[情報] BA Top 10 Prospects:Los Angeles Dodgers
TOP TEN PROSPECTS
1. Dee Gordon, ss
2. Zach Lee, rhp
3. Rubby de la Rosa, rhp
4. Chris Withrow, rhp
5. Allen Webster, rhp
6. Jerry Sands, of/1b
7. Scott Elbert, lhp
8. Kenley Jansen, rhp
9. Ethan Martin, rhp
10. Trayvon Robinson, of
BEST TOOLS
Best Hitter for Average Dee Gordon
Best Power Hitter Jerry Sands
Best Strike-Zone Discipline Justin Sellers
Fastest Baserunner Dee Gordon
Best Athlete Dee Gordon
Best Fastball Kenley Jansen
Best Curveball Chris Withrow
Best Slider Scott Elbert
Best Changeup Allen Webster
Best Control Zach Lee
Best Defensive Catcher Gorman Erickson
Best Defensive Infielder Dee Gordon
Best Infield Arm Pedro Baez
Best Defensive Outfielder James Baldwin
Best Outfield Arm Blake Smith
PROJECTED 2014 LINEUP
Catcher Dioner Navarro
First Base James Loney
Second Base Ivan DeJesus Jr.
Third Base Pedro Baez
Shortstop Dee Gordon
Left Field Jerry Sands
Center Field Matt Kemp
Right Field Andre Ethier
No. 1 Starter Clayton Kershaw
No. 2 Starter Zach Lee
No. 3 Starter Chad Billingsley
No. 4 Starter Rubby de la Rosa
No. 5 Starter Chris Withrow
Closer Jonathan Broxton
TOP PROSPECTS OF THE DECADE
Year Player, Position 2010
2001 Ben Diggins, rhp Out of baseball
2002 Ricardo Rodriguez, rhp Out of baseball
2003 James Loney, 1b Dodgers
2004 Edwin Jackson, rhp White Sox
2005 Joel Guzman, ss/of Orioles
2006 Chad Billingsley, rhp Dodgers
2007 Andy LaRoche, 3b Pirates
2008 Clayton Kershaw, lhp Dodgers
2009 Andrew Lambo, of Pirates
2010 Dee Gordon, ss Dodgers
TOP DRAFT PICKS OF THE DECADE
Year Player, Position 2010
2001 Brian Pilkington, rhp Out of baseball
(2nd round)
2002 James Loney, 1b Dodgers
2003 Chad Billingsley, rhp Dodgers
2004 Scott Elbert, lhp Dodgers
2005 *Luke Hochevar, rhp Royals
(1st round supp.)
2006 Clayton Kershaw, lhp Dodgers
2007 Chris Withrow, rhp Dodgers
2008 Ethan Martin, rhp Dodgers
2009 Aaron Miller, lhp Dodgers
(1st round supp.)
2010 Zach Lee, rhp Dodgers
*Did not sign
LARGEST BONUSES IN CLUB HISTORY
Hiroki Kuroda, 2007 $7,300,000
Zach Lee, 2010 $5,250,000
Clayton Kershaw, 2006 $2,300,000
Joel Guzman, 2001 $2,255,000
Ben Diggins, 2000 $2,200,000
After winning back-to-back National League West titles and making consecutive
NL Championship Series appearances in 2008-09, the Dodgers fell to fourth
place last year. As if its first losing record since 2005 wasn't bad enough,
Los Angeles also suffered the ignominy of their owners' divorce proceedings.
Frank and Jamie McCourt were once the first couple of Dodgers baseball, but
their relationship disintegrated and the franchise took center stage in their
divorce. The McCourts' feud hung over everything the club did in 2010. Frank
attempted to take sole control of the franchise through a marital property
agreement, but in December a Los Angeles Superior Court judge ruled it
invalid and reinstated Jamie as co-owner. That decision promises to drag the
dispute well into 2011.
More than the mechanics of who gets control of the Dodgers, however,
documents filed in the divorce case revealed that the McCourts used the
franchise as their personal piggybank, taking huge salaries for themselves
and traveling extravagantly on the team's dime. At the same time, the front
office continually has had to pinch pennies on the big league roster, often
sending premium prospects away in trades in order to get other teams to pick
up salaries for the veterans they obtain. The most notable example was the
2008 deal that sent Carlos Santana to the Indians for Casey Blake, with
Santana subsequently blossoming into one of the game's best young catchers
and Los Angeles in need of help behind the plate.
The Dodgers started out well enough in 2010 and were tied for first place in
the NL West as late as June 17. A six-game losing streak coming out of the
all-star break started a fast fade, however. Los Angeles ended with an 80-82
record, a distant 12 games behind the rival Giants, who went on to win their
first World Series since the franchises moved to California.
The Manny Ramirez experiment ended ingloriously, when the slugger was waived
and picked up by the White Sox at the end of August. General manager Ned
Colletti tried to keep hope alive with several midseason trades, sending away
a total of seven young big leaguers or prospects, including Andrew Lambo and
James McDonald, the top two players on this list two years ago.
The team will have a new manager in 2011, after Joe Torre retired at the end
of the season. Former hitting coach Don Mattingly, who had also coached under
Torre with the Yankees and followed him Los Angeles in 2008, will take over
despite having no real managerial experience. The Dodgers also ousted team
president Dennis Mannion after the season, clearing the way for Frank McCourt
to take on a larger role in the team's day-to-day operations again.
The Dodgers did make waves in the 2010 draft. When they used their
first-round pick on high school righthander Zach Lee, who had a scholarship
to play quarterback at Louisiana State, the consensus was that they had no
chance of meeting his asking price. Instead, Los Angeles gave Lee more in one
bonus—$5.25 million, spread over five years in a backloaded deal—than it
handed out to any of its previous three draft classes as a whole.
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