News Dodgers Team Notes

Jack Dreyer earns a pair of top 5 votes for NL Rookie of the Year

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The Los Angeles Dodgers, Major League Baseball’s foremost authority on the Rookie of the Year award, didn’t exactly have a memorable campaign on the subject in 2025, but still found a way to sneak at least one player into the voting poll. Jack Dreyer received two top 5 votes in the National League, with Braves catcher Drake Baldwin comfortably beating out Cubs’ starter Cade Horton to win the award.

Playing well enough to win the starting gig over the veteran Sean Murphy, Baldwin was one of three Atlanta Braves with an OPS north of .800. The rookie backstopper was one of the few positives in a down year for an Atlanta team that fell way short of making the playoffs. Chicago started the year with Shota Imanaga and Justin Steele as their top two starters, but Matthew Boyd and the rookie Horton were the ones who carried the load with the best numbers.

2025 National League Rookie of the Year voting​

Player1st2nd3rd4th5thPoints
C – Drake Baldwin (Braves)219183
SP – Cade Horton (Cubs)9164139
INF – Caleb Durbin (Brewers)2139469
OF – Isaac Collins (Brewers)2913162
OF – Daylen Like (Nats)13817
C – Agustín Ramírez (Marlins)2610
SP – Chad Patrick (Brewers)1149
OF – Jacob Marsee (Marlins)128
RP – Jack Dreyer (Dodgers)114
INF – Matt Shaw (Cubs)114
SP – Jacob Misiorowski (Brewers)12
SP – Nolan McLean (Mets)22
OF – Heriberto Hernández (Marlins)11

In a campaign filled with pitching injuries and the bullpen’s struggles, Dreyer’s emergence as a key piece in the bullpen played a pivotal role in helping this team tread water at different times. Utilizing a deadly fastball-slider combo, Dreyer filled in wherever needed. Starting the year on the low end of the totem pole, Dreyer worked his way up the leverage ladder and tied Ben Casparius for most innings out of the bullpen (68.0) in 2025.

Another way to gauge Dreyer’s impact is in acknowledging he was the only reliever on the team with an ERA under 3.00, making up for the struggles of Tanner Scott, Kirby Yates, and company.

Dreyer becomes the first Dodger pitcher to feature in the Rookie of the Year voting since Tony Gonsolin and Dustin May did it back in 2020. Interestingly, that was also the last year in which a reliever won the award, with Devin Williams narrowly beating out Alec Bohm.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...6/jack-dreyer-rookie-of-the-year-vote-dodgers
 
Dodgers Notes: Andrew Friedman, Alex Vesia, Munetaka Murakami

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In the Formula 1 world, “silly season” refers to the period—usually around the sport’s summer break—when rumors about drivers’ contracts and team plans for the next year start picking up more speed than a car going down a straight. In baseball, that period starts immediately after the last pitch of the World Series is thrown, if not sooner. So buckle up for the chaos, because there’s plenty of it already, starting wit the Dodgers in another series of will-they-won’t-they situations.

Dodgers Notes​


Dayn Perry at CBS Sports has a lot of questions for the Dodgers after the end of the World Series, starting with: How will the team get ready for a three-peat attempt? That may be his only direct question for the team, but there’s also plenty of curiosity about Kyle Tucker, Tarik Skubal, and a potential lockout that all have connections to L.A.

Another name that could be on the Dodgers’ radar is Munetaka Murakami, also known as the Japanese Babe Ruth. Oh, you thought that was Shohei Ohtani? Yeah, me too. Murakami’s numbers are comparable to Ohtani’s at the plate, but the new star might not have a spot on the Dodgers unless Max Muncy gets traded, according to USA Today’s Jon Hoefling.

And while Jeff Passan at ESPN argues that the Dodgers don’t need to make any big acquisitions next year, he concedes that that’s the way they roll—although maybe this time, without the huge financial commitment. Passan’s pick is a free agent closer rather than a huge contract for Tucker or another huge name.

Masterminding all of these decisions, of course, is Andrew Friedman, the Dodgers’ intrepid president of baseball operations. Former manager Joe Maddon worked with Freidman for nine seasons in the Tampa Bay Rays organization and spoke with Jayson Jenks at The Athletic about what makes Friedman’s leadership style stand out.

Alex Vesia sat the World Series out as he and his wife Kayla dealt with the tragic loss of their newborn daughter, and Blue Jays pitchers showed their support for a fellow ballplayer by wearing Vesia’s number 51 on their caps. Dodgers fans responded in kind, donating more than $75,000—mostly in amounts of $51, in honor of the Vesia family—to Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children, according to Kristjan Lautens at the Toronto Star.

FYI: Former Dodger Justin Turner says he’s returning for his 18th season in 2026, according to MLB Network’s Jon Morosi. Turner had signed a one-year contract for the 2025 season with the Chicago Cubs, who declined his option and made him a free agent for next year’s campaign.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...-andrew-friedman-alex-vesia-munetaka-murakami
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Andy Pages

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Andy Pages followed up a solid rookie campaign with a stellar sophomore season where he placed second on the team in home runs behind Shohei Ohtani. Despite a horrible postseason, he had his bright spots, including a season saving catch in the ninth inning of Game 7 of the World Series.

The Dodgers attempted to bolster their corner outfield spots by bringing back Teoscar Hernández and signing Michael Conforto, with Pages penciled in as the primary center fielder. Pages trudged through the gates slowly, as a subpar spring training led to him struggling mightily to begin the season.

The Dodgers were unbeatable to open the season, starting 8-0, while Pages collected just three hits over his first 25 at-bats of the year. His bat began to emerge from its season opening slumber during the team’s first road trip, where he homered in two straight games against the Washington Nationals. After another silent homestand, he once again found his power during the team’s second road trip, where he homered in the two games against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field.

It was during that series against Chicago where Pages’s brief sophomore slump vanished. Pages had just two multi-hit games over his first 22 games of the season, yet he ended the month with an eight game hit streak where he had five multi-hit games. Pages slashed .545/.571/1.000 over his hitting streak, launching four home runs and driving in nine. From that point forward Pages remained a consistent force at the middle and bottom of the Dodgers batting order.

Pages in 2024 struggled with his patience at the plate, needing 76 at-bats to work his first big league walk and finishing with an on-base percentage at .305. Pages demonstrated good at-bats early on in the season, as he sported a .370 on-base percentage by the end of April, but he fell back into his old habits throughout the rest of the season.

Pages had walked nine times over his first 28 games of the season, where he also hit primarily at the bottom of the order. Once he received a promotion to the middle third of the lineup, his patience at the plate went out the window, as over his final 128 games of the season, he walked just 20 times, giving him as many walks as he had in his rookie season. His 3.9 percent walk rate ranked fourth lowest in the entire league from May 1 until the end of the regular season, and he finished with a 4.5 percent walk rate on the season, ranking seventh worst in the league.

For a team like the Colorado Rockies, there is the Coors Field effect, the notion that hitters who spend half the season playing at a stadium with the highest altitude will have more favorable stats at home. For Pages, 2025 introduced the Dodger Stadium effect, as he was at his best playing in front of the home crowd.

Pages’s first four home runs of the season all came on the road. His next one hit on the road came nearly four months later on Aug. 21, nearly four months removed from his most recent one hit on Apr. 23 at Wrigley Field. Pages hit his first home run at home on Apr. 27 against the Pittsburgh Pirates, and he proceeded to crush another 15 home runs all at Dodger Stadium. At home, Pages slashed .325/.369/.594 with 19 home runs and 56 RBI. His home batting average was tied with Diamondbacks shortstop Geraldo Perdomo for fourth best in baseball, his 19 home runs at home were tied for 10th best with Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor, and his 165 wRC+ at home ranked seventh best in baseball and first among all National League outfielders. Outside of Dodger Stadium, Pages was one of the worst hitters in baseball on the road, as he sported .221/.257/.336 slash line in 76 road games, with his 63 wRC+ ranking seventh worst in all of baseball.

Pages established himself as the go-to center fielder in the everyday lineup, and he made massive strides defensively after a solid rookie season. Pages ranked 13th among all qualified fielders in fielding value (third among NL outfielders), ranked seventh among all qualified outfielders in outs above average, and really stood out with a cannon in center field, ranking eighth in baseball in arm strength and 12th in baseball in arm value.

Pages ended the regular season on a similarly sour note that he had to begin the regular season, as in the final six game road trip, he slashed just .125/.160/.375 with two of his three hits going for home runs. Pages spent the majority of the regular season hitting in the six or seven holes in the starting lineup, finding the majority of his success at the bottom of the order. In the postseason, Pages hit in both latter half spots for both of the Wild Card series games against the Cincinnati Reds, going hitless across nine at-bats. This prompted a demotion in the lineup, as Pages spent the next three games batting eighth before being sent to the very bottom of the lineup for the next nine games he started.

