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Post by Blunashun on Mar 8, 2023 18:45:52 GMT
The Asian community is a plus. But athletes almost ALWAYS go to the highest bidder. Look at Correa's saga this winter. Frisco for 350 million. Mets for 300 million. Finally, the Twins for 200 million. I wouldn't be surprised if after that circus he said he was so glad to be back in Minnesota. The franchise is storied. The community is great. His kids love the schools. I'm so proud to be a Twin. That was an embarrassing, & highly revealing, fiasco. Good point. Thought I'd look it up. www.mlb.com/video/correa-on-re-signing-with-twins
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Post by dking on Mar 8, 2023 21:51:06 GMT
Yeah, Walker should take it easy, just be ready for the playoffs. In the meantime I'd like to see them rush Gavin Stone, kid looks like he's ready, great stuff.
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 8, 2023 23:02:46 GMT
What Dodgers Outfielder James Outman is Trying to Improve Upon This Season
Story by Noah Camras • 4h ago
The Dodgers No. 13 ranked prospect James Outman has a chance to be a star in this league. The outfielder made his major league debut last year, and kicked it off with a bang, homering in his first career at-bat. The party didn't slow down, as he ended up going 6-13 with a home run and two doubles before being sent back down to the minor leagues
Back in Triple-A, he had another incredible run, including hitting for the cycle twice in the same week. However, he didn't get another chance in the majors at the end of 2022.
This year, though, he may be playing himself right back onto that Opening Day Roster. Through his first 13 at-bats, he's again an incredible 6-13 with a home run and a triple.
While Outman's gotten off to another hot start this spring training, he told Doug McKain of Dodgers Nation that he's constantly trying to improve his game. He also specified a few areas he's hoping to improve.
"Honestly, I’m always trying to cut down the strikeouts, drive the ball the other way. But realistically, I just want to be James Outman and do what’s brought me success while I’m still trying to improve the other areas."
In terms of cutting down strikeouts, he's already been much better early in spring. Last year, he had seven strikeouts in 13 at-bats. This year, he has just three.
McKain also asked Outman about his game plan this spring while hoping for a consistent role with the Dodgers this season.
"Just plugging away and doing my thing and let the rest take care of itself."
I love that answer from Outman, one that shows he clearly isn't worried about what decision Dave Roberts or anyone else is going to make, and instead just focused on improving his game and playing the best baseball he can play.
At this point in spring, I don't think there's any way Outman isn't on the Opening Day roster. But we'll have to see how the rest of camp plays out.
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 9, 2023 9:57:39 GMT
Dodgers' Gavin Lux: Undergoes knee surgery Rotowire 11 HRS AGO Lux underwent surgery Wednesday to repair the torn ACL and LCL in his right knee, Jack Harris of the Los Angeles Times reports.
Lux suffered both injuries when he took an awkward step while running the bases in a Cactus League game on Feb. 27. He'll spend the entire 2023 season in recovery mode, spoiling what many thought might be a breakout campaign for the 25-year-old. Miguel Rojas is expected to open as the primary shortstop for the Dodgers, with Chris Taylor also getting some reps there.
Dodgers' Jason Heyward: Expected to make Opening Day roster Rotowire 11 HRS AGO Heyward is a "safe bet" to be on the Dodgers' Opening Day roster, manager Dave Roberts told Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic on Wednesday.
It had already seemed like a good bet even before Gavin Lux's knee injury pushed Chris Taylor into more infield duty. The Dodgers aren't exactly settled in left or center field, so Heyward could actually wind up playing quite a bit. He's showed up to camp with a new swing and has already popped a couple Cactus League homers.
Dodgers' Tony Gonsolin: X-ray rules out ankle fracture Rotowire 11 HRS AGO Gonsolin's left ankle is still swollen, but X-rays revealed there was no fracture, Jack Harris of the Los Angeles Times reports.
Because of the swelling in Gonsolin's sprained ankle, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts announced the right-hander won't throw for at least several more days. The good news is there's no structural damage, so it does appear Gonsolin has avoided a serious injury. Because of the missed time, however, there is a chance that the 28-year-old will not be ready for the start of the 2023 season, with Roberts going so far as to say he "doesn't feel good" about his chances.
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Post by truedodger on Mar 9, 2023 17:49:37 GMT
Yeah, Walker should take it easy, just be ready for the playoffs. In the meantime I'd like to see them rush Gavin Stone, kid looks like he's ready, great stuff. Yeah, they should chill with Buehler. I say that he would need to be back at least a month before the playoffs at full speed for them to put him on the postseason roster if not just shelve him until 2024.
