2025 Dodgers season review: Will Klein

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At the start of the 2025 season, Will Klein was toiling in Triple-A with the Seattle Mariners, but he ended it by being a saving grace for the Dodgers with a legendary Game 3 performance in the World Series.

Klein made his big league debut in 2024 with the Kansas City Royals, later being packaged in a deal to the Oakland Athletics for reliever Lucas Erceg. Klein struggled across eight games between both teams, allowing nine runs on 12 hits across 7 1/3 innings of work. He was designated for assignment on Jan. 17, and was dealt to the Seattle Mariners four days later.

Klein began the 2025 season with the Triple-A Tacoma Rainiers, where he struggled over 21 1/3 innings of work by posting a 7.17 ERA with opposing hitters batting .277 against him. He didn’t see any time with the big league team before being designated for assignment by Seattle on May 31, ultimately being dealt to the Dodgers two days later for left-handed reliever Joe Jacques.

Klein appeared in six games for the Triple-A Oklahoma City Comets before being called up on June 21, with right-handed reliever Jack Little being demoted back to Triple-A. Klein pitched in two games for the Dodgers in June, tossing 3 2/3 shutout innings with five strikeouts before he was quickly demoted, as Luis García was activated off the injured list.

The bulk of Klein’s season in the big leagues came in July, where he endured some troublesome outings such as giving up two runs in a 9-1 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers on July 7 and allowing three runs on three walks (no hits) in a 10-7 loss to the Minnesota Twins on July 22. He posted a 5.14 ERA across seven innings in July, and he spent the entire month of August in the minor leagues. He was later called back up for the final nine games of the regular season, where he tossed 4 2/3 shutout innings while striking out six and walking just one.

The Dodgers faced some tough decisions as to how they would construct their postseason bullpen, considering options such as Tanner Scott, Blake Treinen and Kirby Yates dealt with injuries or severely and consistently underperformed. Klein was added to the postseason pitching staff as a “last-ditch” option, only appearing in a blowout loss to the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 1 of the World Series.

Everything changed on Monday, October 27. The last time the Dodgers played a World Series Game 3 at home was in 2018 against the Boston Red Sox, which lasted 18 innings. The Dodgers experienced another marathon of a game in Game 3, as it also lasted 18 innings. After the 14th inning, the Dodgers only had one bullpen options available, that being Will Klein. Not only did Klein keep Toronto at bay to give the Dodgers a fighting chance at winning, he threw a career-high in pitches at 72, tossed a career-high four shutout innings and struck out a career-high five hitters while only allowing two walks and a hit. Freddie Freeman thankfully prevented the Dodgers from having to send Klein out for a potential fifth inning or have to reach into their rotation for help. His efforts did not go unnoticed, as his glove from Game 3 now finds a home in Cooperstown at the Baseball Hall of Fame Museum.

2025 particulars​


Age: 25

Stats: 1-1, 2.35 ERA, 1.565 WHIP, 2.74 FIP, 21 K, 10 BB, 15 1/3 IP, 181 ERA+, 0.2 rWAR, 0.3 fWAR

Postseason: 5 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 5 K

Salary: unknown

Game of the year​


Nothing can top Klein’s signature performance in Game 3 of the World Series. He instantly made his name known as a postseason legend and saved the Dodgers from having to go with their rotation as viable bullpen options.

Roster status​


Will Klein has 81 days of big league service time and is on the Dodgers 40-man roster.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/108518/will-klein-2025-dodgers-review
 
Dodgers notes: River Ryan, Gavin Stone, Joe Kelly

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Just because the offseason has been relatively slow for the Dodgers compared to the past two offseasons, that doesn’t mean the team doesn’t possess an unruly and tyrannical force upon baseball.

Edwin Díaz has been the only major splurge this offseason as a needs to address the Dodgers’ bullpen issues, but when it comes to the starting rotation, it is the least concerning of issues. With young arms such as Gavin Stone and River Ryan set to make their returns in 2026, the Dave Roberts is hopeful that they will both be contributing pieces to what is already a behemoth of a starting pitching staff, writes Sonja Chen of MLB.com. Considering they weren’t able to play a hand in the Dodgers’ two previous title runs, Chen notes that it might fuel them to feel a sense of urgency.

“I’m excited for River. I’m excited for Gavin,” manager Dave Roberts said at the Winter Meetings. “Because to see your teammates celebrate and go through what we went through and not be able to participate, those are things that we’re all betting on for that extra hunger to kind of make their impact in 2026.”

Links​


Joe Kelly will no longer be a big league pitcher, but don’t call him retired. That’s what he implied when speaking on Baseball Isn’t Boring podcast, and stated that the title of retired doesn’t sit right when discussing the end of an active playing career.

Retiring is something my grandmother did. That’s so disrespectful. I’m sorry to all you out there watching that work real jobs— you guys deserve to retire— but athletes don’t. We just stop f****** playing. It’s used for people who served in the military, it’s used for people who work until they’re 65.“

Clayton Kershaw will be gearing up for his new occupation; being a full-time father without the grind of Major League Baseball coming as a priority. He and his wife, Ellen, announced on Clayton’s Instagram that they have welcomed their new child, a daughter named Chloe.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...er-ryan-gavin-stone-joe-kelly-clayton-kershaw
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Evan Phillips

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Make a list of all the reasons why the Dodger bullpen was not what any of us envisioned at the start of last season, and right at or near the top, you’ll find the absence of Evan Phillips. This bullpen’s most reliable player since he broke out in 2022, Phillips, saw basically his entire 2025 season crushed by injuries.

Well before the Dodgers reported for spring training, it was widely known that Phillips’ 2025 campaign would be somewhat affected by injuries, although no one foresaw an absence of this magnitude. Unavailable in the 2024 World Series due to a right rotator cuff strain, Phillips saw the recovery time of that injury eat into the beginning of his 2025 season, missing the first 21 games of the season.

Phillips was able to start facing hitters in late March already, shortly thereafter going on a rehab assignment in Triple A, one whose negative results in terms of performance didn’t represent a sign of what was to come. Activated on April 18th to replace another high-profile injured reliever in Blake Treinen as the Dodgers kept juggling a flailing bullpen, Phillips made his season debut against the Texas Rangers in a battle of the last two World Series champs.

In a series perhaps most remembered by Kirby Yates promptly blowing a save against his former team, Phillips secured a couple of holds, striking out three of the four batters he faced. Although the exposure was initially limited, as Phillips combined to throw only one inning in the two appearances, the importance of those outs was as significant as it could be. Despite his long absence, Phillips was fed high-leverage work straight away.

