In the Playoff Pulse series, our MLB editor takes on a hot October topic.These aren't your daddy's Dodgers, you know the franchise that had one playoff win in the last 20 years. Heck, these Dodgers barely resemble the team that was lagging behind the Diamondbacks and below the .500 mark in the NL West three months ago.
The Cubs found that out the hard way in the NLDS, and the Phillies (or Brewers) could be in for a similarly rude awakening in the next round.
Los Angeles won 84 games this season -- the fewest of any postseason team. It's worth noting that the last playoff team to win so few games -- the 83-78 2006 Cardinals -- went on to the World Series. But that team had Jeff Weaver and Anthony Reyes in the rotation and hit an extraordinary hot streak at the right time. This Dodgers team does not need to go on a fluke hot streak to win it all. It is much better than its 84 wins would suggest.
It will be all too easy to point to the Manny Ramirez trade as the key turning point in Los Angeles' season. His impact is undeniable. He hit close to .400 over the final two months of the regular season and he had two home runs in the three-game sweep.
But Ramirez is only part of a radical in-season makeover that has turned the Dodgers from an expensive flop into an NLCS team.
Los Angeles started the season with Andruw Jones in center field and, on many days, Juan Pierre in left. It started the season with Blake DeWitt at third base. It gave 20 starts to Eric Stults, Chan Ho Park, Hong-Chih Kuo, Jason Johnson and Esteban Loaiza and for all intents and purposes lost Brad Penny in June.
It finished the season with Ramirez and two rising stars in Matt Kemp and Andre Ethier playing full-time in the outfield, with the steady Casey Blake at third base, with Rafael Furcal back at shortstop and with Greg Maddux and Clayton Kershaw shoring up a rotation that has been a strength all season long.
Playoff Storylines - Day 4
Dodgers 3, Cubs 1 (Read Recap | Check Box Score)
Propelled by a stellar pitching staff and a balanced offense, the Dodgers won their first playoff series in 20 years, sweeping the Cubs out of the NLDS in three games.
Lucy Nicholson, Reuters
For the Cubs and their fans, it will be another winter of discontent. Despite owning the best record in the National League, Chicago could not win even one game in October and extended its championship drought to 100 years.
Francis Specker, AP
James Loney continued his great series at the plate for the Dodgers. The first baseman, who hit a grand slam in Game 1, drove in two of Los Angeles' three runs in the 3-1 series-clinching win.
Lucy Nicholson, Reuters
Japanese import Hiroki Kuroda was the latest Dodgers starter to shut down a Cubs team that led the NL in runs during the regular season. Kuroda scattered six Chicago hits over 6 1/3 shutout innings.
Kevork Djansezian, AP
Rich Harden wasn't nearly as calm and collected as his counterpart Kuroda. The fragile right-hander struggled with his control, walking three Dodgers, and couldn't escape the fifth inning.
Danny Moloshok, Reuters
Brewers 4, Phillies 1 (Read Recap | Check Box Score)
Down 2-0 to the Phillies in the NLDS, the Brewers were hoping just to stay alive in their first home playoff game since 1982. That's exactly what they did. J.J. Hardy was the catalyst, going 3-for-4 with an RBI and a run scored, as Milwaukee beat Philadelphia 4-1 to stave off elimination.
Jim McIsaac, Getty Images
Milwaukee starter Dave Bush did what Yovani Gallardo and CC Sabathia couldn't -- keep the Phillies' bats quiet. Sporting an excellent curveball, Bush allowed just one run over 5 1/3 innings to pick up the win.
Ben Smidt, Pool / Getty Images
The Phillies loaded the bases with no outs in the ninth inning, but Pedro Feliz grounded into a double play and Shane Victorino, left, was called out for interference at second base, costing his club a run and extinguishing Philadelphia's final rally.
Charlie Neibergall, AP
Veteran Jamie Moyer was uncharacteristically wild in his start for Philadelphia. Moyer walked three Brewers and threw 90 pitches over four shaky innings.
Ben Smidt, Pool / Getty Images
This is about much more than Ramirez. At some point, Joe Torre committed to the younger players -- the guys who will get better, not worse as time goes along -- and GM Ned Colletti filled in the blanks.
Everyone at FanHouse has been critical of Colletti over the years. He has deserved much of it. The Ramirez and Blake trades were not gutsy like a Theo Epstein deal or artful like a Billy Beane swap. There's nothing brilliant about being one of the few executives willing to give up top 10 prospects for Blake or being willing to give up young talent and take a risk on the moody Ramirez.
But this is a results business, and what Colletti has done has worked fantastically in the short-term. He may have made the worst collection of free-agent signings in recent memory, but his trades have given the Dodgers a chance they didn't have earlier this year -- a chance to win the World Series. Coupled with Torre's willingness to make use of the players churned out by one of the best farm systems in the game, there's reason to think Los Angeles might actually do it.
