Split Squad Dodgers on St. Patrick’s Day

Minor movement in the ownership bidding process, as Steve Cohen has been cleared by the MLB vetting committee to move forward, according to the New York Post. Since he had previously been approved to purchase a minor share of the New York Mets (albeit in a less thorough investigation), this news was expected. Besides, if MLB had rejected the bidder who had included the most straight cash of anyone in his bid, you can bet that Frank McCourt would have taken that as reason to send this whole process back to a mediator and delay this mess even further. (That said, there’s still the potential for that, as rejected bidders Leo Hindery and Stanley Gold are each appealing their exclusions.) We’ll find out soon enough whether the other three groups have made it through – expect that they have – and then we move on to McCourt’s final decision, which is due two weeks from tomorrow.

Other news…

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Remember this when Dee Gordon lands on the disabled list with a broken finger at some point this year:

After singling leading off the bottom of the first inning on Friday against the Rangers, the Dodgers’ Dee Gordon attempted to steal second base with a feet-first slide and was called out by umpire Mike Muchlinski.

“I’m not doing that again,” said Gordon. “I’ve been working on not sliding headfirst, so I thought I was going to be safe and figured I would try it. And I was safe. I was like, ‘Really?’ That’s what I get for thinking.

“Feet first? I’m over that. I gotta do what feels natural.”

Increased risk of injury because of a possibly blown call in a spring training game in mid-March? Got it.

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Vin Scully will be calling fewer games this year. Tony Jackson:

Scully, 84, now will call road games within California (San Diego, San Francisco and a June interleague series at Oakland) and at Arizona. The reduction means he no longer will travel to Colorado and won’t call an interleague series at Seattle in June.

Disappointing – in no small part because that’ll subject us to additional games with Steve Lyons – but completely understandable. It wouldn’t surprise me at all if Vin decides to scale back even further to only home games if he continues past 2012, but we should really be happy we even have him for one game a year, much less over 100.

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MLB Network continues it’s “30 Clubs in 30 Days” spring training series with the Dodgers, Sunday evening at 10pm PT:

Hosted by Matt Vasgersian with analysts Larry Bowa and Mitch Williams, the one-hour show will feature an in-depth look at the Dodgers’ pitching staff and lineup, whether they compete in the NL West and analysis of the team’s farm system.  The episode includes interviews with Don Mattingly, Clayton Kershaw, Matt Kemp, Chad Billingsley, Andre Ethier and James LoneyJavy Guerra also gives a tour of the Dodgers’ facility in Glendale.

Williams is atrocious – possibly the worst analyst on television right now – but the MLB Network crew generally does a pretty solid job with these pieces.

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Lineups for today’s split squad games…

1pm PST at Colorado: Gordon (SS), Mark Ellis (2B), Ethier (RF), Adam Kennedy (1B), Juan Uribe (3B), Tony Gwynn (CF), A.J. Ellis (C), Cory Sullivan (LF), Nathan Eovaldi (SP)

7pm PST vs San Francisco: Justin Sellers (3B), Ivan De Jesus (2B), Kemp (CF), Juan Rivera (LF), Jerry Sands (RF), Loney (1B), Luis Cruz (SS),  Matt Treanor (C), Aaron Harang (SP)

The later game will be seen live on Prime Ticket and MLB Network, and will be Vin’s first call of the spring.

Seven Reasons for Optimism in 2012

Nearly five months after the disappointing 2011 season ended when a Kenley Jansen-induced flyball off the bat of Arizona’s John McDonald landed in Tony Gwynn‘s glove, pitchers and catchers are finally getting back to work in Camelback Ranch. Hitters will join them later this week, though many, like Dee Gordon and Matt Kemp, are already there. No matter what your outlook is on the 2012 season, this is the time of year where everyone has hope. (Well, everyone who isn’t an Orioles fan, I suppose, because that situation is beyond repair.)

Now, I’ll be the first to admit that much like last year, I haven’t exactly been thrilled with the offseason. The good will engendered by signing Kemp to an eight-year extension (which looks better by the day) hasn’t completely overcome the disappointment of spending millions on backloaded two-year contracts handed out to aging veterans, or that the previously-added expensive veterans like Matt Guerrier, Ted Lilly, & Juan Uribe are unlikely to improve enough to earn their contracts, or the fact that the big bat which was so desperately needed never arrived – despite the late push for Prince Fielder. Just like last year, this team looks like it’s built to win around 83-86 games, with some small chance of pushing 90, though with a likely equal change of falling below .500. When you have two of the best players in the game and some interesting young players around them, that’s not exactly what you hope your expectations would be entering the spring.

