Tag: Los Angeles Dodgers

Brett Anderson Injury: Updates on Dodgers P’s Back and Return

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Brett Anderson is nursing a back injury that will require surgery, and it is uncertain when he will be able to return to action.

Continue for updates.


Anderson to Undergo Surgery

Wednesday, March 2

Andy McCullough of the Los Angeles Times reported that Anderson will miss three to five months after undergoing the procedure.


Anderson Once Again Experiencing Back Issues

MLB.com’s Ken Gurnick pointed out that Anderson underwent back surgery in 2014. According to McCullough, the procedure two years ago was for a herniated disk.

Anderson rebounded from an injury-plagued 2014 to pitch a career-high 180.1 innings while notching a 10-9 record and 3.69 ERA last season.

“We saw the dedication [last year] to the core and back program, which gave us confidence that that would be behind him,” Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said, per McCullough. “And felt really good about the risk that we took last year. We’re optimistic that there’s even another gear in there.”

The fact that Anderson’s back has flared up again is a cause for concern.

The matter is compounded by the fact that L.A.’s pitching staff is dealing with several medical issues at the moment, per NBC Sports’ Drew Silva:

Considering Anderson’s confidence was on the rise following a healthy and productive first season in Los Angeles, it’s unfortunate for the Dodgers that he has taken a step back at this juncture in 2016.

Another back injury will also hurt Anderson’s potential earning power. The southpaw told the Los Angeles TimesDylan Hernandez he passed up “some multiyear offers” over the fall, instead opting to sign a one-year qualifying offer with the Dodgers.

Now a prospective free agent following the 2016 season, Anderson will need to return from the procedure and perform at a high level to try to snag another long-term contract.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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Dodgers Offense Needs Joc Pederson to Take Immediate Leap in 2nd Year

There’s a scene in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me that I can’t help but relate to Los Angeles Dodgers center fielder Joc Pederson. Austin sits in bed and comes to the sudden realization he’s “lost his mojo.”

We’ve heard this before when it comes to athletes, though it often refers to a slow decline. For Pederson, it was almost an overnight transformation.

I don’t know if Pederson one day last summer woke up and wondered if his version of Dr. Evil—maybe an opposing pitcher?—had ripped out whatever intangible phenomenon caused him to tear through the league as a rookie in April of last season. But a cliff-like drop in average came in May, followed by a similar decline in his power numbers in July, and it left me wondering what the heck had happened.

Whatever it was, Pederson needs to figure it out this spring. It’s crucial for the Dodgers that he recalibrates himself into an impactful hitter.

The organization should be rooting hard for Pederson to win the starting center field job. The team needs his defense. Last year, he had a revised zone rating of .929 on FanGraphs, which was 14th among all outfielders.

Yet his offense was so bad, there were times in 2015 his defense couldn’t justify his position as a starter. L.A.’s offense needs his power. But more importantly, it just needs him to put balls in play.

In April of last season, Pederson hit .298/.461/.596 and looked like the lead dog for National League Rookie of the Year. His average ticked up to .300 after a May 1 game against the Arizona Diamondbacks then did a disappearing act that rivals any David Copperfield trick.

He hit .236 in May, .222 in June, .169 in July and .120 in August. A .197 September batting average helped him finish the season hitting .210. As for his power numbers, he hit the 20th of his 26 homers in 2015—second-best on the team—on June 29. He had a streak of five consecutive games with a home run that stretched into early June—essentially the last we heard of Pederson’s bat in 2015.

What went awry might have been his unrelenting devotion to maintaining his power numbers, which caused him to strike out 170 times last season, the fifth-highest total in baseball. There has been a change in his mentality and his swing, according to JP Hoornstra of the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin (via the Los Angeles Daily News).

Last season, the left-handed hitting Pederson had a swing so focused on power that his front foot would turn over to the extent that it appeared as if he was rolling his ankle. That element is gone, according to Hoornstra, with a new swing featuring much more fluid footwork.

A movie theater would run out of popcorn before we saw players come to spring training without referencing the adjustments they made all winter. Batting stances, lost weight and diets are popular topics among players. We don’t know if the adjustments are meaningless until the season starts, though.

