Los angeles dodgers clipsDodgers vs. Giants: How the NL West is won?
>>Highest in NL Is gauntlet time go time? September, 6, 2012 By Mark Saxon | ESPNLosAngeles.com LOS ANGELES -- It's their greatest challenge yet, and just maybe their greatest salvation. Seven of the Dodgers' next nine games come against the two teams they're chasing, starting with this weekend's series in San Francisco. Thirteen of their next 15 games are against teams with better records. Of all of the contending teams, the Dodgers have the roughest road to the postseason. And they had better embrace it, because this is a perilous time to feel sorry for themselves. For the past two weeks, the Dodgers have played below the level of teams with worse records. Now, they have no choice but to rise above the level of the National League's best, mostly on the road. Can they do it? Predicting this team's fortunes has been a worthless endeavor all season, so why not? "We always play well against these teams. We can do it again," Matt Kemp said. Not entirely accurate, but also not wildly inaccurate. The Dodgers are 5-7 against San Francisco in what has been a bizarre, feast-or-famine rivalry. They are 4-3 against St. Louis and, given the fact they're three games closer to a wild-card spot than to their division lead, those four games at home Sept. 13-16 vs. the Cards could be more pivotal than this weekend's tilts by the Bay. The Dodgers swept the Washington Nationals in their only series so far, but that was back in April. They took two out of three from the Cincinnati Reds. You would think they’d probably rather play the Chicago Cubs or Houston Astros this time of year. However, you might as well play the teams ahead of you. It's more efficient that way. Manager Don Mattingly said he likes his team's upcoming schedule, and maybe he actually does. After all, playing teams behind them wasn't working out too well. The Dodgers have losing records against Colorado and Arizona. "It's really just a chance for us to play head up and not worry about anything going on," Mattingly said. "It looks tough on paper, but it's really better for us." The schedule tends to even out, and the Dodgers weren't complaining about it when they were fattening their record in April against the worst teams in the league. Now, they're getting taxed on the back end. The Giants and Cardinals both play more home games between now and Oct. 3 and against weaker teams. The winning percentage of the Dodgers' remaining opponents is .532. The winning percentage of the Giants' remaining opponents is .475, and the Cardinals' is .462. That makes those ending head-to-head meetings the crux of this entire season for the Dodgers, who have lost 10 of their past 16 games. "You've got to just keep staying after it," Shane Victorino said. The Dodgers have a great opportunity to make their move in the next couple of weeks. To rely on other teams to do their bidding seems like an untenable position.
LOS ANGELES -- Don Mattingly learned a lot standing alongside Joe Torre for all of those years in the Yankees and Dodgers' dugouts. There were no lessons, no textbooks or maxims to live by. He just stood close by, observed and let things sink in so that one day, when he was the one making the decisions, it wouldn't feel like he'd never been there before. Torre had a way about him: a calmness and a classiness only men of a certain age tend to find. He knew the game, but mostly he just knew the men who played the game and how to treat them to get the most out of them -- particularly when it came to star players. "He knew his guys could play," Mattingly said of Torre. "He knew his talent. And he just trusted his guys. "Tino [Martinez] has this story. He says, 'I was struggling and Joe called me in and talked to me. He gave me a good cigar and a great restaurant to go to.'" It's a great story -- one of hundreds just like it Torre's former players tell about him. One that Mattingly could've stolen and co-opted as his own if he would have been thinking about it. Depending on how closely the players in Mattingly's clubhouse read the daily clips packet, that trick from Torre's old bag of 'em probably has to be taken out of Mattingly's repertoire for a while. And let's be honest, the timing isn't great. All of a sudden -- or in the time it took for the Dodgers' new owners to green-light some $400 million in additional payroll obligations -- Mattingly's Dodgers bear a striking resemblance to all those star-studded Yankees' teams Torre had so much success with. No longer is it Mattingly's job to get the most out of a glorified Triple-A ballclub with two transcendent stars (Matt Kemp and Clayton Kershaw). No longer is he trying to figure out how a makeshift roster can do more with less. "It's obviously quite a bit different when you've been adding some of the guys we've been able to add," Mattingly said. "But we've all still got the same