Still, it’s not all doom & gloom around here, so with a nod to last year’s attempt at finding some hope ahead of what looks like it could be an uninspiring season… here’s seven reasons why 2012 is going to be great – and no, the return of Brent Leach is not among them.

1. The welcome end of the Frank & Jamie McCourt era. I just cannot overemphasize this enough, because there’s almost nothing that can happen on the field that is going to make us remember 2012 as anything but the year that we finally rid ourselves of these two vultures.

The first mention of their separation on this site came on October 15, 2009, just hours before Game 1 of the NLCS. (Which I’ll never forgive them for. Jackasses. Edit: okay, there may have been other reasons why that happened then.) In the nearly two-and-a-half-years since then, through dozens of sins and probably hundreds of posts on this site, they have bankrupted the team off the field, hindered it on the field, and dragged one of the crown jewels in American sport through untold miles of mud and embarrassment. (And let’s not forget, it’s hardly as though we all loved them right up until the news of their separation came out.)

We don’t know who the next owner will be, or how they’ll run the team. We all pray they’ll be the owner we all hope they will be, but we know that there’s no guarantees; the next owner could be just as bad as the current one. For the moment, it doesn’t matter, because come April 30, it won’t be Frank McCourt. That’s a sentence I’ve been dying to write for years. Soon, friends. Soon.

2. The pure joy of having Kemp & Clayton Kershaw. There’s a lot of fluff on this team. Old, backloaded, underwhelming, underperforming, overpaid fluff that at best will help you tread water, but isn’t going to really help you move forward. Yet in the midst of all that mediocrity, we’re lucky enough to have the best hitter and best pitcher in the National League, two elite talents who are either close to or in their primes, coming off seasons where they reached the potential we all knew they had.

The best part is, short of injury, there’s little reason to think that they won’t as productive in 2012 and going forward, because 2011 was hardly an out-of-nowhere fluke from either player. Kershaw was a top-ten pick who was successful basically from the day he arrived in the bigs and continued to improve through his breakout 2011; Kemp has been a productive player in each of his four full seasons, despite a (somewhat overblown) disappointing 2010. We should be careful not to get ahead of ourselves here, particularly with Kershaw not yet signed to a long-term deal, but it’s pretty hard not to think that we’re watching the early stages of two of the greatest careers in Dodger history. For that alone, we should be thankful.

3. A big rebound season from Andre Ethier. We keep going back and forth on Ethier. On one hand, I’ve been pretty clear that I don’t like the idea of investing big money in a moody, overrated player who isn’t a great defender, absolutely cannot hit lefties, and has dealt with nagging injuries as he moves into his age-30 season. (When you put it like that, he basically sounds like a platoon DH.)

Yet for all his shortcomings, everything is perfectly primed for Ethier to have a really, really big year. He’s finally healthy heading into 2012, and if you don’t think that matters, just check his pre- and post-injury stats from the last two years. He’s also in his final year before free agency, and he’s made his displeasure at not having been signed to an extension clear. Whether it’s to impress new ownership or potential suitors on the market, Ethier has a chip on his shoulder and plenty to prove in 2012. A healthy, motivated Andre Ethier is exactly the kind of Ethier that could put up a huge season… before convincing someone to wildly overpay him.

4. The breathtaking speed of Dee Gordon. I don’t know if Gordon has enough plate discipline to allow his zero-power game to work on the major league level. I don’t know if he can hone his defensive chops enough to stop making the errors on easy plays that occasionally hurt more than his flashy, outstanding plays help. And I especially don’t know if his slight frame can hold up to the rigors of a full season. But I do know this: in just 56 games last season, Gordon and his speed made more jaw-dropping plays on both offense and defense than I think we’ve seen over the last ten years.

Gordon’s done all the right things this winter to improve his game, from working out with Hall of Fame shortstop Barry Larkin to being one of the first to arrive at camp. It remains to be seen what kind of player he’s actually going to be, but no matter how much he progresses (or not) this year, his entertainment value alone is worth the price of admission. Considering the rest of the infielders that’ll be around him, that’s a stat which might even be more important than his on-base percentage.

