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Yoshiki to perform national anthems on opening day

Washington Nationals v Los Angeles Dodgers

Photo by Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images

Japanese star, who played the anthem on piano at Dodger Stadium last April, will perform national anthems for both U.S. and Japan on opening day Tuesday at the Tokyo Dome.

As part of the ceremony on Tuesday for Dodgers vs. Cubs on opening day at the Tokyo Dome, Japanese star Yoshiki will perform the national anthems for both the U.S. and Japan.

“I feel honored to be part of this major event. I’ve performed the American anthem at Dodger Stadium and Carnegie Hall, but this will be my first time performing the Japanese national anthem in front of a live audience,” Yoshiki said Thursday in a statement. “This will also be my first performance since my neck surgery, but I will do my best to honor these beautiful songs and contribute to the special bond between the U.S., Japan, and the rest of the world.”

Yoshiki performed the U.S. national anthem last April 16 at Dodger Stadium, played on piano in a stage from center field.

Tuesday, March 18 is the first of two Dodgers-Cubs games in Japan, with both games of the Tokyo Series televised locally on SportsNet LA, with Joe Davis and Eric Karros on the call. Fox will also televise opening day on Tuesday, with FS1 televising Wednesday’s tile. Both games start at 3 a.m. PT.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/1...-anthem-dodgers-cubs-opening-day-tokyo-series
 
Dodgers set 31-player travel roster to Japan

MLB Pop-up Store Ahead of the Tokyo Series


16 pitchers and 15 position players are active for the Dodgers trip to the Tokyo Dome. The trip includes exhibition games against Yomiuri and Hanshin, concluding with two regular season games against the Cubs.

The Dodgers on Thursday set their 31-player travel roster for the Tokyo Series in Japan, which is the group of players who will be available to play for the team during their two exhibition games against Yomiuri and Hanshin.

Tuesday’s cuts after the Dodgers’ final Cactus League game set the stage for this travel roster, with Hyeseong Kim optioned and all four remaining position-player non-roster invitees sent to minor league camp. The 15 remaining position players on the 40-man roster are on the travel roster to Japan.

Similarly, a growing list of injuries limited the number of available pitchers. Just this week, it was revealed that Tony Gonsolin will start the season on the injured list with a back injury and Michael Grove having shoulder surgery that wiped out his 2025. Dustin May will be the fifth starter once the domestic portion of the regular season schedule begins, and he’ll stay behind at Camelback Ranch to continue to stretch out his innings.

Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell will start the Dodgers’ two exhibition games in Japan, which will leave them unavailable for the two regular season games against the Cubs on March 18-19. Once the Dodgers finalize their opening day roster, they need to cut down to 29 players, 26 of whom will be active against the Cubs. They are allowed three exempt players, who will almost certainly be Glasnow, Snell, and May.

Three non-roster invitees made the trip to Tokyo. Roki Sasaki, who was an NRI only in the technical sense because he was planned to be in the major league rotation from the get-go after signing with the Dodgers in January, will start the second game against the Cubs on March 19. Right-handed reliever Matt Sauer was informed that he was headed to Tokyo after his appearance last Friday night. Veteran right-hander Luis García, who began his career in the Dodgers organization before getting traded away, signed with Los Angeles on February 14, and made the trip as well.

Dodgers travel roster to Tokyo​

  • Catchers (3): Will Smith, Austin Barnes, Hunter Feduccia
  • Designated hitter (1): Shohei Ohtani
  • Infielders (4): Freddie Freeman, Mookie Betts, Max Muncy, Miguel Rojas
  • Outfielders (4): Teoscar Hernández, Michael Conforto, Andy Pages, James Outman
  • Infielder/outfielders (3): Tommy Edman, Kiké Hernández, Chris Taylor
  • Starting pitchers (4): Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Roki Sasaki, Tyler Glasnow, Blake Snell
  • Right-handed relievers (7): Blake Treinen, Kirby Yates, Ben Casparius, Landon Knack, Matt Sauer, Luis García, Nick Frasso
  • Left-handed relievers (5): Tanner Scott, Alex Vesia, Anthony Banda, Jack Dreyer, Justin Wrobleski

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/13/24376619/dodgers-travel-roster-tokyo-series-cubs
 
Pi Day Dodgers

Sports Contributor Archive 2020

Photo by Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images

Friday is March 14, also known as Pi Day, a celebration of the mathematical constant that is rounded to 3.14.

Ten Dodgers had a season with a 3.14 ERA, though only four of them pitched enough innings to qualify for the leaderboard: George Haddock (1892), Kirby Higbe (1941), Fernando Valenzuela (1986), and Chad Billingsley (2008).

Valenzuela won 21 games and completed 20 that season to finish second in National League Cy Young Award voting. His ERA extended a few decimal points of 3.141089 comes the closest from this Dodgers group to the actual value of pi, which starts 3.14159.

Three pitchers had a 3.14 during their total time with the Dodgers: Hoyt Wilhelm (1971-72), Burt Hooton (1975-84), and Bob Welch (1978-87).

Ignoring the decimal point for a moment allows us to bring hitters into the mix, and 15 Dodgers have hit .314 in a season, five with enough qualifying plate appearances.

The last Dodger to hit .314 so was Andrew Toles in 2016, in 48 games. The close numerical match to pi was by Brett Butler, who hit .314149 in 1994.

Red Barkley (1943) and Michael Young (2013) each had 16 hits in 51 at-bats during their .314 seasons, which was their only year with the Dodgers. Three others have a .314 batting average during their multi-year Dodgers tenure, first accomplished by the memorably-named duo of Dick Cox (1925-26) and Johnny Gooch (1928-29).

Freddie Freeman also has a .314 batting average during his first three seasons with the Dodgers, and he’s under contract for three more years.

Which brings us to today’s question: What is your favorite pie?

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/14/24385772/dodgers-pi-day
 
Ohtani, Dodgers get heroes welcome in Tokyo

Los Angeles Dodgers Workouts: MLB Tokyo Series

Photo by Gene Wang/Getty Images

The Dodgers have been in Japan for two days and have already taken in a few sights, as well as had a workout at the Tokyo Dome.


