Chattanooga Times Free Press

Honeycutt still an important part of Dodgers

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For the first time in nine years, all Rick Honeycutt could do was watch from his Ringgold, Georgia, home. Just like everybody else who wasn’t actually inside Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, on Sunday night for the seventh game of the National League Championsh­ip Series between our Atlanta Braves and Honeycutt’s Los Angeles Dodgers.

“It was terrible, watching it on TV,” said the former pitching coach of the Dodgers, who retired at the end of last season after 14 summers of shaping one of the top two or three pitching staffs in the majors.

“I couldn’t do anything but sit in my recliner. At least when I was in the dugout I had a job to do.”

In the end, the Dodgers performed their jobs enough better than the Braves — winning 4-3 to advance to the start of Tuesday’s best-of-seven World Series against the Tampa Bay Rays — to make for another terrible end to an otherwise terrific season for Braves Nation.

And if you closely follow the Peach State’s athletic teams — pro and college alike — the phrase “rinse and repeat” has once more sent you reeling following that Dodgers win.

Just add it to the long list of heartaches, starting with 28-3, Jim Leyritz,

43- 17, the best record in the National League by eight wins. They overcame a 3-1 deficit in the NL Championsh­ip Series, beat Atlanta 4-3 on Bellinger’s late home run in Game 7 Sunday night and reached the World Series for the third time in four years.

Rookie sensation Randy Arozarena and skipper Kevin Cash’s bullpen-rich Rays were 40-20 and topped the American League by four victories. They also won a Game 7, topping Houston 4-2 in the ALCS and earning the second World Series trip in franchise history.

“Going to be a fun Series,” Bellinger said.

Because of its superior record, Los Angeles has “home field advantage” when the neutral-site Series starts in Arlington, Texas, and will bat last in Games 1 and 2, and then in 6 and 7, if necessary.

“From the moment that we were able to put a season together, once they figured out that COVID thing, everybody was expecting us to get to the World Series. We were expecting to get to the World Series,” said Kiké Hernández, who tied Game 7 with a pinch-hit home run in the sixth inning.

About 11,000 fans will be allowed at Globe Life Field, the new home of the Texas Rangers with a retractabl­e roof, for each game.

Corey Seager and AJ Pollock boost LA’s offense and Walker Buehler and Clayton Kershaw head the pitching staff. The Dodgers won their 24th pennant by getting past Milwaukee, San Diego and Atlanta, but have not won a title since 1988, falling short in a seven-game Series loss to Houston in 2017 and a five-game defeat to Boston the following year.

The Dodgers have won half their pennants since leaving Brooklyn for Los Angeles after the 1957 season.

Tampa Bay is in the Series for the second time and is among six current franchises that have never won, joined by Colorado, Milwaukee, Texas, San Diego and Seattle. The Rays lost to Philadelph­ia in five games in 2008.

While the Dodgers topped the major leagues with a $95.6 million prorated payroll as of Aug. 1, the Rays were 28th at $29.3 million, according to figures compiled by Major League Baseball. Only Baltimore ($23.8 million) and Pittsburgh ($23.6 million) were lower.

Tampa Bay’s offense is much less known to most fans. The Rays’ top hitter during the season was Brandon Lowe with 14 homers and 37 RBIs, but he slumped to .115 (6 for 52) with two RBIs in the playoffs. Arozarena has been the breakout star of the postseason, hitting .382 with seven homers and 10 RBIs.

Pitching has been key, with Tyler Glasnow, Blake Snell and Charlie Morton leading the Rays past Toronto, the New York Yankees and Houston. Tampa Bay also is known for taking an innovative approach to the game, employing a versatile staff and occasional­ly using a four-man outfield.

Since the postseason doubled to eight teams in 1995, the only World Series between the top regular-season records in each league were Atlanta’s victory over Cleveland in 1995, the New York Yankees’ win over the Braves in 1998 and Boston’s triumph over St. Louis in 2013 — all in six games.

Baseball’s postseason keeps getting bigger, expanding to 10 teams in 2012 and 16 this year, when the coronaviru­s pandemic caused the regular-season schedule for each team to be cut from the normal 162 games.

The Rays and Dodgers haven’t played that much over the years, only 17 times overall. LA has won 10 of them.

Loney is among a group to have played for both teams that includes Carl Crawford, Jose Cruz, Logan Forsythe, Dioner Navarro and J.P. Howell.

And they share a notorious player in common: Manny Ramirez was acquired by the Dodgers from Boston in July 2008 and stayed until August 2010. He signed with the Rays for the 2011 season but retired after five games rather than face a 100-game suspension for a positive drug test.

Tampa Bay began as an expansion team in 1998 and transforme­d from Devil Rays to plain old Rays for the 2008 season, the first after Stuart Sternberg bought control from founding owner Vince Naimoli. The Rays beat Boston in Game 7 of the AL Championsh­ip Series that year as Matt Garza outpitched Jon Lester. Evan Longoria, Willy Aybar and Rocco Baldelli then lost to Philadelph­ia in a World Series that remains the second-lowest viewed since television ratings are available dating to 1968.

In an attempt to become more of a regional draw, Tampa Bay moved a three-game home series to the Braves’ then-spring training ballpark in Kissimmee in May 2007 and another in April 2008.

The Dodgers are among baseball’s most traditiona­l teams, playing at two ballparks for most of the past century-plus: Brooklyn’s Ebbets Field (1913-57) and Dodger Stadium (since 1962), with a short stop at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum (from 1958-61). Dodger Stadium remains one of baseball’s iconic venues.

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 ??  ?? Mark Wiedmer
Mark Wiedmer

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