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Category: Dana Eveland

Dodgers trade pitcher Dana Eveland to Orioles

Dana1The Dodgers made a minor trade on Thursday before leaving the winter meetings, sending non-tender candidate Dana Eveland to the Baltimore Orioles for a couple of minor leaguers.

The move was made to clear a spot on the 40-man roster for Aaron Harang, whose two-year, $12-million deal is scheduled to be announced later in the day.

In exchange for Eveland, the Dodgers received 22-year-old left-hander Jarret Martin and 23-year-old outfielder Tyler Henson.

Martin was 5-12 with a 4.96 earned-run average for Class-A Delmarva last season. He was an 18th-round draft pick in the 2009 draft.

Henson, who turns 24 next week, hit .247 with three home runs and 36 runs batted in for Triple-A Norfolk last season. He was a Double-A all-star in 2010 and a Class-A all-star in 2007. He was a fifth-round pick in the 2006 draft.

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-- Dylan Hernandez in Dallas

Photo: Dana Eveland. Credit: Gene Puskar / Associated Press

Hey, buddy, could you spare an extra starter?

Ned Colletti

Baseball’s annual winter meetings are this weekend in Dallas, but don't look for the Dodgers to exactly be at the hub of activity.

General Manager Ned Colletti is nearing the end of his budget for the 2012 season and he’s still minus two starters for the rotation.

The Dodgers must be on the every-other-year rotation plan. They went into the 2010 season with only four starters, which proved one Charlie Haeger knuckleball away from total disaster. Last year they actually thought they had an extra starter in Vicente Padilla, who managed to throw almost nine innings before ending his season due to injury, surprising no one. And then Jon Garland went down.

For 2012 they currently have Clayton Kershaw, Chad Billingsley, Ted Lilly and two holes. Rookie Nathan Eovaldi may have to fill one slot, but assuming they are unable to bring back Hiroki Kuroda, that still leaves a huge gap. Unless you’re all excited about the return of Dana Eveland.

Between Frank McCourt dropping another $9.9 million in bankruptcy-related expenses (per The Times' Bill Shaikin) just through October and Colletti dropping $4.5 million on Juan Rivera, it doesn’t appear the Dodgers have enough money left to bring back Kuroda. He wants to pitch one more season.

If the Dodgers go the free-agent route, the second-tier starters available are wholly uninspiring. Mike Petriello looked at them and his best, reluctant recommendation is … Jeff Francis?

There is, of course, the trade market. Yet to acquire a quality arm the Dodgers probably would have to give up an Andre Ethier or James Loney, both one year from free agency, simply creating another hole.

Dodgers.com’s Ken Gurnick previewed the winter meetings by estimating that Colletti had only about $10 million left to work with — and that was before he spent at least $800,000 on utility infielder Adam Kennedy.

Meanwhile, for the rest of baseball, Albert Pujols and Prince Fielder are still out there.

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— Steve Dilbeck

Photo: Ned Colletti. Credit: Morry Gash / Associated Press.

Daily Dodger in review: The incomplete book of John Ely

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JOHN ELY
, 25, right-handed pitcher

Final 2011 stats: 0-1, 4.26 ERA, 1.50 WHIP, 13 strikeouts and seven walks in 12 2/3 innings.

Contract status: Under team control.

The good: Did not allow a run in his final three appearances, all in relief. Though he’ll never be considered an overpowering pitcher, he did strike out 13 in his 12 2/3 innings.

The bad: It wasn’t that he was terrible, as much as forgettable. Not that the Dodgers really used him enough to know if he’d made any progress over his rookie season. But at triple-A Albuquerque, his numbers weren’t any better (7-8, 5.99 ERA, 1.54 WHIP). You can try to write that off as largely a product of the rarefied Albuquerque air, but he did well enough there last year to get his call-up. And Dana Eveland was 12-8 with a 4.38 ERA at Albuquerque.

What’s next: The Dodgers will hang on to him, albeit with another trip back to Albuquerque. He got one early-season, emergency start in April and was exclusively a starter at Albuquerque but they may have to consider him as a reliever.

The take: The Book of Ely will always refer back to his unexpected and fairly stunning appearance on the scene in 2010. That’s when the Dodgers were dying for a fifth starter, called him up and were the most surprised people in town when he used sharp control to go 3-1 with a 1.80 ERA in a six-game stretch.

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Matt Kemp going out in style, hits 38th homer in 4-2 victory

Dodgers1_600

If one significant opportunity has slipped away for Matt Kemp during the season’s final days, that doesn’t mean he’s given up on another.

