Dodger Talk (6-8-24) - podcast episode cover

Dodger Talk (6-8-24)

Jun 09, 202434 min
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Episode description

DV takes your calls after the Dodgers beat the Yankees, 11-3. Teoscar Hernandez talks to DV after hitting 2 HRs including a grand slam with 6 RBIs. DV shares his conversation with baseball writer, Andy Martino. They talk about Andy's new book on Brian Cashman, and Cashman's connection with the Dodgers.

Transcript

Dodger Talk is sponsored by LA Care Health Plan, providing affordable healthcare insurance to millions of Angelinos for over twenty five years. And now your voice for Dodger Talking like that, David Vasse. Welcome the Dodger Talk. David Vasse with you until nine thirty tonight from the Bronx. We are alive at Yankee Stadium after the Dodgers take it to the Yanks eleven to three. The final score eight sixty six nine eight seven two five seventy is the phone number we will

get to your phone calls. Also, we'll give you an update on James Paxton, Bobby Miller, and we will be joined by a longtime reporter here in New York and author of a brand new Brian Cashman Yankees ten year book, Andy Martino, who will explain to us a path that Brian Cashman almost ran the Dodgers in two thousand and six, So you want to stick around for that. And also we got some mind numbing trade talk as there are some names that are becoming more real than others, and we will get to

that as well. But certainly tonight a big night for taoscar Hernandez as he powers the Dodgers past the Yankees tonight eleven to three. Ta Oscar with two home runs and six RBIs. That was quite a night for Taoscar. Hernandez tied a career high with six RBIs. He's now driven in six runs in a game three different times, and the Dodgers become the first major League team in baseball history to have two players with the last name Hernandez homer in the

same game. Key k Hernandez gave the Dodgers the lead again in the fifth inning with a solo home run to right field, and of course, ta Oscar two home runs tonight that went over four hundred feet each, the home run early in the game in the second inning and then in the eighth inning a grand slam off of Tommy Kinley, and that broke the back of the Yankees, as the Dodgers now have won the series from the Yankees, winning the first two games. Last night in eleven inning victory two to one.

Tonight, they come back with eleven runs as Gavin Stone improves his record to seven and two. Is er now on the year two ninety three, and Gavin Stone did not shy away from this big stage in front of the highest paid attendance at Yankee Stadium this year forty eight thousand, three hundred and seventy four. We're here at Yankee Stadium tonight, and like I said yesterday,

it was playoff like atmosphere and tonight same thing. Playoff like atmosphere. Certainly, this game got a out of reach in the eighth inning, but it was a close game up until then. A couple of mistakes by the Yankees, including by former Alex Verdugo who misjudged the Freddie Freeman fly ball in the fifth inning. Freddie was at second base in the sixth inning excuse me, with one out and then was able to come home later that inning. So that was a big run right there, to give the Dodgers a four to

two lead. And I thought maybe the biggest moment of the game was Alex Vesia coming in to bailout Gavin Stone, who maybe was starting to run out of gas in that sixth inning. Vessia came in after Gavin Stone loaded the bases by walking Trent Grisham, the number nine hitter who's hitting under a buck

this year. Vessia came in to face the very dangerous Anthony Volpi with the bases loaded in the bottom of the sixth inning, he was able to retire him with a fly ball to the left, and then came back for the seventh inning to face Verdugo, Judge and Stanton, and he was able to to retire them in order. So for me, if I'm giving the game ball, yes, Tascar Hernandez gets it, but also I'm finding another ball and get another baseball and giving it to Alex Vessia for what he did tonight

in relief. Eight sixty six seven two five seventy is the phone number we had a chance to catch up with last night's hero and tonight's big star, ta Oscar Hernandez. Tail I saw the Dominican Republic flag out here at Yankee Stadium. How great of a night was it? It's incredible. This feeling is unbelievable, nothing like it. I enjoy the best that I can and I got a lot of family here, so it was a great one. I don't usually see a lot of emotion from you after a home run.

Why did you show so much after the second one? The grand slam? I mean, you know, ground slams are like rare, especially in that situation. I just let everything out. I enjoy go to the team betiversation some week and win the bowl game. Tell you in that second at bat against Tommy Kinley when you hit the grand slam, threw a lot of changeups down in the zone, were you looking soft? Yeah? You know, he's a victure that he trust in the gene up and he gotta trust in

and his change up, he's a very good one. I got a good one in the strike zone and I just hit hard. Hey. I love when the sunflower seeds are coming your way. You started it and you got it twice tonight. Congratulations, thank you, appreciate it me. There is Taascar Hernandez who has that million dollars smile. It was great to see tonight, and he showed a lot of emotion when he hit that grand Slam, and I love seeing that emotion. I love seeing it in this atmosphere.

