During the off-season, I will focusing mainly on goings on with the team, but also with a lot of other things such as sports, video games, and most importantly a video blog for my daughter. As the Hot Stove season picks up, I will get more into the swing of things, but for now, Hockey and Football is back. I will, from time to time chime in on political things, and bare with me the idea that I don’t know how to do a video blog or for that matter keep a stream on twitter, so ill be experimenting a lot.

Please feel free to read on my prior posts, and join me on another blog I always blog on.

outsidethedodgers.wordpress.com

 

No more playing games, no more talking through reps or speaking eloquently so as to mir the truth in lies. Ned messed up this Trade Deadline worse than any other deadline. In what other Deadline have we seen this team become worse while trading something, gaining nothing and trading for nothing worthwhile in return. We were neither buyers nor sellers. We were spectators, and horrible at that. Not only did we leave it up to the players to decide the teams fate, but when that power was shifted to Ned, he gutted the farm of the one player that could make an impact on this team, for players that will fizz out before they turn 30. Can you say CAREER MINOR LEAGUER.?

In one fell swoop, we lost our Top Minor Leaguer and showed the rest of the baseball world that we have stupidity pouring out our “managements” ears.

1. Hiroki should of been traded, but due to the fact that he was given ridiculous amounts of money for mediocrity, even if bare assistance from the lineup resulted in much of his problems, he even received a NTC. What the hell did Ned do besides give a trade chip the leverage to fuck over the team for no reason at all. Not only did he do so with right, but he did it with his damn pride intact, as if the team owed him anything. A lot of teams were looking at him as the Trade Jewel other than Ubaldo, but he didn’t want to seem as though he was being thrown out the door. As if his performance and age was not important in today’s game. As if.? This one will hurt further, because his denial of a trade factored into the other trade, made out of desperation, and the lack of further trades.

2. Trayvon Robinson, former standout at Crenshaw High was traded to the Red Sox for a Catcher, RP, and a SP. What’s the problem here.? Their all 24 and older, in AA ball, not very good offensively or refined in pitching mechanics or 2nd out pitches. The two pitchers figure to become relief pitchers in the long run, and the 24 yr old Catcher, whom is being touted as the next coming of David Ross, not much offense, but plenty defense, career backup type player, for a budding Big leaguer who led the team in HR’s, RBI’s etc., is just that, not much. We needed offense, blue chip players, but instead we got the busted items from the 99 cent only store.

3. Raffy was traded for beans. Not literally, but you get the point. A former All-Star, one of the best in the league, reduced to being sold off as a deduction in what amounted to a career full of injuries, and lack of production. He will always be remembered for his cannon arm during his first contract with the team, but by the time the 2nd contract was signed, he was a shell of his former self. Now, he goes to a Cardinal team loaded to compete and make a run at the title. In return, we get a good AA ball player, in return of paying almost all of his contract. I mean, did I miss something. Did Frank suddenly strike oil or something. Unless he’s going to pay Raffy’s contract with Monopoly money, THIS IS A JOKE. Good for the future or not, Raffy was traded for a minor leaguer who will become a 4th OF, and not something we need.

4. With the need to ship out Hiroki, Carroll, Ethier, Lilly, Guerrier, Broxton, and anyone else old, slow, underperforming, etc., or anyone that deserves a chance to help a playoff ball club, ie. Carroll, for prospects to restock our farm, we didn’t do a thing. We stood pat, and we will regret it next season. You think this season was horrible. Imagine almost $45 mil coming off the record books, and no obligation to actually use that money on major league talent. Imagine a team that has a rookie starting in as many as 6 positions next year, a starter, and like 2 bullpen spots. Imagine our Opening Day payroll at $65- $89 mil range. Imagine having Matt Kemp be the only hitter, with Ethier traded away for scraps or fringe major leaguers. What about the year after, when contracts of Bills, Lilly and others come off or something of the like of books. This team is mediocre at best right now, but with next season already looming on the horizon, I do feel sickened.

All in all, with the many holes needed to be filled and restocked, Ned chose to sell his talent short, and for that, I hope he loses his job, or worse off, dies choking on his own words in trying to find a way to spin today’s debacle. What’s next.? We needed a catcher, 2nd Basemen, 3rd Basemen, 1st basemen, etc. Position players, but all we got was more OF’s and Pitchers. No need to forget the fact that Lucas May, Carlos Santana, etc we’re traded last season and seasons’ past, but now we have been weakened with no end to this nightmare in sight.

WHAT’S NEXT

Well, the WAIVER Trade Deadline comes up next, and as we all know, Ned sure does know how to pick em round this time as well. Maybe this time will be Sands, Rubby, DeJesus or Dee’s time to be traded for more career minor leaguers. Heck, their just the way Frank McNuttless likes em, young, cheap, and obedient.

Sad to say, I won’t be taking my daughter to a ball game anytime soon.

