NEWS/RUMORS/AROUND MLB Thread

Discussion in 'Los Angeles DODGERS' started by irish, Feb 15, 2017.

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  1. 1988Blues

    1988Blues DSP Legend

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    Thanks for those comments.

    Anyhow.....

    I like the WBC, but I would like to see the top 30 rated American Prospects instead....

    What classifies you as American?

    Being born here no matter what your heritage is....

    If you own visas or green cards then you should be able to play for the country you originated from.

    Otherwise don't call it WBC call it Heritage Baseball Classic.....

    But Alex Verdugo really impressed me.....
     
  2. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    anyone who has served in the military, in any capacity, is a veteran imo
     
  3. 1988Blues

    1988Blues DSP Legend

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    It's good to serve your country and I think that makes you a Patriot.

    But to me a true Veteran is a Combat Soldier...

    They pay the price that can change their lives forever or the Ultimate Price of their life.

    Big diffrence......
     
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  4. Bluezoo

    Bluezoo Among the Pantheon

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    Sure...You are entitled to feel that way. But the definition of the word, and you can be veteran strictly speaking, of the Police, Fire Dept., or a newspaper reporter, of you've been there a while.
    There's no specification of combat necessary.
    You have no control over who cuts your orders to wherever anyway. You get deployed, or not.
    You can still go to the VA, combat or not. Not that you would want to.
     
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  5. southerndodgerfan

    southerndodgerfan Dodgers Enthusiast

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    I will say this. I have used the VA twice. Both times I got good care insofar as figuring out what was wrong but the wait times were horrid. And 1988, you're a vet. Not because you went to war but because you volunteered knowing that you could simply for love of country. Thank you for your service.
     
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  6. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    but they all sign up with that intention/understanding/willingness
    takes a lot of courage just to sign up
    not their fault (luck?) their battalion wasn't called on
    they were ready



    this x 1000
     
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  7. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    • Dodgers reliever Sergio Romo returned from the World Baseball Classic with a stiff back and was held out of workouts on Thursday.







    Jason Schmidt, Bill Mueller and Ned Colletti like this.
     
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  8. Fall Winslow

    Fall Winslow McRib

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    [​IMG]
     
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  9. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    :laff:
     
  10. Bluezoo

    Bluezoo Among the Pantheon

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    And so...It begins...
     
  11. fsudog21

    fsudog21 DSP Legend

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    slight edit
     
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  12. Fall Winslow

    Fall Winslow McRib

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    I blame Adrian
     
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  13. ColoradoKidWitGame

    ColoradoKidWitGame DSP Legend Administrator

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    Dave Roberts' dad passed away at the age of 68 last night. He's left the team to be with his family. Very sad to hear, it sounds like they were very close and he was well liked in the clubhouse.
     
  14. dodgers

    dodgers DSP Legend

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    Damn. RIP.
     
  15. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    68 is way too young
    rip indeed
     
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  16. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    great article on turner's ascent...

    Timing is everything for late-blooming Justin Turner
    by Doug Padilla | ESPN Staff Writer — 8 hours ago

    GLENDALE, Ariz. -- The Grand Canyon was formed by millions of years of slow erosion, making it a curious locale for Justin Turner to propose to his girlfriend this spring.

    The setting was no doubt spectacular, and worthy of the momentous occasion -- except that Turner has reached his current confluence of success, fortune and lifelong companionship by using anything but a deliberate, plodding approach.

    A seventh-round draft pick out of Cal State Fullerton whose first six years in the major leagues could best be described as unfulfilled, he found his way by giving himself less time to rise to the occasion, not more.

    Yearning to be a better hitter, Turner actually moved up in the batter’s box, closer to the pitcher, in recent years, giving him a split second less to see pitches. To improve his defense, Turner forced himself to move in on balls hit to his left or right, intensifying the margin for error.

    He neared his 30th birthday before unlocking his true potential, yet that does not mean quickness wasn’t the key.

    The production that resulted from his refined game convinced the Los Angeles Dodgers to retain the Long Beach, California, native on a $64 million deal.

    “In a perfect world, you say, 'Oh man, I wish I figured this out 10 years ago,'” Turner said with a chuckle. "But who knows what would have happened if I did that. So I think this was the path I was supposed to take and I am happy where I am right now. I’m not worried about four, five, six years ago.”

    Surely something needed to be done after Turner was set adrift by the New York Mets following the 2012 season. He ultimately joined the Dodgers, but only after then-coach Tim Wallach saw Turner at a Fullerton alumni game and asked if he had locked on to a team.

    At that point, Turner had played in parts of six major league seasons so he had been doing something right. He just knew he had more to give.

    And while Turner won’t call the changes to his game a reinvention, he went to great lengths to make his timing adjustments feel natural.

    "It wasn’t minor," Turner said. “I was in the cage five days a week for 3½ months trying to get right. I got into a pretty good position, had a good year [in 2015], but still didn’t think I was in the best position I could be in. And then last year, I was in a spot where I felt like I was really good.”

    There is no doubting Turner’s rise in production. In three seasons with the Dodgers, Turner’s run production has increased every year. His overall WAR has also increased to last season’s 5.0 mark, a number helped by improved defense that made him a Gold Glove Award finalist.

    Turner’s decision to move up in the batter’s box has done wonders for his ability to handle breaking balls by allowing him to get to them before the pitch movement neutralizes him.

