
| Los Angeles Dodgers, Boston Red Sox combine to win… | |
NEW YORK — Clayton Kershaw, Matt Kemp and Andre Ethier became the first trio of Los Angeles Dodgers to win National League Gold Gloves in the same year, while Adrian Gonzalez, Dustin Pedroia and Jacoby Ellsbury became the first three Boston Red Sox in 32 seasons to win the AL honor together. Kershaw became a first-time winner at pitcher when the awards were announced Tuesday. Ethier earned his first Gold Glove in the outfield and outfielder Kemp won the NL honor he also received in 2009. First baseman Gonzalez earned his first AL Gold Glove to go along with two he won in the NL while with San Diego, Pedroia won at second base for the first time since 2008 and center fielder Ellsbury picked up his first Gold Glove. The previous three Red Sox to win in the same year were shortstop Rick Burleson along with outfielders Dwight Evans and Fred Lynn in 1979. For the first time since 1986, the Mariners lacked a Gold Glove winner. Ichiro’s streak ended at 10; he shares the AL record for Gold Gloves won by an outfielder with ex-Mariner Ken Griffey Jr. and Al Kaline. Chicago White Sox pitcher Mark Buehrle, who won for the third year in a row, was the lone AL honoree who also earned a Gold Glove last year. Other AL Gold Gloves went to catcher Matt Wieters and right fielder Nick Markakis of Baltimore, shortstop Erick Aybar of the Los Angeles Angels, ex-Mariners third baseman Adrian Beltre of Texas and left fielder Alex Gordon of Kansas City. Non-Dodgers to win NL Gold Gloves were St. Lous catcher Yadier Molina, Cincinnati first baseman Joey Votto and second baseman Brandon Phillips, Colorado shortstop Troy Tulowitzki, Philadelphia third baseman Placido Polanco and Arizona left fielder Gerardo Parra. Managers and coaches do the voting. McCourt to sell Dodgers LOS ANGELES — Frank McCourt has agreed to sell the Los Angeles Dodgers, surrendering the team he fought to retain for two years and in two courts. McCourt and Major League Baseball have agreed to seek approval from U.S. Bankruptcy Court for an auction of the Dodgers. Notes • Former Mariners infielder Willie Bloomquist, 33, has declined his end of a $1.1 million mutual option for 2012 with the Arizona Diamondbacks. • Brian Cashman, New York Yankees general manager, signed a three-year, $9 million contract. What are your opinions. Posted in dodgers-news | Comments Off
|
|
| Dodgers’ Kershaw wins Warren Spahn Award | |
updated 8:14 p.m. ET Oct. 20, 2011 OKLAHOMA CITY – Clayton Kershaw of the Los Angeles Dodgers has won the Warren Spahn Award, given annually to baseball’s top left-handed pitcher. Kershaw was selected Thursday after finishing first this season among lefties in each of the categories included in the formula that determines the winner. He had 21 wins, 248 strikeouts and a 2.28 ERA. Kershaw says he is “truly humbled” to have his name mentioned alongside one of baseball’s best left-handed pitchers. Spahn’s 363 career wins are the most of any lefty to pitch in the big leagues. Kershaw will receive the award during a gala in Oklahoma City in January. Past winners include David Price (2010), CC Sabathia (2007-2009), Johan Santana (2004, 2006), Dontrelle Willis (2005), Andy Pettitte (2003) and Randy Johnson (1999-2002). Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
advertisement More news
Classic Series begins to unfoldDeMarco: Texas’ dramatic win in Game 2 might be a sign that we are watching a classic Series that nobody can predict — and the warning jokingly issued by Ron Washington will prove to be sage advice: “I’ve got to say to those of you with bad hearts, watch yourself.” Rangers rally in 9th, beat Cards in Game 2Down to their last three outs, and in danger of dropping into a serious World Series deficit, the Texas Rangers rallied against St. Louis’ vaunted bullpen for a 2-1 victory Thursday night. Thanks for reading! . Posted in dodgers-news | Comments Off
|
|
| Dodgers Vs. Giants: Matt Kemp Joins 35/35 Club In… | |
Read More: Dana Eveland (P – LOS), Matt Kemp (CF – LOS), Tim Lincecum (P – SFG), Hiroki Kuroda (P – LOS), Ryan Vogelsong (P – SFG), Clayton Kershaw (P – LOS), Madison Bumgarner (P – SFG), Jerry Sands (LF – LOS), San Francisco Giants, Los Angeles Dodgers, San Francisco Giants at Los Angeles Dodgers, Sep 21, 2011 7:10 PM PDT The Los Angeles Dodgers fell to the San Francisco Giants 8-5 on Wednesday night at Dodger Stadium, in a game devoid of the pitch-by-pitch excitement of the Clayton Kershaw vs. Tim Lincecum duel of the night before. However, Matt Kemp did provide the home crowd with a delight, furthering his own case for National League MVP. Kemp hit a long home run into the pavilion in left center field in the fifth inning, a three-run shot off Ryan Vogelsong. It was the 35th home run on the year for Kemp, making him the 14th player in MLB history to have 35 home runs and 35 stolen bases in the same season. Kemp now has a National League-leading 116 RBI on the season, the sixth highest RBI total in Los Angeles Dodgers history. Dana Eveland took the loss, allowing five runs in four innings in his fourth start as a Dodger. The Giants were up 5-0 early, then saw Kemp cut their lead to 5-4 in the fifth inning. But San Francisco tacked on one run in the sixth inning and two more in the seventh. A pair of Dodgers rookies extended their hitting streaks on Wednesday. Jerry Sands singled in the eighth inning, pushing his hitting streak to nine games, and he has 17 hits in his last 34 at-bats. Dee Gordon’s streak is now at eight games, thanks to two singles, a stolen base, and a run scored tonight for the shortstop. Hiroki Kuroda starts on Thursday for the Dodgers in their final home game of the season. Madison Bumgarner starts for San Francisco. For more Dodgers news and information, be sure to read True Blue LA. Thanks for reading! . Posted in dodgers-news | Comments Off