Checking out the Tsukiji Nippon Fish Port Market! pic.twitter.com/huhNBouidx

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) March 15, 2025

He wants to be the very best, like no one ever was. pic.twitter.com/I5htoxvPOI

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) March 14, 2025


The workout on Thursday was open to fans, and the limited number of tickets sold out in under an hour, per Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register:

“I don’t usually hit batting practice home runs, but I felt like we had to today,” Freddie Freeman said. “That was pretty cool. This is a great experience. I mean, it’s practice and we had almost a full stadium.”

Shohei Ohtani is the biggest baseball star on the planet, but the Dodgers also have Japanese stars Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Roki Sasaki, who will start the two games against the Cubs. Fabian Ardaya at The Athletic wrote about how Andrew Friedman’s December 2023 idea of “painting Japan Dodger blue” is being witnessed in person:

“There’s a lot of people outside the hotel and the Dome…(and) you see Shohei’s face all over Tokyo,” Tommy Edman said. “You see Dodgers (gear), just walking down the street. You get the sense that the Dodgers are being Japan’s team.”

Ohtani got the loudest cheers and he didn’t even take batting practice. Dylan Hernández at the Los Angeles Times wrote about the reaction, including this quote from a fan:

“Of course, Ohtani is a representative of Japan,” Hattori said. “But it doesn’t matter any more whether he’s Japanese, American or Korean. I feel he’s reached the level at which he is not a representative of any particular country but is rather a representative of baseball.”

Shohei's back! pic.twitter.com/YkJwgR2BJ0

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) March 14, 2025


Jeff Passan at ESPN wrote a comprehensive season preview encompassing all 30 teams, and included this in his Dodgers section: “Outfield prospect Zyhir Hope, who is listed at 5-foot-10 and 193 pounds, squatted 850 pounds earlier this spring. (For context, a 400-pound squat is considered excellent.)”

Matt Martell at FanGraphs wrote about the late Bob Uecker’s connection to the Brewers, and how that even extended sometimes into him recording outgoing voicemail messages for some of the players. An outrageously fun read.



After the 1993 season the Dodgers what was called a Friendship Tour to Asia, with three games in Taiwan and two more in Japan at the Fukuoka Dome. Todd Radom designed the sleeve patches the Dodgers wore during that trip, and shared them on Friday.

Dodgers team photographer John SooHoo was also there in 1993, and shared a gallery of pictures from the Fukuoka portion of the trip on Instagram.


The Dodgers are in Japan, just like they were after the 1993 season. I designed the sleeve patch logos they wore back then, the first time my work appeared on an MLB uniform. Stashed away in my Dropbox, "last modified 31 years ago." pic.twitter.com/Evw7249Wly

— Todd Radom (@ToddRadom) March 14, 2025

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/14/24385888/dodgers-shohei-ohtani-tokyo-dome-workout
 
Can you guess this Dodgers gold glove winner in today’s in-5 trivia game?

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Think you can figure out what Dodgers player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out.

We’re back for another day of the True Blue LA in-5 daily trivia game. If you missed any of this week’s games, you will find a link below. Game instructions are at the bottom if you’re new to the game! Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in the Google Form.

Today’s True Blue LA In-5 game


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous Games


Friday, March 14, 2025
Thursday, March 13, 2025
Wednesday, March 12, 2025
Tuesday, March 11, 2025

Play more SB Nation in-5 trivia games


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

True Blue LA in-5 instructions


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Dodgers player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS this week. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it. The game will appear in the No. 3 slot of the True Blue LA layout each day this week and as noted above, will appear in this article exclusively.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/15/24386428/sb-nation-dodgers-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Dodgers blanked by Hanshin in final Tokyo exhibition

MLB Tokyo Series: Los Angeles Dodgers v Hanshin Tigers

Photo by Masterpress/Getty Images

Hanshin held Dodgers and Cubs scoreless over 18 innings in two exhibition games. Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow each had their penultimate tuneups for the regular season. 3-run HR off Snell provided the only runs.

If the Tokyo Series exhibition games have taught as anything, it’s that the Hanshin Tigers have formidable pitching. They shut out the Dodgers 3-0 on Sunday afternoon in Japan (Saturday night in the U.S.), and did not allow a run in 18 innings this weekend against two major league teams.

The Tigers shut out the Cubs 3-0 on Saturday afternoon in Tokyo (Friday night in the U.S.), behind 20-year-old left-hander Keito Mombetsu tossing five perfect innings. His teammate Hiroto Saiki was about as good against the Dodgers.

Saiki, who led Hanshin in innings (167⅓), strikeouts (137), and wins (13) while posting a 1.83 ERA last season for Hanshin. Against the Dodgers, the right-hander held the Dodgers hitless through four innings, his only blemish to that point a Will Smith walk in the second inning.

Max Muncy got the Dodgers in the hit column with a single to open the fifth, but was erased by a nifty double play started by second baseman Takumu Nakano.

Saiki struck out seven in his five scoreless frames, and induced 16 swinging strikes.

Snell was cruising just as well, retiring his first nine batters faced. Then the first four batters reached base in the fourth. Three of them scored, all on a Teruaki Sato home run. In all, Snell needed 37 pitches in the fourth inning alone, matching his total for the first three frames.

Snell’s laboring on the mound coincided with Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman joining the SportsNet LA booth. The longer half-inning provided more time for the interview, which touched on the Dodgers’ offseason, their experience so far in Japan, and more.

Friedman also had high praise for Snell, even as Stephen Nelson and Eric Karros were teasing the front office executive that he was bad luck during the inning. “Like I said, Blake has a lot to work on,” Friedman joked at one point.

The point of the outing for Snell, aside from making the trip to Tokyo, was to continue to build up to prepare for the domestic regular season. So even after the long fourth, Snell went back out to start the fifth inning, adding an “up-down” to his day.