Unfortunately for the veteran right-hander, his active contribution to the big league club would be short-lived. Phillips lasted only seven appearances before he once again had to be sidelined with right forearm discomfort, which would eventually lead him to get Tommy John surgery in late May. The Dodgers and Phillips tried to avoid what could be considered a drastic measure by giving him a PRP injection, but it didn’t solve the issue.

Arbitration eligible for the final time in 2026, and due to receive a significant salary for a pitcher who is likely to be out for a decent chunk of the season, at least, Phillips was non-tendered by the Dodgers in November. That move doesn’t necessarily mean the club won’t look to bring him back. In fact, the Dodgers are well-incentivized to resume negotiations with him whenever he does decide to sign for a variety of reasons.

2025 particulars​


Age: 31

Stats: 0.00 ERA, 1.059 WHIP, 6 K, 2 BB, 5.2 IP, 181 ERA+, 0.4 rWAR, 0.2 fWAR

Salary: $6,1 million

Game of the year​


Phillips earned his only save of 2025 in his second-to-last outing before being sidelined, holding down the teeth of the Braves order in a 2-1 win in Atlanta, punching out a couple of batters (Austin Riley and Marcell Ozuna).

Roster status​


Having made a little over 6 million in 2025, Phillips was due for a similar salary in his final year of arbitration eligibility, but the club opted to non-tender him, making him a free agent. Currently free to sign with any team, Phillips is expected to sign a short-term deal, looking to prove his health in the latter part of 2026.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/108629/evan-phillips-2025-dodgers-review
 
2025 Dodgers season review: CJ Alexander

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A major league baseball regular season lasts 186 days, and sometimes longer like when a team starts the season overseas, for instance. Add in spring training, there are seven and a half months during which teams are always looking for ways to upgrade their roster.

Not every transaction ends up notable, but rather represent a moment in time during which someone was available at an exact time a team had a need, or just needed some available depth at the time.

CJ Alexander played parts of the last two seasons in the majors, totaling 25 at-bats with the Royals (2024) and A’s (2025). In both the majors and minors he’s moved around in various corner positions, mostly third base and first base, but also left field and right field at times.

Alexander’s time in the majors with the A’s lasted 12 days and he got into six games before getting optioned. On June 8, Alexander was claimed off waivers by the Yankees and he spent three weeks in Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

He hit the waiver wire again and the Dodgers pounced, claiming Alexander on July 3. This was the day after Max Muncy suffered a bone bruise in his left knee that would knock him out for four weeks. Kiké Hernández was nursing an elbow injury that within a week would land him on the injured list and would later require surgery in November. The Dodgers needed some available bodies who could play the infield, if needed.

To make room for Alexander, the Dodgers designated Steward Berroa for assignment, an outfielder who spent just over seven weeks on the 40-man roster but never got the call to Los Angeles. Alexander’s time on the 40-man roster was even shorter, just four days, as he was DFA’d to make room for Julian Fernández, who pitched in one game in his one day active for the Dodgers in 2025.

That’s how it goes over a long season, especially one in which the Dodgers used a franchise-record 62 different players. That’s not even including Alexander, who cleared waivers and was sent outright to Triple-A, and he remained in Oklahoma City for the rest of the season.

2025 particulars​


Age: 28

Stats: .269/.332/.457, 97 wRC+, 25 extra-base hits in 52 games with Triple-A Oklahoma City

Salary: unknown

Game of the year​


During his time in the Dodgers organization, we’ll go with August 8 for Alexander, who singled twice, homered, doubled, and walked, and scored four runs in a Comets road win at El Paso. His four hits and four runs each tied a professional career high, and reaching base five times tied a season high.

Annnnndddd just like that, CJ Alexander takes back the lead for the Comets! ☄️ pic.twitter.com/PoAbO92hO2

— Oklahoma City Comets (@OKC_comets) August 9, 2025

Roster status​


Alexander is a minor league free agent.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/108071/cj-alexander-2025-dodgers-review
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Bobby Miller

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When we last left off with Bobby Miller in 2024, here was his prognosis for the coming year at True Blue LA:

…Bobby Miller finds himself at a crossroads in his career. Whether [2024] was an aberration or the new normal is entirely up to him. Fixing his fastball has to be the top priority. His floor is now likely trade piece for players who will help defend the Dodgers’ title…

Miller’s comeback attempt in 2025 started ignominiously with his first Spring Training outing, where he took a Michael Busch-comebacker to the head that looked far worse than what it was. Miller underwent concussion protocol and had his spring training delayed.

Bobby Miller was hit in the head by a comebacker, he exits the game in the 3rd inning but walked off under his own power. 🙏 pic.twitter.com/0jGKQpp1vx

— SportsNet LA (@SportsNetLA) February 20, 2025

Miller did not make the Tokyo Series roster but was built up enough to jump into the Triple-A rotation at Oklahoma City to start the year. Miller’s first two starts in OKC were fine, which was leaps and bounds better than last year. Apart from being pulled early from his third start, for an impending call-up, Miller pitched 4⅔ and five innings in his other two starts. In all, Miller in Triple-A had a 2.25 ERA in 12 innings, though with 11 walks and 11 strikeouts.

The Dodgers’ rotation was battered in early April, necessitating Miller to provide coverage against the Colorado Rockies. The Dodgers staked Miller to a large early lead, and Miller did have his strikeout pitches working on April 16, giving at least some hope that Miller would get a couple of turns into the rotation.

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Miller did strike out seven, but managed almost to cough up a six-run lead in record time, reverting to his 2024 form. Two home runs later, Miller’s night was done, and he did not start again for the Dodgers in 2025.

🚨 MICHAEL TOGLIA GRAND SLAM 🚨 pic.twitter.com/4VPd5crAjg

— Colorado Rockies (@Rockies) April 17, 2025

Dave Roberts summed things up about Miller after the disastrous start:

“When you get a 7-1 lead, you’ve got to be able to go deeper into the game. You have to. You have to be able to chew up outs, you’ve got to get count leverage. [The Rockies are] a young, aggressive ballclub swinging the bat. You just can’t get behind,” manager Dave Roberts said after Wednesday’s game, as shown on SportsNet LA. “Bobby’s just got to learn to navigate innings better, and get deeper in games.”