I love to see it in a big moment like that. I want to see more Dodgers show that type of emotion. And Tascar Hernandez was the player that came up with throwing the sunflower seeds to the guy that hit home run, and he he's been getting the sunflower seeds more than any other Dodger because he leads them now with fifteen home runs, and leads them and runs driven in this season with forty seven RBIs so ta Oscar Hernandez such a big part

of this Dodger offense. So much has been talked about after the first four hitters, how there's a drop off in production. Well, you can't be talking about the four or the five or six hitters. It's been the seven, eight, nine guys. Because when Max Munsey was healthy, him and Taoskar Hernandez did bridge that part of the first four to the bottom third.

And obviously it hasn't worked out a lot early in the season. But if the Dodgers are able to get Max Munsey back here in the next three to four weeks and you have Jason Hayward healthy, all of a sudden, now your first seven hitters, the lineup is a lot deeper. So Taoscar Hernandez what a Obviously Yamamoto and Otani got a lot of attention, But is Taoscar Hernandez the best free agent signing that nobody is talking about. The Dodgers signed

him to a one year contract, Nobody offered him more. He was really good last year, and the Dodgers signed him with the intention of playing every day like he is right now. With the injury to Jason Hayward that kept him out for the first month after Korea. With James Outman being sent down, Taoskar Hernandez has been the one outfielder that has been on the field every day, has been their most productive outfielder and to me is on the way

to Texas to play for the National League in the All Star Game. Taoscar Hernandez the least talked about best free agent signing of this past winter. Eight six, six nine, eight seven, two five seventy is the phone number. Let's go out to Izzy in Los Angeles. You're on Dodger Talk. How you doing? Is he good? How are you? I'm doing great, that's good. What do you got? So my question today is do

you Thinkoskar Hernandez deserves or should get Player of the Month this month? If he keeps this up, yeah, if he keeps this up, for sure. But we're only in the first what seven or eight days of June. Is he becoming one of your favorite players? Is he? Yeah? All right? Awesome, Thank you for the phone call. Appreciated. I feel like Taoscar Hernandez is becoming a household name after what he did tonight, certainly on this stage, and also what he's done in the first half of the

season. Forget about player of the month. If you look at National League outfielders, ti Oscar Hernandez by far has been the most productive outfielder in the National League. It's not even close, and there's a couple of differ different reasons for that. Fernando Tatist Junior is right behind him, yes, but he's not having an MVP caliber season. Last time I checked, his ops was below eight hundred, and Bryce Harper has moved to first base, Mookie

Beds has moved to shortstops. So the National League outfield is a little weak these days, and ti Oscar Hernandez is certainly separating himself into me. Not only should be a National League All Star, but he has a case to be a starter for the National League All Star Team. Let's go out to Huntington Beach. Brian, You're on Dodger Talk. How you doing, Brian Dame, I'm doing great. First of all, I have to tell you I'm seriously I've been listening to Dodger Talk since Jeff Witcher. Okay, oh

yeah too. No, come on, Ross Porter was awesome. I know you don't like to have your butt kiss, but listen, you gotta hear it. Okay, here's the thing, this is a no Brainerdom. Why aren't the Dodgers wearing their Brooklyn Dodger hats at least if not the Brooklyn jerseys, it would Greay Brian, I'm with you there. Forget about these ridiculous

City Connect uniforms. The Dodgers when it's Jackie Robinson Day should be wearing the Brooklyn Bee on their hats, and also maybe even go as far as to wear the nineteen fifty five or nineteen forty seven, the year that Jackie broke in. They should be wearing that uniform on Jackie Robinson Day. And honestly, you know, I understand what you're saying here, But the LA Dodgers

and New York Yankees have a history, so I'm fine with that. But as far as like jerseys and all that go back to the eighty one jerseys instead of these City Connect jerseys that we're hearing about. That's fun, but we rarely play in New York anymore. Just when we're at Yankee Stadium. The fans that still love the Dogs Dodgers would cheer up if they saw those old Brooklyn hats on their hats. They'd be thinking about their grandfathers. Everybody.