Pages had one base hit in Game 1 of the NLDS against the Philadelphia Phillies before his bat went silent over his next 11 at-bats throughout the series. He had his most successful series against the Milwaukee Brewers, where he had two hits including a decisive RBI double in Game 2. He managed just one more hit in the World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays, and Pages was not in the starting lineup for both Games 6 and 7 while being replaced defensively in both Games 3 and 5. He finished the postseason with a horrible .078/.113/.098 slash line with one double and one RBI, striking out 11 times and failing to draw a walk. After having a solid rookie showing where he became the youngest Dodger in team history to have a multi-home run game in the postseason, Pages now carries a career .114/.151/.214 slash line in the playoffs. His -3 wRC+ ranks third worst in postseason history out of all players with at least 70 plate appearances.

The numbers would indicate a postseason to forget, but Pages had a pair of moments that were instrumental in helping the Dodgers repeat as World Series champions. Pages came up to bat in the bottom of the 11th inning with the bases loaded and two outs in Game 4 of the NLDS. He tapped a ground ball back to the pitcher, Orion Kerkering, who proceeded to bobble the ball, panicked and threw an errant throw past the catcher J.T. Realmuto, allowing Hyeseong Kim to score the series winning run that sent the Dodgers to the NLCS.

After having his role as a starter removed in the final two games of the World Series, Pages was brought on as a defensive replacement for Tommy Edman in center field in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 7. Yoshinobu Yamamoto found himself in a bases loaded jam with only one out, and after a game saving play from Miguel Rojas for a crucial second out, Ernie Clement smacked a first pitch low curveball to the gap deep in left center field. Kiké Hernández tracked the ball down with his back facing home plate, but Pages collided into Hernández and somehow managed to make the catch, sending the game and the fate of the series into extra innings.

2025 particulars​


Age: 24

Stats: .272/.313/.461, 27 HR, 86 RBI, 27 2B, 13 SB, 74 R, 29 BB, 135 K, 113 wRC+, 3.8 rWAR, 4.1 fWAR

Salary: $770,000

Game of the year​


During the Dodgers first meeting of the season at home against the San Diego Padres, Pages was drilled by an inside fastball from Dylan Cease, prompting both benches and bullpens to empty. During the altercation, Padres manager Mike Schildt was seen barking at Pages from the dugout, yelling, “Who the f**k do you think you are?” Pages gave Schildt and the rest of the Padres a formal introduction as to who he is, going a perfect 4-4 the following game on June 17, smashing a pair of home runs, while driving in three and scoring three runs in an 8-6 Dodgers victory.

Out in a HURRY

Andy Pages hit this homer 110.4 MPH off the bat 🔥 pic.twitter.com/jmWq7kxLfc

— MLB (@MLB) June 18, 2025
THIS GAME 🍿

Andy Pages 2nd HR ties the game right back up! pic.twitter.com/FluOoMo7it

— MLB (@MLB) June 18, 2025

Roster status​


Andy Pages has 1 year and 155 days of MLB service time and has one option remaining.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/107294/andy-pages-2025-dodgers-review
 
Free agency notes: Edwin Díaz, Devin Williams, Steven Kwan

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The stove is sizzling and the temperature is rising. The offseason is officially here.

The Dodgers now own the exclusive mantra as the two-time defending champions of baseball, and they won their most recent championship with a glaring issue that the Dodgers tried to mitigate in the postseason. The Dodgers’ 2025 bullpen was undoubtedly the worst they’ve dealt with since the Frank McCourt era.

The Dodgers bullpen as a unit posted a 4.27 ERA in 2025, ranking in the bottom third in all of baseball. Among the 11 Dodgers relievers that pitched at least 25 innings in the regular season, six posted earned run averages over 4.50, with offseason signings such as Kirby Yates and Blake Treinen posting over a 5.00 ERA. And the $72 million contract they dished to Tanner Scott last offseason has failed to launch after its first year.

Jeff Passan of ESPN explains why the Dodgers don’t need to hand out an exorbitant contract to the likes of Kyle Tucker or Kyle Schwarber, but should rather address the current bullpen situation with a proven high-end closer, that being former New York Mets All-Star closer Edwin Díaz.

“While they have plenty of room to maneuver for a trade, the most obvious move is to hope the second time’s the charm in spending big money on a closer after Tanner Scott’s disappearing act this year.”

Links​


Last offseason, the Dodgers were in the mix for then-Milwaukee Brewers All-Star closer Devin Williams, but the Yankees got a deal done that sent left-hander Nestor Cortes and infielder Caleb Durbin to Milwaukee. After a tumultuous season that included a demotion from the closer role and the Yankees amending their facial hair policy due his grievances, Williams is now a free agent, and once again, the Dodgers are interested in him, reports Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic.

“Dodgers general manager Brandon Gomes affirmed Tuesday that the Dodgers could sign a reliever as they ramp up for a potential three-peat. Candidates include at least one familiar target already clear at this week’s annual general managers’ meetings in Las Vegas, sources said: two-time All-Star reliever Devin Williams.”

The Dodgers were interested in Cleveland Guardians outfielder Steven Kwan at the trade deadline this past season, and they will remain interested in him this offseason, notes Bob Nightengale of USA Today.

“They nearly traded him to the Dodgers at the trade deadline and Los Angeles will come calling again. The price-tag will be high, but the Dodgers certainly have the prospect capital.”

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-links/107484/dodgers-edwin-diaz-devin-williams-steven-kwan
 
Yoshinobu Yamamoto finishes third in NL Cy Young voting

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Yoshinobu Yamamoto was a top-three candidate for the 2025 NL Cy Young award, but it was Pittsburgh Pirates ace Paul Skenes that took home the award unanimously. Yamamoto finished in third place, receiving zero first or second place votes as Philadelphia Phillies southpaw Cristopher Sánchez finished as the unanimous runner-up.

The record didn’t look too appealing for Skenes at 10-10, a similar issue that Jacob deGrom faced during his pair of Cy Young awards in 2018-19, but Skenes proved to be the one of most valuable pitcher in all of baseball in terms of fWAR at 6.5, ranking just under the AL Cy Young award winner Tarik Skubal. Skenes posted a league-leading 1.97 ERA after posting a 1.96 ERA as a rookie last year, and his 216 strikeouts were tied with Phillies lefty Jesús Luzardo for second best in the NL. Skenes becomes the first Pirate to win the Cy Young award since Doug Drabek in 1990, and he is the first pitcher to win the award despite playing for a team at the bottom of their division since Felix Hernández with the Seattle Mariners in 2010.

Player1st2nd3rd4th5thPoints
Paul Skenes- Pirates30210
Cristopher Sánchez- Phillies30120
Yoshinobu Yamamoto- Dodgers1611272
Logan Webb- Giants106547
Freddy Peralta- Brewers4111044
Nick Pivetta- Padres77
Jesús Luzardo- Phillies135
Andrew Abbott- Reds124
Zach Wheeler11

Yamamoto is the first Dodger to receive Cy Young votes since Julio Urías in 2022, and was by far and wide the best pitcher for the Dodgers during the regular season and postseason. Yamamoto became the first Dodgers starter with at least 10 wins in a season since Clayton Kershaw in 2023, overall posting a 12-8 record with a 2.49 ERA and 201 strikeouts across 30 starts. Yamamoto followed up an impressive regular season with a postseason that will live on in baseball history, with a Herculean effort tossing a combined 17 2/3 innings in the World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays.

Yamamoto now joins Padres starter Yu Darvish, former Dodger Kenta Maeda and former Mariners starter Hisashi Iwakuma as the only Japanese-born pitchers to place within the top-3 in Cy Young voting, with Darvish and Maeda both being the most recent as the NL and AL runner-up respectively in 2020.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...28/dodgers-yoshinobu-yamamoto-cy-young-voting
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Justin Wrobleski

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When we last left off with Young Master Wrobleski in 2024, he had the opportunity to succeed in the 2025 season due to a combination of makeup and stuff. No one doubted Wrobleski’s temperament when it came to going after batters. Where Wrobleski had significant room to improve was in throwing quality pitches at the Major League level.

While Wrobleski made only two starts at the Major League level, he improved in 2025 by effectively filling a swingman role, taking down innings in a beleaguered year for the bullpen core. Wrobleski used a six-pitch mix. In order, a four-seam baseball, slider, sinker, cutter, curveball, and changeup. Baseball Savant compared his stuff in 2025 to 2024-Yusei Kikuchi, 2024-Carlos Rodón, and 2025-Garrett Crochet. As to the quality of contact, Wrobleski was comparable to 2025-Will Vest and 2025-Yoshinobu Yamamoto.

Wrobleski pitched well enough in the abbreviated spring to make the Tokyo Series roster. He did not pitch in either of the two regular-season games, but he did open against the Yomiuri Giants and threw two shutout innings with three strikeouts.

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Wrobleski started the domestic portion of the regular season with Triple-A Oklahoma City. He was summoned for a spot start in Washington, D.C. on April 8th. It went badly, as the Nationals roughed up Wrobleski for eight earned runs in five dreary innings of work.