  1. Hiroki Kuroda
  2. Andre Ethier
  3. Jamey Carroll
  4. James Loney
  5. Rod Barajas
  6. Juan Uribe
  7. Aaron Miles
  8. Rafael Furcal
  9. Jonathan Broxton
  10. Ted Lilly
  11. Blake Hawksworth
  12. Matt Guerrier
  13. Hung Chih Kuo
  14. Chad Billingsley
  15. Mike MacDougal
  16. Casey Blake

What do all these guys have in common. For the 1st time in a long long time, this Dodger ball club will be sellers, and to say it isn’t with a heavy heart that many see this as throwing up the white flag, it has come down to rebuilding or retooling for the future. Many of these above are simply overpaid, old, or just in need by another ball club, and some of them are FA at the end of the season. With that being said, this team, and it’s misfortunes and lack of money with which to operate with have led me, as well as most to believe that if we keep the upcoming FA’s, we won’t even take the picks associated with the Type player they come out to be.

Some are hurt, some are fine, just under performing, but it’s about time that this team clears house, and gets what it can for what they got.

Most of them above won’t be traded but those that are, hopefully can get a net return that we can build with.

Our biggest needs in the minors are CATCHER, 3B, 2B, and 1B.

To me, the best trade hopes lie in Boston, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Arizona, Reds, Royals, White Sox, Yankees

Out of Boston, we can get the now trapped Lars Anderson, Middlebrooks

Out of Cleveland, we can get Brantley, Chisenhall, Kipnis

Out of Pittsburgh, we can get Presley, Wood, D’arnaud, Doumit, Owens

Out of Arizona, we can get Borchering, Goldschmidt

Out of Reds, we can get Mesoraco, Alonso, Grandal

Out of Royals, we can get Clint Robinson

Out of White Sox, we can get Viciedo, Flowers

Out of Yankees, we can get Sanchez

Of course, the deal would have to be right for both clubs, but as long as we can get some kinda good fortune for these players, who knows what the future may bring.

So it all comes down to what Ned Colleti decides to do. Does he go the route we all want him to go through, and trade what little working pieces we have for prospects and major league near or ready players, or does he stay the arrogant course, and deny what is plain to see. Does he buy without selling, thus stunting our progress toward rebuilding after this season and its abysmal results.

Only time will tell, but in all fairness, the lone exceptions to trading are Kershaw, Kemp, Rubby, Sands, Robinson, DeJesus, Gordon, Jansen, Guerra, etc. These are deemed by fans and anyone with half a brain as untouchable and essential to Dodger future.

All goes to the deadline, prosperous our bounty I hope it is.

Ned Colleti received the infamous Vote of Confidence trust from Frank McNuggets today, which in any business structure echoes the disapproval from the owner toward the individual. In any which way, Ned has been as abysmal as he has been lucky thus far when trading and signing. Most of which, he’s been signing over the hill veterans and trading rookies with high ceilings for veterans. He reaped the benefits of a farm system that was rich in players when he arrived, and gutted it to the point where our most dire needs now are 3B and Catcher. Our pitching hasn’t lived up to the hype in the minors and that which has, has failed to translate it at the big league level. Signing the likes of a broken down Schidmt, a glutenous Uribe, a has been Jones, and a lackluster Pierre to monstrous-size contracts, which still are being paid after they’ve all moved on. And, in the face of Borras, he simply lost his pair and got bent over when he signed Ramirez to that disaster of a contract. In other words, when has he not been in need of this VOC. Ultimately, anyone who replaces him will have to repair this team, and think logically when trading or signing. Let the clock start tickingĀ  and the seconds start turning each minute of each hour till the time, when Ned Colleti get’s fired, and then when Frank leaves with him in due time.

At the end of the day, the team did something it hadn’t done all season. It hadn’t even come close until that final out on Sunday. They finally swept a team and went into the break with a 4 game winning streak. Tossing 4 straight gems and get the bullpen to shut down the Padres, helped minimize the lack of runs in the series, as two games ended in shutouts. But, just when the team was getting around to starting something good, (I HOPE), the break came in. Maybe the team only meeting organized by Carroll knocked some sense into the team. But, was it too late, or just the start of something big to come after the break.?

Steve Garvey, serving as an undertaker in the marketing and special relations department, saw his effort to create some kind of semblance on this team dashed yesterday when he was fired from his role. When asked for a reason, none was given, but it is well known that Garvey formed his exploratory ownership group alongside working within the Dodger brand, and that, my guess, irked Frank McNuggets into saying that he’s paying his potential successor while trying to keep the team as his own.

In all his years as a Dodger, Garvey became one of the most beloved and treasured players to ever on a Dodger uniform. He represented them in 8 straight All-Star Games, earned the nickname Mr. Clean, and played alongside three of the greatest IF’s the Dodgers have ever produced in Ron Cey, Davey Lopes, and Bill Russell for a record 8 1/2 seasons. To this day, he is still the most enduring baseball player in the NL to play in consecutive games at 1207. He is one of only 15 baseball players to ever have more than 6 or more 200 hit seasons, and ranks as one of the 100 greatest players of all time. Furthermore, he is a former NL MVP and a 5x 100 RBI season hitter.

Other accomplishments include:
-.294 career AVG
-batted over .300 7 times
-batted .319 in 5 World Series
-batted .356 in 5 league championship series
-batted .393 in 10 all-star games
-won 4 Gold Glove awards
-2 time MVP of the all-star game
-2 time MVP of the league championship series
-finished in the top 5 in total bases 7 times
-set a NL record by playing 193 straight games without committing an error
-set a ML record with his .996 fielding percentage at first base