I call it the revolving OKC door. Others may name it the "catch and unconditional release" method. Whatever you call it, it has worked so far, but how much longer can the Dodgers continue this? That answer might surprise you. I think it might go on for months.
Carlos Frias is now the number 4 guy in the Dodger rotation. Here he is facing the Brewers in this week's action at Milwaukee (AP photo) |
David Huff, Mike Bolsinger, Scott Baker, Carlos Frias, and Joe Weiland have made spot starts in the fourth and fifth rotation spots. Relievers Daniel Coulombe, Sergio Santos and Adam Liberatore have bounced between AAA and the majors in that 25th spot too. Mix in position players like Darwin Barney, Chris Heisey and Enrique Hernandez and there you have the 25th man, made up of eleven different guys.
By far, the Dodgers are making the most moves in baseball as they juggle their roster. The risks? Losing the players they send down who have major league service time on the waiver wire, but so far, nobody is picking those men up off the scrap heap. That may change over time as rival NL West teams might want to mess with the Dodger's GM strategy as they repeat this process again and again. The thing is though, there isn't much desire by other clubs for these types of players, and if they are snatched up by another team after the Dodgers unconditionally release them...it's no big deal anyway.
The guys like Baker, Barney, Bolsinger and Huff are serviceable players, but they aren't "difference makers." At least we think that way now anyway. And again, the Dodgers appear to be snake-bit on the injury front again, perhaps more than any other team in the game. More and more, this is becoming the M.O. of the L.A. Dodgers. The front office loads up on depth and in the end, it proves beneficial. How much would we have liked to hold on to Dan Haren right now?
Who can complain though? 19-10 is their record, and that's with the starting staff 40% gone and Clayton Kershaw not hitting his stride yet. Friedman and Zaidi obviously know what they're doing and they have a plan. It is probably plan "C" or "D" that is currently in place, but it's a plan nonetheless, and in the end, the ball club isn't panicking and overpaying in a desperate trade for someone like Cole Hamels. At least not yet.
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