Wrobleski was optioned back to Oklahoma City until May 15 to provide coverage in the bullpen against the Sacramento A’s. He delivered four shutout innings of bulk work, striking out four, and earned his first win of 2025.

Wrobleski was optioned back to Oklahoma City the following day, returning to Los Angeles about two weeks later to make his second and final spot start of the year on June 6, against the St. Louis Cardinals in Missouri. Wrobleski and the Dodgers lost, but it is hard to fault a starter when the offense is shut out.

The young left-hander spent the next month in the bullpen providing bulk coverage. For the rest of June and the first week of July, Wrobleski appeared in five games, throwing 25 IP. He earned a 3-1 record with a 2.88 ERA and 2.49 FIP. He struck out 27 while only walking four batters.

He pitched well against the Giants, Padres, Rockies (in Denver), and Royals (in Kansas City). His sole blemish was against the Astros at Dodger Stadium on July 5th, where he was merely pedestrian, allowing five runs (four earned) in 4 2/3 IP of work with six strikeouts.

It is worth noting that the July series against the Astros was the start of the Dodgers’ summer skid. Wrobleski was optioned back to Oklahoma City when Tyler Glasnow came off the injured list.

Wrobleski returned to Los Angeles for the rest of the season on July 27. While Wrobleski was still in the bullpen, his role shifted from a pure bulk role to more of a two-inning role. Over the last two months of the regular season, he appeared in 16 games with 26 2/3 IP of work. Wrobleski had a 1-2 record, and earned seven holds, two saves with a 4.05 ERA and an eye-popping 2.05 FIP. Wrobleski struck out 36 and only walked 7. Wrobleski generally performed well with one exception: on September 16th at home, the Philadelphia Phillies tagged him for five runs while only facing six batters.

Wrobleski’s most leverage appearance was on September 24th against the Diamondbacks in Phoenix, in an extra-inning victory that all but put the NL West crown out of reach.

Considering the patchwork nature of the Dodgers’ bullpen in October, Wrobleski was always going to feature in the postseason bullpen. However, given the matchups and the effectiveness of the Dodgers’ starting rotation, it was unsurprising that Wrobleski was on the Wild Card and NLCS rosters but not used. Moreover, the Dodgers left Wrobleski off the NLDS roster against the Phillies.

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In the World Series, Wrobleski made his postseason debut by pitching in Games 1, 3, 6, and 7 against the Toronto Blue Jays. During the 2025 playoffs, the Blue Jays seemingly could score at will against everyone except Yoshinobu Yamamoto. Another pitcher who was successful against the Blue Jays was Wrobleski, who posted five innings of scoreless work, striking out six and not walking anyone.

Wrobleski did have one hit by pitch in Game 7, which will likely be played in Dodgers highlights for years to come. Max Muncy later said that he saved Wrobleski from being ejected due to the instigator rules.

For the overall year with the Dodgers, opposing hitters had a slash line of .255/.306/.380 against Wrobleski. Considering the quality of his arsenal and his overall makeup, it would not be surprising to see Wrobleski in a similar bulk/swingman role in 2026.

While Wrobleski is still not embracing a tailor-made, 1980s nickname of Wrobocop, with accompanying soundtrack, it is hard to describe his 2025 campaign as anything other than a success. In just under double the major league workload, Wrobleski struck out an extra 50 batters with one extra walk. His peripheral stats went from questionable to downright scintillating.

It seems likely that Wrobleski’s traveling days back to Oklahoma City likely will be few and far between in the 2026 campaign. Considering the available arms in the Dodgers’ rotation, it seems unlikely that Wrobleski will start the year anywhere but the Dodgers’ bullpen. Considering the evolution from 2024 to the present, if he continues to grow, the Dodgers will gladly accept that outcome.

2025 particulars​


Age: 24

Stats: 5-5, 2 Sv, 66 2/3 IP, 76 K, 17 BB, 4.32 ERA, 2.92 FIP, 3.41 xERA, 1.230 WHIP

Salary: $460,845 (pro-rated share of $760,000 minimum salary)

Game of the year​


The only avenue where Wrobleski did not excel in 2025 was starting for the Dodgers. With that proviso in mind, declaring a Game of the Year for a middle reliever is usually tricky. However, there is one candidate that stands out. In early August, the Dodgers had to play the Tampa Bay Rays in the New York Yankees’ outdoor spring training home, George M. Steinbrenner Field.

Early August in Florida was about as pleasant as one might think. On August 1, Wrobleski earned a three-inning save while striking out five in the sweltering Florida heat.

Three shutout innings from Justin to close out the game! pic.twitter.com/b7FHtCiZdT

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) August 2, 2025

Roster status​


Wrobleski has 150 days of service and one option year remaining.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...s/107243/justin-wrobleski-2025-dodgers-review
 
Shohei Ohtani wins second straight NL MVP unanimously

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It is rare in sports that excitement and expectation are fulfilled in such a wholesome way as has been the case with Shohei Ohtani and the Dodgers. By securing his second straight NL MVP, Ohtani is two for two in World Series rings and Most Valuable Player awards since joining the Dodgers. What else could anyone possibly ask for? Furthermore, it’s Ohtani’s second straight MVP in unanimous fashion, receiving all 30 first-place votes in the National League.

It’s only year two of his tenure in Los Angeles, and we’re already at a point of running out of adjectives to describe the greatness of Ohtani. What he did as a hitter in 2025, much like it was the case last year, would’ve been enough to put him in the lead for the NL MVP. Sprinkle on top the terrific nearly 50 innings of starting pitching, as the Dodgers were very methodical in his return to the mound, and his performance stands out even further. Getting to the playoffs in the best form was always the priority, even as the Dodgers dealt with a plethora of pitching injuries, which ultimately led to such a low innings tally for the Japanese superstar.

Unlike in 2024, Ohtani had some company atop the hitting leaderboards in the National League, with Kyle Schwarber narrowly beating out the Dodgers’ DH for the most home runs, with 56 to Ohtani’s 55. Still, Ohtani was vastly superior to Schwarber in nearly every hitting category (AVG, OBP, SLG). Ohtani’s 3.92 OBP and .622 SLG to Schwarber’s .365 and .563 leave no doubt as to who was the superior hitter.

The most notable difference in Ohhtani’s game was a drastic cutdown in steals, which was to be expected, given his preparation to pitch this year, something he started doing in games in mid-June. Still, it’s not as if Ohtani quit running as a whole; he did steal 20 bags as one of the 20 players in the National League to do that this year.

Cementing his place in this team’s history, Ohtani becomes the first Dodger to win back-to-back Most Valuable Player awards. Roy Campanella is the only other Dodger with multiple MVP awards, but he spread his three awards across a five-year period between 1951 and 1955, never winning it back-to-back.

Looking at the National League as a whole, Ohtani joins a list of Barry Bonds and Albert Pujols as the only players to win this award on back-to-back occasions in the 21st century. Speaking of Bonds, Ohtani still has a long way to go before reaching those 7 MVP awards, but by collecting a fourth one, Ohtani separates himself from that group of 10 three-time winners. Ohtani is also the first player to win this award twice in each league.

The other two Dodger players involved in the voting were Will Smith and Freddie Freeman, with the latter receiving a pair of top-5 votes.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/107530/dodgers-shohei-ohtani-mvp-award-win
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Lou Trivino

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A baseball season takes a while to complete, and it’s especially long for teams that start early overseas and for teams that advance all the way to the World Series. The 2025 Los Angeles Dodgers started their season on March 18 in Tokyo and ended on November 1 in Toronto, the longest season in MLB history.

Over the course of a long season, teams need an absurdly large cast of characters, sometimes just to get by. Which leads to factoids like this: for the roughly 11 weeks Lou Trivino was active with the Dodgers, nobody on the team pitched more often.

Trivino started the season with the Giants, got designated for assignment by San Francisco and signed a minor league contract with the Dodgers on May 11. One week later he was active again in the majors, and lasted just over two months in a busy Dodgers bullpen. The right-hander was active for a total of 54 games and pitched in 26 of them, tied with left-hander Anthony Banda for most on the team during that time.

The veteran right-hander did not pitch in the majors during the previous two seasons while recovering from Tommy John surgery in May 2023. This year he got into 47 games in the majors for three teams, finishing up with the Phillies after he was released by the Dodgers in July.

With the Dodgers, Trivino was a busy man, pitching three times in a four-day stretch three different times in June, and then pitched three days in a row twice in July. He didn’t often pitch in high-leverage situations, entering with a lead only eight times in his 26 games for Los Angeles. But he filled a role, pitching in parts of two innings 12 times, and 17 of his 26 appearances were scoreless.

Trivino getting designated for assignment on July 21 paved the way for Edgardo Henriquez to get the call for his 2025 debut.

