Advertisement

Pierre not happy about latest move

DODGERS FYI

August 04, 2008|Dylan Hernandez, Times Staff Writer

Juan Pierre reiterated Sunday that this has been the toughest season of his career.

"Without a doubt," he said.


Advertisement

The Dodgers' trade for Manny Ramirez last week forced Pierre to change positions. Again.

And the fleet-footed leadoff hitter is facing the threat of being sent to the bench. Again.

"All I've ever done was be Juan Pierre," he said. "I don't know why, for some reason, they're just sticking it to me this year. I applaud the move. Any time you get a chance to get Manny Ramirez, you get him. But from a personal standpoint, it's putting me in a tough position."

Pierre was moved from center field to left to make room for Andruw Jones. But with Ramirez's place in left set in stone and Jones mired in a season-long slump, Pierre is back in center, a position Dodgers management wasn't comfortable with him playing because of his weak throwing arm.

Pierre, who is hitting .303 with six runs in nine games since returning from the disabled list on July 25, has started the last two games in center and Manager Joe Torre has said he would receive "the bulk of the time" at that position.

"It's kind of like riding a bike, as far as center field goes," Pierre said.

What was unusual, he said, was moving from center to left in the ninth inning of Sunday's 9-3 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks, as Jones entered the game as a defensive substitute.

Pierre, who started the season as the team's fourth outfielder and had a consecutive-games streak of 443, longest in the majors, broken on opening day, said he took no comfort in Torre's statement about how much he is expected to play.

"To be honest, if we're winning and Andruw starts hitting, I'll probably be back on the bench," he said. "That's that power they went out and got in the off-season."

--

Ozuna's 'slide'

Pablo Ozuna drove in his first run as a Dodger when he tripled in Ramirez in the eighth inning.

Ozuna dived head-first into third base, but did so unconventionally, leaping into the air 10 feet away from the bag and belly-flopping onto it.

"I thought he was going to puncture his lung," Torre said.

Ozuna explained that the method of diving is nothing new to him.

"I always dive like that," he said. "I used to practice that on the beaches in the Dominican. If I dive low to the ground, I lose velocity. By throwing myself forward, I can keep my momentum."

--

Proctor progressing

Los Angeles Times Articles
|