At this point, one would be tempted to copy and paste the 2024 review, update the dates, see if there are any cheeky comparisons to Trey Yesavage to make, and call it a day.

Miller generally underwhelmed while pitching in the rotation at Triple-A Oklahoma City in 2025. He posted a 5.63 ERA, over 70 1/3 innings with Oklahoma City, but with nearly as many walks (49) as strikeouts (58). His 15.2-percent walk rate in Triple-A this season as a starter was almost double his career rates both in the majors (8.1 percent) and minors (8.3 percent through 2024).

By the end of July, the Dodgers had seen enough and moved Miller to the bullpen to try to salvage his career.

Dave Roberts said Bobby Miller will be transitioned to a relief pitcher in OKC:

"This might be something that unlocks him, going hard for a shorter period of time to get some confidence for him which could help us here." #Dodgers

— David Vassegh (@THEREAL_DV) July 27, 2025

It was a mixed bag for Miller. In 19 games, Miller pitched 21 1/3 innings with a 0-3 record and a 5.91 ERA. He struck out 26 while walking 12. While pitching in relief in the minors, he had a FIP of 3.97 and a WHIP of 1.31.

In this role, Miller made a single appearance for the Dodgers as a reliever in a mop-up role in New York against the Mets.

The most significant hurdle for Miller going forward may be mental. Miller still has his fastball velocity and his other pitches. Still, he would likely be wise to contact the same personnel who helped Roki Sasaki rediscover the effectiveness of his fastball.

If Miller were a mid-tier prospect, these numbers would be acceptable. But considering that Miller was on the fast track to being the next stalwart in the Dodgers’ rotation, Miller is rapidly running out of time to reinvent himself, much less stick in the majors. At this point, if Miller could turn himself into the next Braydon Fisher in 2026, Miller could regain a foothold on the Major League roster. But said hope might be a pipe dream.

With one option year remaining, it seems likely that Miller’s days in the organization are numbered, barring a spectacular turnaround. At this rate, if Miller is moved now, the Dodgers would be selling low, which is not their usual modus operandi.

2025 particulars​


Age: 26

Stats: (With LA) 2 G, 5 IP, 7 K, 1 BB, 12.60 ERA, 4.29 FIP, 7.31 xERA, 2.600 WHIP, -.3 rWAR, -.1 fWAR

Salary: Unknown

Game of the year​


Miller had two appearances with the Dodgers in 2025. His debut was a disaster; therefore, by default, his Game of the Year was his mop-up appearance against the Mets on May 24th. He did not strike anyone out and gave up a single run in two innings of work.

View Link

Roster status​


Miller has 1 year, 119 days of service time, is on the 40-man roster, and has one option year remaining.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/107640/bobby-miller-2025-dodgers-review
 
2025 Dodgers in review: Justin Dean

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After spending the past seven seasons in the Atlanta Braves minor league system, Justin Dean got his first taste of Major League Baseball with the Dodgers in 2025, primarily serving as a late-game defensive replacement.

Dean spent the majority of the 2024 season with the Double-A Mississippi Braves while also spending 25 games with Triple-A Gwinnett, where he slashed a modest .247/.338/.321 with just three home runs and 38 RBI over 92 combined games. His main asset was his speed, as he totaled 61 stolen bases on 69 attempts. After electing free agency following the 2024 season, he inked a minor league deal with the Dodgers on Dec. 13, and began the year with the Triple-A Oklahoma City Comets.

Before making his big league debut, Dean played in 81 games for the Comets, where he had a much improved slash line of .274/.370/.426 with six home runs and 31 RBI, while also swiping 25 bags. After nearly eight full years waiting to get his shot, his opportunity came on Aug. 8, as he was promoted to the Dodgers big league squad while outfielder Esteury Ruiz was demoted to Triple-A.

Dean didn’t get much playing time in his 18 big league games, mainly serving as a late game defensive replacement in center field which allowed Andy Pages to slide to right field in lieu of Teoscar Hernández. He only received two big league at-bats where he went hitless, but also recorded a lone stolen base on the year. He was sent back down to Triple-A on Sept. 10 and played in nine more games in the minor leagues, but with Michael Conforto left off the postseason roster, Dean took his place.

Dean’s role didn’t change come the postseason, but he was a part of most of the Dodgers games in October, only missing four of the seven World Series games. On the stat sheet, he was just a footnote to the Dodgers’ success, but his most crucial moment came in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 6 of the World Series, where he immediately alerted the umpires that a ball off the bat of Addison Barger was wedged under the center field padding. That quick thinking proved extremely pivotal, as Tyler Glasnow needed just three pitches to force a Game 7.

Dean was demoted back down to Triple-A on Nov. 6 and was claimed off waivers by the San Francisco Giants the same day.

2025 particulars​


Age: 28

Stats: 0-2, SB

Salary: unknown

Game of the year​


Dean didn’t register an at-bat in Game 6 of the World Series, but his quick thinking and alertness ultimately saved the Dodgers season for another day, and they eventually capitalized on that opportunity to bring home their second straight championship.

Roster status​


Justin Dean is on the San Francisco Giants 40-man roster.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/108594/justin-dean-2025-dodgers-review
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Roki Sasaki

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To understand Roki Sasaki’s rookie campaign, one must understand the notion of wabi sabi (embracing the beauty of imperfection), which was first popularized to American audiences through the seminal animated hit King of the Hill.

As someone who followed Sasaki for two years before he came to the United States, I had a single thought watching him debut in Tokyo: uhhh, that boy ain’t right. This thought raised alarm bells because Sasaki was thrust right into the deep end and looked like he was ready to burst into the league after a strong abbreviated spring in the Cactus League.

Roki with 5 Ks in three shutout innings in his Cactus League debut! pic.twitter.com/yeYOJuuWKF

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) March 5, 2025

Sasaki admitted he was a work in progress when he signed with the Dodgers. After getting tapped by the Dodgers to make his Major League debut for Game 2 of the Tokyo Series in a packed Tokyo Dome surrounded by countrymen with the baseball world watching, Sasaki was wild and showed flashes of the promise in that first game against the Cubs. His first three pitches were at 100 mph — that question of velocity would be the fulcrum of his rookie campaign.

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Contrary to what Joe Davis said during Game 3 of the World Series, Sasaki was not “terrible” during his first month in the Majors. In his first eight appearances, Sasaki was not necessarily bad, but he did not look like the super prospect I had been studying for the past two years. He made eight starts, posting a 4.72 ERA through 34.1 innings pitched.