I hear you, I hear you on that. But the Dodgers are now in LA, and the Dodgers and Yankees, with the Dodgers being on the West Coast, have their own history of rivalry in the World Series. The Dodgers swept the Yankees in nineteen sixty three. Mickey Mannle was on that team. Sandy Cofax was stellar as always, and the seventy seven, seventy eight, and eighty one World Series run deep as well, Brian, So you don't have to go all the way back to Brooklyn to find that rivalry.

It came to the West Coast. But you know, I'm cool with that. If that's what you want, if that's what they decided, I would be cool with that. But I'm proud about Los Angeles. I'm proud to have the Dodgers in LA. Good job, listen, Dave, I'm telling you, I love you. You're the best. Keep up to your work, and the guy who's answering phones for you he's terrific too. Thank you that's calling ye and yes he is awesome. Thank you for the phone

call, Brian, appreciate you listening. No doubt about it. Hey, this is going to be a more regular occurrence, the Dodgers coming to Yankee Stadium. It has not happened since twenty sixteen. I haven't been here since. Yasiel Puige and Andre Ethier we're patrolling the outfield for the Dodgers. That's how long it's been. But it's going to happen every other year with the new schedule where every team plays each other, you take turns going to one

city one season, going back to the other one the next season. I mean last year the Dodgers went to Kansas City. The Royals are coming to Dodgers Stadium this week, and so are the Texas Rangers. And I have a pair of tickets for one of the games next week at Dodgers Stadium. If you are caller number five in honor of Corey Seger eight six six nine eight seven two five seventy, you will get that those pair of tickets courtesy of US Dodgers Radio and five to seventy LA Sports. All Right, we're

gonna take a time out here on Dodger Talk. When we come back, I'm gonna share my experiences with Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez before the game today, and also we'll get into some mind numbing trade talk as well. Eight six six nine eight seven two five seventy is the phone number. Dodgers beat the Yankees eleven to three on a five to seventy LA Sports on air at AM five seventy, online at AM five seventy LA sports dot com, and

available my podcast on the iHeartRadio app. This is Dodger Talk with David Bassa. Bases loaded, only one out for two to two, Hernandez with a fly ball left center field, tore the bullpen. Don't you pay after Hernandez has done it again? Hey, grand slam, Gregson open care for the Dodgers in the Bronx, Rick Monday and Steven Nelson on the call tonight from Yankee Stadium, ta Oscar Hernandez his best night as a Dodger, two home run, six RBIs, including a grand slam off of Tommy Kinley to blow

this game open in the eighth inning. As the Dodgers defeat the Yankees tonight eleven to three eight six, six nine eighty seven two five seventy is the phone number. Congratulations to Jack Stoffer, who is on his way to work on this Saturday night. Congratulations, you're headed to the Dodgers Rangers series next week. You want a pair of tickets to the June eleventh game courtesy of US Dodgers Radio and five to seventy LA Sports eight six six eight seven two

five seventy. Daniels Jewelers. They are the fe sponsor of the trip around the Diamond. Stop by any Daniel's location and say home run for your free team bracelet and fifty dollars gift card toward any purchase of ninety nine dollars or more. Daniels Jewelers own the Dream. Like I mentioned earlier, I said this was a playoff like Atmosphere last night, playoff like Atmosphere today, even during batting practice a later start tonight, but still brought out all the stars.

You saw it on the Fox broadcast. Spike Lee was here, CC Sabbathia was here. My guy Brad Paisley was here. I got to go visit him, and then ran into Freddie Freeman's dad on the way back. Up, so I always loved seeing Freddie Freeman. Senior. Mariano Rivera was

here. Speaking of Freddie Freeman, I was talking to Freddie and jose Vis Guayano when Mariano Rivera went out of his way to number one see his former teammate jose Vis Guyano and also shake hands Freddie Freeman and congratulated him on being part of the World Series Championship Club, and Freddie really appreciated that. Pretty cool to see Mariano interact with a man that probably will join him one day

in Cooperstown in Freddie Freeman. Also, the Fox Baseball crew was out here with the great Kevin Burkhardt, a great dude, a guy that still has his feet on the ground even with all the success he's had. Great to see Kevin out here. Big Poppy was out here to see his little brother, Mookie Betts. They go back to the Boston Red Sox days. David Ortiz was a big brother to Mookie back then and they have a great relationship

to this day. But also Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez. We're here and I have different interactions with Alex Rodriguez and a different reality with him than the perception of him is out there. I know many of you don't lie him. I understand why. But Alex has always been great to me and gracious, and I haven't seen him in two or three years, and he went out of his way to say hello to me, and we had a chance to catch up. But Derek Jeter, Derek Jeter, I mean, don't

we all put on our pants one leg at a time. I know he has three thousand hits. I know he's probably the most revered Yankee that's still alive right now. But Derek Jeter a media type. Now right he's in the media. I had, you know, I can take rejection, but I don't like being snubbed and felt like I'm beneath somebody. So I saw