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Post by truedodger on Mar 9, 2023 17:57:39 GMT
Man, I am liking the outfield IF everyone hits, obviously. Heyward has always been strong defensively and so has Peralta. It's been years but if Heyward with his new swing can hit .270/.280 he'd be a nice asset. And, I guess you can say same with Peralta, Trayce and Outman. That would be my outfield.
I'd move Taylor to SS and I know everyone likes Mookie in Right but I'd see how well he keeps handling 2B and have Rojas fill- in for defensively at either spot. Vargas would have lesser reps but it's okay since he's such a young pup that it would seem sensible to bring him around slowly.
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Post by dking on Mar 9, 2023 18:11:03 GMT
I'm willing to bet rojas out hits Taylor this year, I love ct3 but I think he's washed up. now would be a good time to trade him
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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 Mar 10, 2023 3:26:51 GMT
Yeah, Walker should take it easy, just be ready for the playoffs. In the meantime I'd like to see them rush Gavin Stone, kid looks like he's ready, great stuff. So far, Stoney has had two outings, one inning each. with a total of 3 Ks and 1 hit, no runs. Miller hasn't even pitched yet and Pepperman is in the regular spring rotation, including today, with 3 innings, 3 hits, 1 BB, 0 runs and 4 Ks. That strongly implies that Pepperman is ahead of Stoney in the pecking order. Stoney's pitches have plenty of movement and he throws strikes.
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 10, 2023 15:37:35 GMT
Dodgers' Will Smith: Expected to bat third Rotowire 9 HRS AGO Dodgers manager Dave Roberts hinted Wednesday that Smith will be the team's No. 3 hitter this season, Doug Padilla of the Orange County Register reports. "It's hard to go wrong with [Smith] in the three. A guy that can hit left, hit right, he can drive runs in, values the walk, so makes sense," Roberts said.
Smith most frequently batted out of the cleanup spot in 2022, but Los Angeles' lineup has a different look this season, and Roberts appears to favor moving him up a slot. The backstop should continue to see plenty of opportunities to produce with Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman likely hitting ahead of him, though Smith could play slightly fewer games with the DH slot -- where he started 24 times last year -- now expected to be occupied on a near-everyday basis by J.D. Martinez. Even if that's the case, Smith should have ample opportunity to put up numbers worthy of a top-three catcher in fantasy, which is where he's largely being drafted this spring.
Dodgers' Miguel Vargas: Takes first swings of spring Rotowire 9 HRS AGO Vargas went 1-for-3 with a double and a strikeout in a Cactus League contest against Oakland on Thursday.
This was Vargas' seventh game of the spring, but he wasn't allowed to swing the bat in his first six after fracturing his right pinky finger while fielding a grounder early in camp. He was cleared to begin swinging in games ahead of Thursday's exhibition contest and nearly homered in his first at-bat, driving a ball to deep center field that bounced over the fence for a ground-rule double. Now that Vargas is back to playing without restrictions, there's nothing standing in his way of opening the campaign as the Dodgers' starting second baseman.
Dodgers' Noah Syndergaard: Strong results so far this spring Rotowire 11 HRS AGO Syndergaard has tossed five scoreless innings through two spring appearances, allowing one hit and no walks while striking out four batters.
The Dodgers signed Syndergaard over the winter with the hope of turning him into another pitching reclamation success, as they did with both Tyler Anderson and Andrew Heaney last season. Though spring-training stats should always be taken with a grain of salt, the results have been encouraging thus far given Syndergaard's first two outings. On a less positive note, the veteran right-hander has yet to display the in-game bump in velocity that manager Dave Roberts hinted at in mid-February, as he topped out at 93 mph in his first outing and 94 mph in his second, per Jack Harris of the Los Angeles Times. Syndergaard averaged 94.1 mph on his fastball last season, well below his early-career velocity, which averaged over 98 mph.
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 10, 2023 18:01:31 GMT
Meet the four prospects spearheading the Dodgers' youth movement on the mound
Story by Jack Harris • 4h ago
It was right around this time of Dodgers spring training last year when Tyler Anderson came walking through the door.
The team didn’t have an opening in its starting rotation. And Anderson, a veteran left-hander trying to prolong his career, was given no guarantees beyond a long-relief role in an already-stacked bullpen.
The move seemed minor, if not redundant, at the time.
But within a matter of weeks, Anderson’s addition became one of the biggest factors in the Dodgers' 111-win campaign.
That’s the nature of a Major League Baseball season. Starting pitchers almost always get hurt. Opening day rotations are virtually certain to change. And oftentimes, a team’s performance can be defined by how much it can rely on its overall pitching depth.
