Blake Injures Wrist

Dodgers third baseman Casey Blake was scratched from Sunday’s starting lineup after injuring his left wrist lifting weights after Saturday’s game. The injury is not believed to be serious, but Blake was scheduled to have an x-ray around game time. — Ken Gurnick

Belisario in Simulated Game

Dodgers rookie reliever Ronald Belisario is currently throwing a simulated game to hitters Juan Pierre and Juan Castro at Turner Field. Disabled since July 6 with a tender elbow, Belisario will be sent on a rehab assignment next week if he comes out of this workout healthy. — Ken Gurnick

Dodgers Trade Vargas to Brewers

After spending most of the season getting right-handed pitcher Claudio Vargas healthy, the Dodgers Friday traded him to the Milwaukee Brewers for Minor League catcher Vinny Rottino. The move opens a spot on the 25-man Dodgers roster for reliever George Sherrill, who was acquired from Baltimore Thursday. Vargas was on the disabled list the first three months of the season with an elbow injury.  — Ken Gurnick

Elbert Up, Leach Down

While negotiations on the George Sherrill were ongoing Thursday, the Dodgers recalled left-handed reliever Scott Elbert and optioned back to Triple-A Albuquerque left-handed reliever Brent Leach. Elbert had been scratched from a scheduled start Wednesday night. Elbert, who has been mentioned in trade rumors, had been optioned to Albuquerque 10 days earlier. — Ken Gurnick

Report Has Dodgers After Sherrill

If the Dodgers acquire a left-handed reliever before Friday’s trade deadline, it most likely will be Baltimore’s George Sherrill. They’ve been scouting him the past two weeks and the Cleveland Plain-Dealer reports that the Dodgers have backed away from talks for Indians starter Cliff Lee and are focusing on Sherrill. — Ken Gurnick

Colletti on Halladay

The price in players for Toronto ace Roy Halladay is “two or three players off our current club, including a young pitcher, or five or six prospects,” Dodgers general manager Ned Colletti told KABC Radio Friday morning. Colletti wouldn’t mention names, but presumably the young pitcher is either Clayton Kershaw or Chad Billingsley or Jonathan Broxton. Trading any of them would hardly improve the Dodgers’ chances this year, not to mention the other player off the Major League club, not to mention the long term impact. However, a larger deal (or separate deal) could be made with Toronto that would return reliever and former Dodgers farmhand Jason Frasor, according to the Toronto Globe. Frasor would address the Dodgers’ other need, a veteran reliever. — Ken Gurnick

No Day Off for Manny

Dodgers employees, still stunned over Manny Ramirez’s jaw-dropping pinch grand-slam homer Wednesday night, arrived at Dodger Stadium Thursday morning to find Ramirez taking batting practice. Although the club has a rare day off in the middle of a homestand, Ramirez had arranged for first-base coach Mariano Duncan to pitch to him, apparently not wanting to go two days without taking live batting practice. Ramirez skipped batting practice Wednesday because of a sore hand that also kept him out of the starting lineup. Then pinch-hitting in the sixth inning, he rocketed Nick Masset’s first pitch into the Mannywood section of seats for a grand slam. — Ken Gurnick