Yesterday's Hero: Dave Bush wasn't spectacular, but he did something no other Brewers pitcher has been able to, he shut down the Phillies. Honorable mention to Hiroki Kuroda, James Loney and J.J. Hardy.
Yesterday's Goat: The Phillies' middle of the order hasn't really impressed yet so the dubious distinction goes to Chase Utley, Ryan Howard and Pat Burrell. Dishonorable mention to Rich Harden, every Cubs hitter and Jamie Moyer.
Quick Hits: Hopefully Jeff Suppan has a little of that 2006 playoff magic stored away. Milwaukee will need his best -- something he's rarely had since signing with the Brewers -- to push the NLDS to a fifth game. ... Will Matt Garza have enough left in the tank to succeed in October? We'll find out starting tomorrow. ... Josh Beckett is the big x-factor in the playoffs right now. Boston is formidable either way, but if he impresses on Sunday it's going to be awfully tough to dethrone the champions.

















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-05-2008 @ 11:53AM
R said...
HA HA HA HA HA Chuckles all weekend. When you have a city full of the most egotistical and RUDE people that call themselves fans, that drought will just continue on.
With some of the best talen in baseball over the years and you still can't get it done?!??? well, results show. "Good luck next year" LOL
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10-05-2008 @ 4:23PM
kRaZyEdDiE said...
RIGHT NOW IM IN HEAVEN ,ITS BEEN A LONG TIME FEELING THAT WAY, AND I DONT WANT IT TO END,RIGHT NOW I HAVE BEEN ABLE TO SOAK SOME OF WHTAS HAPPENING AND I THINK IM HAVING A DREAMAND DONT WANT IT TO END,TO ME AT THIS TIME MANNY IS THE BEST HE CAME AND UP LIFTED THE DEAD DODGERS , THEY WERE GOING THRU ANOTHER DISMAL SEASON AND THEN CAME MANNY , I HOPE THE DODGERS WIN THE SERIES AND MANNY GETS THE MVP CAUSE RIGHT NOW AT THIS TIME AND PLACE MANNY FOR WHATEVER HE HAS DONE DESERVES IT , AND LIKE THE REAL FANS OF YESTERYEAR VIVA LOS DODGERS AND MANNY
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10-05-2008 @ 1:08PM
peter olsen said...
Way to go Joe wish you were back in NY
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10-05-2008 @ 1:26PM
R said...
Very well said... Joe, show 'the organization' who the talented was. Show the Dodgers what you've shown the great city of NEW YORK. Good luck buddy!
10-05-2008 @ 1:08PM
Mak said...
There is a true reason for the Dodgers success, A major part of it is Joe Torre, There is A man who was disrespected by the Yankee Brass,all because a bunch of over priced ,no hit in the clutch group of guys,They misplaced what they had because of greed.The Dodgers recieved a good man,a respected man,one who is a definition of the word Honor,there is only one or two men in all of Major league baseball,what seven eight hundred players or coaches that is worthy of asking for an autograph,because he represents what baseball should be,and was at one time,I remember his playing days at St . Louis, Bob Gibson, Tom Seaver, Wilber Wood pitching both games of a double header, Hes old school baseball, once guys like him are gone ,Its a buisness,no longer a game, Its the Dodgers in the World Series, I can promise that with a few simple words of spell. Attu me usesa betas zeti we amontonda , just repeat those words three times to bring them luck, when they win, an Autograph from Joe Torre will bring success in the World Series, Please take this Spell serious,those who dont will suffer
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10-05-2008 @ 4:23PM
kRaZyEdDiE said...
you are absolutely correct when you say that joe torre had something to do with the turn around direction the dodgers did but remember joe had what he had before manny came the dodgers where dead there wasnt any kind of life the team had until manny came along then did the team start to click also jeff kent ,i had a lot of respect for jeff at first he made some difference but when he started to go down hill he injected nothing but poison, and when he started to disrespect vin scully his credability went out the door as far as im concerned vinny is royalty in the eyes of long time dodger fans and ive been one since maury wills days so ive been there just as long as vinny, so when jeff wasnt around to inject his poison ,and manny came there was another turn for the better so it just wasnt joe ,but i do have alot of respect for him so the two do need each other , but anyways as us long time dodgers fans always are used to chant a certain phrase and im proud to bring it back is VIVA LOS DODGERS ,AND JOE TORRE AND MANNY RAMIREZ, THEYARE GOING TO WIN THE SERIES AND MANNY IS GOING TO BE MVP
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10-05-2008 @ 11:27PM
mercurinj said...
go dodgers.
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10-06-2008 @ 3:55PM
Red said...
When Kent's batting average went up when he was batting in front of Manny he was insulted that , that was the reason. What a jerk, who cares why it went up it did for a fact. The team has not missed him at all, they have done just fine without him. Time for him to retire. Manny has added so much to the team and clubhouse. They laugh now. And Torre is great. Go DODGERS!!!!!
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