler has made four postseason starts with a 3.80 ERA and 0.845 WHIP. His first start was in Atlanta last year, and he had a five-run meltdown in the second inning. He had a rough start at home against the Brewers in the NLCS; pitched well in the Game 7 clincher, though he didn’t get out of the fifth inning; then dominated the Red Sox at home for seven innings of a no-decision in the 18-inning Game 3 that ended with a Max Muncy walk-off home run.
Ryu is more seasoned, but not by much, going 2-2 with a 4.11 ERA and 1.229 WHIP in seven starts. Throw out his pre-surgery appearances in 2013-14, and his results are confined to last year. He blanked the Braves over seven innings at home in Game 1 of the NLDS, but he was a mess through the next two rounds, failing to finish five innings in any of his three starts, all on the road.
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 1, 2019 14:53:48 GMT
Latest look at Dodgers' potential playoff roster
By Ken Gurnick @kengurnick September 30, 2019
LOS ANGELES -- Along with breaking the franchise record for victories in one season, Sunday’s regular-season finale provided Dodgers management with valuable information on Rich Hill, Joe Kelly and Dustin May as it ponders roster decisions for the National League Division Series.
Hill pitched three effective innings without noticeable left knee pain, improving his chances to be the starter or bulk pitcher when the bullpen handles Game 4. Kelly pitched for the first time since an unspecified ailment sidelined him for 11 days, and May made his eighth consecutive scoreless appearance.
Third baseman Justin Turner, however, missed the last five games with a back injury.
With that backdrop, here's the latest guess at how the postseason roster will look:
Catchers (2): Will Smith, Russell Martin Smith remains management’s choice to catch any game not started by Hyun-Jin Ryu, who clearly pitches better when Martin catches. It’s virtually unprecedented for a team that expects to win a World Series to switch to a rookie catcher late in a season, but it has happened. The Dodgers apparently look back on the 2018 postseason -- when the catching combination of Yasmani Grandal and Austin Barnes disappointed -- and figure they will be no worse off this time.
Infielders (6): Turner, Corey Seager, Enrique Hernández, David Freese, Max Muncy, Gavin Lux The red flag on Turner can’t be ignored, although he said he will do “whatever it takes” to be ready for Thursday. That’s what he did when he was rumored to have played with a back injury in the 2017 World Series, when he hit .160. Lux has played a surprisingly slick second base for a natural shortstop. Offensively, he looks like a talented 21-year-old, meaning he shows flashes of brilliance, but he strikes out about one-third of the time.He probably won’t start against left-handed pitching. Muncy returned quickly from a broken right wrist, with the power appearing to come around over the final week after nursing a tight quad.
Seager has really picked it up of late after appearing to be a work in progress following two operations last year. Hernández has lost playing time to Lux, but he appears almost nightly regardless.
Outfielders (5): Cody Bellinger, Matt Beaty, A.J. Pollock, Chris Taylor, Joc Pederson Bellinger might win the MVP, but his second half wasn’t anything like his first half, and he picked it up only a little in September. Pollock was the opposite, producing better late than his injury-plagued first half. Pederson epitomizes today’s game as a slugger on every pitch. Taylor (and Hernández) are liable to show up anywhere.
Starting pitchers (3): Walker Buehler, Ryu, Clayton Kershaw The big three are as much as the club will commit to, with a potential Game 4 looking like a bullpen/opener combination, depending on matchups. Kershaw’s relief appearance against Madison Bumgarner and the Giants on Sunday was a tipoff that he’s likely to start Game 2. Where to slot Buehler and Ryu is an apparent quandary, as arguments can be made either way. They all pitch much better at home, so the Game 3 starter will be at some disadvantage. That might mean Ryu because of his experience edge.
Relief pitchers (9): Jansen, Kelly, Pedro Báez, Adam Kolarek, Kenta Maeda, Hill, Ross Stripling, Julio Urías, May Jansen was noticeably improved after a phone call with Minor League mentor Charlie Hough at the beginning of last week. Kelly has faced two batters in two weeks, but he insists he’ll be good to go by Thursday and even can pitch on back-to-back days. Much will be needed from Maeda and Urías, while Kolarek has proved to be a workhorse Trade Deadline acquisition. This alignment leaves out Caleb Ferguson, Dylan Floro, Yimi García, Casey Sadler and especially Tony Gonsolin, who essentially was bumped by Hill -- but any of them could make it depending on Kelly’s health and the opponent.
