Jul
01
2011
2

Al Jazeera weighs in on Dodgers bankruptcy

In an Al Jazeera opinion piece, Dave Zirin weighs in on the current situation: “Dodger’s bankruptcy reveals much about the US”

Much has been said about the business practices of Dodgers owner Frank McCourt and his battle against the efforts of Major League Baseball commissioner Bud Selig to forcibly seize the team. But what does an insolvent Dodgers franchise say about the state of America in the 21st century?

Maybe it says nothing at all. Maybe it’s as simple as saying that Frank McCourt mismanaged the team. Yes it’s true that McCourt looks terribly incompetent and used the team as a personal ATM to live a lifestyle that would shame Caligula.

But that doesn’t explain the broader economic crisis in the sport. It doesn’t explain why the Texas Rangers in 2010, on the road to the World Series, had to be auctioned off at a bankruptcy sale. It doesn’t explain why the New York Mets, playing in the game’s biggest market, are flat broke after team owners Fred Wilpon and Saul Katz thought Bernie Madoff would make a fine personal investment banker. It doesn’t explain why Selig, when he crows about baseball’s rosy financial picture, sounds like he’s living in the last days of disco.

But more than anything else, it doesn’t explain how – of all teams – the Los Angeles Dodgers find themselves in this crucible of humiliation. The Dodgers are arguably the most culturally significant franchise in the history of American sports. It’s the team of Jackie Robinson, Sandy Koufax, Fernando Valenzuela, and Hideo Nomo.

That’s more than just a tradition. That’s a Ken Burns epic.

Apr
28
2010
1

Ump missed a good game

indignant-loney.jpg
Home plate umpire hiding his face in shame. Photo: Jon SooHoo, Dodgers.

I caught only a smidgen of the double header today on TV — James Loney’s justified anger at a called strike 3 and subsequent ejection, and then a bit of Charlie Haeger pitching the next half-inning.

Malaise is apparent. The Dodgers are 8-12, tied for the worst record in baseball (apart from the 4-16 Orioles). Great pitching days seem unable to coincide with great hitting days, and vice versa. If they ever put them both together, watch out.

At this point last season, the Dodgers were 14-7, winding up 15-8 at the end of April, in the midst of their record 20-0 home start and blissfully unaware of the Manny news coming May 7th. Presently, we are losing players to injuries rather than suspensions, but the season is still young. ;)

8-12 is not a death sentence by any means, nor would 8-15 be if they lose out for April. It’s one of those things: rationally, I know everything will even out eventually, and this ugly month will be a distant memory; emotionally, the thumb gets twitchy on the remote.

May
18
2009
0

“It can only be attributable to human error”

Two runs. Eleven hits. Five Errors. A missed third base. Gaffes galore.

I wouldn’t be surprised if Mets Manager Jerry Manuel called Torre “Jim” while exchanging lineup cards.

That was the closest laugher I’ve ever seen. No wonder the Sunday Night Baseball booth crew was going off on the Mets last night.

I would not want to be in the visitors’ clubhouse tonight except as a fly on the wall. What a painful performance.

On the non-laugher side:

  • Ethier 0-5, 1 K, 6 LOB
  • Martin 0-4, 1 LOB
  • Kemp 0-5, 5 LOB

Great job from Wolf:
7.2 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 2 K, 0 HR

Copyright © 2006-2011 Robert Daeley. All rights reserved. | Theme: Aeros 2.0 by TheBuckmaker.com