The conundrum: If Pederson’s newly minted swing doesn’t net results, who from a Dodgers outfield shrouded in uncertainty will carry the offensive burden?

Injuries have limited Carl Crawford, and at 34 years old, he is a wild card. Andre Ethier hit .294 last year and is a solid left-handed bat against righty pitchers. But he’s barely serviceable against lefties. In 45 at-bats against left-handed pitching last season, he hit .200 and is a career .234 hitter against it.

Right fielder Yasiel Puig only played 79 games last season while dealing with hamstring issues, and reports of clubhouse friction from Yahoo’s Jeff Passan, among others, made Puig the subject of trade speculation. Both have combined to hinder the freakish potential we saw when he hit .319 as a rookie in 2013.

There’s hope, obviously, but not necessarily any more than there is with Pederson, who is only 23.

Even more shocking than Pederson’s drastic drop was that despite his high strikeout total, he had an on-base percentage of .346. Pederson’s walk percentage was 15.7, which ranked him sixth in baseball.

He has a keen eye. If he can learn to lay off some pitches, he can develop into the kind of top-of-the-order hitter the Dodgers could use. For those wondering, by the way, in today’s game, it’s perfectly all right to lead off with power. In fact, the majority of his at-bats last season (268) came in the leadoff spot.

Given his walk rate, that may be where he could help the team most.

He will need to prove himself worthy, though. Find his mojo. Develop a better swing. Be less focused on power numbers. Call it whatever you want.

The April 2015 version of Pederson needs to be revived.

 

Seth Gruen is a national baseball columnist for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter @SethGruen and like his Facebook page.

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Yasiel Puig Reportedly Won’t Be Suspended for Alleged Domestic Violence Incident

Major League Baseball reportedly will not suspend Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Yasiel Puig for an alleged domestic violence incident involving his sister, per ESPN’s Pedro Gomez.

However, Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times spoke Tuesday with Dan Halem, MLB‘s chief legal officer, who denied Puig is in the clear: “The investigation is not finished. The commissioner has not rendered a decision.”

Last November, Puig was allegedly involved in a fight with a bouncer at a Miami nightclub. The Associated Press (via USA Today) reported Puig was having an argument with his sister prior to the altercation with the bouncer. Both the bouncer and Puig declined to press charges.

Gomez’s report comes on the same day MLB announced it suspended New York Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman for 30 games after an alleged incident with his girlfriend in October. The league also placed Colorado Rockies shortstop Jose Reyes on administrative paid leave while his domestic-abuse trial is ongoing.

The joint domestic violence, sexual assault and child-abuse policy between MLB and the MLB Players Association allows MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred to act somewhat unilaterally when it comes to player discipline. Under the terms of the policy, the commissioner isn’t beholden to a minimum or maximum length for a punishment, and criminal charges aren’t a prerequisite.

This spring will be somewhat important for Puig—at least as important as spring training can be for any veteran. Shaikin explained on MLB Tonight in early February how the Dodgers are committed to the Cuban star:

Puig played in just 79 games in 2015, boasting a .255/.322/.436 slash line with 11 home runs and 38 runs batted in. His work at the plate was a far cry from the heights of “Puig-mania.”

Being unavailable for Opening Day due to a suspension wouldn’t get the 25-year-old off on the right foot to start the 2016 campaign, so MLB’s final ruling will carry major weight both for him and the Dodgers.

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Hyun-Jin Ryu Injury: Updates on Dodgers P’s Shoulder and Return

After missing all of 2015 with shoulder problems that eventually led to surgery, Los Angeles Dodgers left-hander Hyun-Jin Ryu is making slow progress in his return to the mound in 2016. 

Continue for updates. 


Ryu Likely to Miss Start of Season

Saturday, Feb. 27

Per Eric Stephen of True Blue LA, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts acknowledged Ryu will not be ready when the regular season starts on April 4. Ken Gurnick of MLB.com reported Ryu won’t be ready until May.

Per Stephen, Roberts said, “If you look at April 4, he’s behind. We said it from the beginning, there’s no hard date, and we’re not going to rush him.”