Kemp’s spectacular season flirted down the stretch with a triple crown, but the past couple of days the batting title has drifted out of reach.

Yet with two games left in the season, Kemp still has an outside shot at a highly exclusive club -- 40 stolen bases and 40 home runs.

Kemp hit the 40 stolen-base mark over a week ago and on Monday hit his 38th home run to lead the Dodgers to a 4-2 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks in Phoenix.

Only four players in baseball history –- Jose Canseco (A’s, 1988), Barry Bonds (Giants, ’96), Alex Rodriguez (Mariners, ’98) and Alfonso Soriano (Nationals, ’06) –- are in the 40-40 club.

Kemp’s monster three-run blast in the first inning left him needing two homers in the final two days. Tough duty, but last season he hit home runs in each of his final five games.

The home run broke his tie with Cardinal Albert Pujols for the National League lead, and pushed his No. 1 RBI total to 123 –- fourth highest in Los Angeles Dodgers history. Still ahead: No. 1 Tommy Davis, 153 (1962) Shawn Green, 125 (’01); Mike Piazza 124 (’97).

Kemp went one for four on the night, dropping his batting average to .324. Mets shortstop Jose Reyes went three for four to push his average to .333962, slightly ahead of Brewer Ryan Braun at .333032.

The victory left the Dodgers 81-78, the first time all season they've been three games over .500, and assured them a winning record this season.

The Dodgers got 5 2/3 scoreless innings from left-hander Dana Eveland, who earned the victory to raise his record to 3-2. The journeyman called up in September retired 14 of his first 15 batters. He allowed five hits, did not walk a batter, struck out five and lowered his earned-run average to 3.03.

Eveland left with the bases loaded and two outs in the sixth, but Josh Lindblom came on to strike out Paul Goldschmidt.

The Diamondbacks scored their two runs without a hit in the eighth after rookie Nathan Eovaldi walked the bases loaded. Scott Elbert relieved, but an A.J. Ellis passed ball allowed arun to score. After Elbert walked the bases loaded again, reliever Mike MacDougal came on and walked in another run.

Despite some shaky defense by shortstop Dee Gordon, rookie right-hander Javy Guerra pitched a scoreless ninth to earn his 21st save in 22 opportunities.

Jerry Sands singed in the eighth, extending his hitting streak to 14 games.

MORE:

Dodgers-Diamondbacks box score

--Steve Dilbeck

Photo: Dodgers center fielder Matt Kemp is congratulated by teammates Jerry Sands and Dee Gordon after hitting a three-run home run in the first inning Monday night at Arizona. Credit: Jennifer Hilderbrand / US Presswire

Was that a last chance to bid adieu to half the Dodgers?

Carroll3
So did you wave goodbye? Blow a few kisses, you know, just in case.

Bid a fond farewell to the nine Dodgers who can become free agents at the end of the season? The five Dodgers who are arbitration eligible and could be non-tendered? The two whom the Dodgers hold options on that they’re not expected to pick up?

That’s almost half of the 38 Dodgers currently in uniform or on the disabled list. Some will be back; some won’t. But which, and in what roles?

The free agent list: Aaron Miles, Jamey Carroll, Rod Barajas, Juan Rivera, Hiroki Kuroda, Vicente Padilla, Jonathan Broxton, Hong-Chih Kuo and Mike MacDougal.

The arbitration five: James Loney, Tony Gwynn Jr., Eugenio Velez, Blake Hawksworth and Dana Eveland.

The options not expected to be picked up: Casey Blake and Jon Garland.

That’s a lot of moving parts. For sure, several appeared on the field at Dodger Stadium for the last time Thursday in the Dodgers’ final home game of the season.

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Not so much fun this time: Giants end Dodgers' win streak, 8-5

Dodgers6
Hangovers can be killers.

All that rare buzz at Dodger Stadium on Tuesday generated by the Clayton Kershaw-Tim Lincecum showdown evaporated Wednesday into a slow, uninspiring 8-5 loss to the Giants before an announced crowd of 32,334.

The carryover effect was lacking from the get-go, the Giants jumping on Dana Eveland for three runs in the first and never relinquishing the lead.

The loss ended the Dodgers’ four-game winning streak and dropped them back to the .500 mark (77-77), with seven games to go. Kershaw’s victory Tuesday had lifted them over .500 for the first time since April 29.