goal." A few days after the monster nine-player deal for Boston's Adrian Gonzalez, Josh Beckett, Carl Crawford and Nick Punto went through, Mattingly's brother called and asked whether he felt any more pressure in trying to win. Mattingly shrugged at the query, "We're always trying to win." Ah, but it's different now. The Dodgers' clubhouse is filled with veterans who have proved themselves many times over. The young players who helped fuel last September's surprising run are back in Triple-A (Dee Gordon), or playing far smaller roles (Javy Guerra). Mattingly needs to connect with his star players now. Then he needs to do what Torre was always so good at with the Yankees: Get the most out of them. "I talk to Joe still. Sometimes good conversations about that kind of stuff," Mattingly said of Torre, who works in the commissioner's office now. "And other times we talk about suspensions and things like that. I have different conversations with Joe." He's kidding, because he can. He spent enough time around Torre, and before that as a player for the Yankees, to know what it's like to be around a team like this. "I think you manage everybody differently," he said. "A kid who's coming up for the first time, you're having a lot of different conversations with that kid than a guy who has six years under his belt and is accomplished.” "It was a little odd when we first got everyone,” he said. “You get four new guys there, but you also lose some of these guys’ best friends [popular reliever Josh Lindblom, who was dealt to Philadelphia for Shane Victorino] and you send a Tony Gwynn down [to the minors] or a Bobby Abreu down, guys that have kind of been good fixtures and good people. "But honestly, I think the winning is the biggest thing. You put a string of wins together, it starts to bind you together." He's right, of course. Winning is what brings a team closer together in a hurry. But he's also glossing over some important things he and the incumbent Dodgers players and coaches have already done to help ease the transition. It may not sound like a lot -- and because it comes so naturally to guys like Mattingly and Torre, it doesn't feel all that remarkable -- but by far the most important thing has been to quickly get to know each new player's personality. That is, to develop a rapport and a comfort level, then build on that relationship to create a productive environment. "I just talk to 'em. BS with 'em," Mattingly said. "[Josh] Beckett, I told him he hurt my neck the other day in Colorado. That first homer he gave up [to Rockies outfielder Tyler Colvin]. I was sitting nice and easy and all of a sudden there it goes. He tried to fix it the other day by giving up that other one on the other side." Mattingly laughs, and you know Beckett did, too. "Managing is a lot about having some people skills," Mattingly said. "You've got to get your guys to play and buy into what you believe in." Pretty quickly after each new player joined the team, Mattingly and his staff discussed their initial impressions in meetings and tried to coordinate their messages. It was typical of Mattingly and Torre's holistic approach. Coach the person, not just the player. Manage the man, not just the game. "Honestly, I'm just trying to get to know them as a person," Dodgers hitting coach Dave Hansen said. "That probably goes farther than anything: 'How are ya? How you doing? How you feeling at the plate?' We've got to have some compassion here; it's a hard game. But if they know they're secure, I think we'll get a lot farther a lot quicker." It seems simple. Too simple. But only Mattingly has stood close enough to Torre to know how important that part of it is in a situation like what the Dodgers have become. "I don't control the game," Mattingly said. "It's their game. At the end of the day, it's their game. All I'm trying to do is create an atmosphere. Create an environment where these guys can go play and be their best. That's what Joe was really good at." Could that really be the secret behind Torre's success in New York? Or why Mattingly was such a good captain for the Yankees all those years? "He's very simple," Dodgers catcher A.J. Ellis said of Mattingly. "All he asks you to do is play hard as you can and be where you're supposed to be on time. He never forgets how hard this game is to play. There's never any added pressure coming from the bench.” "Honestly, it's almost like Donnie is actually on the field with us playing,” Ellis said. “It's like having a very strong veteran player who doesn't actually play in the games leading you."
Directory: documents documents -> Concept stage documents -> Concept stage documents -> The great global switch-off documents -> Nonprofit grant application documents -> The Truth about the Rwandan Genocide documents -> Annual InStructional unit plan documents -> Chaos equipment included Download 208.2 Kb. Share with your friends: |