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A Balanced Attack

These are the Dodgers leaders in OPS among players with at least 300 at bats:

J.D. Drew - .866
Nomar Garciaparra - .862
Jeff Kent - .860
Andre Ethier - .860
Rafael Furcal - .817

The Dodgers are tied for third with two other teams in players with OPSes over .800, behind only the Blue Jays and Yankees. They're tied for second with one other team in hitters OPSing over .850, behind only the Yankees. Of course, they're tied for last in hitter OPSing over .900 and beyond, with zero. The Dodgers just missed tying the Yankees for players over .800, with Russell Martin at .793.

On Saturday, I noted J.D. Drew's low linear weights total, and wondered if any team has a worse leading hitter (at least two teams do). Despite the lack of a stud hitter, the Dodgers are 4th in the NL in runs scored, barely behind the Mets, a team stacked with threats. How are they doing this? Balance. The worst hitters amongst the Dodger regulars are Wilson Betemit and Kenny Lofton, who have .753 and .751 OPSes respectively. September's power surge aside, the Dodgers have needed to get at least two base runners an inning to put any runs on the board. Since the Dodgers have no real holes at any point in their lineup, this is a feasible strategy. Barring some surprise moves in the offseason it looks like the 2007 Dodgers will have a similar construction: high average combined with little power. If the Dodgers ran a nearly identical offense out there next year, would their success be repeatable? Possibly, but there's not a lot of room for error. While the Dodgers lead the NL with a .274 batting average, they also are seeing a 10 point jump in average and a 35 point jump in OPS with runners in scoring position. If the Dodgers clutch hitting goes south next year, they could end up scoring far less runs. So sure, the Dodgers success is repeatable, but the Dodgers could just as easily hit exactly the same, yet score far less runs. A power hitter could help the Dodgers from relying too much on something that can very so much from year to year.

The lesson we can learn from the 2006 Dodger offense is that one player doesn't matter; it's the aggregate production of the team. The lack of one true stud can be made up for with solid production throughout the lineup.  So long as the Dodgers can continue to add solid players to the offense, they'll be fine. However, This could prove to be difficult as the fruits of our farm system join the team. If one or two of them have a bad start to their careers, they could end up taking the whole offense down with them. For a team like the Dodgers, having a guy that can carry the team could really help as the rookies get acclimated to the club. I'm very curious to see how Ned Colletti will handle this situation in the off-season.

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I see more power next year....
it seems with the exception of Nomars possible absence each possition will display at least more power....

 CF Kemp more power less OBP
RF Drew I suspect a better Off season workout will boost #s
LF Ethier lower AVE better power, if not, someone else will take his place by the deadline.
2nd Kent naging injuries should be gone, could be counter-acted w/ age though
3rd ??....

as you said, most positions which could be upgraded will be taken up by rookies. However, even if #s do decline, spend the money on pitching and imagine all the bad starts by Tomko, Seo, and Hendrickson being replaced by Zito and Kuo with slightly less offense to go around.

by kemp4wells on Sep 22, 2006 3:38 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

An example is less than an hour away
With no traffic.

The Angels are a team that also relies on high batting average with RISP to score runs, this year they did not hit as well and then their lack of OBP and power made their offense very inconsistent especially during the first half.

I'm not sure how this changes, most of us who lurk among these Dodger sites, do not want any deals to acquire a veteran bat but there are no Ryan Howards in our minor league system.

by bhsportsguy on Sep 22, 2006 11:06 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Angels
Good point. Though having Vlad makes up for a lot of the failings they've had. I don't think their quite as stacked 1-9, so maybe things will work out better for the Dodgers.

It's a very tough choice, but maybe Loney or Ethier have to be sent away to make room for a bat. I'm glad it's not one I have to make.

by Andrew on Sep 23, 2006 7:08 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

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2010 Dodger Payroll

Pos No Player 2010 Salary
C 55 Martin $5,050,000
1B 7 Loney $3,100,000
2B 33 DeWitt $410,000*
3B 23 Blake $6,000,000
SS 15 Furcal $8,500,000
LF 99 Manny $7,267,760
CF 27 Kemp $4,000,000
RF 16 Ethier $6,000,000

2B/3B 14
Carroll $1,350,000
2B/3B/1B 3 Belliard $825,000
C 12
Ausmus $850,000
OF 5 Johnson $800,000
SS 60
Hu $405,000*

SP 22 Kershaw $425,000*
SP 58 Billingsley $3,850,000
SP 18 Kuroda $14,100,000
SP 44 Padilla $4,025,000
SP 57 Elbert $405,000*

CL 51 Broxton $4,000,000
LHP 52 Sherrill $4,500,000
LHP 56 Kuo $950,000
RHP 67 Troncoso $425,000*
RHP 54 Belisario $425,000*
RHP 31 McDonald $425,000*
RHP 68 Monasterios $460,000*

Pierre $4,000,000
Andruw $3,600,000
Schmidt $2,000,000
Wolf $2,000,000
Hudson $1,440,000
Nomar $1,250,000
Ohman $200,000
Hoffmann ($50,000)

Others on 40-man roster (total: 40)
LHP 65 Zerpa $60,000*
RHP 64 Guerra  
RHP 37 Haeger  
RHP 74 Jansen  
LHP 59 Leach
RHP 73 Link  
RHP 49 Schlichting  
LHP 50 Stults  
RHP 47 Wade
C 9
Ellis  
C 71 May  
SS 87 DeJesus  
OF 75 Paul
OF 17 Repko $500,000
OF 62 Robinson  

Totals $93,547,760
 
Red = arbitration
Asterisk (*) = estimated
For more detailed information, click here.

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