On the morning after teammate Milton Bradley unleashed a public tirade against him - albeit without using his name - Dodgers second baseman Jeff Kent told his side of an incident that took place between the two after Saturday night's win over Florida. Kent was anything but repentant. "Most of what happened stays in the clubhouse, but I will respond (to Bradley's comments)," Kent said. "I'm one of the veteran players on this team, probably the only veteran. When things happen, something needs to be said. I'm not one to hold back. How other players respond to that is something I can't control." The incident reportedly took place in the clubhouse immediately after the game, when Kent confronted Bradley after Bradley failed to score from first base on Kent's seventh-inning double, a hit that scored Hee-Seop Choi from second to tie the score. Bradley eventually did score on a bases-loaded walk by Jayson Werth, putting the Dodgers ahead to stay. Bradley apparently took exception to what Kent said, and what one source described as an "ugly" confrontation ensued. That led to an impromptu, closed-door meeting involving the entire team, but neither Kent nor manager Jim Tracy would say who called it. After that, Bradley requested, and was granted, a one-on-one meeting with Tracy. When that ended, Bradley showered, got dressed and addressed the media. His comments were cryptic in nature, but he left no doubt it was Kent to whom he was referring. Kent wouldn't confirm that the episode began because Bradley didn't score on the double. "That would be unfair to him to single out one incident," Kent said. "It has been a buildup of the frustration of our season. This isn't pinned at Milton. Please understand that." Bradley accused Kent of caring too much about personal statistics and securing his likely place in the Hall of Fame. Kent wouldn't address those charges directly. "If everyone is not on the same page, it's going to be difficult," Kent said.