It’s why the Dodgers signed Anderson last year, then exhaled as he became an All-Star-caliber anchor for their banged-up staff. He was like a de facto insurance policy, and proved to be worth every bit of the $8-million premium it took to sign him.
This year, the team could have attempted a similar move.
Though they have five established starters, almost all of them have injury concerns or potential workload limitations. After both Anderson and Andrew Heaney left in free agency this offseason, the acquisition of another veteran swingman might have made sense.
The Dodgers, however, are going a different direction with their pitching depth this season.
They have a young core of four highly-touted prospects — Ryan Pepiot, Michael Grove, Gavin Stone and Bobby Miller — and are banking on some combination of them to help bolster the rotation throughout the season.
The first opportunity might be coming sooner than expected. After spraining his ankle while walking across the diamond during fielding drills this week, Tony Gonsolin’s status for opening day is unclear. A door might be open for a spot start or two in his place early in the regular season.
And as a result, what was already an intriguing subplot to camp is taking on even more meaning, thrusting the quartet of promising but largely unproven arms into an increasingly bright spotlight just three weeks out from the March 30 opener.
“They’re gonna get an opportunity,” manager Dave Roberts said. “That’s a good thing for them individually and also for the organization, to kind of promote from within.”
Dodgers minor league pitching director Rob Hill beams with pride when discussing the growth of the team’s four young arms.
When Hill was hired by the Dodgers ahead of the 2020 season, each one was just embarking on their professional careers — Grove as a 2018 second-round pick who’d only recently recovered from Tommy John surgery, Pepiot as a third-round pick the previous summer, and Miller and Stone as soon-to-be first- and fifth-round additions in that year’s draft class.
Before long, it was evident their careers would follow similar trajectories. And like others around the organization, Hill quickly recognized they all might reach MLB-readiness around the same time.
“It’s been really cool to watch their growth,” Hill said. “It’s almost like they got more boring, if that makes sense. They just really learned about their craft, about what makes them great. And they continuously and relentlessly pursued it. It’s been really fun to watch.”
Pepiot and Grove have paced the group, getting their first taste of big league life with several call-ups last season.
Pepiot was summoned for three starts in May, one in July and three more in August. His surface level numbers were good, a 3.47 ERA in 36 ⅓ innings (he also made two long relief appearances in September). And there were flashes of his sky-high potential, brief moments when he mixed his deceptive tailing fastball and biting trademark changeup.
“When I was in the zone, I did have success,” Pepiot said. “Seeing that, it gave me a little confidence boost.”
It also provided some motivation to his offseason.
In most of his starts, Pepiot struggled with consistency and command. He lost too many pitches to his arm side of the plate. He couldn’t find a good feel for a slider he’d tinkered with the previous offseason. And he finished the season unsatisfied with his delivery.
So, this winter, he tried to revamp his game.
He focused on cleaning up his mechanics, especially to better locate his two-seamer and changeup. He settled on a more traditional slider shape, with just enough right-to-left movement to keep hitters guessing.
The early returns have been promising, highlighted by one earned run in three Cactus League games and, more importantly, only one walk and nine strikeouts in six innings.
If Gonsolin’s sprained ankle does drag past opening day, Pepiot seems likeliest to get the nod in his place.
“There’s a confidence that comes with knowing the delivery he has landed on and is continuing to hone, will allow him to compete at a higher level,” Hill said. “He’s in a great spot with all those things.”
Grove has made similar strides this spring.
After his own up-and-down debut campaign — he posted a 4.60 ERA in seven big league outings (six starts) after initially being called up straight from double A — the 26-year-old right-hander has displayed equally impressive offseason gains.
His fastball is up a couple of ticks, routinely reaching 96 mph after averaging 94.4 mph last year. He added more spin and movement to his slider and curveball, hopeful it will help him put more batters away in his next stint in the majors.
“I could have gone one of two ways,” Grove said. “Throw [my breaking pitches] harder or get something that spins a little more and has a little bit more shape to it. I went with that route, and just toyed with my grip and made an adjustment that way.”
Stone and Miller haven’t made their major league debuts yet but could be ready at some point this season.
Miller, who hasn’t pitched in a spring game yet because of a slower ramp-up in camp, might have the best raw stuff of any prospect in the organization.
His fastball flirts with triple digits. He can get whiffs with his slider, curveball and changeup. In his third triple-A start near the end of last season, he struck out 14 batters in six innings.
Stone, however, currently looks like the more polished of the two.
After being taken with the second-to-last pick in the pandemic-shortened 2020 draft and struggling in Class A during 2021, Stone burst onto the scene as the Dodgers' minor league pitcher of the year last season.