Derek Jeters talking being interviewed by another New York writer. So I made my way over to that part of the field, which was right in front of the Yankees dugout, and when Jeter was done with this rider, I said, excuse me, Derek, I'm David Dodgers Radio. Can I ask you a couple of questions? And as I'm speaking to him, he's walking towards going down the steps in the dugout like a safe zone, and I said, hey, I just want to ask you what your thoughts are about Mookie

Betts playing shortstop? Yeah? Yeah, maybe in three minutes. And then as he's saying this, one of his two bodyguards steps in between me and him. Am I going to physically assault Derek Jeter? I was at least fifteen feet away from him. His reply to me is fine, he didn't have time. He had to go on live TV. That's fine. Maybe.

And then later, about fifteen minutes after he was off the air, he's walking back towards the tunnel, has to pass me in front of the Dodger dugout, and he has three bodyguards and there was no fans in the stadium. Why do you need three to four bodyguards for Alex Rodriguez, Derek Jeter, and David Ortiz. We are all working professionals here. It made no sense to me. Man, New York is different. I'm telling you it's different. All right, Let's get to some mind numbing trade talk.

The Dodgers have been linked to Luis Robert of the Chicago White Sox. Luis Robert, who only has played one hundred games once in his brief career with the White Sox. I believe he's been in the league for five years, four or five years, and he's only played one season where he's played over one hundred games, and that was last year, and he had a great

year. And talking to guys that were teammates with Luis Robert over the course of the last week or so, they've told me he's a great guy, a great teammate, and a great player when he's on the field, which isn't too often. But the Dodgers have some interest in Luis Robert. The White Sox are taking the best offers. So if you have a great offer, the White Sox will take it because they're willing to trade Luis Robert, and the Dodgers have a wealth of talent in their minor leagues. Luis Robert

could help the offense. I'm not necessarily one of these people that believe they absolutely need to add in the outfield. They need to add somewhere to lengthen their lineup, and Louis Robert, if he's healthy, he's a difference maker, no doubt about it. He has played four games this month after missing the entire month of May with a hip injury. He has played four games he has He's three for sixteen with two home runs. So, like I said, he's a good player when he's on the field. And I know

everybody knows. The Dodgers training staff, strength and conditioning coaches are the best in baseball, which is true, but they can't do They can't change a guy. The guy has to want to change to be better to stay on the field more. And the Dodgers also can manage Luis Robert physically because they have the depth to be able to play him maybe four or five straight days and then give him a day off to try to make him last all season

through October. And Luis Robert, by the way, is under contract for not only the rest of this year, but also next year. Let's go out to Alejandro, who was at Yankee Stadium tonight. Alejandro, were you part of that Dodger fan club that marched their way through the streets of the Bronx to Yankee Stadium? Yes, sir, day we were a pantone two ninety four. I'm currently on the corner of fifty one and sixth Street getting

some scharmus. You're getting one of that. You get some street meet, You're getting some street meet right now exactly, Well, what was it like being on the streets of the Bronx? Did you guys? I saw you had a police escort? How did uh the Yankee fans treat you? Guys? It was epic, it was it was exactly. It was exactly how I thought it was you. It's I tried to explain, but it was. It was beautiful. All the Dodger fans out here, I understand that.

But how how were you treated in the streets of the Bronx? All right, Uh, there's a lot of love for the Dodgers out here. The Yankee fans were respectful. They they left after the Grand Slam, of course, but nothing but love. I saw that. Yeah, we were all right. Here's another question, Alejandro. Here's another question, Alejandro. What was it like to get How did you guys get a police escort? Was that NYPD being generous or uh? Did you guys arrange that? I'm

I'm not exactly sure how that happened. We just we were just uh, everybody was out in the middle of the street just partying it up. And I guess the NYP had no choice, but just guess for us in Okay, Yeah, that was pretty fun. Ta Oscar Hernandez, Alejandro, you feel like a lot of these Dodger fans now are gonna start buying ta Oscar jerseys. Of course, as soon as I get home, that's first thing I'm gonna do. Hit up the Camry and then give me one of those