Ryu’s 2015 season officially ended on May 21 when he had surgery to repair a torn labrum in his left shoulder. He hasn’t appeared in a game since Oct. 6, 2014, against the St. Louis Cardinals in the National League Division Series. 

At the time of Ryu’s procedure, Ken Gurnick of MLB.com noted some of the success stories following a similar procedure included Roger Clemens and Curt Schilling. He also pointed out sad endings to promising careers for Jason Schmidt and Mark Prior. 

While time will determine Ryu’s fate on that particular list, by all accounts, right now he is heading in the right direction. The Dodgers will need him back in their rotation after losing Zack Greinke to free agency this offseason. 

Los Angeles still has plenty of depth among starters, with Clayton Kershaw being the alpha dog and Scott Kazmir behind him. Ryu has been a valuable No. 3 for the Dodgers, posting a 3.17 ERA with 293 strikeouts in 344 innings since 2013-14. 

The Dodgers know how important Ryu is to their starting rotation and are going to take their time to ensure he is 100 percent before throwing him out against an MLB lineup.

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Big Decisions That Will Make or Break Dave Roberts’ 1st Year as Dodgers Manager

Dave Roberts said all the right things as he was being introduced as the newest manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers, talking about grit, individual accountability and the only thing Dodgers fans truly care about—ending a nearly 30-year championship drought.

“I think everyone in a Dodger uniform and in the fanbase (wants) to win a world championship,” he told reporters (via Jon Weisman, the team’s director of digital and print content). “That’s first and foremost, and I think we’re all excited about that, and that’s the goal. There’s obviously a lot of work that goes toward that.”

While there are literally hundreds of choices that Roberts will have to make along the way for that goal to become a reality, his decision-making process in regard to three specific areas will ultimately make or break his first year at the helm. 

 

How He Manages the Bullpen

Perhaps none of Roberts’ decisions will be scrutinized as closely as those he makes when it comes to managing the bullpen, something that was always a point of contention during former manager Don Mattingly’s tenure.

While acknowledging that he’ll have to remain flexible, Roberts tells Weisman that his plans for the pen on any given day will be formulated before the first pitch, after consulting with pitching coach Rick Honeycutt and bench coach Bob Geren:

It’s obviously going to be my decisions, but there’s going to be some input and some dialogue. But I think a lot of the dialogue is going to happen before the game. I like to have matchups and ideas of potentially the different ways (the game) could play out beforehand, and see what kind of direction I like to go.

Then obviously, you’ve got to pay attention to the game and see how that goes and how that develops. I think the manager-pitching coach relationship is very important to managing a bullpen, and obviously listening to the bench coach’s input as well, but ultimately those decisions are going to fall on me.

The Dodgers return the bulk of a bullpen that pitched to the National League‘s fifth-highest ERA (3.91) in 2015, adding only Joe Blanton to the mix. But it’s a group that also tied St. Louis’ bullpen for the NL’s third-highest WAR (4.5), one of the 10 best in all of baseball, according to FanGraphs.

There’s talent there, besides All-Star closer Kenley Jansen, and it’s the team’s belief in that talent that led the Dodgers to not make a major addition to the group after they walked away from a deal for Aroldis Chapman.

The pressure is on Roberts, Honeycutt and the rest of the team’s coaching staff to get the most out of that trio—and anyone else they might call upon in relief.

With no track record to look back on, it’s impossible to know exactly what his tendencies will be, whether he’ll pitch his most trusted relievers into the ground early or spread the workload around evenly in an effort to keep everyone fresh.

However Roberts decides to utilize his bullpen, the results will make it pretty easy to determine whether he made the right call or not.

 

How He Handles Yasiel Puig

If we were to create a list of the most naturally gifted players in baseball, Yasiel Puig would be right at the top of that list, likely behind only Mike Trout and Bryce Harper. But sometimes, the most talented among us are the most difficult to relate to, to get along with.

So it’s no surprise that Puig has had his fair share of issues, whether it be teammates getting on him about what appeared to be lackadaisical play or his manager questioning just how injured he actually was. 