Snell retired his only batter faced, and finished with seven strikeouts.

Tyler Glasnow got his work in as well, starting a clean inning in the sixth, and finished out the game. That included pitching the bottom of the ninth even though Hanshin was leading at the time, a pre-arranged setup.

Glasnow got his four innings in, scoreless on two hits and three walks, with seven strikeouts.

Notes​


Andy Pages had the second Dodgers hit, a sixth-inning single. That he started both exhibition games in center field and played all nine innings of each game is a fairly clear indicator that he’ll be on the opening day roster come Tuesday.

Austin Barnes caught the final four innings behind the plate, and singled in the eighth inning for the Dodgers’ third and final hit of the game. Barnes was 2-for-2 in the two exhibition games.

Matt Sauer, the non-roster invitee who got told he was making this trip on the mound during a pitching change in Peoria on March 7, replaced Snell and got the final two outs of the fifth.

Up next​


The Dodgers have a workout day Monday at the Tokyo Dome before beginning the regular season against the Cubs on opening day Tuesday (3:10 a.m. PT; SportsNet LA, Fox). Yoshinobu Yamamoto starts for the Dodgers, while left-hander Shota Imanaga is on the mound for Chicago.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/15/24386823/dodgers-hanshin-tigers-exhibition-blake-snell-home-run
 
Your daily Dodgers trivia game, Sunday edition

tb_la_social.0.png


Think you can figure out what Dodgers player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out.

We’re back for another day of the True Blue LA in-5 daily trivia game. If you missed any of this week’s games, you will find a link below. Game instructions are at the bottom if you’re new to the game! Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in the Google Form.

Today’s True Blue LA In-5 game


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous Games


Saturday, March 15, 2025
Friday, March 14, 2025
Thursday, March 13, 2025
Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Play more SB Nation in-5 trivia games


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

True Blue LA in-5 instructions


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Dodgers player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS this week. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it. The game will appear in the No. 3 slot of the True Blue LA layout each day this week and as noted above, will appear in this article exclusively.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/16/24387012/sb-nation-dodgers-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Ohtani will wear gold MLB patch in 2025 for winning MVP

Los Angeles Dodgers v. Hanshin Tigers

Photo by Yuki Taguchi/MLB Photos via Getty Images

All six award winners for MVP, Cy Young, and Rookie of the Year get special patches on their jerseys this season.

The Dodgers split their two exhibition games at the Tokyo Dome, both on Saturday by Pacific time. They beat Yomiuri 5-1 on Saturday night in Japan, then got shut out by Hanshin 3-0 on Sunday afternoon.

While we wait for the team’s next game on Tuesday at 3 a.m. PT, here are some stories for your Sunday morning.

Major League Baseball on Saturday announced that the 2024 winners of the MVP, Cy Young, and Rookie of the Year awards will wear a golden MLB patch on their uniforms during the entirety of the 2025 season. That’s six players in total, including NL MVP Shohei Ohtani.


JUST IN: MLB, Topps & Fanatics have partnered on the brand-new Gold MLB Logo Patch program.

These six award winners from last year will wear a Gold MLB Logo Patch on their jersey for the duration of the 2025 season:

Shohei Ohtani
Aaron Judge
Tarik Skubal
Chris Sale
Paul Skenes… pic.twitter.com/cpE91xQR8i

— MLB (@MLB) March 15, 2025

Links​


Bruce Kuntz at Dodgers Digest unveiled his top 50 Dodgers prospects on Thursday, with details about each player. Among the notable is 18-year-old shortstop Emil Morales at No. 6 in the system.

Molly Knight is covering the Tokyo Series for new newsletter The Long Game, and wrote about the joy evident from fans at the park and in the surrounding areas, including running into Al Yellon from Bleed Cubbie Blue.

The Diamondbacks on Saturday signed J.P. Feyereisen to a minor league contract, their Triple-A affiliate Reno Aces announced. The 32-year-old right-hander allowed 10 runs in 11 innings over his 10 relief appearances with the Dodgers in 2024, with nine strikeouts and five walks. Feyereisen was sent outright off the 40-man after the regular season, and elected free agency on October 10.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/16/24386403/shohei-ohtani-gold-patch-jersey-mvp-award
 
See the trailer for the Dodgers-Yankees World Series doc

dodgers_yankees_world_series_doc_art_apple_tv_031725.0.png


All three episodes of the doc drop on March 28, which is the same day the Dodgers will get their championship rings prior to their game against the Tigers at Dodger Stadium.

The documentary of the 2024 World Series between the Dodgers and Yankees will premiere on Apple TV+ on March 28. The documentary, titled “Fight for Glory: 2024 World Series,” will be three episodes, and the trailer was just unveiled on Monday.

(Spoiler alert: the Dodgers won the series.)

I plan to review the full documentary here once I get a screener. All three episodes drop on March 28.

“Our goal was to make a truly cinematic experience that celebrates the drama, emotion and beauty of baseball at its highest-stakes moment: The World Series,” director R.J. Cutler said in a press release. We wanted to put the audience right in the guts of this story— the tension, the triumph, the heartbreak. As in life, the game of baseball is never over until the final out— you feel that in this series and your heart pounds with every twist and turn.”

March 28 is also the first Friday of the 2025 regular season, including two ‘Friday Night Baseball’ games each week on Apple TV+. The Dodgers’ first game this season on the network is Friday, April 4 at the Phillies.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/1...-series-documentary-trailer-apple-tv-march-28
 
Shohei Ohtani sits down with CBS News

MLB Tokyo Series: Los Angeles Dodgers v Hanshin Tigers

Photo by Masterpress/Getty Images

Dodgers news and notes heading into

Ahead of the Dodgers’ opener against the Cubs at the Tokyo Dome on Tuesday, CBS News aired an interview with Shohei Ohtani that was taped with Adam Yamaguchi the day before the first exhibition game against Yomiuri.

Ohtani homered in that game.

