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Post by Blunashun on Sept 4, 2020 22:01:27 GMT
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Post by Blunashun on Sept 5, 2020 21:20:09 GMT
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Post by 88bulldog on Oct 1, 2020 5:49:19 GMT
Think I would go with JT. But it’s close for me, especially considering how much I love penguins.
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jrgreene6
Legend
Married . . . With Cats
Posts: 7,437
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Post by jrgreene6 on Oct 1, 2020 5:56:21 GMT
Think I would go with JT. But it’s close for me, especially considering how much I love penguins. Who doesn’t love penguins? GO DODGERS!!!
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Post by 88bulldog on Oct 1, 2020 5:58:12 GMT
Think I would go with JT. But it’s close for me, especially considering how much I love penguins. Who doesn’t love penguins? GO DODGERS!!! Yeah, really! They’re so annoying 😃
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Post by 88bulldog on Oct 1, 2020 5:59:16 GMT
and they’re pretty stupid too!!
😂
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20DodgerMiracle24
Legend
Rob Manfred is a disaster to our national pastime.
Posts: 1,790
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Nov 2, 2020 14:56:41 GMT
And the best sub? A toss up between Darrly Thomas and Kike Hernamdez
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Post by Blunashun on Nov 2, 2020 18:42:23 GMT
And the best sub? A toss up between Darrly Thomas and Kike Hernamdez I always kinda liked Lee Lacy too.
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20DodgerMiracle24
Legend
Rob Manfred is a disaster to our national pastime.
Posts: 1,790
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Nov 2, 2020 20:06:56 GMT
Think I would go with JT. But it’s close for me, especially considering how much I love penguins. It's Justin for me also. It would've been Adrian Beltre if the Murdock bunch hadn't cut him after the '04 season.
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Post by Blunashun on Nov 2, 2020 20:15:24 GMT
Think I would go with JT. But it’s close for me, especially considering how much I love penguins. It's Justin for me also. It would've been Adrian Beltre if the Murdock bunch hadn't cut him after the '04 season. That was McCourt. "You'll have your third baseman." That's what Frank told a fan who asked. Turns out that third baseman was Jose Valentin.
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20DodgerMiracle24
Legend
Rob Manfred is a disaster to our national pastime.
Posts: 1,790
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Nov 3, 2020 16:36:07 GMT
It's Justin for me also. It would've been Adrian Beltre if the Murdock bunch hadn't cut him after the '04 season. That was McCourt. "You'll have your third baseman." That's what Frank told a fan who asked. Turns out that third baseman was Jose Valentin. No, it was the Murdock bunch. McCourt hadn't come along yet, as much as I'd love to blame them.
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Post by Blunashun on Nov 3, 2020 22:33:31 GMT
That was McCourt. "You'll have your third baseman." That's what Frank told a fan who asked. Turns out that third baseman was Jose Valentin. No, it was the Murdock bunch. McCourt hadn't come along yet, as much as I'd love to blame them. Okay. But McCourt bought the team before the 2004 season. Beltre hit .334-48-121 for the division winning Dodgers in 2004. Remember that Dan Evans had cleared payroll space to make a run at Vladimir Guerrero. Frank fired Evans & replaced him with DePo. Then he blamed Bud Selig for supposedly not being able to spend that big & kept the money. Guerrero was AL MVP for the Angels. I remember this stuff because I hated McCourt. In 2005, DePo spent on Kent & Drew. We had Jose Valentin at third base. They even experimented with a washed up Japanese league star.
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Post by Blunashun on Nov 3, 2020 22:43:58 GMT
Paul DePodesta
At the age of 31, DePodesta was named general manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers on February 16, 2004, making him the fifth-youngest general manager in baseball history, behind Jon Daniels of the Texas Rangers, Theo Epstein of the Boston Red Sox, Andrew Friedman of the Tampa Bay Rays, and Randy Smith of the San Diego Padres.
During the 2004 off-season, Adrián Beltré, who had hit 48 home runs in 2004, signed with Seattle as a free agent, spurning DePodesta's offer of 3 years for $30 million for Seattle's offer of 5 years for $64 million. DePodesta signed J. D. Drew, Jeff Kent, and Derek Lowe. Drew enjoyed two productive seasons as a Dodger and then used an opt-out clause in his contract to sign a new 5-year deal with the Boston Red Sox. Both Kent and Lowe put in four productive seasons for the Dodgers and cut ties with the franchise at the end of the 2008 season with Kent retiring and Lowe signing a contract with the Atlanta Braves.
Hiring and firing of Paul DePodesta In 2003 (under NewsCorp ownership) the Dodgers' record was 85 wins, 77 losses. Shortly after purchasing the team, McCourt fired then General Manager Dan Evans, replacing him with Paul DePodesta. DePodesta is featured (along with Billy Beane) in the book Moneyball as it discussed their sabermetric-based approach to using statistics to build the Oakland A's. In Los Angeles, DePodesta made a trade in the middle of the 2004 season that sent the Dodgers' starting catcher, Paul Lo Duca, its set-up man, pitcher Guillermo Mota, and outfielder Juan Encarnación to the Florida Marlins for the high on-base percentage first baseman Hee-Seop Choi and power pitcher Brad Penny and pitching prospect Bill Murphy, who was in turn flipped with Koyie Hill and Reggie Abercrombie to the Arizona Diamondbacks for Gold Glove center fielder Steve Finley and catcher Brent Mayne. At the time, DePodesta said of Choi, "I think we've acquired one of the better offensive players in the league."
Finley hit 13 HRs for the Dodgers in his two months with the team. Choi batted .161 with 0 HRs for the Dodgers after the trade, though he walked 11 times in 87 plate appearances. In the playoff loss to St. Louis that season, Penny did not play, Choi had one at bat (hitless) and Dodger catchers were 3-for-10.
In 2004, the Dodgers won the NL West with a record of 93-69, but lost in four games to the St. Louis Cardinals in the Divisional Series. In the offseason the Dodgers decided not to re-sign Adrián Beltré due to his high contract demands (Beltre finished second in the NL MVP voting and would later sign with Seattle for 5 years/$64 million). DePodesta signed outfielder J. D. Drew for five years at $55 million, sinkerball pitcher Derek Lowe for four years at $36 million, and All-Star second baseman Jeff Kent.
However, the 2005 season, with a record of 71—91, was the Dodgers' second-worst record since moving to Los Angeles, due in part to players' injuries. That off-season, manager Jim Tracy was fired. Soon after Tracy was fired, McCourt fired DePodesta and about a month later, hired Ned Colletti to replace him.
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