“For me, it’s more of ‘let’s wipe the slate clean and let’s start anew,'” Roberts told Andy McCullough of the Los Angeles Times about his first meeting with the polarizing star. “There’s the same core of players, but there’s a completely different coaching staff. And we just want him to be himself. So let’s start fresh.”

That fresh start is exactly what Puig needs, according to first baseman Adrian Gonzalez, who believes that Roberts, who has a reputation for being a people person, is the right manager to bring the very best out of the Cuban sensation.

“From my experience, Puig responds well to genuine people, when he understands there’s no agenda and people just really care for him,” Gonzalez told ESPN’s Mark Saxon.

As long as Roberts decides to be straightforward with Puig—whether he’s praising him, disciplining him or providing some constructive criticism—those past issues will be nothing more than a distant memory.

 

How He Changes the Clubhouse Culture

Growing up in a military family—his father, Waymon, was a United States Marine—Roberts spent his childhood bouncing around, forced to acclimate himself to new places and make new friends, often from different backgrounds and cultures, wherever his dad was stationed.

That’s much like the situation he’ll encounter in Los Angeles’ clubhouse, a melting pot for players from different parts of the world, with varying degrees of experience and their own, individual expectations about what the coming season will hold.

“The No. 1 goal … is for us … to create an unbreakable bond within the group,” Roberts told McCullough. “Where no distractions … get us away from staying together … or getting our focus off track.”

Everything can’t be sunshine and rainbows all the time, especially over the course of a 162-game regular season. Bonds are going to be tested. Tempers will flare. Distractions are inevitable. How he decides to get the clubhouse to buy into his message will ultimately dictate how successful his first year is.

As he explained to McCullough, his message is clear.

“You can have all the money. You can have the highest payroll. You can have the best information. If you don’t have the best team, you’re not going to win.”

One thing that could work in Roberts’ favor is his longstanding relationship with Gonzalez, perhaps the team’s most respected veteran leader, as the two were teammates in San Diego a decade ago. 

If Gonzalez and the rest of the team’s leaders not only buy into his message, but push it in the clubhouse when Roberts isn’t around, his chances of success at getting everyone focused on the task at hand would increase substantially.

If not, it’s going to make Roberts’ job substantially harder—and the Dodgers season feel substantially longer. “That’s the secret,” he said of being able to build those bonds. “That’s the question. Because if we have that, then everything else will take care of itself.”

 

Unless otherwise noted, all statistics courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs.

Hit me up on Twitter to talk all things baseball: @RickWeinerBR.

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Alex Wood Maximizing Potential Would Change the Game for Dodgers Rotation

A wild card exists in every Major League Baseball rotation. The Los Angeles Dodgers, though, have a deck of them.

Starting pitchers Scott Kazmir, Kenta Maeda and Alex Wood all enter the 2016 season with questions about how they may perform.

A history of arm injuries plagued Kazmir earlier in his career. Can he stay healthy enough to maintain top-of-the-rotation stuff in Los Angeles? He has only one 200-inning season in his 11-year major league career.

For Maeda, who played professionally in Japan the last eight seasons, will his stuff translate to the major leagues? Though the Dodgers protected themselves financially by only guaranteeing $25 million in an incentive-laden, eight-year deal, the rotation will still be dependent upon Maeda’s ability to succeed.

Then there’s Wood, who, considering his previous success, could be the rotation’s equalizer. The uber-talented lefty had an inconsistent 2015 season, particularly after being traded from Atlanta to Los Angeles on July 30.

But if Wood, 25, can revert to the success he had in 2014 with the Braves when he posted career bests in ERA (2.78) and strikeouts (170), what Kazmir and Maeda do would just be gravy.

That isn’t to say the Dodgers aren’t expecting a solid season from either Kazmir or Maeda. But Wood’s potential is greater.

Pairing the 2014 version of Wood with ace Clayton Kershaw would give the Dodgers an innings-eating duo that could actually make Kazmir and Maeda more successful.

How exactly?