While Sasaki showed promise in his debut, his initial problems showed up fairly early after a poor domestic debut against the Detroit Tigers at home: Sasaki was striking out far fewer batters (6.29 K/9 innings) and walking far more batters (5.77 BB/9 innings) than he was in Japan (10.5 K/9 and 2.6 BB/9, respectively, for Chiba Lotte in 2024 as comparison).

Sasaki had battled oblique and other injuries during his final campaigns in Japan. His fastball velocity, which had been near 100 mph in Japan, was suddenly topping out at 92-95 mph while pitching for the Dodgers. The path of Sasaki’s fastball requires velocity to be effective. Moreover, Sasaki’s primary outpitch, his super forkball, acts like a cross between a knuckleball and a circle change-up, and often flutters outside of the zone.

Jack Harris, then of the Los Angeles Times, summarized the issue in mid-May:

So far, his trademark splitter has been an effective weapon, yielding just a .158 batting average to opponents while generating whiffs on 35% of swings. His lesser-used slider has been a fine secondary option, with opponents batting just three-for-12 against it while coming up empty on 33% of swings.

Sasaki’s fastball, on the other hand, has been susceptible to the improved level of hitting he has faced in the big leagues, resulting in a .253 opponent batting average, a .494 slugging percentage, almost as many home runs allowed (six, not even including two others that were robbed on leaping catches by Andy Pages) as strikeouts generated (eight), and a 10.1% whiff rate that ranks fifth-lowest for four-seamers among qualified MLB starters.

The Dodgers tried to have Sasaki hold back his fastball velocity to navigate his injury issues, but that strategy did not work. He pitched well enough for his first MLB victory in Arlington on April 19th (6 innings, 2 ER, 3 BB, 4K), but was stymied by Kirby Yates’ implosion in the ninth inning. Sasaki did not notch his first victory until May 3 against Atlanta.

On May 13, the Dodgers announced that Sasaki would be placed on the injured list with a right shoulder impingement, which ultimately would keep the rookie right-hander out until August 14.

His hips don’t lie​


Sasaki rehabbed with Triple-A Oklahoma City with uneven results. Sasaki made five starts for the Comets, in which his fastball velocity ticked up from what it was in the Majors, but not nearly where it should be. Dave Roberts was disappointed about Sasaki’s lack of progress and foreclosed his return to the Dodgers in 2025 unless he seriously improved:

“Again, I think the main thing for Roki is just performance. Increasing his velocity and command. Just pitching well,” Roberts said. “We’re in a playoff race. So he’s got to continue to raise his level to be here.”

“Like I said a couple weeks ago, we’ve got to go with our best guys,” said Roberts of Sasaki seeing October. “And this is the time, right now. And again, Roki has gone through a lot this year. And he still has a ton of talent. We just want to see more.”

“I am surprised. Because the talent level is certainly there,” Roberts said after Sasaki’s most recent start [on September 2]. “The performance, the stuff hasn’t been there. I think there needs to be a tick up in stuff. And also against Triple-A hitters, you would expect more.”

Jeff Passan of ESPN reported that Sasaki said he was willing to overhaul his mechanics at the Dodgers’ Arizona complex. Per Passan’s reporting, which should be read in full, it is not an understatement to say that Director of Pitching Rob Hill and Pitching Performance Coordinator Ian Walsh saved Sasaki’s, and by extension, the Dodgers’ season.

For months, officials throughout the organization had worked to gain Sasaki’s trust, cognizant of how loath he was to offer it. President of baseball operations Andrew Friedman, general manager Brandon Gomes and manager Dave Roberts all had let Sasaki know they hadn’t lost faith, even as he’d gone from the major league rotation to minor league mediocrity. They would provide whatever tools he needed as the season went on.

…Hill and Walsh broke down the answers and emerged with a suite of options to help fix the issues. They believed that Sasaki’s troubles stemmed from his pelvis tipping forward, which caused him to rotate too early. During the pitching delivery, energy builds in the body, ripples up to the arm and is projected onto the ball at release. Any disruption — even something that goes unnoticed by the naked eye — can wreak havoc. And with Sasaki, that havoc equaled 7 mph of fastball velocity going AWOL.

On Sept. 5, Hill and Walsh presented [their analysis]. In particular, they believed the set position of Sasaki’s back leg could fix what ailed him. During the deposition, Sasaki had shown them videos from the 2022 and 2023 seasons, when his stuff was at its best, and his back leg wasn’t nearly as extended. By flexing the back leg, with his knee starting over his toes, Sasaki could avoid hinging his pelvis and delay it from dragging his center of mass forward too early, which prevented his front leg from having enough time to stabilize.

“Rotating the pelvis early is just death to everything,” Hill said.

[emphasis added.]

On September 9, while striking out eight, Sasaki gave up three runs in 4 2/3 innings of work against the Sacramento River Cats in Oklahoma City. While the stat line is unremarkable, for the first time since Spring Training, Sasaki looked like the Monster of the Reiwa Era.

Up, down, out was the mental cue that Sasaki used to transform his season.

The Dodgers did have a path for Sasaki to return in 2025: the bullpen. After a couple of final outings in Oklahoma City, 99 days later, Sasaki returned to the Dodgers on September 24 against the Arizona Diamondbacks in what served as a de facto tryout for the postseason bullpen. Sasaki passed with flying colors.

Sasaki made two successful relief outings in the final week of the 2025 regular season campaign. In his initial campaign, hitters had a slash line of .221/.342/.404 against Sasaki, which improved during the postseason.

The look of a killer​


“When [Sasaki] came back, I told him he’s got a different look now,” Roberts said. “He’s got the look of a killer.” Moreover, Sasaki started carrying himself with the swagger of someone who belonged with the Dodgers.

Sasaki was a starter in Japan and essentially learned to be a reliever on the fly. Michael Baumann of FanGraphs best described the conundrum using Sasaki in the postseason, considering that Sasaki had primarily been a starter on a once-a-week schedule in Japan before this year:

Making Sasaki the closer was the right decision, but it’s not like Roberts could just declare it so and use him the way [Phillies Manager] Thomson used Jhoan Duran or [Blue Jays Manager] Schneider used Hoffman.

Sasaki broke out during the postseason run, posting scoreless outings during both the Wild Card round against the Cincinnati Reds and the Division Series round against the Philadelphia Phillies. Sasaki was primarily a two-pitch pitcher in the postseason run: his fastball and his super forkball. During the entire postseason run, hitters had a .182/.300/.273 slash line against the young phenom.