“It really means a lot to me when kids who play baseball say they want to be like Shohei Ohtani,” Ohtani said during the interview. “This has happened a lot both when I played in Japan and after I started playing in America. I feel a strong responsibility to make sure I don’t let those kids down.”

Everything Ohtani did during the two exhibition games over the weekend at the Tokyo Dome was under intense scrutiny, which was hard not to notice. Bill Plunkett at the Orange County Register wrote about the reaction:

“When he was at-bat, it was complete silence,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said of the rapt attention with which Japanese fans are treating Ohtani’s every at-bat. “Every time he did something – take a swing, foul a ball off – there was just a gasp. I think that it was a great welcome, but I think there was just so much anticipation to see anything he did, which was different than any one of our other players.”

With five Japanese stars playing for the Dodgers and Cubs during this Tokyo Series, this week is quite a moment for baseball in the country. Fabian Ardaya at The Athletic delved into history and looked at how Japanese baseball reached new heights.

Alden González at ESPN detailed the several-years-long path to get to the point now where, he says, “The Dodgers look about as insurmountable as a franchise can be in this sport.”

The Dodgers’ legacy in Japan includes a visit by Dodgers scouts Tommy Lasorda and Kenny Myers made a spring 1965 trip to Japan to serve as guest instructors for the Yomiuri Giants. Mark Langill at Dodger Insider takes a trip down memory lane.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/18/24388194/dodgers-shohei-ohtani-impact-history-japan
 
Yoshinobu Yamamoto stars in season-opening win

Los Angeles Dodgers v Chicago Cubs: MLB Tokyo Opening Series

Photo by Gene Wang/Getty Images

Dodgers RHP earns the win with five strong innings on opening day. He retired his final nine batters faced.

Taking the field without two MVP hitters, and with a bit of rustiness natural to every start of the season, the Dodgers needed a strong performance from Yoshinobu Yamamoto to win this one, and they got just that. Performing very differently than in his Dodgers and MLB debut last year, Yamamoto tossed five strong innings to pave the way for a Dodger victory.

Looking to establish that heater early on, Yamamoto started the game with seven straight four-seam fastballs, six of which came against Ian Happ, the Cubs’ leadoff batter. A patient hitter in his own right, Happ spit at all six heaters Yamamoto threw, and after a 2-0, 50/50 call didn’t go his way, Yamamoto ended up walking the Cubs batter. That would turn out to be the only free pass the Cubs would get in the whole game.

Perhaps the biggest compliment one can give to Yamamoto in this outing has nothing to do with the actual final line, but more so the adaptability he showed in not ideal circumstances.

Without necessarily one exact moment to point to, it became clear that Yamamoto didn’t have the best feel for his curveball in this game, a curve he threw basically just as much as the splitter last season (24.1-percent splitter usage in 2024, compared to 23.1-percent curveballs).

Despite not really having that pitch, Yamamoto made due primarily with a heater-splitter combo he went to in about 80 percent of the time, and that proved more than enough to stifle Cubs hitters. Yamamoto wasn’t a strikeout machine, far from it, only recording 4 across his five innings of work. That being said, three of the punchouts he did get came with the splitter or four-seamer, also mixing in a cutter in there for a fourth one.


pic.twitter.com/SPQ3oZLPJt

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) March 18, 2025

While Shota Imanaga left the game without allowing a run in his four innings, there was a clear difference in efficiency between the two starters. Imanaga needed 69 pitches to get through four as the Dodgers hitters worked long counts, despite not having necessarily anything to show for against him. Yamamoto was much more in line with his regular self, needing only 72 pitches to get through five. And while the Dodgers’ hitters left those first four innings with nothing in terms of runs, it gave them a larger number of chances against the Cubs’ bullpen, and they capitalized on that.

Back to Yamamoto, another significant point is also how he got stronger as this game went on, and by the time he finished the fifth inning, he had retired the last nine batters faced. The primary reason why he left this game was a sense of extra caution for a somewhat rushed Opening Day. Under normal circumstances, the Dodgers’ starter had plenty of gas for one, maybe two more innings without too much pushing.

On a more personal note for the Dodgers’ starter, this performance might have been a bit of a cathartic experience after all he wasn’t able to do against the Padres one year ago. This time around, facing a fellow Japanese star in his home country, Yamamoto showed why the Dodgers were willing to sign him to the most lucrative deal ever for a pitcher.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/18/24388502/yoshinobu-yamamoto-dodgers-cubs-tokyo-series
 
Freeman out for Game 2 of Tokyo Series

MLB Tokyo Series: Los Angeles Dodgers v Hanshin Tigers

Photo by Kenta Harada/Getty Images

Freeman was scratched from Tuesday’s game due to left rib discomfort and will now miss Wednesday’s game for precautionary measures.

The Dodgers were without their reigning World Series MVP Freddie Freeman for the Tokyo Series opener against the Chicago Cubs, and the Dodgers will play it safe by omitting him from playing in the series finale.

Freeman was a late scratch on Tuesday as he dealt with left rib discomfort, prompting manager Dave Roberts to start Kiké Hernández at first base against the lefty Shota Imanaga. Roberts was quick to downplay the severity of Freeman’s condition, noting how the decision to keep him out of the lineup for the series opener was a precautionary measure, per Sonja Chen of MLB.com.

“Not as severe,” manager Dave Roberts said. “I thought we made the right decision not playing him tonight, and we’ll see how he comes in tomorrow. So right now, I’m not too concerned.”

Chen reports that the Dodgers would have Freeman undergo imaging on his rib should he miss the entire series. Freeman joins Mookie Betts as two pieces of the triumvirate at the top of the lineup forced to make their season debuts domestically. The Dodgers will once again deploy Kiké Hernández at first base to face left-hander Justin Steele.


Roki's debut.

Today's #Dodgers Tokyo Series lineup at Cubs: pic.twitter.com/MSL5EpEG1F

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) March 19, 2025

Links​


Seemingly every direction you look in Tokyo, Shohei Ohtani is at the forefront of Japanese culture, appearing in ads for Hugo Boss, Fortnite, and New Balance while he’s not being a spectacle to watch on the diamond. The fans at the Tokyo Dome roared when his name was announced during the lineup introductions and became louder when he reached base twice in last night’s win.