If the front end of the Dodgers rotation is able to save the bullpen, guys like Maeda and Kazmir could throw harder in the early innings. With a well-rested bullpen on the days they start, they wouldn’t be pressured to go as deep into games.

Managing Kazmir and Maeda’s innings nets benefits, too.

A limitation of Kazmir’s innings would help prevent injury. Doing so for Maeda would allow a gentler transition to American baseball. The hitters are obviously better in MLB, so Maeda may need to work deeper into counts to get outs.

Along with Kershaw, Wood should be the workhorse starter. He is that talented—a top-of-the-rotation player who could help vault the Dodgers to another National League West title.

Yes, his 2015 season looked a lot like a heart monitor. He would touch his potential at times, but nearly as frequently he looked more like a back-end starter.

Through July and August, which includes time with the Braves and Dodgers, Wood made it through seven innings only once. His ERA in 12 starts (11 decisions) with Los Angeles was an abysmal 4.35.

But his stint with the Dodgers last season did more to suggest he could successfully be the Dodgers’ No. 2 pitcher than the totality of his statistics may otherwise indicate.

Wood’s unsightly ERA with Los Angeles was largely affected by two starts. On Sept. 11 at Arizona, he allowed six earned runs in 1.2 innings. At Colorado on Sept. 27, he allowed eight earned runs in 5.1 innings.

Chase Field (home to the Diamondbacks) and Coors Field (home to the Rockies) were the two places Wood pitched the worst in 2015. In two starts at Chase Field, he had a 6.52 ERA, and in three appearances at Coors Field, he had a 12.27 ERA.

Starts at those parks skewed his numbers.

Further proof that his poor performance against the Rockies was, in part, due to pitching at Coors Field: Wood had his best start as a Dodger against Colorado at home. On Sept. 16, he allowed only one hit and needed just 78 pitches to go eight innings.

His ERA at Dodger Stadium was 2.21 in 2015. All five of his starts at the park as a Dodger were quality starts (at least six innings pitched and no more than three earned runs allowed).

So, he has a record of pitching well in the park that will house about half his outings in 2016. And if the team chooses, it can actually manipulate the rotation to get Wood more starts at home.

As the Dodgers built their rotation this offseason, they must have considered Wood’s performance in their ballpark. Otherwise, they may have pushed harder to retain Zack Greinke.

Regardless, it won’t do anything to quash the innumerable questions surrounding this rotation.

Wood, however, could easily be the answer to all of them.

 

Seth Gruen covers baseball for Bleacher Report among other sports. Follow him on Twitter @SethGruen.

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Dodgers’ Elite Youth Puts Bright Future Ahead of Uncertain Present

There’s a credo among baseball executives nowadays: Get younger.

Whereas putting together a World Series contender was once as simple as writing a check for some big-market teamsahem, the New York Yankeesthe emphasis for organizations more recently has been on improving their minor league systems.

Free-agent spending still has its role—an important one—but building an organization is much like building a house. You’re not going to put mahogany on the walls (high-priced free agents) without building a foundation first (prospects).

It’s a combination that makes the Los Angeles Dodgers best set for the future. Other big-market teams, like the Chicago Cubs and Boston Red Sox, deserve credit for similarly building upper-echelon minor league systems.

With their mega television deal, however, the Dodgers will be able to add to their young core more easily via free agency and in the foreign market.

Are the Dodgers ready to compete this year? Definitely, despite issues surrounding the team—namely star outfielder Yasiel Puig. In November, former player Andy Van Slyke told CBS 920 (h/t InsideSTL.com) that Los Angeles ace Clayton Kershaw wanted Puig traded.

Regardless, 2016 will be an opening act as some of the organization’s young stars begin to matriculate to the major league club.

The main event won’t come for a few years.

“We’re really excited about the group of talent that we have and probably more important the group of humans—the group of men—that we have,” Gabe Kapler, the Dodgers’ director of player development, said in a phone interview with Bleacher Report.

Among those expected to be promoted to the major league club this season is Corey Seager, who, at 21 years old, should be the Dodgers’ starting shortstop on Opening Day.

But Seager is just the headliner in a crop of prospects that might be baseball’s best.