Based on the bullpen’s struggles in 2025 (most notably Blake Treinen and Tanner Scott), Dave Roberts did not declare that Sasaki was the Dodgers’ closer until after NLDS Game 2, when Treinen nearly coughed up the lead without recording a single out.

Sasaki gave a bravura performance in Game 4 of the NLDS, where he entered the game in the eighth and went three perfect innings, striking out two. It was the first time in MLB history that a pitcher had a perfect eighth, ninth, and tenth in a series-clinching victory, of which Dave Roberts was all smiles afterwards:

“Oh my gosh, you’re talking about one of the great all-time appearances out of the pen that I can remember,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said after the game. “Certainly given where he started this year, what he is as a starting pitcher, to go out there and not only go one inning, two innings and then three innings, and to do what he did gave us a huge boost.”

However, Sasaki had to be bailed out by Treinen in Game 1 of the NLCS, as fatigue began to show, when he surrendered his only run of the entire postseason against the Brewers. Moreover, Sasaki’s velocity slowly started to dip for the rest of the postseason run.

However, this success should really come with an asterisk, especially in the World Series, where Sasaki walked a tight rope in Game 3 and had one of the ugliest throws to first in recent memory. Moreover, no one will ever forget Sasaki’s final pitch of 2025.

View Link

For as bumpy as this half frame got in Game 6, it is worth remembering that the Blue Jays literally ran themselves out of the inning and into November baseball. Hence, another example of the imperfection, yet the success of Sasaki’s rookie campaign. Sasaki will return to the rotation in 2026. He will not participate in the 2026 World Baseball Classic. Even with all of his trials in 2025, Sasaki only turned 24 in early November.

Sasaki had developed a cutter while at Triple-A but did not use it upon returning to the Dodgers. Whether he further develops that pitch or tries to revive his slider will likely give MLB hitters something else to worry about, provided that Sasaki remains in the rotation. If Sasaki’s velocity can remain elite, the sky is literally the limit for the Monster of the Reiwa Era for his sophomore campaign.

2025 particulars​


Age: 23

Stats: 1-1, 10 G, 36 1/3 IP, 28 K, 22 BB, 4.46 ERA, 5.80 FIP, 5.75 xERA, 1.431 WHIP, .3 rWAR, -0.1 fWAR

Postseason Stats: 3 saves, 9 G, 10 2/3 IP, 6 K, 5 BB, 0.84 ERA, 3.70 FIP, 1.031 WHIP

Salary: $760,000 (with a signing bonus of $6.5 million)

Game of the year​


Sasaki’s Game of the Year is NLDS Game 4’s bravura performance against the Phillies. Nine up, nine down.

Roster status​


Sasaki has one year of service time and has three options remaining.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/107643/roki-sasaki-2025-dodgers-review
 
2025 Dodgers in review: Miguel Rojas

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Miguel Rojas continued to be a solid bench option and a leader in the Dodgers’ clubhouse during the 2025 regular season, and when his name was called on in the World Series, he became a part of some of the biggest plays in franchise history.

Rojas was coming off his best full season statistically in 2024, where he set career highs in slugging percentage, OPS and wRC+ for a full season while registering the highest fWAR of his career. The Dodgers decided to exercise Rojas’ $5 million club option for the 2025 season, keeping around one of the driving forces within the clubhouse.

Rojas showed his humility and deep admiration for the Dodgers when the team signed Roki Sasaki, as he passed his jersey no. 11 down to Sasaki and opted to once again wear his no. 72 that he donned during his rookie season in 2014. In exchange for the jersey number, Sasaki gifted Rojas a bottle of sake.

“The number 11 means something to me and to this organization, and I want him to know that before me, there was another guy [Manny Mota] that was pretty popular in L.A.” Rojas said to Sasaki. “Those guys are important in our culture, and hopefully we can actually continue to do this.”

Rojas began the season getting occasional starts in the middle infield, notably filling in at shortstop while Mookie Betts was fighting a stomach bug during the Tokyo Series. It was a sluggish start for Rojas, as over his first 17 games of the season in March and April, he slashed .273/.289/.318 with just two doubles and two RBI. As Tommy Edman and Teoscar Hernández both suffered injuries in May, both Rojas and Hyeseong Kim were called upon to fill in at second base. In 10 games during Edman’s absence, Rojas slashed a more respectable .250/.280/.417 slash line while also connecting for his first home run of the season.

Once Edman made his return to the lineup on May 18, Rojas began to struggle again, and by June 10, he had a season slash line of just .207/.240/.272 with just a single home run and five RBI. Things began to turn around while the Dodgers made their first visit to San Diego, and he began to split time at third base with Edman and Kiké Hernández when Max Muncy suffered a bone bruise to his left knee on July 2. From June 10 until the end of the first half, Rojas was arguably the Dodgers’ best hitter, as he slashed .364/.429/.763 with four home runs and eight RBI, striking out as many times as he walked over 16 games. He raised his season average from .207 to .254 and his OPS from .511 to .712. He maintained a level of consistency throughout the entire second half relative to how his overall stats looked at the end of the first half, although he went exactly two months without hitting a home run.

When the postseason came around, Rojas was in the starting lineup for both games of the Wild Card series against the Cincinnati Reds, with his lone impact coming via an RBI single in the series clinching Game 2. He was in the lineup for the first three games of the NLDS against the Philadelphia Phillies, and although he wasn’t much of a factor offensively, he made a head first diving play to tag the third base bag and beat the speedy Trea Turner to keep the game scoreless through six full innings in Game 2.

Rojas did not appear in the series clinching Game 4 nor any of the four games in the NLCS against the Milwaukee Brewers, not stepping on the field until coming in as a defensive replacement in the 13th inning of Game 3 of the World Series. The Dodgers decided to start Rojas for the final two games of the World Series, sliding Tommy Edman in center field as Andy Pages mired in a horrible playoff drought. Rojas was at the receiving end of a game-ending double play to force Game 7, and in the top of the ninth inning with one out on a full count pitch from Jeff Hoffman, Rojas had the swing of his life. It is a moment that will live on as one of the greatest swings in Dodgers history.