5. More young pitching on the way. Last year, we were excited to see the next wave of Dodger hitters, since Gordon, Jerry Sands, and Trayvon Robinson were all starting together at Triple-A. All three saw big league time – though not exactly in the way we expected – and Gordon & Sands are poised to be big parts of the Dodger core going forward.

This year, it’s the youthful pitching that demands our attention. Other than Nathan Eovaldi, I’m not even really talking about what we saw in the bigs last year, because Scott Elbert & Josh Lindblom finally proved themselves as big leaguers after having been close for years, and Javy Guerra really came out of nowhere to take over the closer’s job – at least until Kenley Jansen takes it. If you look at all of the various top prospect lists that came out over this offseason, you’ll find an Alfredo Silverio here and a Joc Pederson there, but what you’ll mostly see is a Dodger list that is full of quality pitching, most of which is ready to make their Los Angeles debuts in 2012 and 2013. This year alone, you could see Eovaldi, or Allen Webster, or Shawn Tolleson, or Chris Withrow, or Steve Ames or others, plus the return of Rubby De La Rosa; after them, it might be Zach Lee, Chris Reed, Garrett Gould, Ethan Martin, Aaron Miller, Angel Sanchez and more.

ESPN’s Keith Law summed up the feeling well in a recent chat:

Mike (CT)
After really digging into this did any farm systems surprise you in a good or bad way??

Klaw
Rockies came out better than I expected. Dodgers too. I love that collection of arms, and now it’s close enough to potentially impact the ML club this year.

We all know the failure rate of pitching prospects, and you can guarantee that some of the names on that list will either never make the bigs or do so unsuccessfully. But there’s so much talent there that we’re almost certain to see a few of them make big contributions to the Dodgers over the next few years (whether in blue or via trade), and they’re close enough that it’s worth keeping a close eye on them as they try to advance another level in 2012.

6. Improved infield defense. You can make a good argument that the Dodger infield might be the worst offensive group in baseball. (A really good argument, especially with the durability issues around Gordon, Mark Ellis, and Juan Uribe, and the complete unknown that is James Loney. But hey, at least Adam Kennedy is in reserve!) Who knows what you’ll get out of Uribe – though the fates aren’t on his side – and Ellis is coming off an age-34 season with a .288 OBP.

But what you should get out of this group is some fancy glovework, superior to what we saw last year. For all of his failures, Uribe was a plus defender at third base when he played, and Ellis has long been one of the better defensive second basemen in the game. Assuming health, they’re replacing 970 innings of Aaron Miles (who was merely passable at second and atrocious at third) and about 1050 innings of Jamey Carroll, who was rated as slightly below-average at each of the middle infield spots. As mentioned above, you hope that Gordon can get to enough balls with his incredible range to make up for the easy ones he’ll boot, and it’s easy to see how this group of infielders could potentially be a big step forward over last year. Even when they go down, the glovework may not suffer; for all of my problems with the Kennedy signing (and there are many), he’s still a good second baseman, though one who should never play elsewhere, and Jerry Hairston offers a decent glove at a few spots. Beyond them, playing solid defense might be the only thing Justin Sellers can do.

Is this group going to hit, at all? Well, uh, this is the optimism post, so we’ll stick to what works. At the least, they’ll pick it, and that can only help the questionable starting staff beyond Kershaw.

7. Vin Scully. No matter what happens off the field, no matter how many games are lost on the field, as long as there’s Vin, there’s reason to watch. Well, home games, at least. No year with Vin can be a bad year, and it’s comforting to know that he’ll outlast Frank McCourt at Dodger Stadium.

Happy Birthday, Vin

You know, a year ago at this time, we spent November 29 and 30 talking about Juan Uribe‘s new contract, checking into reported interest in Johnny Damon & Jason Varitek, realizing that Jon Garland‘s “durability” might not have been what it seemed, and celebrating that Ryan Theriot was headed out for Blake Hawksworth.

This year, we’re all but settled in for the winter with the realization that the budget is largely tapped, that there’s unlikely to be much movement at the winter meetings, and that until there’s progress on the ownership front, all we can do is warily keep an eye on the interminable court proceedings, though today’s Dodgers/FOX hearing was postponed until December 7.

