Utley shows us again why he is ‘The Man

When all was said and done the Dodgers lost to the Chicago Cubs on Friday night – period. That’s the bottom line and what really matters. It does no good to seek out someone to blame; not Kenley Jansen, who became the new all-time strikeout leader in franchise history for a reliever with his 605th and 606th career strikeouts; not Carlos Ruiz, who was acquired on Thursday afternoon to add offense to the position of back-up catcher and, in fact, who reached base in three of his four plate appearances in his Dodgers debut on Friday night; and most certainly not the trade of the .194-hitting A.J. Ellis that brought Ruiz to the Dodgers.

Sure, A.J.’s trade was an emotional blow to everyone, but from a baseball (and business) perspective, acquiring Ruiz significantly improves the Dodgers chances of winning a World Series title this season.

No, the real culprit for the Dodgers dropping Game-1 of a three-game series to the best team in baseball right now (and thereby having their lead over the San Francisco Giants drop back to only one game) is the same thing that has plagued the Dodgers all season long … all decade long for that matter – their inability to hit with runners in scoring position, at which they were 1 for 15 in Friday night’s painful 6-4 loss to the Cubs while stranding 10 men on base.

“It was a tough loss,” said Dodgers manager Dave Roberts. “That’s a game that we wanted to win.”

But lost in the disappointment of Friday’s loss was arguably one of the finest defensive plays of the season – Chase Utley‘s unbelievable run-saving play on a hard ground ball off the bat of Cubs second baseman Ben Zobrist. It was not only a near-impossible play for the 37-year-old Utley, who long ago was given the (appropriate) nickname “The Man,” it was a play that was near-impossible for anyone, regardless of age.

But for those wanting to sit around and mope over Friday night’s loss, you better hurry because the next game begins at 1:10 pm PT.

Play Ball!

 

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5 Responses to “Utley shows us again why he is ‘The Man‘”

  1. CruzinBlue says:

    No moping here. Just the facts.

    Josh Reddick personally accounted for 8 LOB himself. Someone please remind me why he was in the lineup against a guy who boasts a .149 BA against LH bats?

    F&Z are still hoping upon hope to defibrillate the Reddick/Hill deal into a justification of their decision to sign them. Hell, Andrew Toles would’ve had a better shot than Reddick last night if the plan was to use a left-handed bat against one of the tougher pitchers in the league on lefties.

    So with the righty going today, and by all accounts, Andrew Toles and his superior slash line should be in the lineup even before Reddick steps into the clubhouse today. I just don’t see that happening though. No posting of the Dodgers lineup just yet…

    Heading down the stretch run, Andrew Toles and Rob Segedin should be in the lineup on a near daily basis.

    Let’s get it done…

    • Snider Fan says:

      Agree on that. Reddick is playing and Kendrick, who has beat Hammel like a drum, is sitting. Shouldn’t the Cubs be giving US a handicap, not the other way ’round? At least Toles is in left.

  2. Respect the Rivalry says:

    “It was a tough loss,” said Dodgers manager Dave Roberts. “That’s a game that we wanted to win.”
    OK, Doc, how many games have you not wanted to win?

  3. oldbrooklynfan says:

    It’s hard to believe that the Mets have the worst batting average with RISP.

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