He led all minor leaguers with a 1.48 ERA, progressed all the way up to triple A (where he posted his best numbers of the year) and so far this camp has earned high praise from Roberts on down.
“There's a lot of talk of Gavin,” Roberts said. “He's opened a lot of eyes."
There is an irrefutable risk to the Dodgers' pitching depth plan this season.
For all the promise and potential they have in their top four prospects — as well as other younger arms who could contribute if needed this season, such as Andre Jackson — they are still putting a lot of trust into pitchers with little to no major league track record.
They’re gambling on a group that offers no guarantees.
And it is quietly looming as a potential linchpin for the team’s fate this season.
The Dodgers did explore other possibilities this winter. They were linked with Seth Lugo before he signed with the San Diego Padres. They checked in with the Miami Marlins on Pablo López before he was dealt to the Minnesota Twins.
They could always explore the market around the trade deadline, though it’s likely their offense could be a more pressing need in the wake of Gavin Lux’s season-ending injury.
For now, they are putting their trust in the current starting five — Julio Urías, Clayton Kershaw, Dustin May, Noah Syndergaard and Gonsolin — and the fast-rising wave of talent behind them.
“You sort of assess the market and potential upside of going outside the organization versus what we had internally, and I think we nailed it,” Roberts said, noting the Dodgers have successfully integrated such past prospects such as Urías and Walker Buehler into their rotation.
“I think the floor is higher than people perceive because of the talent of those minor league arms,” Roberts added.
General manager Brandon Gomes echoed similar optimism, saying he expects the team’s young pitchers to keep progress over the course of the season, regardless of how soon their big league opportunities arise.
“I think each one of them have different things they need to improve upon before becoming impact major leaguers, but they also have different, real strengths,” Gomes said. “We’ll see as things play out. I sense like we always have, we’re going to be using quite a few pitchers. So I think they’ll have the opportunity to go out and continue to develop and grow.”
And there might be no bigger believer than Hill, who has watched them all blossom from raw newly-drafted projects to highly-anticipated prospects knocking on the door of big league opportunities.
“They’ve shown all the things that a big league pitcher needs,” he said. “Staying on the field. Adaptability with the game plan, with pitching and delivery. And just the mental fortitude to make it work and stick through it. I think they all showed they can handle it.”
This year, for better or worse, the Dodgers might not have to wait long to start finding out.
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jrgreene6
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Married . . . With Cats
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Post by jrgreene6 on Mar 10, 2023 19:21:14 GMT
Sounds like Catman’s “day to day sprain” might be a bit more serious than our resident in training originally assessed.
Raise your hand if this is shocking news to you.
“Crickets”.
GO DODGERS!!!
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 10, 2023 20:11:12 GMT
Sounds like Catman’s “day to day sprain” might be a bit more serious than our resident in training originally assessed. Raise your hand if this is shocking news to you. “Crickets”. GO DODGERS!!! Wasn't Dave one of those interns Dr. Cox used to ridicule on Scrubs?
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jrgreene6
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Married . . . With Cats
Posts: 7,438
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Post by jrgreene6 on Mar 10, 2023 21:48:49 GMT
Sounds like Catman’s “day to day sprain” might be a bit more serious than our resident in training originally assessed. Raise your hand if this is shocking news to you. “Crickets”. GO DODGERS!!! Wasn't Dave one of those interns Dr. Cox used to ridicule on Scrubs? Nervous guy Doug, who ended up in the morgue due to most of his patients dying on him is the EPITOME of our boy Daisy. I’m still watching it on IFC and it’s still as funny as hell. GO DODGERS!!!
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 11, 2023 0:45:24 GMT
Dodgers' Bobby Miller: Won't appear in games this spring Rotowire 5 HRS AGO Miller is not expected to pitch in any Cactus League games this spring, Jack Harris of the Los Angeles Times reports.
Miller upped his workload significantly in the minors last season, so the Dodgers are slow-playing him this spring. He remains one of the team's better prospects and should push to debut at some point in 2023.
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20DodgerMiracle24
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Mar 11, 2023 12:35:31 GMT
Dodgers' Bobby Miller: Won't appear in games this spring Rotowire 5 HRS AGO Miller is not expected to pitch in any Cactus League games this spring, Jack Harris of the Los Angeles Times reports. Miller upped his workload significantly in the minors last season, so the Dodgers are slow-playing him this spring. He remains one of the team's better prospects and should push to debut at some point in 2023. I wondered why he hasn't pitched yet. I guess it makes sense, that his body isn't used to pitching so many innings.
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