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Watching With One Eye Closed

Years of season-ending struggles leaves this Dodger fan clinching as the season comes to an end.

Published: Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Updated: Monday, September 28, 2009 02:09

watching with one eye closed

Leonardo Alannis | Valley Star

My first real Dodgers moment haunts me to this day. It was 1996 and the Dodgers had a two game lead over the San Diego Padres heading into the final weekend of the season. I was fortunate to be at the final game of the season to see the epic battle between the Padres and Dodgers for the NL West crown. Unfortunately, witnessing the Padres charge the mound in victory gave me my first taste of defeat as a fan.

Fast forward 13 years later and I'm still cringing at the thought of the Dodgers losing division leads late into the season. This year, the Dodgers had a nine game lead at the All-Star Break only to have it reduced to a 3 game margin with the Rockies still nipping at their heels.

Although the Dodgers won last weekend's series over rivals San Francisco Giants, I can't help but feel somewhat optimistic about the 2009 boys in blue. While the division lead isn't as long as hoped for, the dodgers are right where they are supposed to be. This team doesn't bring memories of the 2008 squad that didn't get into high gear until Manny Ramirez showed up with the Dodgers youth movement finally coming of age, thankfully we don't have to witness another 2007 collapse that included aging stars light years past their prime wilt in front of our eyes along with any hope of the playoffs.

The success of this year can be credited to manager Joe Torre for keeping the team on even footing regardless of wins or losses and general manager Ned Colletti for keeping a young nucleus of together that not only has an opportunity to win now but for future seasons. The James Loney, Matt Kemp, Andre Ethier, Russell Martin combination has the potential to be as consistent as the Karros, Piazza, Mondesi, Hollandsworth era of the franchise that brought the team consistent NL West titles and wild card playoff berths. It's energizing as a fan to see the growth of the team keep pace with the win total. Teams that usually peak this late into the season pay off big dividends, i.e. the Tampa Bay Rays, Red Sox, and Colorado Rockies of recent seasons

The consistency of this year's team has shown that the Dodgers are more formidable than last year and are ready to make a serious playoff run. Take into consideration Manny Ramirez's 50 - game suspension for using performance-enhancing drugs. If that happened last year, the team would've been deflated and may not have made the playoffs. This year, they had a better record without Ramirez than with the suspended slugger. That couldn't have been a better thing for the team to experience, allowing the team to reset its leadership role to manager Joe Torre and let the young core lead from example rather than defaulting to Ramirez.

This season ends with a final series against the Padres. I'll be waiting and watching to see the Dodgers charge the mound in celebration... hopefully.

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