When speaking with Harold Reynolds of MLB Network, Ohtani discussed playing in his native country once again (with his likeness sprinkled every which way), remarking how nervous he was to play in front of a sellout crowd.

Through interpreter Will Ireton: “I was actually pretty nervous. It’s been a while since I was nervous, but today, definitely felt it... Just a very unique environment and a very unique situation where I do feel that the fans are expecting me to get some hits, so that was a little bit different.”

Every time Shohei Ohtani stepped up to the plate today, the fans at the Tokyo Dome went silent.

The @Dodgers superstar discussed his nerves to be back in Japan and more with Harold after getting the Game 1 victory.#MLBTonight | #TokyoSeries pic.twitter.com/QSQ1vBGrlK

— MLB Network (@MLBNetwork) March 18, 2025

Thousands of Dodgers fans from all walks of life were in attendance on Tuesday for Game 1 of the Tokyo Series, and shortstop Miguel Rojas felt overwhelmed with emotions due to the support of the fanbase and is looking forward to the team’s home opener next week, per MLB on X.

“We’re looking forward to playing in front of our fans in L.A., but, I mean, I’m overwhelmed of emotions. The way that Dodger fans travel— they have a great group that they travel all over the world, and I’m just so happy to represent this organization because they have the best fans in the world.”

Checking in with Miggy Rojas after that @Dodgers W. #TokyoSeries pic.twitter.com/kDMJxZx40E

— MLB (@MLB) March 18, 2025

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/1...njury-tokyo-series-shohei-ohtani-miguel-rojas
 
Attempting to whitewash Jackie Robinson from history

Baseball Player Jackie Robinson


The Defense Department is literally erasing its own history involving Jackie Robinson, and others.

We interrupt my delightful shenanigans while aboard in Japan to bring you some fresh horror coming out of the United States.

My original reaction to this story is unprintable in a family website. It did involve a biologically impossible suggestion to oneself and one’s mode of conveyance.

My politics are fairly obvious but I do my best to follow the “"no politics” rule.

I get it; we're a baseball site, a Dodgers site. Let’s talk about Ohtani hitting dingers rather than the socioeconomic disparity arising in absurd tickets prices, in which, yes, I am part of the problem.

There are other venues to describe areas of overlap. However, on rare occasions, something happens that it so egregious, to be silent about an act is to be complicit about an act.

On Tuesday, U.S. time, reporting emerged from Matthew Reichbach that the current Defense Department, in line, with the Trump Administration’s posture against Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, more commonly abbreviated to DEI, erased a story about famed Dodgers legend and ex-Army officer Jackie Robinson from its homepage.

The Department of Defense deemed a story about baseball hero and civil rights leader Jackie Robinson's time in the Army as "DEI" and deleted it.

Matthew Reichbach (@fbihop.press) 2025-03-18T15:26:13.223Z

In its place on Tuesday was a 404-not found message including “dei” in the web address. On Wednesday the page was restored, without “dei” in the URL.

The removed story was an innocuous retelling of Robinson’s life and baseball career. The thing about the internet is that things do not just disappear because you don't like them and an archived version can be found here.

This purge affected both Army and Air Force websites, removing virtually all mention of Robinson. Other items have been removed as well including the Tuskegee Airmen, the Navajo Codebreakers, some of the Iwo Jima flag raisers, and the Enola Gay, the bomber in the atomic attack against Hiroshima.

The theme of removal is as undeniable as it is incompetent — using control-F (the search feature) is a dumb way to run a government.

We can disagree about politics and even disagree about being agreeable.

The truth is a funny thing. It doesn't care if you ignore it, deny it, replace it, because eventually with each lie, a debt is incurred. And sooner or later, that debt is paid.

That debt is always paid.

While ongoing things that this current administration is doing go well beyond the pale and are well afield of what we do here, I hope that Dodgers fan will agree with the follow sentiment:

  • Damn them. You don't get to pretend entire classes of people don't exist or have never contributed to score political points.
  • Robinson was an American hero and the best of us, and white supremacy masked as cowardice cannot change what he did.

Dodgers fans have a special obligation to Robinson. While his story, his heroism, his dignity, and his sacrifices belong to all baseball fans, he broke the color barrier as a Dodger.

He was the best of us. People who are not fit to carry his cleats do not get to bleat and try to erase a great man to fit a narrative of a place that does not and never existed.

Major League Baseball retired Robinson’s number of 42 throughout the league, but it had been long retired in Los Angeles.

Robinson’s story is ultimately our story and we are the stewards of it.

I have called out the Dodgers for screwing up in the past, most relevantly as to Glenn Burke. If we want to bask in the adulation of when the team got it right, we have the parallel obligation to make up for the times when the team got it wrong as fans.

Do better. Be kind. Don't back down.

If Robinson can be summarized more succinctly, I haven't heard it.

MLB and the Dodgers have a responsibility to publicly call out this cowardice, this shame as loudly and as soon as possible, to call out “not in our names.” To do anything less is to be complicit in the whitewashing, in the perversion of both Robinson’s history and its legacy. Said complicity would be unbearable, next month, with Jackie Robinson day fast approaching.

If Commissioner Rob Manfred wanted a way to change his narrative and do the right thing for a change, well, here you go.

Sadly, I am not holding my breath.

Things did not happen this way overnight. A lot of rhetorical ground had to ceded for reactionary, racist forced to even dream up something like this removal, much less do it.

Author and former lawyer Craig Calcaterra wrote about the Robinson situation at his Cup of Coffee newsletter, and his subsequent Bluesky post summarizes my feelings best, and his words serve as this essay's conclusion:

If you cannot honor an American hero like Jackie Robinson — and especially if you go out of your way to attempt to ERASE him — you are a white supremacist. That’s just a simple fact.

It’s high time that everyone say that in clear terms. That we call these people what they are.