MIGUEL ROJAS WITH THE BIGGEST SWING OF HIS LIFE 💥

GAME 7 IS TIED IN TORONTO pic.twitter.com/tDwUGzBrVq

— MLB (@MLB) November 2, 2025

Not only did Rojas tie the game in the top of the ninth inning, he fielded a ground ball from Dalton Varsho with the bases loaded in the bottom of the ninth inning. Although the momentum of the ball pushed him back by a step, he managed to make an accurate throw to Will Smith to narrowly beat Isiah Kiner-Falefa by inches for a huge second out. Without Rojas in the fold, there is no certainty that the Dodgers would have repeated as champions.

2025 particulars​


Age: 36

Stats: .262/.318/.397, 7 HR, 27 RBI, 18 2B, 5 SB, 35 R, 24 BB, 46 K, 100 wRC+, 2.1 rWAR, 1.7 fWAR

Postseason: .278/.316/.444, 1 HR, 2 RBI

Salary: $5,000,000

Game of the year​


The answer is pretty obvious, that being Game 7 of the World Series. Rojas tied the game with a solo home run in the ninth inning and prevented the Blue Jays from winning the series on a walk-off with his throw home in the bottom of the ninth inning.

Roster status​


Miguel Rojas is back with the Dodgers after signing a one-year deal for the 2026 season, which will be his last. He will earn $5.5 million.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/108617/miguel-rojas-2025-dodgers-review
 
Dodgers trade Esteury Ruiz to Miami Marlins

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The Dodgers have dealt outfielder Esteury Ruiz to the Miami Marlins in exchange for minor league pitcher Adriano Marrero. Francys Romero of Beisbolfr.com was the first to report the trade. In a corresponding move, the Marlins have designated infielder Eric Wagaman for assignment, per Kevin Barral at Fish on First. The Dodgers 40-man roster now drops to 39.

This marks the fifth trade involving Ruiz since signing as a minor league free agent with the Kansas City Royals in 2017 and the second one this year after the Dodgers acquired him from the Athletics on April 3. He spent the majority of the season with the Triple-A Oklahoma City Comets, and performed well in 104 games by slashing .303/.411/.514 with 16 home runs, 60 RBI, and a team-high 62 stolen bases. In 19 games for the big league club, he slashed .190/.261/.333 with a home run and two driven in, stealing four bases in as many attempts. Ruiz has one more option remaining and will enter arbitration following the 2026 season.

Marrero, an 18-year-old right-handed starting pitcher out of Cienfuegos, Cuba, signed with the Miami Marlins on Jan. 15 with a $350,000 signing bonus, reports Romero. He started 10 games in the Dominican Summer League, tossing 33 innings while posting a 3.82 ERA with a 1.333 WHIP, striking out 35, walking 12 and giving up just one home run.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...8734/dodgers-esteury-ruiz-miami-marlins-trade
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Will Smith

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Will Smith was one of the best offensive catchers during the 2025 regular season, as he was named to his third consecutive NL All-Star team and even registered some MVP votes. Despite suffering a hand injury that wiped out his final month of the regular season, he made his return in the postseason and delivered numerous key moments against the Toronto Blue Jays in the World Series.

As had been a recurring theme for Smith the past two seasons, Smith was coming off a 2024 season where he was looking like an MVP in the first half, only for his bat to taper off in the second half. His bat had diminished so much that in the postseason, he was relegating to hitting at the bottom third in the Dodgers’ lineup for the World Series against the New York Yankees.

Smith had been dealing with a nagging ankle issue dating back to the 2024 season, which severely hampered his hitting and base running abilities. As a result, Smith missed the first week of cactus league play, but he eventually made his spring debut on Feb. 28 and played in seven cactus league games. Once the regular season began, Smith got out to an exceptional start, hitting as high as .400 into April 7 during the team’s first road trip with an on-base percentage at .550. He began to slightly fall back down to Earth over the course of the month, but still ended the month of April with a remarkable .316/.426/.500 slash line.

Smith was making himself known as not only one of the best hitting catchers in baseball, but as one of the best hitters in general. His batting average never fell below .300 during the entire first half of the regular season, and he was at or near the top in various offensive categories. Smith hit .323 in the first half, leading the National League and ranking in fourth in all of baseball, and his 169 wRC+ ranked third in baseball behind Aaron Judge and Cal Raleigh. Smith’s 15 percent walk rate ranked first among catchers— just ahead of Raleigh at 14.9 percent— and his .425 on-base percentage ranked best in the National League and only behind Aaron Judge for second in baseball.

Where Smith really stood out was his ability to hit with runners on base, as by June 4, he held a .440 batting average with runners in scoring position, ranking best in the NL and second behind Aaron Judge for all players that had at least 40 plate appearances. Although he wasn’t able to sustain that extreme level of productivity, he still finished the regular season with a .337 batting average in those situations, ranking 11th in baseball. Not only was he productive with the bat, he became increasingly patient in RISP situations, as his walk rate rose to 17.1 percent and his strikeout rate fell to 13.8 percent. Smith was an easy pick to start at catcher for the National League All-Star team, making his third consecutive All-Star selection.

In an attempt to keep Smith as great a hitter as he was in the first half entering the second half of the season, Smith received the occasional off day in lieu for Dalton Rushing. Things were looking great over his first 11 games following the break, as he hit .343 in that span while also collecting his first multi-home run game of the season. As the Dodgers continued to mire in an underwhelming second half, Smith’s contention for the batting title began to slip away throughout the entire month of August. Smith had two stretches of being hitless in at least three games, and slumped to a .159/.326/.304 slash line while his batting average on the season fell from .325 down to .293.

Smith never got the chance to improve upon his August slump, as on Sept. 3 against the Pittsburgh Pirates he took a foul ball off the bat of Nick Gonzales to his right hand, forcing him to exit the game early. He attempted to play through it six days later against the Colorado Rockies, but his regular season was forced to come to an abrupt end once he was placed on the injured list due to a fractured right hand. With Smith out, the Dodgers were forced to rely on both Rushing and Rortvedt as platoon options behind the plate, and even added Chuckie Robinson to the fold while Rushing dealt with an injury of his own.

With the postseason in full swing, Smith was unable to play in either of the two Wild Card games against the Cincinnati Reds, but he was able to return just in time for the NLDS against the Philadelphia Phillies and remained healthy throughout. Smith added to a four-run seventh inning in Game 2 with a two-run single, but wasn’t much of an impact in the other three games. Runs were hard to come by in the NLCS, but Smith was able to score three times and went 6-15 in the four games against the Milwaukee Brewers. In the World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays, Smith put the offense on his back in Game 2, smashing a home run against Kevin Gausman and driving in three. He began the scoring in Game 6 with an RBI double and in Game 7, he hit the go-ahead home run against Shane Bieber that gave the Dodgers a 5-4 lead, ultimately putting the cherry on top of the Dodgers’ second consecutive championship.