Left-handed pitcher Julio Urias, 19, is the Dodgers’ best pitching prospect since Kershaw, and right-handed pitcher Jose De Leon is a 24th-round pick from the 2013 MLB amateur draft who has developed into one of the organization’s best prospects. Baseball America ranked him third in the Dodgers’ organization behind Seager and Urias.

According to MLB.com’s minor league organizational rankings in August of last season, the Dodgers had five prospects in the top 100.

While the Dodgers have baseball’s best position player-pitcher duo in Seager and Urias, they should be most heralded for their depth. Kapler was specific in mentioning 26-year-old catcher Austin Barnes.

“If you just gave him the opportunity to go out and play right now at the major league level, you have a guy that is a good, quality major league catcher today,” Kapler said.

When might these heralded prospects arrive at Dodger Stadium?

That is somewhat unclear, and Kapler cautioned not to generalize how the organization may handle its young prospects. They won’t come all at once. A sweeping claim about the team’s philosophy in handling prospects is that there really isn’t one.

Kapler emphasized that the organization wants to take an individualized approach to handling its prospects and their potential promotions.

That much was apparent Tuesday when the Dodgers added Hall of Fame pitcher Greg Maddux and Raul Ibanez as special assistants to Andrew Friedman, president of baseball operations. Expanding the team’s baseball operations department allows for more individualized attention throughout the organization, which can only help development.

It’s a luxury, though, and much easier when you consider that the Dodgers have a major league roster that can compete now. There’s no need for the organization to rush the development of any of its prospects.

When needs at the major league level do arise, the Dodgers’ limitless payroll allows them to seek a short-term solution via free agency.

But where the Dodgers’ payroll flexibility will really benefit them is when all of their prospects arrive. Then they can spend on big free agents to bolster the roster. We’re getting back to the idea of building the house with the mahogany walls.

Moreover, the Dodgers’ developmental philosophy preaches versatility.

So when the prospects arrive, might the Dodgers use their bottomless pocket to fill a need? Of course. But the group’s versatility may also allow the Dodgers to identify the biggest-impact free agents—whether or not they fill an apparent need.

Any time a team has players who can fill multiple roles, it allows for more flexibility in the players a team can target in free agency.

“As a philosophy, versatility is critically important and I don’t mean just in a traditional sense where [a guy] can play shortstop, he can also play second base,” Kapler said.

“It’s very important to us that our players come into our system with the mindset that they are athletes. They are not 2-hole hitters, they are not 5-hole hitters, they are not shortstops, they are not starters. They are athletes and highly trained ones that can play multiple positions, hit multiple spots in the lineup, work in various roles.”

We’re still talking about prospects here. Things dramatically change when it comes to teenage and early-20-something baseball players. So Kapler wasn’t suggesting each of the organization’s players will come to the major leagues with limitless flexibility.

Development doesn’t end at the major league level.

But once the likes of Seager, Urias, De Leon and Co. get to Los Angeles, it very well could make a milestone beginning.

 

Seth Gruen covers baseball for Bleacher Report. He previously worked at the Sun-Times, where he covered baseball in addition to a multitude of other sports. Follow Seth on Twitter @SethGruen.

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Greg Maddux, Raul Ibanez Hired by Dodgers: Latest Contract Details and Reaction

The Los Angeles Dodgers continue to add more brainpower and manpower to their front office, hiring former big leaguers Greg Maddux and Raul Ibanez on Tuesday. 

According to the Dodgers’ official Twitter account, Maddux and Ibanez have joined the team as special assistants to the president of baseball operations and baseball operations department.    

The Dodgers have had an eventful offseason, though not for reasons most fans in Los Angeles like. They lost Zack Greinke to their National League West rivals in the Arizona Diamondbacks, opting to sign Scott Kazmir and Kenta Maeda for their starting rotation. 

Yet what the Dodgers have lacked in free-agent buzz, they have more than made up for with the bolstering of their front office.

Already boasting a group that included president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman, senior vice president of baseball operations Josh Byrnes and general manager Farhan Zaidi, the Dodgers brought in former Toronto Blue Jays general manager Alex Anthopoulos as vice president of baseball operations. 

