
Bill Plaschke's most recent column, dedicated to Frank McCourt's belief that some of his young players a) lack listening skills and b) might need to be traded, as taken some recent heat from some of the most respected Dodger bloggers around.
"There is a certain type of player that will thrive and excel here," McCourt said. "There is another type that won't last here."And rightfully so. (Note that Ned "Hot Seat" Colletti has echoed similar statements, but he's got more to worry about than the media.)
[...]"Giving them a lot of playing time, now we've seen them a little closer, we've seen their approach," he said, pausing. "And we've all learned a lot."
Without naming names, he said he has learned that some kids are ready to be winners, and some are not.
"You have to be patient, but, on the other hand, young players have to be receptive and respectful, eager to learn and listen," he said. "How many years of experience do we have with our coaches in that clubhouse? Don't you think maybe these guys could learn something from them?"
As the Kam Bros. and Weisman both noted, the idea that Matt Kemp -- as opposed to Andruw Jones -- is dragging the team down because he doesn't "listen well" is absurdly stupid. This team is struggling because of Colletti's propensity to sign overpriced free agent outfielders that are not likely to contribute.
And let's not call it anything resembling hindsight either; every baseball fan with a glimmer of statistical understanding knew that Jones and Juan Pierre would not pan out well at their respective costs.
The Dodgers have gotten this far primarily based on pitching. To win the NL West, they need to improve on their .697 team OPS. Trading the youngsters and hoping the Druw Joneses of the world start listening and magically turn this thing around, well, that's not going to change the way things operate in LA.

Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
7-12-2008 @ 1:03AM
ryan said...
Dodgers are still in it to win it. Loney need to step it up. This team is talented enough to win 80 games-
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7-12-2008 @ 11:07PM
Martin said...
It's not reasonable to compare Pierre with Jones. Aquiring Jones was a dumb decision, and the Dodgers are paying him twice the amount they are paying Pierre. Pierre bats around .300 every year, steals about 60 bases a year, rarely strikes out, rarely hits into double plays, and brings a lot of excitement to the game. Jones, not so much. Jones is batting about .170 and is striking out a third of the time. In fact Pierrre's batting average is higher than Jones slugging average this year.
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