2025 particulars​


Age: 30

Stats: .296/.404/.497, 17 HR, 61 RBI, 20 2B, 61 R, 89 K, 64 BB, 153 wRC+, 4.5 rWAR, 4.1 fWAR

Postseason: .276/.363/.414, 1 HR, 8 RBI, 2 2B, 8 R

Salary: $23 million (Smith earned the other $15 million of his signing bonus on Jan. 15 and made $13 million in actual salary, with $5 million being deferred)

Game of the year​


Smith had some notable moments during the regular season, including a walk-off home run against the San Diego Padres on June 18, but his best game came on July 21 against the Minnesota Twins, as he finished 2-4 while collecting his lone multi-home run game of the season.

Roster status​


Smith is entering the third year of his $10-year, $140 million extension he signed with the Dodgers on March 28, 2024. He will make $8 million in 2026, as he will earn $13 million in actual salary with another $5 million being deferred.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/108637/will-smith-2025-dodgers-review
 
Kirby Yates signs 1-year, $5 million contract with the Anaheim Angels

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Kirby Yates struggled in his one year with the Dodgers in a season marred by injuries and underperformance. The longtime reliever found a new home for his age-39 season, signing with the Anaheim Angels on a one-year, $5 million contract on December 30.

Kirby Yates to Angels. $5M for 1 year. @AriA1exander 1st

— Jon Heyman (@JonHeyman) December 30, 2025

Yates signed a one-year, $13 million contract with the Dodgers in January and earned another $500,000 by pitching in 50 games. The overall results were underwhelming. Yates had a 5.23 ERA and 4.29 xERA with three saves, 52 strikeouts, 17 walks, and nine home runs in 41 1/3 innings.

He also missed time on three separate injured list stints due to his right hamstring and lower back pain. The injuries serve as a demarcation of Yates’ 2025 season. Before his first IL trip in May, Yates had a 4.34 ERA, 3.05 FIP, and three home runs in 22 games, with a 38.8-percent strikeout rate and 7.5-percent walk rate. Afterward, he had a 5.96 ERA, 6.18 FIP, and six home runs in 28 games, with a 21.4-percent strikeout rate and 11.2-percent walk rate.

Yates’ final injured-list stint came in the last week of the regular season, and he was not active at all during any of the Dodgers’ four postseason series.

The Angels are Yates’ fourth team in four seasons, after pitching for the Braves in 2023, Rangers in 2024, and Dodgers in 2025. In 11 major league seasons, Yates also pitched for the Rays, Yankees, Angels, and Padres. The two-time All-Star has a 3.36 ERA and 98 career saves in 472 games, with 623 strikeouts and 181 walks in 452 2/3 innings.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange.../108353/kirby-yates-signs-anaheim-angels-2026
 
The Ohtani 50/50 home run ball lawsuit plods along

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If one recalls the halycon days of September 19, 2024, Shohei Ohtani established the first 50/50 club with aplomb against the Miami Marlins at the sociological nightmare that is loanDepot Park.

One might recall that a scrum broke out where the historic home run ball landed, and, to settle that dispute in the most American fashion, a lawsuit broke out.

That Florida civil lawsuit is still plodding along, and we will continue to monitor it in case something interesting happens.

And guess what? We have a similar update in the Ohtani 50-50 ball lawsuit…where on Tuesday the parties had a mediation conference.

The result?

"The parties did not reach an agreement." pic.twitter.com/l8PeouzAnQ

— Paul Lesko (@Paul_Lesko) December 18, 2025

What is interesting about this case is that we know precisely who owns the ball now and where it physically is. The parties in the underlying lawsuit are fighting over the record proceeds of the auction. The new owner in Taiwan will continue to show the ball to its heart’s content regardless of who prevails in court.

This update was prompted by an article in The Athletic about how Goldin Auctions convinced the feuding parties to allow the sale to proceed. Spoiler alert: it was greed.

“Everybody’s suing everybody,” [Ken] Goldin said. “My auction is running. I am going full steam ahead like a bull in a China shop. I’m on TV. I’m promoting the ball. I’ve got people from Japan flying over to do interviews with me. … The bidding for the ball at that point was maybe $1.5 million, maybe $2 million. Now people are starting to get out there like ‘Could the auction be halted?’”

“I said to them (the two parties fighting for a claim of the ball), ‘Do either of you want to keep this ball or do you want to own it so you can make the most money possible?’ And luckily, they said that they want to make the most money possible by selling the ball,” Goldin said….

….“As a businessman, you are just using logic,” Goldin said. “I just felt that they needed to hear from me as the auctioneer, as the guy who is the ‘King of Collectibles’ that you are screwing yourself if you do not let this ball sell now. The court’s going to decide what your ownership is, you’re not going to win the case arguing with me. So let’s put your arguments aside. Let me get the most money possible for the ball.”

The case cited by Goldin was the infamous Barry Bonds’ 70th home run ball, which delayed its sale due to the now-iconic case between Patrick Hayashi and Alex Popov. The Bonds’ ball sold for $450,000, which was far less than the $3.005 million Mark McGwire’s 70th home run ball sold for without ownership controversy.

We will continue to monitor this case for updates and report as they become available.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...1/shohei-ohtani-50-50-baseball-lawsuit-update
 
Auld Lang Syne

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Today, we say goodbye to 2025.

For most people, they can hardly say good riddance to this year (or the past few years) quickly or loudly enough. Personally, I have had trouble letting go of this year, a problem I have not had since my inaugural season of travel as an amateur in 2021.

Back then, I confused quantity with quality, as I felt a kinship with seeing about 20% of the 2021 Dodgers’ season. The 2021 team was a deeply flawed team that mistook the results of a glittery, shortened season for actual greatness.

The 2025 team, while flawed, had an adventure that will likely never be repeated in scale. From Tokyo to Toronto, I had a front row seat, which I have been happy to share with you. Time marches forward, and so must I. Chasing a high that can never be topped short of being hired by the organization is a fool’s errand.

No one is guaranteed a tomorrow, and accordingly, the Dodgers and baseball have timely released missives that merit attention.