But momentum was a no-show Wednesday. About the only excitement the Dodgers offered came from the usual source, Matt Kemp hitting a rain-maker, three-run homer in the fourth that briefly brought the Dodgers to within 5-4.

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Ned Colletti and the Dodgers' looming, uncertain offseason

If there’s one thing most every offseason offers, it’s uncertainty. And then there is the coming offseason for the Dodgers, which may discover new doors into the unknown.

"I think we have more questions this offseason than we’ve had in the past," General Manager Ned Colletti says.

From small to huge, from backups to star players, from short term to long, all the way to who is going to be the team’s owner.

Colletti is charged with piecing it all together -- determining who he wants to re-sign and which free agents and trades he wants to pursue. When to gamble, when to play it conservatively.

"The offseason really is Ned’s time," Manager Don Mattingly said.

The team offense is the one area everyone agrees the Dodgers need to focus on improving. And the easiest way is to add a significant bat, which remain in shorter supply than love letters between Frank McCourt and Commissioner Bud Selig.

"I say the most dramatic way we can improve the offense, that would be the way we would go," Colletti said.

Alas, there are only two big bats scheduled for free agency, Albert Pujols and Prince Fielder. Either will be looking at a $100 million-plus contract. McCourt has never spent $100 million on a single player, and that’s when he wasn’t in bankruptcy court. Only one player has ever received a $100 million contract from the Dodgers, Kevin Brown back in 1999.

"The pitching and defense have been pretty good," Colletti said. "It’s the offense we have to try and impact, whether that’s from the inside or outside, we have to make the offense more productive. It’s a domino effect inside the lineup."

The Dodgers have at least $25 million coming off the books this offseason, so the possibility of signing a Pujols or Fielder isn’t completely ridiculous. Yet even if they were to make a run at them, there certainly is no guarantee that they’d return the interest. Some players may not be attracted to a bankrupt team.

Colletti said he hasn’t been told by McCourt yet what kind of budget he’ll have in the offseason, though that’s standard operating procedure for this time of year. Most years, of course, the Dodgers aren’t bankrupt.

When he starts to piece it all together, here are some issues Colletti will have to address:

-- Colletti said he wants to re-sign right-hander Hiroki Kuroda: "We’d love to have him back here."

-- If Kuroda returns, Colletti would still need a fifth starter: Nathan "Eovaldi has to be a candidate for that. I don’t want to count anyone else out. [Dana] Eveland has had two real good starts out of three. And there maybe somebody else in the system who can take that."

-- Assuming he doesn’t get a Pujols or Fielder, Colletti may tender James Loney after all: "As of right now, I’d say he’s somebody we’d have back."

-- Juan Uribe was a bust and then went out with injury but has two more years on his contract and will return next season, most likely at third: "We’re going to have to count on it. Everything is risky."

-- When the big pieces are filled in, several of this year’s role players -– Tony Gwynn Jr., Aaron Miles, Jamey Carroll, Juan Rivera and even Casey Blake -- may return: "In the right situation, yes."

-- Steve Dilbeck

Pirates' 6-2 win officially eliminates Dodgers from N.L. West

Matt Kemp slides into second base on a steal attempt against the Pirates

And that’s what a game in late September between two disappointing teams looks like.

Uneventful, long, slow, watched by precious few and filled with plenty of players who started this season in the minors.

For the Dodgers, it added up to a 6-2 loss Thursday night to the Pittsburgh Pirates, a defeat that officially eliminated them from the National League West Division race.

So much for those great comeback hopes.

The game was watched by an announced crowd of 25,381, the lowest official crowd of the season, though there have certainly been games with fewer actually in the seats.

Six of the nine Dodgers who started Thursday began their 2011 baseball journey in the minors. This is the time when you look at the kids, of course, when you’re out of the race and playing another team with nothing on the line.

The game did mark the first major-league start for Tim Federowicz, the catcher the Dodgers acquired in the Trayvon Robinson deal in August. In his first at-bat, he was welcomed to the majors by getting hit with a pitch. He did single in his second at-bat.

The pitcher the Dodgers couldn’t handle, on the mound or at the plate, was the unheralded Ross Ohlendorf.

Ohlendorf had won one game in his last 32 starts. He entered the night with an 8.03 earned-run average. In his last start, he gave up six runs on 10 hits in two innings to the Florida Marlins.

Against these Dodgers on Thursday night, he was an entirely different pitcher. He went seven innings, holding the Dodgers to two runs on four hits. He was a model of efficiency, not walking a batter and throwing only 72 pitches.

