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Thursday, April 24, 2008

Confidence Game: Dodgers 8, Diamondbacks 3

Billed as a pitching duel, this rapidly got out of hand as starter Danny Haren clearly had nothing and didn't last five. If the six runs he surrendered (one unearned thanks to a Chris Young fielding error) had been the end of the story, it would have been plenty good for the Dodgers, who needed a game like this one against one of the Snakes' twin aces. It was Haren's worst showing since a September 24, 2006 game against the Angels in which he also surrendered six runs. (Ervin Santana was the winning pitcher, BTW, and at the Coliseum no less!) The even better news came when the Dodgers smacked around the Diamondbacks' bullpen for an additional two runs, one each in the seventh and eighth, the final tally coming when Justin Upton mishandled a routine fly ball off the bat of James Loney.

It wasn't a cruise, though; Jonathan Broxton wheezed through the eighth, and left the game with men on first and second and two out, which brought in Takashi Saito. Saito seemed to have command issues, and quite a few of his pitches were out of the zone (only 20 of 34 pitches were strikes); one of them ended up in the left field power alley, and plated Orlando Hudson. But that was it for the Snakes, who went down in the bottom of the ninth with a couple of singles but a pair of strikeouts.

Offensively for the Dodgers, pretty much everyone contributed, and even Nomar got in a hit and an RBI from the cleanup spot (!). Chin-Lung Hu drove in a pair, a number equaling his career best achieved on September 25, 2007 in a losing effort against the Rockies. Matt Kemp was 2-for-5, and for those keeping track of the Juan Pierre-vs.-Kemp stats, Pierre has three multihit games all year, while Kemp has had five, counting this one.

About the only bad news was Derek Lowe's early exit due to an elbow strain, but he should be back in time to make his next start. The win gave the Dodgers a 9-13 record, and thanks to an improbable 3-2 Giants victory over the Padres in extra innings (which included another Trevor Hoffman kablooie delivered to Benjie Molina), the Dodgers are now out of the cellar and in third place (the Pads and Giants are both tied for last place). In all, a fun game to watch, and a much needed one.

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Comments:
Rob, I noticed that you omitted any mention of the Dodgers' Tuesday contest against Cincinnati. Was this intentional (too embarrassing to discuss?) or an oversight?

Just wondering.
 
I've been busier than usual with other stuff this spring, and attending to the minor league stuff has left me somewhat enervated. Tuesday's Dodger game was just another in what I consider a typical loss for them: bad pitching, inadequate hitting, and really bad roster construction, which is to say, nothing new here, move along. But what do I know.
 
Plus I have, lately, been running 2-2.5 miles every day, which burns another half hour out of my day. Just a lot going on.
 
Exercise is a good thing, something I should look into.

Going into the season, many (maybe it was just local media) were calling the Dodgers a possible World Series team (then again, I remember hearing the same stuff the last two or three years as well). Personally, I never saw that, but I'm not exactly a fan, so my opinion is certainly biased.
 
I didn't see it, either; the Diamondbacks are, on average, a better team and arguably at every position, though I don't have anything but my gut feel to back that up. To get to the postseason, the Dodgers are going to have get past both the Snakes and perhaps the Rocks, assuming (and there's a decent argument for this) Colorado's late 2007 run wasn't just one of the biggest lucky streaks in the history of baseball.
 

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