    Prior to joining the Dodgers, Turner had a .216 career batting average against breaking balls with a .542 OPS. In his three years in Los Angeles, he is batting .319 against breaking balls with an .870 OPS. Going deeper into the numbers, Turner had just one home run against a breaking ball over his first six seasons, but he has belted 13 of them as a member of the Dodgers.

    If that looks like success that simply came with more playing time, consider this: The ESPN Stats & Information department calculated Turner’s hard-hit rate against breaking balls as 8 percent before joining the Dodgers and 15 percent since. He is hitting a lower percentage of ground balls and fly balls, while his line-drive percentage has gone up 25 percent.

    The defensive metrics show a similar shift. In games at third base before joining the Dodgers, Turner had zero defensive runs saved to 18 DRS as a member of the Dodgers. And, according to Baseball Info Solutions, he has 8 DRS while wearing a Dodgers uniform based on "range and positioning."

    Turner credited his previous work with Wallach for helping him to read bat angles. He credits current third-base coach Chris Woodward for getting him to reach forward on ground balls instead of backward.

    “Woody changed me and got me to play more in, more this way,” Turner said, pointing his arms in 45 degree angles in front of him. “That was huge, defensively. It cleaned up my throwing. I didn’t make as many throwing errors last year as I did the year before. It just made throwing easier because I am throwing from a better position on the field every time I am catching ground balls."

    The Dodgers’ defense is not known for its outstanding range but still managed to be a top defensive club in 2016 because of positioning and good hands. It was a boon to the pitching staff, including a bullpen that had the lowest combined ERA in baseball.

    The pitchers and coaching staff appreciated the hard work Turner put in to make himself better in all aspects of his game.

    “It kind of obviously transformed his career,” manager Dave Roberts said about Turner’s evolution from a non-tendered player with the Mets to a $64 million man with the Dodgers. “You don’t see that very often with players, but I think that it is just a credit to JT that he was open-minded to say, ‘I have a little service time as a major league player, but how am I going to get to the next level?’ And it’s tough to be open to swing changes and things like that, but JT did that and it obviously worked out.”

    It sure is working out nicely for Turner, as his recent trip to the Grand Canyon would attest. And having it come together for him in his 30s gives him an even greater appreciation for it all.

    He is trending upward in more ways than one as the first season of his new contract approaches.

    "I tell guys all the time, especially young guys, 'Don't be mad if you’re not playing every day,'" Turner said. "It’s better to be a bench guy or a role guy in the big leagues than an everyday guy in the minor leagues. Just embrace the role you’re in and, when the opportunity comes, be prepared for it. If you’re a negative guy and you have those negative thoughts and you have that opportunity, it makes it that much harder on you."
     
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  17. irish

    irish DSP Staff Member Administrator

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    kazmir, not so much

    Kazmir struggles with velocity in simulated outing
    ESPN.com news services — 6 hours ago

    Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts remains concerned about Scott Kazmir's velocity after the pitcher threw a five-inning simulated game to minor league hitters Thursday.

    Kazmir, who had been in line to be the team's fourth or fifth starter for this season, threw 71 pitches, with only 44 strikes, and his velocity was recorded at 82-84 mph during the session. His velocity last season averaged in the low 90s.

    "We've still got to see some improvement in the velocity at some point in time," Roberts told reporters. "And I think he'll say the same thing. I don't know if there's a certain number of miles per hour that he needs to pitch at. I think he was 82-84 today. ... That's not the number, and he'll be the first to tell you that."

    Kazmir, who said he's been dealing with hip issues since last season, remained confident after the outing, but he knows his velocity isn't where it needs to be.

    "I feel close, really close," Kazmir told the Orange County Register. "I was able to keep my tempo, keep my balance and use this hip to get through. It's a lot of things that we have to focus on. It's just a matter of putting that all together.

    "I don't even want to know [about the velocity]. I know it's not there yet."

    Kazmir had an MRI on March 8 after feeling soreness in his left hip, but it came back clean. He also missed a month last season with neck inflammation and back issues. He has been working with pitching coach Rick Honeycutt to improve his mechanics.

    "From everything I hear, he's healthy," Roberts said. "The next step is, if he can feel good about that, hopefully the velocity ticks up. ... He feels strong, but it's still not coming out the way we need it to right now."

    The club's top three pitchers are set in Clayton Kershaw, Rich Hill and Kenta Maeda. After that, Kazmir was in a large group vying for one of the final two spots along with Brandon McCarthy, Hyun-Jin Ryu, Julio Urias, Brock Stewart, Ross Stripling and Alex Wood.
     
  18. dodgers

    dodgers DSP Legend

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    Oh Jesus Christ. Even last year when he was fucking horrible his fastball averaged 91.4. Sitting low 80's he's literally unusable.

    also lol at this --
    "I feel close, really close," Kazmir told the Orange County Register.

    ...

    "I don't even want to know [about the velocity]. I know it's not there yet."
     
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  19. ColoradoKidWitGame

    ColoradoKidWitGame DSP Legend Administrator

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    My only hope for what they are saying about Kazmir from the other day was that he was just working on his mechanics and wasn't really going 100%. Possible, but dangerous as fuck if he was facing live hitters. Was really worried when that article came out that said he was still having pain into mid-January before they finally figured out the issue. It gave them 3 weeks to identify and target the issue for strengthening and that was not nearly what he would need. Should have just brought him along slowly with a May or later target date to make sure he didn't fuck his mechanics all up.
     
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  20. THINKBLUE

    THINKBLUE DSP Gigolo

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    Just go away Kaz
     
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