|
|
| Giant Killer: Kershaw wins 20th, improves to 5-0… | |
![]() The 2011 season hasn’t provided too many positive memories for Los Angeles Dodgers fans, but that doesn’t mean the ones it has provided can’t be extremely satisfying. Take the incredible success of Clayton Kershaw(notes) for example. Kershaw is currently enjoying the best season by a Dodgers starter in over 20 years. He further cemented that on Tuesday night, tossing 7 1/3 innings of one-run ball while leading Los Angeles to a 2-1 victory over the San Francisco Giants. With the win, Kershaw became the team’s first 20-game winner since Ramon Martinez(notes) in 1990. I would imagine that’s very satisfying to witness. But going beyond that, it’s the fact Kershaw has achieved a good deal of that success against their arch-rivals that likely has Dodgers fans doing cartwheels — or at least staying off the ledge — at the tail end of this lost season. How good has Kershaw been against the defending World Series champs? With the victory Tuesday night, the 23-year-old lefty improves to 5-0 with a 1.07 ERA in five starts this season. Not even Sandy Koufax, Don Drysdale or Fernando Valenzuela can lay claim to a 5-0 record over the Giants in a given year. In fact, you have to go all the way back to Vic Lombardi — who would have turned 89 on Tuesday — in 1946 to find the last time it happened. On top of that, in four head-to-head matchups with two-time Cy Young winner Tim Lincecum(notes), Kershaw has gone 4-0 and only allowed one earned run in 30 1/3 innings. Fully acknowledging the shortcomings of the San Francisco Giants offense, those are still pretty crazy ridiculous numbers. And assuming the Giants fail to make the postseason, they can look back at their inability to solve Kershaw as one of the main reasons why. Knowing this, Los Angeles reporters decided to ask Kershaw for his thoughts on contributing to San Francisco’s current predicament, to which he deadpanned a very short response.
That’s enough to make a Giants fans’ stomach churn. As is the following question: With 20 wins under his belt, and remarkable success against the defending world champions on his résumé, has Clayton Kershaw done enough to unseat Roy Halladay(notes) and hold off the competition from Cliff Lee(notes) and Ian Kennedy(notes) in the National League Cy Young race?
There’s no denying Kershaw put an impressive stamp on his candidacy Tuesday night with an outing so dominant, center fielder Matt Kemp(notes) had time to debate the Cy Young with himself while standing around in the outfield.
Honestly, I couldn’t think of a more ringing endorsement than that. Related: Clayton Kershaw, Ian Kennedy, Tim Lincecum, Matt Kemp, Cliff Lee, Ramon Martinez, Roy Halladay, Los Angeles Dodgers, San Francisco Giants That’s all for today guys, i’ll be back to blog you tomorrow. Posted in dodgers-news | Comments Off
|
|
| Pirates-Dodgers Preview | |
Los Angeles Dodgers starter Chad Billingsley(notes) hasn’t won in more than six Los Angeles seeks its fourth win in five games Sunday when it hosts Billingsley (10-10, 4.30 ERA) is 0-1 with a 4.78 ERA in seven starts since The right-hander lost 4-1 to the Pirates on May 9, allowing three runs in The Dodgers (75-76) have a chance Sunday to reach the .500 mark as they near The Dodgers beat Pittsburgh 6-1 on Saturday with the help of James Loney’s(notes) Kemp scored his 100th run on Juan Rivera’s(notes) third-inning homer, then stole “I didn’t even to know I was the first person to do that, so that surprises The Pirates (68-84), meanwhile, continue to struggle. Finishing up its Josh Harrison’s(notes) RBI double in the second inning resulted in Saturday’s only The Pirates were tied for the NL Central lead July 25, but their 186 total Brad Lincoln(notes) (1-2, 3.73) will take the mound for Pittsburgh looking to Lincoln is coming off his worst start since being placed permanently into It marked the first of six starts in which the right-hander failed to last The Dodgers have won 9 of their last 12 meetings with the Pirates. If you like reading our blog, remember to bookmark it. Posted in dodgers-news | Comments Off
|
|
| Dodgers beat Pirates 7-2 on Loney’s 3-run homer | |
LOS ANGELES (AP)—Bothered by a stiff neck in his last few starts, Hiroki Kuroda set a career high with his 12th victory, helped by pinch-hitter James “It was a little peace of mind, but I still think it bothered me,” Kuroda He said he plans to make his next scheduled start. Kuroda (12-16) allowed two runs and five hits in six innings. The “(Rod) Barajas called a great game,” Kuroda said. “He knew all the Loney’s first career pinch-hit homer off Chris Resop(notes) hit the top of the “Those extra runs made it a lot easier on us,” Dodgers manager Don Kuroda gave up three consecutive hits to open the sixth, including Alex “Hiro was good,” Mattingly said. “He was sharper than his last two Pittsburgh’s Jeff Locke(notes) (0-2) gave up three runs and five hits in three Locke, who lives in New Hampshire, said it was his first time being out of “It was very exciting,” he said. “It’s definitely an honor to come here Pittsburgh is 17-39 since July 20, when it was 51-44 and led the NL Central The Dodgers took a 3-1 lead in the third on Kemp’s single that increased his The Pirates’ other run came in the first when Garrett Jones(notes) scored on NOTES: Kemp had his 51st multi-hit game, the most by a Dodger since Juan Feel free to leave your comments below. Posted in dodgers-news | Comments Off
|
|