I'm hearing the Dodgers are working on a deal that will allow the team to cut ties with
Andruw Jones, save $12 million and send the guy, who couldn't hit a thing, seeking employment elsewhere.
Dodgers' GM
Ned Colletti said, "We can't confirm that and right now we don't have a comment," but if completed, it would give the Dodgers an additional $12 million to pursue
Manny Ramirez or cover the cost of a new wardrobe for
Mrs. Parking Lot this season.
There was a one-sentence report in the Denver Post on Thursday suggesting the San Francisco Giants are now "quietly" and "aggressively" making a play for Ramirez, which suggests the Denver Post has been talking to agent
Scott Boras.
It figures Boras will need another suitor to get the Dodgers' attention but should the rival Giants actually sign Ramirez, reports of Dodgers fans leaping from the Think Blue sign beyond the left-field pavilion probably will follow.
The Dodgers, suddenly relevant again because of Ramirez's arrival last season, have wiped a ton of money off the books, losing
Brad Penny,
Derek Lowe,
Joe Beimel,
Takashi Saito,
Greg Maddux,
Jeff Kent,
Chan Ho Park,
Nomar Garciapara and now possibly Jones.
They signed
Rafael Furcal, but because much of the money will come at the end of the three-year deal, they will be paying the shortstop $6.5 million less this season than what he was making a year ago.
It appears as if the Dodgers are loaded but still reluctant to tie themselves to Ramirez for any length of time.
The Giants, meanwhile, are entering new territory with a TV deal struck last year and are reportedly looking to make a splash.
They already fashion themselves a contender because of the recent acquisition of
Randy Johnson, but "the batting order remains more shallow than
Britney Spears' reading list," according to a column written recently by
Mark Purdy in the San Jose Mercury News.
The Giants arguably would become overnight favorites to win the National League West Division with Ramirez and the pitching staff they have already assembled.
As for the Dodgers, they would still have
Juan Pierre to fill Ramirez's shoes in left.
WHEN BOTH teams took the field for the start of the Rose Bowl, several USC players ran to the end zone to taunt Penn State fans who were all dressed in white. And then they took a knee to say a prayer, or maybe an act of contrition.
CLORIS LEACHMAN did the coin toss, but instead of announcing heads or tails and who would get the ball, referee
Steve Shaw said, "And the winner is USC."
Never heard a referee declare a winner before the game was played, but given the number of calls that went against Penn State at crucial times early on, maybe he knew something.
PENN STATE was losing, 31-7, at the half, and Coach
Joe Paterno remained in the press box rather than venture downstairs to rally the troops.
I pictured someone placing a speaker phone in the middle of the Penn State locker room and Paterno rasping, "You hear me? You hear me now? How about now?"
OBVIOUSLY NO one in the USC locker room was listening to
Pete Carroll's halftime pep talk.
THE WAY the Trojans played the second half, it's easy to understand how they let the Bowl Championship Series title get away from them at Oregon State. The word "lackluster" comes to mind.
The Trojans were essentially playing a home game, but while they played a championship-caliber second quarter, scoring 24 consecutive points, it was tied in the first, 0-0 in the third and the Lions outscored USC, 17-7, in the final quarter.
It was a convincing win, but the blowing confetti fell kind of flat and it was not a memorable Rose Bowl.
"I don't think anybody can beat us right now," said Carroll, and we will never know because they weren't ready to play at Oregon State.
IT WAS a good night for USC offensive coordinator
Steve Sarkisian, who will now take over as head coach of the Washington Huskies. It might be a while before the team he's coaching puts 38 points on the scoreboard again.
CARROLL SAID a phone call came in at halftime to the officials who warned the Trojans that if they continued to celebrate on the sidelines they would be penalized.
Carroll, calling it fun, said he wanted to get such a penalty to show everyone just how much fun the Trojans were having, "but I forgot."
"I'd just like to know where that phone call came from," Carroll said.
Another day or two, and
Ken Norton will probably let it slip that the call came from
Rick Neuheisel.
It didn't, did it?