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Offseason Prospectus #14: Los Angeles Dodgers

Offseason Prospectus #14: Los Angeles Dodgers
Posted by Hippeaux on 26 Dec 2009 | Los Angeles Dodgers

The conventional wisdom this offseason has been that L.A. has not and will not be a major player in the free agent market because of the messy divorce proceedings between owner, Frank McCourt, and his wife and former Dodger CEO, Jamie McCourt. I don’t care to speculate too much regarding this subject, except to say, it is probably in the best interests of the franchise if Jamie is awarded the team when all is said and done. She is clearly more familiar with the daily operations of the franchise and perhaps more dedicated to the teams success (as she has made it her sole priority since 2004). Since the McCourts took over, the Dodgers have had only one losing season and, under the leadership of Paul DePodesta (GM ’04-’05) and Ned Colletti (GM ’06-Present), as well as Jim Tracy (Manager ’04-’05), Grady Little (’06-’07), and Joe Torre (’08-Present) they have made four playoff appearances and assembled perhaps the best collection of homegrown stars in all of baseball.

Ponder this list for a few moments:

RHSP Chad Billingsley (25) Drafted in 2003 (1st Round)
RF Andre Ethier (28) Drafted in 2003 (2nd Round)
OF Xavier Paul (25) Drafted in 2003 (4th Round)
CF Matt Kemp (25) Drafted in 2003 (6th Round)
SS Chin-Lung Hu (26) Signed in 2003 as Amateur Free Agent
1B James Loney (26) Drafted in 2002 (1st Round)
RHRP Jonathan Broxton (26) Drafted in 2002 (2nd Round)
LHSP James McDonald (25) Drafted in 2002 (11th Round)
C Russell Martin (27) Drafted in 2002 (17th Round)
IF Tony Abreu (25) Signed in 2002 as Amateur Free Agent
RHRP Ramon Troncoso (27) Signed in 2002 as Amateur Free Agent
RHRP Ronaldo Belisario (27) Signed in 1999 as Amateur Free Agent
LHRP Hong-Chih Kuo (28) Signed in 1999 as Amateur Free Agent

I think it’s safe to say the Dodgers would not have gone to the NLCS the last two years without this collection of talent. Nobody on this list is older than 28, and yet there are four All-Stars, two Gold Gloves, and three Silver Sluggers. They make up a significant portion of the everyday lineup (Kemp, Ethier, Loney, Martin), provide arguably the Ace of the pitching staff (Billingsley), and almost the entirety of the bullpen, which was, in ’09, the best in baseball.

So, the McCourts and Ned Colletti deserve some commendations right?

Well, yes, they did have a significant hand in developing these players, but all of them were acquired prior to the McCourts purchasing the Dodgers, by the man they fired as GM, Dan Evans. Evans, who now heads up West Coast Sports Management, deserves a great deal of the credit for the Dodgers recent success and may be one of the more underrated general managers of the Moneyball era. In addition to the guys on this list, he was also responsible for drafting Edwin Jackson (who Colletti later traded to Tampa Bay for Lance Carter and Danys Baez) and for engineering several trades which gave the Dodgers a great deal on long-term financial flexibility (sending away Kevin Brown, Gary Sheffield, Eric Karros, Mark Grudzielanek, Paul Lo Duca, Juan Encarnacion, Devon White, etc.). Obviously, trading away veterans (or letting them walk, as he did with Chan Ho Park) didn’t make Evans particularly popular with the Dodgers fan base, but it is hard to cite a case (except maybe Sheffield’s) where he unloaded somebody who proved to be worth what they were being paid over the next several seasons. And in the process, Evan stocked the farm system to the incredible degree which is paying dividends for his successors.

Then again, Evans also signed Darren Dreifort to five years and $55 Million…

See the Prospectus at The Sporting Hippeaux

Author: Hippeaux

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