The job of special assistant to the president of baseball operations, which Maddux and Ibanez will be serving, is often left vague. Many former players serve in that role, with Chipper Jones returning to the Atlanta Braves under the same banner. 

According to Mark Bowman of MLB.com, Jones’ role in Atlanta includes spending time with the team during spring training and doing work at major league and minor league levels throughout the regular season. 

Maddux and Ibanez could conceivably do the same thing for the Dodgers, helping inform Friedman and Zaidi about personnel decisions throughout the year and about when to bring players up from the minor leagues. 

Regardless of what Maddux and Ibanez will be doing for the Dodgers, their hiring continues the franchise’s trend of adding as many smart, informed baseball voices as possible to the mix so it is making the best decisions for 2016 and beyond. 

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Dodgers Tighten Grip on NL West with Howie Kendrick Signing

The Los Angeles Dodgers have won three straight National League West titles, and they really didn’t need to do anything else this winter to have a good shot at making it four in a row in 2016.

But why settle for “good enough” when you can go for “even better”?

This line of reasoning would seem to be responsible for the Dodgers’ latest move. As Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports was first to report, the Dodgers are bringing back veteran second baseman Howie Kendrick on a two-year deal.

According to Jon Heyman of MLB Network, Kendrick’s deal guarantees him $20 million. That’s only a few million more dollars than he would have gotten if he’d accepted the $15.8 million qualifying offer at the start of the winter, which would have been for only one year.

So, behold the rarest of finds on the free-agent market: a steal.

Going into the offseason, Kendrick figured to get roughly the same sort of deal as fellow second baseman Daniel Murphy. He’s nearly two years older than Murphy, sure, but Kendrick has clearly had the better career.

So much for that. Murphy signed a three-year deal with the Washington Nationals that will pay him $37.5 million. No thanks to his ties to draft-pick compensation and his long wait on the open market, Kendrick is only getting a little more than half of that.

Too bad for Kendrick, but good for the Dodgers. Because lest we forget, they’re getting a pretty good player in addition to a pretty good deal.

Kendrick is coming off a 2015 season that admittedly wasn’t his best. Injuries limited the 32-year-old to 117 games, and, at least according to the advanced metrics, his defense took a big step back.

Kendrick remained an effective hitter, though. He hit a solid .295, making it three straight years in which he’s hit better than .290. He did this the way he always does: by putting his bat on the ball and, as Brooks Baseball can show, wearing out the opposite field with line drives.

Those last two habits make Kendrick a classic No. 2 hitter, which is mainly where now-former Dodgers skipper Don Mattingly used him in 2015. In 2016, new Dodgers manager Dave Roberts figures to do the same.

“He’s a heck of a ballplayer,” Roberts said of Kendrick before the news hit the wire on Friday, via Andy McCullough of the Los Angeles Times. “I know that he enjoyed his time here last year. If something does work out, it makes us a better ball club.”

At the least, Kendrick certainly makes the Dodgers lineup better. Slot him into the No. 2 hole in the lineup, and you get a pretty impressive unit. Here’s Dodgers Nation with a sneak peek:

Granted, there are some question marks present in the Dodgers lineup. Justin Turner and Yasmani Grandal were pretty banged up by the end of 2015. Yasiel Puig was banged up for most of 2015 and wasn’t at his best when he was able to play. Joc Pederson struggled down the stretch of his rookie season, and Corey Seager has fewer than 30 major league games under his belt.

Despite these questions, though, the potential is as clear as day. By adjusted OPS, every single position player in the Dodgers’ projected Opening Day lineup was an above-average hitter in 2015. And going into 2016, a few of them have the goods to be way above average.

It’s no wonder that the early (well, not too early at this point) projections see good things in store for the Dodgers offense in 2016. According to FanGraphs, the Dodgers are projected to score the most runs per game of any NL West team (except the Colorado Rockies, who play half their games at elevation).

It wasn’t even that close before Friday, but adding Kendrick gave them a nudge anyway. And in addition to padding the Dodgers offense, the Kendrick signing also pads their depth.