He had another out-of-body experience in the second inning, when he hit a three-run homer off Dana Eveland. In 100 career at-bats in the majors, he had never had an extra-base hit or driven in a run.

Eveland (2-1), the soft-throwing left-hander who had consecutive strong outings since being called up at the beginning of the month, never looked particularly sharp Thursday. He lasted five innings, surrendering four runs on eight hits and a walk.

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-- Steve Dilbeck

Photo: Pirates second baseman Neil Walker takes the throw as Matt Kemp slides into second base on a steal attempt in the sixth inning. Walker would make the tag in time. Credit: Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press

Meet the new Dodgers, same as the old Dodgers

Dodgers1_600

Ah, what to make of this? General Manager Ned Colletti saying he hopes you like this year’s Dodgers, because they are pretty much going to be next year’s Dodgers.

Kinda gets you all tingling, eh?

Of course, this year’s Dodgers have been a major disappointment and have struggled for more than four months just to climb to .500. Crowds have disappeared. Belief that anything will ever change as long as Frank McCourt owns the team permeates everything Dodgers.

Which, naturally, explains why you shouldn’t expect significant changes to this team next season. That would require signing a major bat, which is hard to do when you’re bankrupt, or even when your plan all along was to reduce payroll.

Colletti acknowledged that McCourt had yet to let him know how much he can spend in the offseason, and good luck with that. He has attorneys to pay, you know.

Both Manager Don Mattingly and Colletti said it’s the offense that needs upgrading, a statement’s shock value that resonates right up there with "desert needs more water."

The only troubling thing to this is that it seems immediately reactive to this year’s team and not part of an overall plan. I suppose some of that is always inherent with the job, but a year ago it was the rotation that was a problem –- as anyone paying attention knew it would be going into the season. So Colletti opened this season not only with five starters, which is always wise, but an extra one on board just in case. The extra one, Vicente Padilla, went down to injury just as the fifth starter, Jon Garland, did, but the plan was solid.

This season it was the offense that struggled -- as anyone paying attention knew it would be going into the season, though maybe not so extreme.

So now the emphasis is going to be to add a bat, and I sure hope you believe Juan Rivera can do this for a full season. Big bats cost big money, which McCourt was loath to spend even when he was pretending to and not dropping $35 million on divorce bills.

The good part to this .500 season is that having a crummy team, and battling constant injuries, enabled to Dodgers to get a good and encouraging look at a lot of young players.

Still, it’s not like the next wave will be reminiscent of the Matt Kemp, Andre Ethier, Russell Martin and James Loney invasion. Most of the promise comes from young pitchers and a couple of light-hitting infielders.

And then there is the rotation, which at the moment has only three sure starters: Clayton Kershaw, Chad Billingsley and Ted Lilly.  How much do you really like Nathan Eovaldi and Dana Eveland?

To the team’s great credit, they have continued to play hard, though as Mattingly has recognized, it is always dangerous to place too much credence in the performance of late call-ups, either good or bad.

There is plenty that needs to be added next season. And there are 10 current Dodgers who have contracts ending within the next three weeks. Plenty of bodies will come and go, yet the team figures to look very familiar.

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-- Steve Dilbeck

Photo: Juan Rivera, the Dodgers' recently acquired left fielder, is congratulated by ace pitcher Clayton Kershaw after scoring on a balk against the Giants in the fourth inning Saturday in San Francisco. Credit: W. Henderson / Getty Images

And on the 144th game, the Dodgers reached .500; beat Giants 3-0

Dodgers-blog_600 Being mediocre never felt so good.

The Dodgers got to a place Saturday they hadn’t visited since the second day of May. Hadn’t really even sniffed it in more than four months.

An even .500.

The Dodgers continued their recent strong play, dropping the Giants, 3-0, behind journeyman left-hander Dana Eveland.

The victory was their 15th in their last 18 games and it left them 72-72. It’s the first time they’ve been at .500 since May 2 (15-15). And considering everything they’ve been through on the field and with ownership, no minor accomplishment.

The win over the shrinking-so-small-you-can-barely-see-them Giants assures the Dodgers their sixth consecutive series victory. It’s the first time they’ve managed that in three years. Suddenly they're good, if late, these days.

Saturday the Dodgers used a pair of triples and a bunch of balls that never made it out of the infield to make a loser of right-hander Ryan Vogelsong (10-7).

Eveland, who spent all season at triple-A Albuquerque until being called up last week to start against the Pirates, was once again just shy of brilliant.

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