2025 stats​


Age: 33

Stats: 26 games, 2-1, 3.76 ERA, 26 1/3 IP, 8 BB, 18 K, 4.12 FIP with Dodgers

Salary: unknown with Dodgers (earned pro-rated share of $1.5 million for his time with Giants, with whom he signed a minor league contract in February)

Game of the year​


On June 27 in Kansas City, Trivino entered in the sixth inning and promptly allowed a single to Royals catcher Freddy Fermin, who was replaced by pinch-runner Tyler Tolbert. Trivino picked Tolbert off first base, then retired his next four batters faced for 1 2/3 scoreless innings with a strikeout, and earned one of his two wins for the Dodgers in relief.

View Link

Trivino picked off two runners while with the Dodgers, the only two pickoffs of his six-year major league career to date.

Roster status​


Trivino is a free agent.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/107287/lou-trivino-2025-dodgers-review
 
Whine and circuses

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The Dodgers have won back-to-back World Championships. Yes, I was there at Game 7, serving as a calming force for others, a fact that I will harp on for the foreseeable future. Even hardened cynics are proclaiming that this World Series is the best of all time. I’m not sure I can go that far, but it was certainly entertaining.

However, I did promise that I would point out how the Dodgers were ruining baseball, even if just a little bit.

I was prepared to let this issue sit for a little bit; after all, I needed a few days to recover and bask in the afterglow of victory. Then, the Canadians would not stop complaining, so we take a brief detour to address this issue first.

Bested with one arm​


I understand how raw feelings can be after losing a World Series.

I never watched the end of Game 7 of the 2017 World Series until after the Dodgers won in 2020, and even then, it was an accident. I washed my hands of the 2018 World Series after Dave Roberts and Ryan Madson robbed me of my joy in Game 4, and Manny Machado had one of the worst at-bats I have ever seen to close out a game in Game 5.

I will tip my cap where credit is due.

The Blue Jays were likely a tougher matchup than the Seattle Mariners. The Blue Jays thoroughly out-hit and out-scored the Dodgers, who hit only .203 for the Series, the lowest mark for a winner since the 1966 Baltimore Orioles, who had a .200 mark. For the record, the 1966 Dodgers hit .142 in that World Series while getting swept in Sandy Koufax’s last ride.

Toronto led for 25 of 27 outs. In 2025, I had firsthand experience of seeing a lead improbably evaporate before the 27th out is recorded. It stinks. The Win Probability Chart for Game 7 resembles an EKG for a patient experiencing a cardiac episode.


With all that understanding in mind, when someone paid to talk about baseball says something incredibly dumb, even in the heat of the moment, we should take a moment to chuckle. This reflection is intended to remind us not to be that dumb if we ever find ourselves in that situation.

As the Dodgers were celebrating on the field, Sportsnet analyst Caleb Joseph gave his opinion about the recently completed World Series, forgetting how to count to four and opining that the better team had not prevailed in the World Series.

“It’s gonna sound like sour grapes, and I don’t really give a shit. I think the better team did not win this series.” pic.twitter.com/BumF5Drnn5

— Rob Williams (@RobTheHockeyGuy) November 2, 2025

At the beginning of the World Series, I said that if the Dodgers hit like in the Wild Card round, the series would be delightfully short, and if the Dodgers hit like the Division Series round, the team better break out the Tums for everyone. The antacid flowed like the sands of Arrakis as the Dodger bats were generally in neutral for the championship.

It was a bit of a circuitous journey, but statistically, both in offense and pitching, the Blue Jays were numerically superior in this series. However, baseball is a cruel and funny sport: you can out-hit and out-pitch your opponent and still lose a series.

However, the Dodgers prevailed with one arm tied behind their back.

If you can’t solve Yoshinobu Yamamoto (and to a lesser extent Justin Wrobleski), you don’t get to call yourself champion.

If you can’t outslug an offense that has been slumping for the better part of a month, you don’t get to call yourself champion.

The Dodgers only had two regulars hit above .250 in the World Series: Shohei Ohtani (.333) and Will Smith (.267).

If you waste home-field advantage for the final two games of the year, you don’t get to call yourself champion.

Just like the Mariners let the Blue Jays off the hook by blowing a 2-0 ALCS lead, the Blue Jays let the Dodgers off the hook by blowing a 3-2 World Series lead with home-field advantage. Toronto had their numerous chances to finish off the Dodgers and could not do it. To quote Joe Davis: to beat the champ, you gotta knock him out.

Remember what the Mythbusters taught us: sliding leads to outs on bases you can overrun. Oops.

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I would generally let whining like this go without comment. Still, I remember how chirpy Blue Jays fans were after beating the Mariners and during this series. And as I recall the chirping I received during Game 7, and the absolute silence outside the ballpark once I left to return to my hotel, I just smile.

The NHL-ification of MLB​


How are the Dodgers ruining baseball? Certainly not by embracing the role of villain.

As an aside from the video, some of the Dodgers could definitely upgrade their walk-up music, but that topic is one for a later day. If you want to stop the Dodgers, beat them.

It’s not through their spending. My contempt is reserved for teams that seemed destined to be fodder. For example, the Anaheim Angels have spent over one billion dollars on player contracts from 2011 to 2021, and the team got considerably worse, despite having first-ballot Hall of Famers Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani (who arrived in 2018).

Expanded playoffs in MLB mean that teams that do not merit advancement do so only for the pleasure of serving as cannon fodder. The Cincinnati Reds had no business making the playoffs, serving as a speed bump and a reminder of what the Dodgers can do when they actually hit their stride. Expanding the playoffs even further would mean more teams like the Reds and more instances of chance being introduced into the postseason tournament, which would diminish the regular season as a whole.

Go too far, and you have to resort to gimmicks to try to undo what was supposed to be an improvement. Half the league makes the NHL playoffs, which is too many teams; hence, the made-up term “NHL-ification.” Currently, MLB admits just over a third of the league into the postseason, which is arguably too many teams. However, if we have more Octobers like the one we just had, it is a survivable trade-off.

As these past postseason essays have covered, a third of MLB franchises are more interested in looking like they are trying than actually trying to field a competitive roster. Fans should treat teams like the Baltimore Orioles or Minnesota Twins with contempt, as they had glimmers of promise that were snuffed out in the crib because their respective ownership groups were too cheap to build upon the success. Now the Orioles are adrift, and the Twins were sold off for pennies on the dollar at this year’s trade deadline.

How are the Dodgers ruining baseball? By making a devil’s bargain at the risk of forgetting what the sport is.

Yes, the Dodgers ultimately won their division and ultimately another championship. Still, they resembled an early 2000s Los Angeles Lakers team that would bumble through the regular season, turn it on for the postseason, and win.

Baseball is the sound of spring and summer. One of baseball’s many strengths is the long, languid nature of its regular season. It does not demand your attention like American football or the Premier League.

Yes, before the pitch clock, the sport could be too languid, but for the most part, the regular season marathon plays out in the background and does not command the same level of attention as its postseason or other sports, such as the NFL.

The pitch clock and the regular-season Manfred Man in extra innings have been a godsend to the sport. Extra-inning marathons like Game 3 of the World Series? In October, sublime. In July, hell — some of us have things to do in the morning.

Can the pendulum switch back towards a less frantic pace? Sure. Personally, if the Manfred Man did not go live until the eleventh inning, the spirit of the rule could be honored while keeping most of its practical effect.

The key to understanding modern baseball is that it is, in fact, two sports in one: a lengthy marathon that sets up seeding for a shorter, more intense sprint to determine the overall winner. The same skills that lead to success in the marathon often do not translate over to the sprint; after all, as the Dodgers have learned over the past few years, there is no trophy for finishing with the best regular-season record in baseball.

Therefore, even though the Milwaukee Brewers had the best regular season in baseball in 2025, there is no prize apart from having home-field advantage throughout the playoffs for having the best record. Building your team to focus on small ball and stealing bases works well for a regular-season campaign that unfolds over time. What generally works in the postseason is having power arms in the rotation and the ability to slug home runs.

Alternative strategies can be effective, but they have a significantly narrower margin of error, especially if a team enters the postseason tournament with injuries. I am moderately amused that the finalists for National League manager of the year were the three managers dispatched by Dave Roberts and the Dodgers in the postseason tournament.

Pat Murphy can be folksy as he likes with his pocket pancakes, but I guarantee you that he would much rather be managing in the World Series than racking up personal achievements. Yet when I hear word that the Brewers are seeking to trade their best pitcher, it is increasingly difficult for me to take that organization seriously.

At some point, racking up extra wins in the regular season is wasted effort because there is nothing to be gained. (See: 2022 Dodgers.) At some point, if the team shows up banged up to the postseason, it may not matter. (See: 2023 Dodgers.) Sometimes you have to take unorthodox personnel, mash them together, and rely on the team to stumble (See: 2024 Dodgers, also 2025 NLDS Dodgers).

Admittedly, I was of two minds when forecasting the playoffs, as I was spectacularly annoyed with the Dodgers’ summer, which will happen. In my heart, there was a “just” option for what was about to happen, and in my head, there was an option that we all deserved because no one deserved anything nice. At the start of the playoffs, the “just” option was a dudefest Phillies/Mariners World Series. The worst option was a Dodgers/Yankees rematch, as both teams had scuffled throughout the year, and the needless drama from the Bronx was already making me gag.