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 1, 2019 14:56:15 GMT
That would be a shame about Ferguson.
Kelly is 'hurt.' No way should we risk his health for a stoopid championship. Go with Gonsolin.
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 1, 2019 15:03:43 GMT
Brewers at Washington - 5:08 PM.
If the Brewers win, hopefully Craig Counsell held on to his psychotic managerial playbook from last year.
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Post by truedodger on Oct 1, 2019 15:25:45 GMT
@jaysonst
Most years since last postseason appearance:
Mariners 18 Marlins 16 Padres 13 White Sox 11 Phillies 8
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 1, 2019 15:30:38 GMT
Please let us burn it.
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jrgreene6
Legend
Married . . . With Cats
Posts: 7,437
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Post by jrgreene6 on Oct 1, 2019 18:08:39 GMT
That would be a shame about Ferguson. Kelly is 'hurt.' No way should we risk his health for a stoopid championship. Go with Gonsolin. No Flopo or Yumpin Yimini - I believe these are two excellent choices to not be included. Would’ve liked to have seen Goose & Ferguson. Maybe next round. If Kelly comes up lame, can he be replaced or would he require going on the IL in order to be replaced? That would pretty much knock him out of the first two rounds. GO DODGERS!!!
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Post by Blunashun on Oct 1, 2019 19:26:16 GMT
That would be a shame about Ferguson. Kelly is 'hurt.' No way should we risk his health for a stoopid championship. Go with Gonsolin. No Flopo or Yumpin Yimini - I believe these are two excellent choices to not be included. Would’ve liked to have seen Goose & Ferguson. Maybe next round. If Kelly comes up lame, can he be replaced or would he require going on the IL in order to be replaced? That would pretty much knock him out of the first two rounds. GO DODGERS!!! www.thecubreporter.com/book/export/html/35499. A post-season eligible player who is injured during a post-season series (LDS, LCS, or World Series) can (with the approval of the MLB Commissioner) be replaced during the series by another player on the club's Post-Season Eligibility List, or by a player who was on an Active List, Reserve List, 60-day Injured List, or Military List of a minor league affiliate from that organization prior to midnight (Eastern) on August 31st, or by a player who was on the club's MLB Reserve List (40-man roster), MLB 60-day Injured List, or Military List prior to midnight (Eastern) on August 31st but who was subsequently sent outright to the minors. (In the case of a player who is sent outright to the minors after August 31st, the player must remain on a Reserve List of a minor league affiliate from that organization continuously throughout the remainder of the MLB regular season and post-season in order to be eligible to replace an injured post-season eligible player). An injured player replaced during a post-season series is ineligible to be reinstated to his club's Active List (25-man roster) for the balance of that series and the next series (LCS or World Series). Also, a pitcher must replace a pitcher and a position player must replace a position player. However, it is NOT necessary for a catcher to replace a catcher, an infielder to replace an infielder, or an outfielder to replace an outfielder.
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Post by truedodger on Oct 1, 2019 20:47:18 GMT
That would be a shame about Ferguson. Kelly is 'hurt.' No way should we risk his health for a stoopid championship. Go with Gonsolin. No Flopo or Yumpin Yimini - I believe these are two excellent choices to not be included. Would’ve liked to have seen Goose & Ferguson. Maybe next round. If Kelly comes up lame, can he be replaced or would he require going on the IL in order to be replaced? That would pretty much knock him out of the first two rounds. GO DODGERS!!! I don't see how neither gets on. Hopefully!
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Post by truedodger on Oct 1, 2019 21:59:13 GMT
Much rather face the Brewers who are without Yelich and have a less formidable rotation to that of the Nationals.
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jrgreene6
Legend
Married . . . With Cats
Posts: 7,437
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Post by jrgreene6 on Oct 1, 2019 22:13:43 GMT
Much rather face the Brewers who are without Yelich and have a less formidable rotation to that of the Nationals. We were 4 - 3 against both this year, but we haven’t seen the Brew Crew since VERY early in the season. I’d rather go against them as well, but think we’re okay against the Nats. GO DODGERS!!!
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