PDA

View Full Version : Kent leaves LA as he arrived ... as a jerk


Bear
09-02-2008, 02:11 PM
Sep 02, 2008

Jeff Kent is scheduled to undergo surgery on his left knee this morning and spend the next few weeks listening to Vince Scully. You just know then it will be a speedy recovery.

If this is it, though, the knee worse than initial medical reports indicated, then it will be a cold, abrupt end to a Hall of Fame career, and a fitting farewell for time so misspent in Los Angeles wrote Los Angeles Times columnist T. J. Simers.

Kent came here known best as a hard-nosed jerk, and leaves the same way, successful for the most part in convincing the world he's mad at everyone living in it. He should be leaving as the respected pro with gaudy baseball stats behind his name, someone who reported to work every single day, playing as if every single day mattered. Instead, he leaves as the player who bad-mouthed Scully, no way for any Dodger to go out, making it "jerk" with an exclamation point.

Kent ignored every suggestion to soften his image, and dismissed the chance to retract his Scully comments before they made it into the newspaper because he took pride in saying something no one else on the team would dare say. For someone so smart, he sure could be stupid.
When the story lingered, he appeared dumbfounded, and yet he grew up here. The fans in Dodger Stadium booed him, got on him in Philadelphia, Washington and across the Internet. He became more grouchy than grumpy, even sullen, complaining that it should have been a "one-day story," but Page 2 wouldn't let it drop. Check with F.P. Santangelo, and maybe he can explain.

Kent was stung by the public criticism, quick to point out, of course, that he pays no attention to criticism or booing fans or Internet gibberish, although he hears it all and reads every word. There might not be anyone more sensitive on the Dodgers, certainly no one fighting harder to disguise the fact, and then throw in Manny Ramirez's arrival.

The young players immediately gravitated to Ramirez, each one expressing their admiration for such a great hitter. It bothered Kent, because as the team's resident veteran, he thought every one of them should be looking up to him, clueless when it came to understanding why they did not.
Source: Los Angeles Times

What did he say about Vince Scully? Will he ever learn to keep his mouth shut? Is he loved anywhere?

I still think he has HOF numbers, but he is going to be a tough sell.

McCovey
09-02-2008, 02:33 PM
What did he say about Vince Scully? Will he ever learn to keep his mouth shut? Is he loved anywhere?
Is Kent the ultimate dumbass or what? Critisize Vin Scully? Earth to Kent: Scully is a Dodger legend. He's been with the Dodgers since 1950. Kent said Scully talks too much because Scully mentioned on air that Kent had been batting .500 since Manny Ramirez arrived. I guess Scully doing his job annoys Kent? :rolleyes:


I still think he has HOF numbers, but he is going to be a tough sell.He'll get in rather easily. All the Kent-being-a-jackass stuff will be mostly forgotten when the HoFer voters look at Kent's resume in 2014. This stuff only really hurts with borderline HoF cases like Dick Allen and Albert Belle. Kent's HoF case is well beyond borderline IMHO.

SF Kid
09-07-2008, 07:30 AM
Well I wonder about Jeff Kent. The Dodgers were losers of like 7 straight and now Kent is hurt or something and not around. Interestingly now the Dodgers are on a tear and leading the NL West.

Is Jeff Kent just a flat our cancer? Sure seems like it. Looks like the Dodgers are better off without him. Addition by subtraction.

Bear
09-07-2008, 08:25 AM
Well I wonder about Jeff Kent. The Dodgers were losers of like 7 straight and now Kent is hurt or something and not around. Interestingly now the Dodgers are on a tear and leading the NL West.

Is Jeff Kent just a flat our cancer? Sure seems like it. Looks like the Dodgers are better off without him. Addition by subtraction.

Kent was never as good after he left the Giants and was not part of that Bonds, Kent duo. They did not like each other, but they were never as good apart.:nono:

SF Kid
09-07-2008, 09:11 AM
Bonds was better once they were apart. He didn't need Kent as much as Kent need Bonds. Frankly I think Kent is a problem in the club house.

Bear
09-07-2008, 05:33 PM
With Kent, Bonds would have had 50 more HR's at least!:eek:

SF Kid
09-08-2008, 08:02 AM
And the Dodgers are really on a roll now. They lead by 3 after that 7 game losing streak.