Frankly, 40 years between matchups was not quite enough.

Around the time that I came back from Pittsburgh and Baltimore, Craig Goldstein of Baseball Prospectus wrote an interesting paywalled essay that argued that the Dodgers were, in fact, ruining baseball, and summarized my feelings about what the Dodgers were going quite well:

The difference between [now and previous seasons] is that the Dodgers had enough cushion within the division that whatever in-season experiments they wanted to run were basically irrelevant. That’s the kind of thing you can do without causing agita when you win 111 games and finish the season 22 up on your next closest competitor. …

But it’s the similarities that create the bigger problem. In both situations, Roberts and the Dodgers seem to just…not care all that much. Obviously, their preference is to win, you don’t spend what they’ve spent just to win in the playoffs, but to be good enough to sell lots of tickets and ads throughout the season, too. …

There’s nothing strictly wrong with prioritizing a World Series; it’s where the league and its culture have arrived, hand in hand. But the impact of taking the longest view available at every possible turn undeniably results in a diluted on-field product—again, much as we’ve seen with the league as a whole. …

And that kind of thinking can make a certain kind of sense. The league has devalued winning the division, especially if you’re not a top-two seed. The Dodgers likely look at the benefits of being the third-seed division winner compared to the fourth-seed top Wild Card and…shrug. It’s home-field advantage in the Wild Card round either way, so why press things?

And yet, the Dodgers stumbled through the summer like someone who was either drunk or very hungover at the circus.

Some of the Dodgers attributed the poor regular-season play to fatigue, but, truthfully, they were defeated by their own past success throughout the year. It is hard to gin oneself up for six games with the Anaheim Angels, but even the most passive observer could tell that the Dodgers were not nearly as sharp as they once had been.

Throughout the year, the 2025 Dodgers said their first mission was to win the division with the team as healthy as possible. A team that respected the regular season would not have tolerated the inept bullpen play of Blake Treinen, Tanner Scott, and Kirby Yates, much less kept sending them out to lose ballgames in spectacularly awful fashion. A team that respected the regular season would not have kept Michael Conforto around the entire year, while discarding Chris Taylor. A team that respected the regular season would have actually improved its roster at the trade deadline, no disrespect to Alex Call, Paul Gervase, and Brock Stewart.

Yes, the Dodgers ultimately won their division and ultimately another championship. Still, they resembled an early 2000s Los Angeles Lakers team that would bumble through the regular season, turn it on for the postseason, and win. One should not be an underachieving A-student. Channelling Matt Damon’s character from Good Will Hunting is not a good look.

It is worth repeating that if the Dodgers had even an adequate bullpen, they likely would have had the number-one seed for the playoffs.

It is worth repeating that if the Dodgers’ regulars, apart from Ohtani and Smith, had even average World Series performers, the team likely would have celebrated at home for the second time in franchise history.

Dwelling on the what-ifs is of no help (just ask Toronto for the foreseeable future), but learning the proper lessons from what worked will be beneficial. Asking Yoshinobu Yamamoto to have back-to-back generational performances seems a bit unfair and unlikely.

As an aside, I speak from plenty of personal experience on this point. The notions of success and hard work did not go together in my mind for far longer than they should have.

While the Dodgers’ inept play annoyed me during the year, I will admit that this run was a pleasant surprise. I wrote off the Dodgers doing anything of consequence, ironically enough, on August 10th — the date on which the Dodgers failed to secure a sweep of the Toronto Blue Jays. This game, ironically, was the margin of difference in who wound up with home-field advantage in this final round.

Currently, this problem is more academic than anything else.

It seems unlikely that other teams will adopt the Dodgers’ strategy as more than a third of the league refuses to spend on their rosters. However, if the Dodgers insist on running the same strategy in 2026, would it be too much to ask for them to be a bit more adaptable and willing to admit that certain things are not working? Yes, the Dodgers are champions once again; my only gripe is that the year felt like more of a slog than it had any right to be. Still, this circus was entertaining in the end.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/106204/world-series-wrap-up-aftermath
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Gavin Stone

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Gavin Stone was the answer to a trivia question in 2024, as he led a championship team in both starts (25) and innings pitched (140 1/3), but did not pitch during the postseason.

The right-hander had shoulder surgery in October 2024, which not only wiped out a potential playoff run but also the entire 2025 season as well. Stone in 2025 was the first Dodger to be placed on the 60-day injured list, on February 11 just after spring training opened to make room for the return of Kiké Hernández.

How soon Stone is able to return next year remains to be seen, but his surgery was a major one, repairing both the capsule, labrum, and rotator cuff of his right shoulder. Stone explained the procedure to Matthew Moreno of Dodger Blue during spring training:

“The capsule was a big thing. I don’t necessarily know what happened, but the capsule was being scraped by the bone, or something like that. And they did a partial labrum and partial rotator as well. Basically a new shoulder. Just trying to get healthy right now and get stronger is the main aspect.”

Looking through the Baseball Prospectus injury recovery dashboard, here are a few recent pitchers who had capsule surgery in the last few years:

  • Brandon Woodruff: surgery in November 2023, back in majors July 2025
  • Kyle Wright: surgery October 2023, back in minors May 2025, minor league IL from July to end of season
  • Sam Hentges: surgery September 2024, did not pitch in 2025

Stone is one of several Dodgers pitchers who spent the entire 2025 season on the injured list, along with Brusdar Graterol, River Ryan, Kyle Hurt, and Michael Grove. All are ostensibly in the mix for playing time at some point in 2026 after returning from surgery, except for Grove, who was sent outright to the minors off the 40-man roster on November 6 and subsequently became a minor league free agent.

2025 stats​


Age: 26

Stats: did not pitch

Salary: $780,000

Roster status​


Stone has two years, 34 days of major league service time, and two option years remaining.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/107402/gavin-stone-2025-dodgers-review
 
2025 Dodgers season review: José Ureña

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José Ureña had a record-setting year in 2025, and that included a week with the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Ureña not only joined the Buddy Kennedy club, playing for both World Series teams — the Dodgers and Blue Jays — but the veteran pitcher tied a major league record by pitching for five teams in 2025. Only three players in National League/American League history have played for five teams in one season, and all are pitchers, a byproduct of the modern trend of teams churning through pitchers at a rapid rate.

Oliver Drake was the modern trendsetter with his five-team 2018, and Mike Baumann in 2024 did the same. Outfielder Bobo Leonard also played for five teams in the Negro Leagues in 1924.

Ureña’s first stop of 2025 was with the Mets, for whom he had a perfect stint in my opinion — one appearance on April 28, allowing five runs while recording a three-inning save. Then came seven games in May for the Blue Jays.

The Dodgers signed Ureña on June 3, capping a six-day stretch that also saw the Dodgers trade for relievers Alexis Díaz and Will Klein. Ureña pitched that night, entering a tie game in the ninth, and got two outs but also allowed a double, which was stranded after he left.

Two days later, Ureña got seven outs while allowing a run in another game against the Mets. The Dodgers won both of his appearances 6-5, including June 5, the only game of the Dodgers season in which the score matched the date.

Roster churn continued on June 10, when Ureña was designated for assignment to make room for Matt Sauer getting called up. But that didn’t stop his journey, as he pitched four games for the Twins in August and six games for the Angels in September. Ureña’s time with each of his teams was relegated within one month. Just think, had he gotten to the majors with the Twins sooner rather than spending July in Triple-A St. Paul, there might have been time for a sixth team.

Maybe next year.

2025 stats​


Age: 33

Stats: 2 games, 3 IP, 1 run, 2 K with Dodgers; 4.58 ERA, 6.85 xERA in 19 games for five teams

Salary: unknown with Dodgers (original minors deal with Mets paid pro-rated share of $2 million in majors)

Game of the year​


Ureña got seven outs from the sixth to the eighth innings on June 5 against the Mets in a game the Dodgers were trailing. He allowed three hits and a run, and struck out Jeff McNeil and Francisco Alvarez in a no-decision. The first strikeout included a Will Smith back pick to nail Starling Marte at third for an inning-ending double play.

View Link

Roster status​


Ureña is a free agent.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/107334/jose-urena-2025-dodgers-review
 
Dodgers 2025 season review: James Outman

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James Outman struggled mightily for a second straight year following his breakout rookie season, playing in just 22 games with the Dodgers before being traded to the Minnesota Twins at the trade deadline.

After making the opening day roster in each of the past two seasons, Outman opened the season in Triple-A with the Oklahoma City Comets, where he opened the season slashing .253/.322/.508 with eight home runs over his first 32 games. Outman was eventually called up back to the big league level on May 6 after an adductor injury to Teoscar Hernández, hitting a pair of home runs in his absence before being demoted back to Triple-A on May 19.

Back with Oklahoma City, Outman improved drastically at the plate, cutting his strikeout rate from 36.3 percent down to 25.7 percent. He slashed a robust .318/.422/.622 with 12 home runs over 38 games before an elbow injury to Kiké Hernández signaled another promotion to the big leagues on July 7.