Not one more inch, not here.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/19/24389097/department-of-defense-whitewash-jackie-robinson
 
Updated Dodgers 40-man roster

Los Angeles Dodgers Spring Training

Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images

Here is every Dodgers transaction related to the team’s 40-man roster from the beginning of spring training in 2025 through the end of the postseason.

Throughout the season this page will be updated as new transactions happen, to reflect the 40-man roster. That includes players called up from and sent down to the minor leagues, plus signings, trades, getting designated for assignment, and getting released.

We’ll also list every injured list stint, and will keep track of injuries in a separate post this season as well. Same goes for counting minor league options; we’ll track those throughout 2025, as each player can be optioned up to five times beginning on March 27, the date of domestic opening day.

Each Dodgers transaction has its own section on True Blue LA, and you can click on any link below to get detailed information on each roster move.

We also kept track of every Dodgers transaction from the 2024-25 offseason, leading up to this season. And for further reference, here are all transactions from the 2024 season, the 2023 season, and in 2022 as well.

Note: On a mobile device, this table will show up best in landscape mode.

Click on the dates below for more detailed information on each transaction:

March 19: Landon Knack, Matt Sauer, and James Outman were optioned to Triple-A Oklahoma City.

March 18: Matt Sauer was selected, Justin Wrobleski was optioned, and Clayton Kershaw was transferred to the 60-day injured list.

March 17: The Dodgers finalized their opening day roster for the Tokyo Series against the Cubs, including 14 active position players and 12 pitchers.

March 17: Tony Gonsolin, Edgardo Henríquez, Kyle Hurt, Clayton Kershaw, Michael Kopech, Evan Phillips, and Emmet Sheehan were placed on the 15-day injured list.

March 17: Roki Sasaki and Luis García were selected to the active roster. Michael Grove and Brusdar Graterol were placed on the 60-day injured list.

March 14: Hunter Feduccia was optioned to minor league camp.

March 13: Dodgers set 31-player travel roster for Tokyo Series.

March 11: Hyesong Kim and Bobby Miller were optioned to minor league camp.

March 11: Manager Dave Roberts signed a 4-year, $32.4 million contract through 2029.

March 2: Nick Frasso was optioned to minor league camp.

February 13: River Ryan was placed on the 60-day injured list.

February 13: Signed Clayton Kershaw for one year, $7.5 million.

February 11: Gavin Stone was placed on the 60-day injured list.

February 11: Signed Kiké Hernández for one year, $6.5 million.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/2/19/24367631/dodgers-roster-2025-transactions
 
How many games will Freddie Freeman play in 2025?

MLB Tokyo Series: Los Angeles Dodgers v Yomiuri Giants

Photo by Kenta Harada/Getty Images

Dodgers first baseman sat during the first two games in Japan with left rib discomfort. Freeman ranks second in the majors in games played since 2018, but is also 35 years old and coming off ankle surgery.

The Dodgers didn’t have Mookie Betts and didn’t play Freddie Freeman during the Tokyo Series against the Cubs, and still came home with two wins anyway, with a deep and still-functioning offense.

Patience was the key in the Tuesday opener, with no hits before the runs finally came in the fifth. Power was the name of the game on Wednesday with three home runs and three doubles.

Having two games halfway across the world, then a week before the next games that count helped tip the scales toward an abundance of caution, especially in the case of Freeman, who lobbied to play in Tokyo while dealing with left rib discomfort and will likely be back on the field for the Freeway Series against the Angels.

Freeman has been one of the most durable players in the sport, second only to Marcus Semien in games played since the start of 2018. Last year was a rarity, with Freeman only playing 147 games. His 15 games missed were four more than over his previous six seasons combined.

He dealt with tolls both physical — a broken finger, sprained ankle, before his cracked rib in October — and mental, the latter while tending to his son Max in the hospital. It was a taxing year for Freeman, which ended with ankle surgery in December.

Already this spring, the Dodgers and Freeman have talked about how to potentially manage his ankle during the first half of this season. How that translates to possible rest days remains to be seen, but compared to the norm for Freeman of not sitting at all until after the division is clinched, any time off is newsworthy.

Today’s question is how many regular season games will 35-year-old Freddie Freeman play in 2025?

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/20/24389938/freddie-freeman-dodgers-playing-time
 
Shohei Ohtani tops a reported $100m in endorsements

Los Angeles Dodgers v Chicago Cubs: MLB Tokyo Series

Photo by Gene Wang/Getty Images

A look at Ohtani’s earning power off the field, plus more about his home run Wednesday at the Tokyo Dome and the impact of the Dodgers & Cubs playing in Japan.

The global appeal of Shohei Ohtani was on display this week, including headlining the Tokyo Series between the Dodgers and Cubs and his first-ever MLB games played in Japan. But also came word that Ohtani in 2025 will make over $100 million in endorsements alone.

From Kurt Badenhausen at Sportico, which unveiled the top 15 highest-paid MLB players in 2025 on Wednesday:

Ohtani has been deemed a unicorn for his ability to impact baseball games at the plate and on the mound, but it also applies to his off-field game. Before Ohtani, endorsement earnings for MLB players peaked around $10 million for Derek Jeter and Ichiro Suzuki. Ohtani’s $100 million in estimated endorsement earnings is a threshold reached by only three athletes ever in Tiger Woods, Roger Federer and Stephen Curry, who each did it one time.

The 10-year contract Ohtani signed with the Dodgers calls for him to be paid $2 million per year, with $68 million deferred 10 years into the future. Ohtani getting paid an estimated $102 million per Sportico makes him the second-highest-paid player in the sport in 2025, behind only Juan Soto.

Interestingly, Blake Snell checks in at No. 3 in MLB, thanks in large part to his $52 million signing bonus, plus $12.8 million of his salary he’ll be paid in 2025 and, per Sportico, another $750,000 in endorsements.