The Dodgers will now move Chase Utley to the bench, where they already had under-the-radar 2015 breakout star Enrique Hernandez. Another spot on the bench will go to whoever is not playing between Carl Crawford and Andre Ethier, and the Dodgers will also have Trayce Thompson, Scott Van Slyke and Alex Guerrero to call on.

Of course, anyone out there who’s not sold on the Dodgers going into 2016 is probably looking more at their pitching.

The Dodgers did lose Zack Greinke, after all, and replaced him with depth rather than another ace. Neither Scott Kazmir nor Kenta Maeda figures to be anywhere near as good. They also haven’t upgraded a bullpen that has something of a soft underbelly.

However, the Dodgers’ pitching projects to be a lot better than you may think.

FanGraphs’ projections have Dodgers pitchers near the top of the league in wins above replacement in 2016. That doesn’t mean they will be there, mind you, but it’s a good reminder that the Dodgers still have the best pitcher on the planet in Clayton Kershaw. Kazmir and Maeda should at least be serviceable, as should Brett Anderson and Hyun-jin Ryu. And late in games, Kenley Jansen is basically automatic.

None of this is to say the Dodgers aren’t going to get any competition in the NL West. The Arizona Diamondbacks already had a terrific offense and defense, and now they have some pitching after stealing Greinke and trading for Shelby Miller. The San Francisco Giants, meanwhile, figure to once again be the Dodgers’ primary nemesis.

The Giants didn’t make the postseason in 2015, but they likely would have if they’d had some starting pitching depth to help support the excellent Madison Bumgarner and a lineup led by Buster Posey and baseball’s most star-studded infield. They corrected that problem by signing Johnny Cueto and Jeff Samardzija. For good measure, they also added Denard Span to their outfield.

But though the Giants should be a dangerous team in 2016, you can still wonder if they have quite enough depth.

There’s a steep drop-off in their starting rotation after Bumgarner, Cueto and Samardzija, and there’ll be trouble in their outfield if Span, Angel Pagan and/or Hunter Pence have their 2015 injury troubles follow them into 2016. Question marks like these didn’t keep yours truly from rating the Giants as a more dangerous World Series contender than the Dodgers, but they’re not built as well for the 162-game grind of the regular season.

In so many words: Yeah, we can probably trust the projections on how the NL West is going to shake out in 2016. The Dodgers project to be the best team in the division by a comfortable margin.

And after basically completing the ensemble by re-signing Kendrick, they sure do look the part.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Vin Scully to Have Street Leading to Dodger Stadium Named for Him

Legendary Los Angeles Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully is getting honored with a street bearing his name that leads to Dodger Stadium.  

According to Ken Gurnick of MLB.com, the Los Angeles City Council on Friday unanimously approved the moniker “Vin Scully Avenue” to be used in place of Elysian Park Avenue. 

Los Angeles City Councilman Gil Cedillo proposed the name change, according to Doug Padilla of ESPN.com.

Per Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times, even though Scully has resisted these kinds of accolades and tributes in the past, he was “on board” with this proposal. 

Dodgers President and CEO Stan Kasten released a statement regarding the proposal before it was voted on, per Steve Dilbeck of the Los Angeles Times: “There’s no better way to recognize such an iconic Dodger as Hall of Famer Vin Scully than naming a street after him. We appreciate Gil Cedillo and city officials bringing this to the forefront, and we look forward to the day when everyone can drive on Vin Scully Avenue when they enter Dodger Stadium.”

It would be hard to think of a better way to honor arguably the most iconic announcer in Major League Baseball history. The 88-year-old Scully, who has said 2016 will likely be his final season in the booth, has been with the Dodgers since 1950 and calls games by himself with no color commentator. 

Accolades are nothing new for Scully, who was given the Ford Frick Award from the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1982. He’s one of the great voices in sports, always able to call games with a natural ease and tell stories from past decades that relate to what is happening on the field. 

Since it’s probably impossible to get the entire city of Los Angeles named after Scully, a street that leads directly to Chavez Ravine is a pretty good consolation prize. 

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