Dodger jerseys. You're sold. You're sold on tail. Huh. No, I've diden't. I'm not. I haven't been. I've been waiting for him to give me a really good to buy his jersey. All right, well he's given you fifteen and forty seven reasons fifteen home runs, forty seven RBIs Alejandro, that's awesome. You made it out here that you guys really have a lot of passion for this team, and uh, they would not be who they are as a duel franchise without the passion of the fans in Los

Angeles. So a salute to you guys. Thank you, Dave Dames, thank you for all the imploy gus us up to date with all the Dodgers. My pleasure be safe on the streets of New York tonight. Alejandro. All right, thank you Dave too. Life all right there, he is, Alejandro get in some street meet. That's what they call it, when you go to one of these makeshift stands. They're all over New York. Our own Dwayne McDonald, he has a great appetite for life. I'm sure

he's tried it a few times. Anyway, the Dodgers beat the Yankees tonight eleven to three. They beat him last night two to one in eleven innings. And look, I'm very aware of the fact that the Yankees are without Juan Soto, who makes this lineup so much more dynamic. But you have to give the credit to the Dodgers for doing what they were supposed to do tonight against Nestor Cortes and the rest of that Yankees bullpen. But tonight Aaron

Judge with two home runs in the first two games of this series. Judge is four for seven with the two home run tonight in three RBIs the rest of the Yankees lineup in the first two games of this series eleven for eighty three. That's a one thirty three batting average. So they're not doing much without Juan Soto offensively. He may be available off the bench tomorrow night on

Sunday Night Baseball. Hey, I mentioned Andy Martino. He's a great writer, and he has a new book out that's basically the story of Brian Cashman with the Yankees. It's titled The Yankee Way, The Untold Inside Story of the Brian Cashman Era. And Andy I have so much respect for him. He tipped me off that in the book there is a connection between Brian Cashman

and the Dodgers. Here it is, Yeah, how about that? Brian Cashman told me, and they're reporting for this book that after the two thousand and five season the Yankees lost to the Angels in the Division Series, Cashman was leaving the Yankees. He had interest elsewhere, including and most concretely, from the Dodgers, who he says, offered him a five year contract worth five million a year. He ended up taking half as much to come back

because of his loyalty to the Steinbrenner family. But at that time he was so fed up with a micromanaging from George Steinbrenner. There was a shadow front office of the Yankees operating out of Tampa and signing players that Cashman had nothing to do with, and then Cashman would get blamed when they wouldn't work out. So he was like I'm out of here, and he went after the

Dodgers, of course, had moved on from Paul Deep Pedesta. Cashman was down the tracks with them, according to him, to take that job and succeed Deep Podesta. That job obviously went to Ned Colletti instead. Cashman went back to the Yankees after Steinrenner basically offered him for the first time full control

over baseball operations. But yeah, there's a whole alternate history there where he was running the Dodgers at that time, which would have meant no Joe Tory because they had had a falling out, No Don Mattingley because maddingly succeeded Tory. So there's a whole alternate universe that would have happened in Dodger Land. When you say Brian Cashman was down the road with the Dodgers down the road,

was he enough to get that offer enough to seriously consider it? His debuty kind of his right hand person here at the time and still is Gene after him and assistant GM here And she told me they were down the tracks, so that's how she put it. And you know it's I guess it's been long enough now, or they're willing to discuss that openly, but I don't know if he ever got closed to putting pen to paper, but he was very seriously considered and he had that concrete offer. Andrew Friedman has been

running the Dodgers since twenty fifteen. Cashman obviously knows him well from being with the Rays. What's the dynamic of their relationship then and now now? A couple of things there. The Yankees got in the situation by the late twenty tens where I think it's fair to say that they were, if not trying to emulate the Rays, really kind of chasing them. They knew that the

