The Cat with 9 Lives Survives Again

There is only one person on the entire planet who hasn’t come to grips with the fact that the Juan Uribe experiment has failed – and miserably. Fortunately for Uribe (but unfortunately for Jerry Sands, Tony Gwynn Jr., Elian Herrera, Justin Sellers, Josh Fields and millions of Dodger fans), it is the only person that matters – Ned Colletti.

Why Colletti continues to hang on to what is obviously his worst free agent signing since Andruw Jones rather than simply admit defeat and cut his losses with Uribe remains a mystery to all and does nothing but substantiate the belief that his insatiable ego continues to stand in the way of sound judgement and common sense. It is a decision that could very well cause Ned Colletti to forever be remembered as a lousy general manager as opposed to being remembered as a (potentially) good one.

Juan Uribe must have some serious dirt on Ned Colletti – Why else would Ned keep him? (Photo credit – Jon SooHoo).

The real mystery, however, was calling up hot-hitting Triple-A outfielder Jerry Sands to give Andre Ethier a questionable day off and then sending Sands right back down to Albuquerque three days later. I certainly understand that a roster spot had to be made available for returning utility infielder (not outfielder) Adam Kennedy, but to send outfielder (not infielder) Jerry Sands and his potentially big pinch-hitting bat back down to Triple-A instead of dumping useless infielder (not outfielder) Juan Uribe is yet another unbelievable and inexplicable Colletti blunder. What part of useless doesn’t Colletti understand?

All of this being said and to give credit where due, as painful and unpopular as Colletti’s decision to designate Tony Gwynn Jr. for assignment was, it was, in all honesty, the right decision and one that had to be made. Dodger manager Don Mattingly had already come right out and said that with the acquisition of Shane Victorino and with only 50 games remaining, he was going to play Kemp, Ethier and Victorino every day and not remove them from any games. As such, there was no reason to hang on to the weak-hitting Gwynn Jr. as a late-innings defensive replacement. Mattingly’s thinking is that (Lord forbid) should one of his outfielders get injured, Jerry Hairston Jr. could fill in as a temporary replacement. (Of course, having two very good center fielders on your roster is kind of nice, too).

It goes without saying that Sands will be called back up on September 1st when rosters expand, as will Tony Gwynn Jr. who (thankfully) accepted assignment to Triple-A Albuquerque after being DFA’d.

But what also goes without saying (by Ned Colletti, that is) is why he continues to ignore the obvious and refuses to unload Uribe. Even if the Dodgers do make it into the post season, does Colletti actually believe that Uribe deserves a spot on the playoff roster? I mean, come on now – let’s get real, Ned.

During a recent caption call for this photo on the ThinkBlueLA forum, the hands-down winner was “Which way is first base?” (Photo Credit – AP)

The bottom line is that Uribe is guaranteed $7 million for 2013 (plus an additional $1 million in 2014) whether he sits on the bench rotting and taking up a very valuable roster spot or if he is sent packing (à la Andruw Jones – another Colletti blunder whom the Dodgers are still paying $3.2 million a year for and will continue to do so through the 2014 season).

It’s time for Ned Colletti to quit prolonging the inevitable and do the right thing – or for Stan Kasten to replace Colletti with someone who will.

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7 Responses to “The Cat with 9 Lives Survives Again”

  1. lindav says:

    Totally agree – what is his (Ned) problem? Why hasn’t Kasten stepped in or Magic? Why does Mattingly want this to happen? Uribe is almost a guaranteed out when he comes to bat – farbeit from him to prove us all wrong but every time he’s in he proves us right. Ned doesn’t own the Dodgers – they can see his stats – again, why don’t they pull the plug.

  2. ebbetsfld says:

    Kasten might step in, but Magic should not be making personnel decisions. If it’s Ned’s ego that keeps Uribe on the roster, then it’s time for Ned to move on. If he has some reason that Kasten feels is valid, then I guess he gets a pass this year, but only if the Dodgers make it to the post season and perform well there. While all of us agree that Uribe makes no positive contribution to the Dodgers’ on field performance, we also are not privy to what goes on in the clubhouse and the executive offices and there may be (but i doubt it) a valid reason to keep Uribe around.

  3. CRANBROOK MIKE says:

    It certainly wouldn’t be because he doesn’t eat a lot in the clubhouse!! Fat Bastard:0

  4. OldBrooklynFan says:

    I’d say that everything goes by individual transactions. Only if it comes to a point where a players MUST be moved off the roster will that happen. In otherwords if a particular move does not effect a player, than that player remains with the team, regardless of his performance.
    That said I expect the day is nearing when Uribe will be joining Abreu and Gwynn in Albuquerque, because I think he would get through waivers.
    That is if he’ll accept the assignment.
    Of course most of this is based on my own opinion.

  5. KSparkuhl says:

    Another great article, 53. BTW… where did you find the cat photo?

  6. KSparkuhl says:

    Nevermind… I just did what you probably did; Google “cat with 9 lives”… LOL!

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