Links​

  • Ohtani’s home run on Wednesday against the Cubs capped off “The Week of Ohtani” in Tokyo, writes Dylan Hernández of the Los Angeles Times.
  • Ohtani’s home run fell back onto the field after a fan tried to catch it, and Cubs centerfielder Pete Crow-Armstrong tossed the ball back into the stands. A 10-year-old fan, Sota Fujimori, ended up with the ball. Fujimori told reporters, per Stephen Wade of Associated Press, “I couldn’t believe it. I’m going to keep it as the family treasure.”
  • Japanese baseball great Sadaharu Oh talked with reporters on Tuesday, from Michael Clair at MLB.com: “I never remember seeing this level of excitement from fans and players. ... Now coming here, I get to see directly the old timers’ impact and, with all the other players here, a new level of excitement. It’s really exciting for me to have been there before and now be here seeing everything unfold.”
  • MLB commissioner Rob Manfred earlier this week told Evan Drellich of The Athletic, “The Tokyo series is going to be the biggest standalone international event in the history of Major League Baseball.”
  • The annual ranking of starting pitchers, sorting aces and near aces, is up at The Athletic, from Andy McCullough, Will Sammon, and Sahadev Sharma. Yoshinobu Yamamoto (No. 10 overall) and Blake Snell (No. 15) were rated in their third-highest tier of starters.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/20/24389937/shohei-ohtani-endorsements-100-million-dodgers
 
Week 1: Ohtani, Yamamoto lead Tokyo sweep

Los Angeles Dodgers v. Chicago Cubs

Photo by Yuki Taguchi/MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Dodgers got a two-win head start on the rest of MLB by beating the Cubs twice in Japan, even without a pair of stars in the lineup.

The Dodgers were without Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman, but still got enough offense to sweep the Cubs on their trip overseas to Tokyo, Japan. Having a pitching staff allow only four runs in 18 innings certainly helped as well.

Betts had an illness dating back to the final day of Arizona camp, and even flew home from Tokyo before the games against the Cubs. Freeman had left rib discomfort and was scratched from Tuesday’s lineup and held out of Wednesday. Both are expected to be ready by next week’s home opener in Los Angeles.

Batter of the week​


We’ll give this one to Shohei Ohtani, who was a part of the scoring in both games, with a double on Tuesday, a home run on Wednesday, and a team-leading three hits. Three of his four batted balls in the first game were hard hit (a 95-mph exit velocity or higher). Only one of his three batted balls in the second game were tracked by Statcast, but one of the ones missed was his home run.

“Nothing Shohei does surprises me. Everyone here tonight came to watch Shohei perform and put on a show. Like Shohei does, he always seems to deliver,” manager Dave Roberts told reporters at the Tokyo Dome after Wednesday’s game. “Shohei just seems like a superhero.”

This very easily could have also gone to Will Smith, who singled, doubled, and had five walks for a .778 on-base percentage. Kiké Hernández homered and drove in three runs, and will lead the majors in RBI for at least a week.

Pitcher of the week​


Yoshinobu Yamamoto had a stellar debut, allowing only a run on three hits, with four strikeouts in his five innings.

Seven of the nine relief pitchers for the series allowed zero runs, and nobody on the staff allowed more than a single run.

Week 1 results​


2-0 record
10 runs scored (5.00 per game)
4 runs allowed (2.00 per game)
.842 pythagorean win percentage

Miscellany​


Going streaking: Max Muncy on Tuesday made his fourth straight opening day start at third base after starting the previous three opening days at first base. Only seven Los Angeles Dodgers had longer streaks of opening day starts.

A first: Yamamoto vs. Shota Imanaga were not only the first two Japanese pitchers to start against one another on opening day, but also did so in Japan at the Tokyo Dome. Coupled with Wednesday Dodgers starter Roki Sasaki, the three Japanese starting pitchers in the series combined to allow two runs in nine innings during the Tokyo Series, with nine strikeouts and 10 walks.

Worldwide: The Dodgers’ two wins in Japan added to their international history.


The Dodgers are global. They are the only Major League team to win a game in six different countries. They now own wins in the United States, Canada, Australia, Mexico, South Korea and Japan.

— Dodger Insider (@DodgerInsider) March 18, 2025

Transactions​


Friday, March 14: We’ll start this one back from the Tokyo trip, when catcher Hunter Feduccia was optioned.

Tuesday: The slightly-modified opening day roster was set for the Tokyo Series, with 14 position players and 12 pitchers.

Tuesday: Non-roster invitees Roki Sasaki and Luis García were selected to the roster.

Tuesday: Nine pitchers were placed on the injured list. Michael Grove and Brusdar Graterol are on the 60-day IL to make roster room for Sasaki and García. Tony Gonsolin, Edgardo Henríquez, Kyle Hurt, Clayton Kershaw, Michael Kopech, Evan Phillips, and Emmet Sheehan are on the 15-day IL.

Wednesday: Non-roster invitee Matt Sauer was selected to the roster, and Justin Wrobleski was optioned. Kershaw was moved to the 60-day IL to make 40-man roster room for Sauer.

Wednesday: After the Tokyo Series, Sauer, Landon Knack, and James Outman were optioned to Triple-A, effectively setting the 26-man roster for the upcoming home opener.

Game results​

Up next​


The Dodgers run the Gary Pettis gauntlet, which starts with three more exhibition games to take care of prior to the regular season starting back up. They play the Angels in the Freeway Series, with Sunday in Los Angeles followed by Monday and Tuesday in Anaheim. The home opener for the Dodgers is against the Tigers, with the three-game series starting on Thursday at Dodger Stadium.

No rotation order has been announced yet, but don’t be surprised if Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow, and Yamamoto start in some order against Detroit. Reigning American League Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal starts on March 27 for the Tigers.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/2...ei-ohtani-yoshinobu-yamamoto-will-smith-japan
 
Julio Urías suspended through 2025 All-Star break

Los Angeles Dodgers v Chicago Cubs

Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images

Former Dodgers pitcher Julio Urías was suspended through the 2025 All-Star break by Major League Baseball on Friday under the league’s joint domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse policy.