Rays were what they consider the smartest front office in the game. And that's a tradition that started with with Andrew, even though he wasn't necessarily there by that time. Obviously, the Rays are still in many ways on his in his program, and the Yankees were. They tried an opener the playoffs and it didn't work. There was blowback from the players like why are we trying to be like the Rais. So there's that aspect of the dynamic that originated

with Friedman, and then there's the personal dynamic they had. I didn't put this in the book, David, I'll tell you when the Dodgers were eliminated one of the many times from the postseason. I believe this was after the twenty twenty two season and they were getting beat up in the LA media. We won't say names, Dylan Hernandez, but there was a lot of criticism out there about Freeman and could he get them to the next level even though

they had won that one COVID World Series. Cashman reached out to Freedman and said, hey, man, I know what this is like. They're killing me here every year or two. The media sometimes doesn't understand how hard it is just to be in the dance every year. So they have a certain camaraderie of having that in common. And it is very similar here in New York, where the Yankees are in it every single year, or close to in it every single year. Just like the Dodgers. Their fans are getting

more and more frustrated. They haven't been able to get over that hump and win a World Series since two thousand and nine. The Dodgers dig it over that hump in twenty twenty. But still Cashman has reassured Freeman at times. He's told me like I get it man. This is tough. We get beat up, but don't worry. You're good at your job. That kind of thing. Andy Martine is joining us. Is the author of this great new book you can find anywhere, The Yankee Way, the Brian Cashman Story.

And Cashman has been in charge of the Yankees for over twenty years now. Andy Andrew Friedman has been in charge of the Dodgers going on ten plus years. If you hear about manager's voices just kind of being drowned out over time, why has it worked for so long for Brian Cashman? And do you believe Andrew Friedman can have the same type of tenure lengthwise with the Dodgers.

Yeah, that's an interesting framing because it has been a while now for Freedman too, And it's clearly you can see with the Yankees the benefits of continuity and the reason why Cashman, I don't think has gotten stale here. He manages up to ownership well, but he also manages down well. People here in this organization and baseball operations really do feel fiercely loyal to him,

and he's well liked. And that's in that balance and that era of trying to balance the scouting and the analytics and all the things that are difficult organizations. People like Cashman here not always players. He's very blunted with players and is not afraid to pick a fight with one when he feels it's best for the organization. But he's well liked among the people who work for him, and I think that's what's helped, and that continuity helps them have traditions in

baseball operations that are in play all the time. They're not redoing it every couple of years with a new GM or a new administration. Whether or not Friedman can have that, certainly, you could probably speak to the internal dynamics with the Dodgers better than I could. But from my vantage point, the success that they're having year in and year out is what an ownership group wants.

Fans understandably want more championships for both of these teams, but if you're hiring somebody to run your baseball operations, you want someone who's going to have you in or near that position every single year, year in, year out. That's what's good for fancy, for revenue, for ratings, and just for overall success. So I can imagine that Freedman has done the job that

he was hired to do. I know ownership has said recently that they want to win World Series more regularly in LA, but similar to Cashman, he's got them in that position every year. So it would seem from the distance that I'm at to make no sense to think about moving on from that. There he is. Andy Martino. The new book The Yankee Way, the untold inside story of the Brian Cashman era here with the Yankees, and it's a great Father's Day gift if anybody is a Yankees fan or a baseball fan.

I strongly recommend that book, and obviously Andy mcculli's biography on Clayton Kershaw, the last of his kind. But how about that story from Andy Martino. Brian Cashman almost ran the Dodgers after the two thousand and five season before they hired Ned Coletti. And if they do that, because of the fractured relationship between cash and Tory, Joe Tory never would have managed the Dodgers either.

Very interesting and by the way, like I brought up to Andy Martino, Andrew Friedman is on his way to running the Dodgers for twenty years because remember that clause in the Otani contract. If Andrew Friedman leaves or if Mark Walter sells the team in the next five years, show hey, Otani can

become a free agent. So we're talking about what twenty twenty nine. And Andrew Friedman's first year with the Dodgers was in twenty fifteen, so he's on the same path of being in charge of the Dodgers for just as long, if not longer, than Brian Cashman has been with the Yankees. So very interesting story there, and interesting about the dynamic and relationship between Brian Cashman and

Andrew Friedman. That'll do it for us tonight on Dodger Talk Tomorrow, Tyler Glass now will be on the mound for the Dodgers, going up against Luis Hill, who brings the heat. Marongo Casino. Dodgers on deck will be at three o'clock, first pitch from the Bronx at four to ten, the

Dodgers looking for the sweep at Yankee Stadium. Thanks to calling ye back at our Burbank Studios, Thanks to Dwayne McDonald out here at Yankee Stadium, and thanks to you for listening in case you missed any of the show or our pregame conversation with Tyler Glass. Now you can find it on the iHeartRadio app once again. The final score tonight from Yankee Stadium. The Dodgers defeat the Pinstripes eleven to three. Have a great rest of your night see them

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