2004 Los Angeles Dodgers season


The 2004 season brought change to the Dodgers as the sale of the franchise to developer Frank McCourt was finalized during spring training. McCourt promptly dismissed General Manager Dan Evans and hired Paul DePodesta to take over the team. That led to a flurry of trade activity as the new group attempted to rebuild the Dodgers in their image.
Despite it all, the Dodgers managed to finish the season in first place in the Western Division of the National League and won their first post season game since 1988. However they lost the NL Division Series 3-1 to the St. Louis Cardinals.

Offseason

Season standings

National League West

Record vs. opponents

Opening Day lineup

Notable transactions

Starting Pitchers stats

Relief Pitchers stats

Batting Stats

[2004 National League Division Series]

The 2004 National League Division Series was played between the Los Angeles Dodgers and St. Louis Cardinals. St. Louis ended up winning the series 3-1.

Game 1, October 5

, St. Louis, Missouri

Game 2, October 7

, St. Louis, Missouri

Game 3, October 9

Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles

Game 4, October 10

Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles

2004 Awards

Major League Baseball Draft

The Dodgers selected 52 players in this draft. Of those, nine of them would eventually play Major League baseball. They gained an extra first round pick and a supplemental first round pick as compensation for the loss of free agent pitcher Paul Quantrill.
With their three first round picks, the Dodgers selected left handed pitcher Scott Elbert from Seneca High School, right-handed pitcher Justin Orenduff from Virginia Commonwealth University and second baseman Blake DeWitt from Sikeston High School. Elbert became a relief pitcher for the Dodgers, but numerous injuries kept him from reaching his potential. Orenduff never reached the Majors, pitching in 131 minor league games through 2011. DeWitt hit.257 in 426 games in the Majors, primarily as a utility player.
2004 Draft Picks-------

OWIKI.org. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.