Urías is the first person in the nine-year history of MLB’s policy to be suspended twice, having also served 20 games in 2019.

The left-hander last pitched on September 1, 2023 and has been a free agent since the conclusion of that season. Urías is will be reinstated from the restricted list on July 17, 2025.

Urías was arrested during Labor Day weekend 2023 in Los Angeles on a suspicion of felony domestic violence, and released on a $50,000 bond. On September 6, MLB placed Urías on administrative leave, and he missed the final 25 games of the regular season plus three games in the National League Division Series.

The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office on January 9, 2024 declined to file felony charges, instead turning over the case to the LA City Attorney’s office. On April 9, the LA City Attorney charged Urías with five misdemeanors, with an arraignment hearing set for May 2.

A day ahead of the arraignment hearing, Urías pleaded no contest to a domestic battery charge on May 1, which avoided jail time, but included 36 months of probation, 30 days of community labor, an order to take a 52-week domestic battery course (as he also did in 2019), and pay a domestic violence fund fee.

The burden of proof under MLB’s collectively-bargained domestic violence policy does not require criminal charges nor a conviction. From the policy:

A Player may be subjected to disciplinary action for just cause by the Commissioner for a violation of this Policy in the absence of a conviction or a plea of guilty to a crime involving a Covered Act.

In November 2023, the day after the World Series ended, Urías became a free agent, ending his tenure with the Dodgers that dated back to August 2012.

.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/2...spension-mlb-domestic-violence-policy-dodgers
 
Dodgers pitching preview, part 2: Starting rotation depth

Los Angeles Dodgers v Texas Rangers

Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images

We’ve already looked at the first six on the rotation depth chart, and the Dodgers are so deep in starting pitching that lurking just behind these six is an All-Time Great™ and a guy who was 16-1 a couple of years ago. Plus, a whole stable of young guys waiting for a chance. You wonder how some of these guys will ever get a shot when they are stuck behind so many stars contracted for years into the future, but the way starting pitchers are dropping like flies these days, it’s good to be stuffed to the gills.

Clayton Kershaw​


The big guy is coming back for his 18th season, and would it be surprising if he strung together a series of quality starts? Nobody knows how many more starts Kershaw has left, so every start should be enjoyed as if it is going to be his last. Hopefully, this year results in another world championship added to his legacy.

Projection: 6-10 starts, 4-2, 3.40 ERA

Tony Gonsolin​


Perpetually underrated, and going into his age-31 season, Gonsolin sports a 34-11 lifetime record and a 3.19 ERA that would be a lot better if not for his last season when his arm broke down. While Gonsolin looked sharp for the handful of innings he pitched in spring training, he injured his back lifting weights. That set him back in his preparation for the season and cost him a spot in the opening rotation. If he bounces back quickly from his injury, he should be the first one up if something opens up in the rotation, but with Ohtani and Kershaw also due back within the first couple months of the season, starting spots may be in short supply.

Projection: 15 starts, 7-2, 3.40 ERA

Landon Knack​


He made 12 starts last season and quietly pitched at about the same level as Stone and Glasnow. His peripherals were not as good as his results, and there is some sentiment that he is likely to regress, especially if he doesn’t find a way to limit the volume of home runs he gives up. But Roberts has declared that Knack will be an important part of the staff, and he pitched two shutout innings in his first appearance of the season. While the Dodgers hope the health of their starting pitchers doesn’t necessitate too many starts from Knack, he may get the opportunity for innings as a long reliever.

Projection: 45 innings, 4.15 ERA

Justin Wrobleski​


While his six-start debut didn’t go that well last season, he had an excellent spring training, and he looks like he may have a future as a major league starter. He’ll start the year in Triple-A, and compete with guys like Bobby Miller, Knack, and current bullpen member Ben Casparius for position on the depth chart.

Projection 6 starts, 4.25 ERA


5 Ks for Justin Wrobleski. pic.twitter.com/dz4wVwQmvJ

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) March 8, 2025

Bobby Miller​


He flashed his talent his rookie year but suffered through an apocalyptic sophomore season that resulted in an ERA over 8 in 13 starts. Now he’s going to have to go back to the minors and re-establish his value. It appears Miller’s issues are more mental than physical — though he missed 10 weeks on the injured list last year — perhaps that gives hope that they are correctable. If he can get back to his level of performance in 2023, he’ll have a successful career as a major-league pitcher.

Projection: He’ll need to show progress in the minor leagues and might become a change-of-scenery type of trading chip.

Ben Casparius​


I think he has a chance to stick in the bullpen if there is a need, or could go down to Triple-A and build up as a starter. His star seems to be rising after he pitched well in the postseason, and I think the team has become confident in giving him major league innings.

Projection: He is a depth piece who is likely to get more opportunities in the bullpen than as a starter.

Nick Frasso and Emmet Sheehan​


Both of these pitchers were highly rated before injuring their arms. It will be interesting to follow them and see how they bounce back in the minor leagues. Either of them could reposition themselves as a top prospect relatively quickly.

Jackson Ferris​


Not expected in 2025, but the Dodgers’ top pitching prospect after Roki Sasaki can move fast after impressing in spring training.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/22/24391685/dodgers-pitching-preview-starting-rotation-depth
 
Can you guess this Dodgers Rookie of the Year in today’s in-5 trivia game?

tb_la_social.0.png


Think you can figure out what Dodgers player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out.

We’re back for another day of the True Blue LA in-5 daily trivia game. If you missed any of this week’s games, you will find a link below. Game instructions are at the bottom if you’re new to the game! Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in the Google Form.

Today’s True Blue LA In-5 game


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous Games


Friday, March 21, 2025
Thursday, March 20, 2025
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Play more SB Nation in-5 trivia games


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

True Blue LA in-5 instructions


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Dodgers player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS this week. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it. The game will appear in the No. 3 slot of the True Blue LA layout each day this week and as noted above, will appear in this article exclusively.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/2025/3/22/24391579/sb-nation-dodgers-daily-trivia-in-5
 
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