My, how times have changed. Still, we have a few items of interest to attend to…

* Today is Vin Scully’s 84th birthday, which allows me the opportunity to post the same picture I’ve been using for about four years. We say each year that every season we still have with Vin is a gift, and never was that more true than in 2011, arguably the worst season in the franchise’s history. The fact that we’ll have him for at least one more year, and that he’ll outlast Frank McCourt, is an honor we should all be grateful for.

* As expected, Jonathan Broxton moved on to greener pastures today, though I can’t say I predicted him signing with the Royals. He’ll set up for Joakim Soria and join a Kansas City pen that could be fearful, considering they already had an enviable talent of young relievers like Greg Holland, Blake Wood, Louis Coleman, and Tim Collins, enabling them to move Aaron Crow to the rotation. If he’s healthy, it’s a great deal for the Royals, though of course if he does succeed all you’ll hear from the usual suspects will be ”well of course, there’s no pressure in Kansas City in the 8th inning.” Uh huh.

* You’ll notice I’ve added a tracker to the right sidebar collecting all of the minor-league invites the Dodgers hand out this offseason, and the newest addition is shortstop Luis Cruz, who will be 28 in March and has seen time in 56 MLB games across parts of three seasons from 2008-10 with Milwaukee and Pittsburgh. He spent most of 2011 with Texas’ Triple-A club, though he did spend a month back in Mexico. With a .293 OBP in parts of 11 minor-league seasons, he’s organizational filler and little more, though he could see a decent amount of Triple-A playing time if Justin Sellers does indeed make the big club.

* Hey, it could be worse: San Francisco extended GM Brian Sabean’s contract through 2013 with a club option for 2014. That’ll give him plenty of time to give Nate McLouth a four-year deal after the Braves are done with him.

* Finally, do you care about hockey? Particularly college hockey? No, of course you don’t. Nor should you. That said, I did attend a game between my alma mater Boston U & Cornell over the weekend at a sold-out Madison Square Garden, and what you’ll see in the clip below was too fun not to share. Fortunately for the Terriers, this got waved off because the ref lost sight of the puck and whistled the play dead. 

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eOugWiCjqik]

Vin Scully to Continue Making Dodger Baseball Watchable in 2012

Well, home games and division road games, anyway. So, best news of the season? Vin, just a few minutes ago, on the air:

“I don’t want to make a big deal out of it, you and I have been friends for a long time,” Scully told the audience on PRIME TICKET. “But after a lot of soul searching and a few prayers, we’ve decided that we will come back with the Dodgers for next year. God’s been awfully good to me, allowing me to do the things I love to do. I asked him one more year at least and he said okay.”

Fingers crossed: Vin might just outlast Frank McCourt.

Six Reasons for Optimism in 2011

I’ll be the first to say that this hasn’t exactly been the brightest offseason around here. We’ve been dismayed at the seemingly excessive contracts handed out to Matt Guerrier, Rod Barajas, and Juan Uribe. We’ve cringed at the impending disastrophe of the JaMarcus Gwybbons, Jr. situation in left field, wondered why they couldn’t find a righty partner for Andre Ethier, been disappointed over the inability to upgrade on Casey Blake, and resigned ourselves to another year of mediocrity from James Loney. We’ve been terrified at both how there’s no good option for a #2 hitter and how the lineup as a whole seems to have been assembled with no regard for OBP. We’ve worried about atrocious outfield defense and considered what things may have looked like if the near-misses for aging vets Aubrey Huff , Michael Young, and A.J. Pierzynski hadn’t been misses at all. We’ve fretted that minor-league deals or not, historically poor players like Juan Castro and Aaron Miles are in the mix and just may make the team, and we’ve wondered when and if proven young talents like Clayton Kershaw and Chad Billingsley would see long-term deals

And that’s just a list of on-the-field concerns, because there’s still the ongoing McCourt embarrassment, the uncertainty around inexperienced new manager Don Mattingly, and yet another fun year of “will Ronald Belisario make it to camp?” (As a sidenote, I considered running an entire post about that, because while the official reporting date hasn’t arrived yet, with his history, how was he not planning to be back in the country by February 1st at the latest?)

So with all of the questions surrounding this team, it’s fair to say that my expectations for 2011 are tempered at best. I see this as a club that’s built to win around 85 games, and if everything breaks right maybe that can be 90. That’s a team that will have a say in the wild card race and possibly the division, though not a team I see as clearly being one of the three best in the league.

