SAN DIEGO >> Chone Figgins and Adam Kennedy have a history.

The two were Angels teammates from 2002-06, winning a World Series together in 2002. They got into a well-documented shouting match in the Angels’ clubhouse after a May 2006 game, and Kennedy signed with the St. Louis Cardinals after the season.

Figgins and Kennedy were teammates again in 2011 in Seattle.

Their relationship came into focus Friday night when a series of tweets from Kennedy’s Twitter account took aim at Figgins, who made the Dodgers’ Opening Day roster as a non-roster invitee.

Asked about Kennedy on Sunday, Figgins deadpanned: “Who? I don’t know who that is.”

The unverified Twitter account @KennedyBaseball might have caught Figgins’ attention with this first tweet: “Figgins actually is on the Dodgers? Highest payroll in baseball and you have him on ur team?”

After receiving dozens of retweets and responses, @KennedyBaseball answered back — twice.

“Keep it coming!! Check the numbers people,” read the first tweet.

“Haaaaa I was an extremely average player but not a (lousy) teammate!!” read the second.

Kennedy signed a one-year contract with the Dodgers in 2012 and saw action in 86 games in a utility role, batting .262. He never officially retired but went unsigned each of the last two seasons.

Prospect watch

For several of the Dodgers’ top prospects, their next stop on the organizational ladder will be in Rancho Cucamonga.

Shortstop Corey Seager and pitchers Julio Urias, Chris Anderson and Tom Windle will begin the 2014 season with the Dodgers’ Single-A affiliate in the California League.

Seager, 19, saw action in four major-league exhibition games in March, going 2 for 7 with a walk. The 2012 first-round pick batted .160 in 27 games last season following a midseason promotion to Rancho Cucamonga.

Urias, Anderson and Windle all finished last season with Single-A Great Lakes, and each saw action in one Cactus League game. The Dodgers drafted Anderson and Windle in the first and second rounds of the 2013 draft, respectively, out of college. Urias was signed as a free agent out of Culiacan, Mexico.

Pitcher Zach Lee and outfielder Joc Pederson, who spent virtually all of spring training with the Dodgers and represented the team in an exhibition game in Australia, will begin the season with Triple-A Albuquerque.

Lee went 10-10 with a 3.22 ERA last season at Double-A Chattanooga. He was named the organization’s minor-league pitcher of the year after the season. Pederson hit 22 home runs to go with a .278 batting average and 31 stolen bases last season at Chattanooga.

Cooperstown bound?

With the beginning of a new season comes the renewal of a baseball tradition: Pitcher Jamey Wright’s University of Oklahoma T-shirt.

The Oklahoma native has worn the gray shirt for 10 years. These days it’s literally hanging off his shoulders by a few threads.

Call it a well-worn superstition.

“Maybe a little bit,” Wright said.

Wright is in his 19th major-league season. For eight straight years he went to spring training without a guaranteed major-league contract, then signed at the end of camp. That streak ended when the Dodgers signed him last December.

Nonetheless, the shirt lives on.

“I’ve had people ask me to send it to them and they’ll frame it for me,” Wright said. “Maybe I’ll frame it and give it to my parents.”

If the Baseball Hall of Fame calls?

“I’d donate it,” he said.

Notable

Josh Beckett will throw 45 to 50 pitches to live hitters Monday at Petco Park, Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said. Beckett began the season on the disabled list with a right thumb contusion. He pitched in minor-league spring training games while the Dodgers visited Australia. … Matt Kemp, who’s also on the 15-day DL, and Chone Figgins are among the hitters who Beckett will face. … Also on the DL to start the season: Chad Billingsley (Tommy John surgery, 15-day), Onelki Garcia (left elbow surgery, 60-day) and Scott Elbert (Tommy John surgery, 60-day).