Outman found sparse playing time back with the big league club, only accruing 17 plate appearances over his next 13 games. He had just one hit, a double back on July 7, and started just five games manning center field. His final game as a Dodgers came on July 30, where he came in as a late defensive replacement in center field against the Cincinnati Reds. The following day, he was dealt to the Minnesota Twins before the trade deadline for reliever Brock Stewart, who previously played with the Dodgers from 2016-19.

Outman played another 12 games with the Triple-A St. Paul Twins before making his Twins debut on Aug. 16, where he began to find regular playing time for a team that just underwent a massive fire sale at the deadline. Outman played in 37 games to the end the season with Minnesota, still underwhelming to a .147/.221/.337 slash line with four home runs.

2025 particulars​


Age: 28

Stats with Dodgers: .103/.205/.282, 2 HR, 4 RBI, 37 wRC+, -0.2 rWAR, -0.1 fWAR. Stats with Dodgers and Twins: .134/.216/.321, 6 HR, 11 RBI, 48 wRC+, -1.0 rWAR, -0.5 fWAR, 59 games

Salary: Unknown

Game of the year​


Outman only had three games where he collected at least one hit with the Dodgers in 2025, and his only multi-hit game came on May 15 against the Athletics. Outman collected two hits including a home run, the last one he hit in a Dodger uniform, as the Dodgers steamrolled their way to scoring a season-high 19 runs.

James Outman joins the fun! pic.twitter.com/ZgbBEh2w1w

— MLB (@MLB) May 16, 2025

Roster status​


Outman is on the Twins’ 40-man roster.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/107319/james-outman-2025-dodgers-review
 
Dodgers 40-man roster for 2025-26 offseason

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With the 2025 season now concluded, we’ll keep track of every transaction by the Dodgers for the entire offseason here, beginning with the advent of free agency on November 2 until the start of spring training.

We will update this page throughout the offseason with every transaction, and links below to specific details about every roster move by the team. You can also find more information on each move in our Dodgers roster section on the site. Here is a look at how the roster looked at the first day of the offseason.

For more information on Dodgers transactions during the 2025 season, click here.

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

No.Pitchers (24)Bat/throw2026 ageServiceOptions (used)
43Anthony BandaL/L324.1350 (’17-18,’20)
78Ben CaspariusR/R271.0162 (2024)
86Jack DreyerR/L271.0003 (none)
79Nick FrassoR/R270.0021 (2024-25)
65Paul GervaseR/R260.0212 (2025)
31Tyler GlasnowL/R328.158n/a
48Brusdar GraterolR/R275.1672 (2021)
60Edgardo HenriquezR/R240.1642 (2025)
63Kyle HurtR/R281.0992 (2024)
61Will KleinR/R260.0812 (2024)
96Landon KnackL/R280.1192 (2024)
28Bobby MillerR/R271.1191 (2024-25)
59Evan PhillipsR/R315.1360 (2018-20)
77River RyanR/R271.0703 (none)
11Roki SasakiR/R241.0003 (none)
66Tanner ScottR/L317.059n/a
80Emmet SheehanR/R262.0802 (2023)
7Blake SnellL/L339.072n/a
41Brock StewartR/R344.0930 (2016-19)
35Gavin StoneR/R272.0342 (2023)
49Blake TreinenR/R3811.065n/a
51Alex VesiaL/L305.0781 (2021,’23)
70Justin WrobleskiL/L250.1502 (2024)
18Yoshinobu Yamamoto R/R272.000n/a
No.Two-way players (1)Bat/throw2026 ageServiceOptions (used)
17Shohei OhtaniL/R318.000n/a
No.Catchers (2)Bat/throw2026 ageServiceOptions (used)
68Dalton RushingL/R250.1383 (none)
16Will SmithR/R316.0903 (none)
No.Infielders (4)Bat/throw2026 ageServiceOptions (used)
50Mookie BettsR/R3311.070n/a
76Alex FreelandS/R240.0382 (2025)
5Freddie FreemanL/R3615.033n/a
13Max MuncyL/R369.027n/a
No.Outfielders (4)Bat/throw2026 ageServiceOptions (used)
12Alex CallR/R312.1612 (2024)
37Teoscar HernándezR/R338.097n/a
44Andy PagesR/R251.1551 (2023-24)
27Esteury RuizR/R272.0641 (2022, 2025)
No.Infielder/outfielders (3)Bat/throw2026 ageServiceOptions (used)
25Tommy EdmanS/R316.114n/a
6Hyeseong KimL/R270.1492 (2025)
Ryan WardL/R280.0003 (none)
Age is as of June 30, 2026

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

November 16: Robinson Ortiz was traded to the Mariners for minor league pitcher Tyler Gough.

November 12: Ben Rortvedt was claimed off waivers by the Reds. Tony Gonsolin cleared waivers and elected free agency.

November 6: Max Muncy’s $10 million club option for 2026 was exercised.

November 6: Alex Vesia’s $3.65 million club option for 2026 was exercised.

November 6: Justin Dean was claimed off outright waivers by the Giants.

November 6: Tony Gonsolin was designated for assignment, Ryan Ward and Robinson Ortiz were added to the 40-man roster. Michael Grove was sent outright to the minors.

November 2: Clayton Kershaw, Kiké Hernández, Miguel Rojas, Michael Conforto, Kirby Yates, Michael Kopech, and Andrew Heaney are free agents.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-roster/107021/dodgers-roster-2025-2026-offseason
 
Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Will Smith highlight award season

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The 2025 awards have come and gone, and Shohei Ohtani continued to pile up more hardware for his mantel. Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Will Smith were other Dodgers also honored for their efforts this season.

Ohtani has been a Dodger for two seasons, and has won the National League MVP both times, unanimously. His award last week made Ohtani the second Dodger to win multiple MVPs, now one behind catcher Roy Campanella. Ohtani joined Roger Maris (1960-61 with the New York Yankees) as the only players to win MVP in their first two seasons with a new team.

With four career MVP awards, Ohtani is second only to Barry Bonds’ seven for most in MLB history.

“We can just go ahead and keep giving it to him however many years, the rest of his contract, until his done pitching. Then somebody may have a chance,” Mookie Betts said Friday on MLB Network. “If he’s still pitching, man, we can just keep giving it to him.”

That wasn’t all for Ohtani, who won the Edgar Martínez Award as the best designated hitter for the fifth year in a row. The best DH award has been around since 1973, but was named for Martínez in 2004. Ohtani’s five such awards match Martínez’s career total. David Ortiz has the most Martínez awards, with eight.

Ohtani also won the National League Hank Aaron Award as the best offensive player in his league, the third such award in a row. The Aaron award has been around since 1999, and the only other Dodger to win it besides Ohtani was Matt Kemp in 2011.

Ohtani’s three Aaron awards are tied with Aaron Judge and Barry Bonds for second-most, one behind Alex Rodríguez.

All-MLB teams​


Ohtani and Yamamoto were named first-team All-MLB this season, and Smith was the second-team All-MLB catcher. Ohtani has been an All-MLB designated hitter five years in a row, including four first-team honors and second-team in 2022. In addition, Ohtani was an all-MLB starting pitcher from 2021-23 with the Angels, including first-team in 2022 and 2023.

After pitching 67 1/3 innings in the regular season and postseason combined after returning from a second Tommy John surgery in 2025, Ohtani said on the BBWAA conference call after winning MVP looked forward to a full season of pitching in 2026. From Fabian Ardaya in The Athletic:

“I do plan on being able to pitch off mound from the beginning of the season,” he said. “The biggest thing is to be able to stay healthy throughout the season and hopefully be able to start and end the season on the mound.”

Yamamoto was the third Dodgers pitcher to be named first-team All-MLB, along with Walker Buehler and Max Scherzer in 2021. All-MLB awards have been around since 2019.

This was the second All-MLB honor for Smith, who earned second-team honors in 2022.

Other awards​


Yamamoto finished third in NL Cy Young voting, with Paul Skenes getting all 30 first-place votes and Cristopher Sánchez garnering all 30 second-place votes. It’s the highest finish for a Dodger since 2022. Yamamoto was named on 29 of 30 ballots, with 16 third-place votes, 11 fourth-place votes, and two fifth-place votes.

Ohtani captured his fourth Silver Slugger Award as the best-hitting DH in the league. Will Smith had a case for best-hitting NL catcher but lost out in the voting to Hunter Goodman of the Rockies. Ohtani is the fifth Dodger to capture a Silver Slugger in consecutive seasons, joining Dusty Baker (1980-81), Mike Piazza (1993-97), Corey Seager (2016-17), and Mookie Betts (2022-24).

Jack Dreyer finished ninth in NL Rookie of the Year voting, earning one third-place vote and one fifth-place vote.

For the first time in his 10 years at the helm of the Dodgers, Dave Roberts did not receive any votes (each ballot is three deep) for Manager of the Year.