Still, a team that has the potential to win 85-90 games is hardly an unwatchable disaster, and as the weather starts to warm and the team reports to camp, there are reasons for optimism – and we’d be remiss to ignore them.

1) Clayton Kershaw. You hardly need me to revisit all the ways in which Kershaw is awesome; I did just that already in his 2010 Season in Review piece. He had a two-month stretch last season in which he was basically the best pitcher in baseball, and while that’s probably a bit too much to hang on his head right now, you can certainly make the argument that he’s already one of the best lefty starters in baseball. Forget what you hear about him still needing to do this or that to be an “ace”; if he made no further progressions, he’d still be worthy of being at the top of nearly any team’s rotation.

Yet, there’s still so much more there. Last year he made a marked improvement in his major weakness by walking 10 fewer batters despite pitching 30 more innings than in 2009. Don’t forget, he’s not even 23 yet. I’ve been arguing that he turned potential into performance last year, but the greater accolades haven’t quite come yet because of his mediocre (and pointless) win-loss record. This is the year that the greater baseball world recognizes Kershaw in his rightful place as one of the dominant starters in the game.

2) Overall pitching depth. Did Ned Colletti overpay for Ted Lilly? Yeah, probably. Did he go overboard on Matt Guerrier? No question. Is the “Jon Garland vs. Vicente Padilla for 5th starter or bullpen arm” thing going to go as smoothly as we hope? I’m not so sure.

Still, while the rotation may not be able to feature the four aces of Philadelphia, the depth from one through five (or six) is nearly unparalleled. Make all the arguments you like that Tim Lincecum & Matt Cain or Zack Greinke & Yovani Gallardo are better than Kershaw and Billingsley (I’m not convinced, but I can see it), but don’t forget that most teams use 7-10 starters throughout the year. While other teams will be like the 2010 Dodgers, picking through scraps of rejects and prospects to patch and fill, this year’s edition actually runs six deep, and that’s without even including John Ely, who filled in so ably last year.

Milwaukee blog The Brewers Bar put this theory to the test in their jubilation over adding Greinke and Shaun Marcum by trying to see what potential NL rotation compiled the most WAR last year. It’s not a perfect evaluation, since everyone clearly won’t have identical seasons in 2011 as they did in 2010, but it’s a fun exercise. How much respect did the Dodgers get? They didn’t even make the initial list. How did they look when added to the results? The overall WAR of their top five beats everyone in the league except for the Phillies. That’s without even counting Vicente Padilla, by the way; I can’t imagine how he compares to the potential 6th starter on most of those teams.

Then there’s the bullpen. Sure, maybe Jonathan Broxton bounces back, and maybe he doesn’t. (I happen to think that he will.) You’ve still got the unhittable Hong-Chih Kuo. You’ve got the tantalizing potential of Kenley Jansen. You’ve got Guerrier, who’s certainly overpaid but still useful. You’ve got Padilla, in whatever role he ends up in. You’ve got Belisario, who I understand cannot be counted on but who most people don’t realize was actually pretty effective last year when he was able to put his problems aside. Then you’ve got a smorgasboard of useful arms fighting for the last spot, guys who in other organizations might very well have guaranteed spots - guys like Ron Mahay, Blake Hawksworth, Scott Elbert, Ramon Troncoso, Jon Link, Josh Lindblom, and Travis Schlichting. Understanding that many of them will start in AAA isn’t a disappointment as much as it is a boost, since there’s no question that depth will be tested as the year goes on.

A pitching staff is not one man, or two. It’s usually fifteen or more, and you’d be hard-pressed to find a team with equal or better depth that far down the line.

3) Matt Kemp. As with Kershaw, I’ve spent so much time talking about Kemp that I’m not going to rehash it in full here. Just know that he’s my top choice for a rebound this year, and before you accuse me of looking at it through Dodger blue glasses, realize how many other players I’ve criticized and don’t expect to have good seasons.

So why am I high on Kemp? It’s because all of the signs are pointing in the right direction. Remember, even though I’m not going to defend his 2010 production, you’d think by the way people talked about him that he hit like Garret Anderson. This is still a guy who set a career high in homers and had an OPS above league-average. If that’s his “disaster” year, that’s still a guy who’s pretty special. Besides, any and all excuses are now gone. Think that his troubles last year were due to work ethic issues? He’s taken responsibility. Think that he spent too much time with Rhianna? I don’t agree, but they’re split up now. Think that he didn’t get along with Joe Torre? He’s got a good relationship with Don Mattingly. Think that his issues with the rest of the coaching staff last year were reflected on the field? As you’ll see in a second, that staff has largely turned over. Instead of cranky Bob Schaefer and Larry Bowa, he has baserunning guru Davey Lopes.