Mookie Betts won the 2025 Roberto Clemente Award for his philanthropic work, which was awarded during the World Series. He also won a Fielding Bible Award as the best defensive shortstop in baseball. He was among the top three for an NL Gold Glove Award at the position, with Cardinals shortstop Masyn Winn taking home that honor.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...s-shohei-ohtani-yoshinobu-yamamoto-will-smith
 
Here Today, Gon-dola 2025: Funicular Fight, Part 3

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If it’s the Dodgers’ offseason, it’s time to discuss the ongoing potential boondoggle of the Dodger Gondola project. The construction project to build a gondola system to take passengers to and from Union Station to Dodger Stadium by way of Chinatown has been hotly debated from the start.

When we last covered this story in May, the Second Appellate District of the California Court of Appeals ordered that the approval of the Environmental Impact Report (EIR) by L.A. Metro be set aside due to the deficiencies in the EIR, in part, a failure to address audio levels resulting from the gondola’s construction and operation.

Over the summer, there was a failed attempt by backers of the Gondola to modify state law to allow projects the Gondola to be fast tracked.

As lead agency of the project, now spearheaded by Zero Emissions Transit (ZET), L.A. Metro drafted and submitted a supplemental EIR on September 30, which you can read here in its 437 pages of glory. Naturally, we were all paying attention to the start of the Wild Card Series rather than sifting through environmental reports. L.A. Metro’s public comment period on the supplemental EIR ended last Thursday.

However, the Gondola Project may finally be facing public institutional resistance.

Turnabout at the L.A. City Council​


On Thursday, November 13, in a stunning reversal, the L.A. City Council voted 12-1 in favor of the resolution, introduced by Councilmember Euniesses Hernandez of District 1 and Councilmember Ysabel Jurado of District 14, urging L.A. Metro to kill the project.

The resolution stated in part:

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that by adoption of this Resolution, the City of Los Angeles hereby OPPOSES the Los Angeles Aerial Rapid Transit (LA ART) project, and URGES the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro), in its consideration of the Supplemental Environmental Impact Report (EIR) for the LA ART, dated September 25, 2025, to OPPOSE the readoption of the [Final EIR] Findings and the Statement of Overriding Considerations for the LA ART project, and DENY reapproval of the project.“

Before the vote, Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez released a statement regarding her ongoing opposition to the Dodgers Gondola project:

“This gondola is not a public transit solution,” said Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez. “It is a private development scheme disguised as transportation, designed to raise the value of a billionaire’s parking lots, not to serve working Angelenos. Our communities have said loudly and clearly that they do not want a project that threatens their homes, their park, their green space, and their quality of life. We refuse to sacrifice Chinatown and Solano Canyon so a private developer can profit.”

For the resolution to take effect, Mayor Karen Bass would need to approve the resolution. Considering that Mayor Bass crafted the compromise that L.A. approved in February 2024, this very public rebuke of the project is a shocking turn of events. Granted, the Bass Compromise of 2024 did feel like a genuine effort to move the project forward while acknowledging the legitimate concerns of project detractors.

A 12-1 vote from the City Council is all but an open declaration of war on the project.

The main intervening incident since the approval is the series of wildfires that struck various parts of Los Angeles in early 2025. Suddenly, a flawed project with no public financials, even after all these years, is seen for the turkey it clearly is. As the cost estimates have risen from $125 million in private funds in 2018 to $300 million in private funds in 2020, and to $500 million of public and private funds in 2024, the ongoing question of who will pay for the project grows starker by the day.

Inflationary factors have impacted all sorts of construction projects including the Gondola Project, from the Sacramento Athletics’ new home in Las Vegas, Nevada to repair and refitting of the roof of Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida.

Jon Christensen, a founder of the Los Angeles Park Alliance and litigant of the lawsuit that was ultimately successfully appealed to the Second Appellate District of the California Court of Appeals, released a statement after the council vote:

The city council did the right thing today. They supported the three council members whose districts would be directly impacted by Frank McCourt’s proposed gondola: Eunisses Herdnandez, Ysabel Jurado, and Hugo Soto-Martinez.

Those council members are opposed because of the harmful impacts this project would have on their constituents and communities in El Pueblo, Olvera Street, Chinatown, and Solano Canyon, as well as Los Angeles State Historic Park and Elysian Park.

This is a textbook example where it makes sense for other council members to defer to the council members whose districts would be directly impacted by a project since this project would have no benefits for other districts.

There are far better solutions to the challenges of bringing fans from all over Los Angeles to Dodger Stadium.
The Metro board should follow the council’s example and defer to the local elected officials who best represent their communities so that Los Angeles can now move forward with better transit solutions.

Nathan Click, spokesman of Zero Emissions Transit, the primary private entity working with L.A. Metro to construct the conduct, also released a statement:

This resolution contains a number of blatant falsehoods and misleading statements. The truth is that this project will expand transit options for Angelenos while reducing air pollution in some of the most polluted communities in our city. The councilwoman’s resolution stands in stark opposition to the efforts of other Los Angeles leaders like Supervisor Hilda Solis, who secured long-sought legacy goals for the neighborhoods secured in conjunction with the project. This project is a win for the community.

L.A. Metro is expected to consider and vote on whether to recertify the final EIR later at its general meeting next month or early next year. The agenda for the December 4th General Board meeting has not been released as of the time of this article.

We will provide updates as this ongoing story develops. In the interim, next time, we are going to do something different as for five offseasons, I have done nothing but point out why this project is a terrible idea. It is time to suggest what the Dodgers, L.A. Metro and the city of Los Angeles should do and why.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...ere-today-gondola-2025-funicular-fight-part-3
 
2025 Dodgers player season reviews

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The Los Angeles Dodgers in 2025 played the longest season in MLB history, starting their schedule on March 18 in Japan and ending it on November 1 in Canada while winning Game 7 of the World Series.

Here we look back at the season by chronicling every single player who spent any time on the Dodgers 40-man roster from the start of spring training through the end of the postseason. They used a franchise-record 62 different players during the season, and tied a team record set the year before by using 40 different pitchers.

But we are reviewing a total of 73 players, which includes some folks who spent the entire season on the injured list and others who were on the 40-man roster but never got called up to the Dodgers.

Our 2025 season reviews began with Blake Snell on November 5 and we’ll end things, fittingly, with Yoshinobu Yamamoto on December 31. Links to each player review can be found below.

2025 season reviews​


Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...los-angeles-dodgers-roster-2025-season-review
 
Dodgers add Ronan Kopp to 40-man roster

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The Dodgers added pitcher Ronan Kopp to the 40-man roster, ahead of Tuesday’s deadline to set rosters ahead of the Rule 5 Draft.

Earlier this offseason, the Dodgers also added outfielder/first baseman Ryan Ward and pitcher Robinson Ortiz to the 40-man roster to keep them from reaching minor league free agency. Ortiz on Sunday was traded to the Seattle Mariners for minor league pitcher Tyler Gough.

Kopp was drafted by the Dodgers in the 12th round in 2021 out of South Mountain Community College in Arizona. That was just a year out of high school in Scottsdale, where he was coached by former Angels outfielder Tim Salmon.

The 6’7 left-hander had a 3.43 ERA and 2.99 FIP in 49 games this season between Double-A Tulsa and Triple-A Oklahoma City, with 91 strikeouts in 57 2/3 innings. Kopp’s 36-percent strikeout rate was third-best in the Dodgers minors in 2025 among pitchers with at least 40 innings, trailing only Ryan Brown and Alex Makarewich, both of whom pitched in both Class-A levels, and in fewer innings.

As is the case with many young pitching prospects with live arms, walks are the main bugaboo for Kopp, who issued 42 free passes in those 57 2/3 innings, with a 16.6-percent walk rate.

In October, Ian Cundall at Baseball America said this of the left-hander:

Kopp has a deceptive delivery. He’s a short-strider with a high release height and steep approach angle. Kopp throws everything hard. His fastball sits in the mid-90s and touches 98.9 mph, while his slider averages around 90 mph. Both pitches miss bats—his slider generated a 44% whiff rate and his fastball 32%—but neither found the strike zone more than 50% of the time.

Kopp was promoted to Oklahoma City in July after a stretch of 15 appearances without allowing an earned run for Tulsa, a span that got to 16 games and 20 2/3 innings including his first game in Triple-A. He held his own with the Comets, with a 2.53 ERA in 21 games in the high-octane Pacific Coast League, and allowed only one home run in 253 batters faced on the season. He turned 23 years old in July.

After adding Kopp, the Dodgers have 39 players on the 40-man roster, including 25 pitchers.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-roster/107660/dodgers-40-man-roster-ronan-kopp
 
Dodgers need more position players

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It’s still quite early in the offseason, but at the moment the Dodgers have only 14 position players on the 40-man roster. They will clearly be adding multiple players, because teams must have at least 13 active position players. So let’s take a look at what’s in house at the moment, and where needs arise.