Again, not defending Kemp’s reaction, but it’s hard to ignore that after his scorching April last year, he headed downhill at just about the time Ned Colletti oddly called him out in April. Then, as it became clear that Torre & crew wouldn’t be back in 2011, he ended the year by homering in five games in a row. That’s got to be a pretty nice taste in your mouth as you head into the offseason.

Kemp’s in his age-26 year this season, and in addition to playing for a contract, he’s got to know that many view this as a make-or-break season for him after his turbulent 2010. I think we all know that regardless of the moves the club has made this offseason, 2011 largely depends on Kemp’s resurgence. I won’t pretend I’m not at all biased here, but I’m squarely in his corner as far as expecting a breakout 2011.

4) Coaching staff turnover. You could almost consider this as a companion piece to Kemp, but the implications here are much wider. If you’ve been reading this blog for any period of time, you know how happy I was when Joe Torre decided to leave. As I’ve said several times, he may have been the right manager for the 2008-09 “Manny-mania” crew, but he wasn’t the right man for 2010 and certainly wasn’t going forward. But it wasn’t just him. Bench coach Bob Schaefer not only was the man who caused some of the Kemp drama, he aired the dirty laundry on the radio before the season was even over. Larry Bowa was so old-school and despised that even though Mattingly may have wanted him back, Colletti didn’t. I can’t say I’m disappointed to see a single one shown the door. (Mariano Duncan left as well, though I can’t say I really had an opinion on him either way.)

Sure, there was – and still is – a lot of concern over choosing Mattingly over Tim Wallach. Mattingly will have to prove himself to be the right choice, but the new coaching staff seems like a massive improvement. Trey Hillman was a failure as a manager in Kansas City (though you can’t totally ignore the lack of talent he had), but his experience and relative youth (47) makes him a good choice as a bench coach. Getting Wallach to stay in the organization as 3B coach should be seen as a coup, and adding Davey Lopes is an absolutely great get, particularly for his baserunning prowess. Inasmuch as you can grade coaching staffs, this is a group I’m very satisfied with.

5) The next wave of young players. After the much-hyped group that arrived between 2006-08, including Kemp, Loney, Ethier, Kershaw, Billingsley, and Russell Martin, the last two seasons have been something of a dry spell as far as impact prospects are concerned. Ivan DeJesus got hurt and hasn’t recovered his lost luster. James McDonald showed promise, but couldn’t hang on and was shipped out. (Foolishly, in my mind, as you might know.) Scott Elbert still has a chance, yet has proven little and probably won’t make the club out of camp. The same goes for Xavier Paul, who has potential but is a third outfielder at best, and likely to end up elsewhere anyway. There was also Russ Mitchell, who many tried to sell as “the next Casey Blake” but whom I see as a bench piece at best. The only young player who debuted over the last two years who really made any impact is Kenley Jansen, and his ascendence was something of an out-of-nowhere story, considering his catching conversion.

That’s not so much an indictment of the farm system as much as it is a cyclical fact of life; if you graduate as many quality players as the Dodgers did several years ago, you’re almost certainly going to have a gap until the next class is ready. But while we’re probably still at least a year away from seeing the next group push through to the majors, 2011 is a notable year because many of the names we’ve been hearing about are likely to make the move to AAA, putting them just one step away from the bigs. That includes Jerry Sands, a late-round pick who has destroyed every stop of the minors. It includes Trayvon Robinson, who had a breakout 2010 and is probably the closest to being big-league ready of this group. At some point during the season, it’ll include Dee Gordon, who’s unrefined but undeniably exciting. It may even include Rubby De La Rosa, the organization’s 2010 minor league pitcher of the year who turned heads with his exciting 2010.

Again, it’s probably premature to expect much big-league impact from them this year, other than possible September cameos by Sands and Robinson, but 2011 will go a long way towards seeing if the answers of the next few years can come from within or not.

6) Vin Scully is still here. No explanation required. It doesn’t matter if this team wins 10 games or 100, as long as Vin’s calling them, it’s worth listening to.

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What have I missed? What causes for hope are exciting you for the upcoming season?