Regulars or semi-regulars (9)​


Unicorn (1): Shohei Ohtani DH/P

Catcher (1): Will Smith

Infielders (4): Freddie Freeman, Tommy Edman IF/OF, Mookie Betts, Max Muncy

Outfielders (3): Teoscar Hernández, Andy Pages, Alex Call

Extra position players (5)​


Dalton Rushing: The other catcher on the 40-man roster, who could conceivably play first base or left field as needed. Struggled in first season in majors, hitting .204/.258/324 with 37.4-percent strikeout rate in 155 plate appearances.

Hyeseong Kim: Excellent defender at second base, with some concerns whether he can hit enough for a relevant role. Hit .175/.195/.225 with 41-percent strikeout rate over 83 plate appearances over the final three months of the regular season.

Alex Freeland: Shortstop who made major league debut in July and played mostly at third base and second base with Dodgers. Switch-hitter hit .190/.292/.310 in 97 plate appearances.

Esteury Ruiz: Has speed. It’s hard to see him lasting the offseason on the 40-man roster.

Ryan Ward: First baseman and corner outfielder, the reigning Pacific Coast League MVP, was added to the 40-man roster on November 6 to avoid reaching minor league free agency. Whether that translates into a real shot at major league playing time remains to be seen.

The problem​


Dodgers outfielders in 2025 were, as a group, below average on both offense and defense, hitting .240/.299/.415 with a 98 wRC+, fifth-worst in on-base percentage in baseball and 18th with negative-4 Outs Above Average in the field.

The Los Angeles outfield was 18th in MLB with 4.3 FanGraphs Wins Above Replacement, with Andy Pages accounting for nearly all of that production at 4.1 fWAR. Pages and Teoscar Hernández are sure starters, with their alignment likely dependent on what other outfielders the Dodgers add into the mix this offseason.

Tommy Edman theoretically should be able to play center field as needed, but he’ll also be coming off right ankle surgery that might limit him, at least early in 2026. Edman will likely see a lot of time at second base, and there should be plenty of opportunities to fill in as well at third base, where Max Muncy has started only 156 of 324 games the last two regular seasons due to injuries.

Getting up there​


Only five returning Dodgers started 100 games in 2025, with Shohei Ohtani (158 starts) and Pages (155) leading the way. Pages is heading into his age-25 season but everyone else among the regulars are on the wrong side of 30. Ohtani wants to pitch the entire season in 2026 at age 31, which might necessitate a few more days off even if it’s just not hitting in some games that he’s pitching. Mookie Betts (148 starts in 2025) is 33, Freddie Freeman (145 starts) is 36, Hernández (132 starts) is 33.

Max Muncy is back but has started just 156 games over the last two seasons and is now 35 years old. Edman started 126 games the last two years and just had ankle surgery heading into his age-31 season. These seven players combined for 919 starts in 2025. Even if they repeat that total in 2026 — which isn’t a given, considering all but Pages are in their thirties — that’s still 215 starts to account for to fill these seven slots.

This is not a core group of regulars a team should rely on starting 140 games each. They are going to need help, which is what the offseason is for.

Options​


Kyle Tucker is the top prize on the free agent market this year, and has topped four Wins Above Replacement at both Baseball Reference and FanGraphs in each of the last five seasons, including in a 2024 campaign in which he played only half the year. The Dodgers have been linked to old friend Cody Bellinger by both Jeff Passan at ESPN and Jack Harris at the Los Angeles Times, which would give them another good defensive outfielder.

The Dodgers could theoretically pursue Bo Bichette to play second base, which would mean more outfield time for Edman plus backing up at several infield positions. This is all before getting to the inevitable wondering about the returns of veterans Miguel Rojas and/or Kiké Hernández.

Given the current state of the roster, Dalton Rushing is the only “extra” player I’d consider a lock for the active roster. Hyeseong Kim probably gets a shot as a reserve as well, but the Dodgers need to add at least two position players this offseason and maybe three.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...s/107658/dodgers-roster-position-player-depth
 
Dodgers-Diamondbacks opening day game exclusively on NBC/Peacock

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Major League Baseball on Wednesday announced a series of new broadcast deals with ESPN, NBC, and Netflix for 2026-28, essentially replacing the final three years of ESPN’s previous deal which the network and MLB opted out of. Part of the restructuring is Sunday Night Baseball now exclusively on NBC and Peacock.

The first game of the new NBC contract with MLB is the Dodgers’ opening day contest on Thursday, March 26 against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Dodger Stadium. Game times for 2026 haven’t yet been announced, but NBC touts that Dodgers vs. Diamondbacks will be the only primetime MLB game on opening day. Whether that means locally or nationally remains to be seen. Last year, for instance, the Dodgers’ home opener was exclusively on ESPN and started at 4 p.m. in Los Angeles, 7 p.m. on the east coast.

Part of Netflix’s contract with MLB includes an exclusive “opening night” the day before opening day, like how ESPN used to have a lone Sunday Night Baseball game when opening day was on Monday. Next season, the Netflix opening night game is the Giants and Yankees on Wednesday, March 25 in San Francisco.

NBC now has Sunday Night Baseball, a 25-game slate they say is “a mixture of games on NBC/Peacock (in all available Sunday night broadcast windows) and Peacock/NBCSN exclusives,” plus the entire wild card round. That was the bulk of ESPN’s previous commitment, with Netflix taking over broadcasts of the Home Run Derby.

MLB Sunday Leadoff games will be on Peacock, a group of 18 games that were on Peacock in 2022 and 2023 and The Roku Channel the last two seasons. NBC says these Sunday morning games will have one game simulcast on NBC and the other 17 on Peacock and NBC Sports Network.

ESPN’s old contract was set to pay $550 million per year to MLB through 2028. Andrew Marchand at The Athletic reported that ESPN will still pay that amount, with the NBC and Netflix deals bringing in nearly $250 million annually to MLB.

ESPN will continue to have exclusive weeknight games, now 30 per season with the new contract, plus The Little League Classic each year. In addition, ESPN is now the rights holder for MLBtv, which will still be available through MLB platforms in 2026.

Per ESPN:

New MLB.TV subscribers will be able to purchase and stream the service through the enhanced ESPN App and enjoy its suite of interactive features and functionalities – alongside more than 50,000 other sports events and content from ESPN’s family of networks. Both new and existing MLB.TV subscribers will have the ability to access the service on the ESPN App and through MLB platforms.

From Marchand at The Athletic:

ESPN has not decided how it will sell MLB.TV, but it is expected to be at the same $150 per year that subscribers paid when it was under the league’s control. For at least the first year, subscribers will still be able to continue on the MLB app. T-Mobile is expected to continue, allowing fans to receive the service for free.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...amondbacks-opening-day-television-nbc-peacock
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Anthony Banda

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No pitcher on the roster appeared in more games for the Dodgers in 2025 than Anthony Banda, perhaps not the hero this team deserved, but the one it needed to get through a grind of a regular season filled with underwhelming performances, some disappointment, and a great need for innings-eaters.

Part of a roster that performed a full 180 in terms of which unit of its pitching it relied on in the most crucial times from 2024 to 2025, Banda found himself immersed in that change despite posting his usual steady numbers, for the most part.

Being as productive in 2025 as he was in his first season with the Dodgers, a point that we’ll get to a bit later on, Banda performed a much larger and more effective role in the 2024 postseason as part of a loaded bullpen than he did in 2025 as a member of a weaker unit.

After not even appearing in the Wild Card Round, Banda earned some trust with one crucial inning against the Phillies in the NLDS. Shortly after that, he proceeded to implode in the World Series, allowing six earned runs in the Fall Classic, right as the Dodgers needed him the most. This performance, much like for the rest of the bullpen, was a far cry from the one run allowed in eight innings during the 2024 postseason.

Now, while the results (3.18 ERA in 2025 and 3.08 in 2024) were similar during this past regular season, Banda went about things on a different path, both in terms of his approach and also how he achieved those results.

For starters, after seeing that four-seam fastball look like the most vulnerable of his heavily utilized pitches in 2024, Banda leaned much more heavily on the slider in 2025. While that negatively affected his K-BB% ratio, there were plenty of positives to take away from this new approach.

Banda managed to sustain a similar ERA by drastically cutting down on the number of hits he allowed, courtesy of an unsustainably low BABIP of .227. Even if some of that skill set could be argued as sustainable, Banda will need to cut down on the walk rate of over 12 percent he put up in 2025. He doesn’t have anywhere near the level of stuff to negate something like that on a long-term basis. His 23.2 K% since becoming a Dodger highlights that rather fairly.

2025 particulars​


Age: 32

Stats: 71 games, 3.19 ERA, 3.64 xERA, 65 IP, 34 walks, 61 strikeouts

Salary: $1 million

Game of the year​


The Dodgers trailed the Twins at home 3-2 in the top of the ninth inning of a late July matchup. Banda took the mound, and he struck out the side, stranding a one-out single, enough to give the Dodgers the opportunity to come back and win it in walk-off fashion after nine. At the time, Banda jumped to a 5-1 record.

Roster status​


Banda is once again arbitration eligible, set to reach free agency at the end of the 2027 campaign.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/107828/anthony-banda-2025-dodgers-review
 
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