Lion’s Farewell​


On that note, the Dodgers took a moment on this final day of the year to say farewell to Clayton Kershaw, who retired after the successful title defense campaign. The video is approximately fifteen minutes long and features various players and Dave Roberts wishing Kershaw well.

Koufax at 90​


On December 30, Hall of Famer and living legend Sandy Koufax turned 90 years old. MLB posted a six-minute reflection on Koufax’s life, written by Tom Verducci, narrated by Dodger fan Bryan Cranston.

“To beat the champ, you gotta knock him out!”​


Last year, I synced up the end of Game 5 of the 2024 World Series to line up with the clock striking midnight. Having Joe Davis shout “Start the party, Los Angeles” at midnight hit unexpectedly well.

For this year, if someone were to do the same thing, assuming no commercial interruptions and using the MLB.com feed of Game 7 that runs 4 hours, 47 minutes, and 25 seconds at 4:25:30, Joe Davis has his call of “To beat the champs, you gotta knock him out!”

Therefore, if one starts Game 7 at 7:34:30 pm, the game will align to have the final out and call be given at midnight. We would not presume to tell you how to spend your new year, but if you wanted to start the year on a Dodgers’ note, this essay will hopefully help.

In any event, we at True Blue LA wish you all a very Happy New Year as we provide Dodgers’ coverage into 2026!

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...dia/108756/auld-lang-syne-2025-kershaw-koufax
 
Dodgers 2026 salary arbitration preview

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Season reviews are now complete, with 73 players covered, and what better way to usher in 2026 than to look ahead to salary arbitration, with the exchange deadline coming next week.

The Dodgers have four players on the roster eligible for salary arbitration this year. That’s down from nine players at the beginning of the offseason, with some trimming occurring in November. Tony Gonsolin was designated for assignment and Evan Phillips was non-tendered, with both pitchers coming off Tommy John surgery and a partial season shy of free agency. Michael Grove was sent outright off the 40-man roster, into free agency.

The Dodgers avoided arbitration by signing Ben Rortvedt to a $1.25 million deal, but then tried to sneak the third catcher through waivers and off the 40-man roster, but the Reds swooped in and claimed the out-of-options backstop. Alex Vesia’s club option was exercised, avoiding an arbitration hearing for him as well.

That leaves these four Dodgers players still eligible for arbitration:

  • Reliever Brusdar Graterol
  • Reliever Anthony Banda
  • Reliever Brock Stewart
  • Outfielder Alex Call

The salary exchange date for arbitration is Thursday, January 8, when the Major League Baseball Labor Relations Department will file salary figures for teams, and the MLB Players Association will file salary figures for the players. Negotiations can and will happen at any time, but several teams have treated the exchange date as a not-so-soft deadline of sorts, meaning that if the two sides cannot come to an agreement by the exchange date, negotiations will cease and they would proceed to a hearing, which per the collective bargaining agreement must be scheduled between January 26 and February 20 each year.

The Dodgers are in this “file and trial” group, to a point. In the 11 years of the Andrew Friedman-led front office, 79 of the 87 players (90.8 percent) eligible for arbitration have reached an agreement by the exchange date. Six of the eight players who exchanged salaries later reached agreement on contracts with consideration past just one year:


Arbitration hearings pit player vs. team, which can lead to some awkward situations, like Pedro Guerrero in 1983 telling reporters, “I hope the jerk that made the decision, the arbitrator, dies,” or the Dodgers arguing that catcher Mike Scioscia’s high on-base percentage was actually detrimental to the team by clogging the bases. New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner, after losing a hearing to star first baseman Don Mattingly in 1987, told reporters, “Salaries are starting to come down now, but arbitration is still the cancer of baseball.”

Each side in an arbitration hearing argues for their salary filed back on the exchange date. A three-person panel then has to pick one salary or the other, with no in-between.

The Dodgers in 2020 went to arbitration with hearings with both outfielder Joc Pederson and reliever Pedro Báez. Pederson lost his case, earning $7.75 million after asking for $9 million. Báez won his hearing, earning $4 million instead of the $3.5 million offered by the Dodgers. Those are the only two arbitration hearings for the Dodgers in the last 18 years.

If I had to guess, the Dodgers won’t have a salary arbitration hearing this year either. Brusdar Graterol didn’t pitch at all in 2025 after shoulder surgery and will almost certainly sign for something near the $2.8 million he made last year. Brock Stewart ($880,000) and Anthony Banda ($1 million) made relatively small salaries last season, and Stewart is coming off shoulder surgery. Outfielder Alex Call is eligible for arbitration for the first time, after batting all of 322 times in 2025.

These all seem likely to reach agreement by the January 8 exchange date, but we’ll delve into each player in detail individually. Here are the projected salaries in 2026, using both MLB Trade Rumors and Cot’s Baseball Contracts.

PlayerService time2025 salary2026 Cot’s2026 MLBTR2026 average
Brusdar Graterol5.167$2,800,000$2,800,000$2,800,000$2,800,000
Anthony Banda4.135$1,000,000$1,550,000$1,700,000$1,625,000
Brock Stewart4.093$880,000$1,250,000$1,400,000$1,325,000
Alex Call2.161$769,100$1,400,000$1,500,000$1,450,000

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-payroll/108471/dodgers-salary-arbitration-2026
 
2025 Dodgers season review: Yoshinobu Yamamoto

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From Tokyo to Toronto, this season belonged to Yoshinobu Yamamoto. In my view, both as a journalist and as a traveling correspondent, Yamamoto was the best pitcher in MLB in 2025, with no disrespect to either Cy Young winner.

He was the Dodgers’ Rock of Gibraltar. He threw the first pitch of the season in Tokyo at the Tokyo Dome in front of the rapt silence of his countrymen.

He made every assigned start and led the Dodgers in innings pitched, strikeouts, and wins. He led the league in allowing the fewest hits over nine innings (5.9) as opposing batters had a slash line of .183/.257/.283 against him during the regular season (think a slightly worse Michael Conforto).

Yamamoto made his first All-Star team. He won pitcher of the month honors in both March/April and September, becoming the first Dodger to win multiple awards in the same year since Clayton Kershaw in 2014.

He had the best Dodger pitching postseason since Orel Hershiser in 1988, which is damning Yamamoto with faint praise. Yamamoto fittingly threw the final pitch of the season in Toronto, while somehow getting the most outs on no rest to earn World Series MVP honors.

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One has to dig really deep to find flaws with Yamamoto’s sophomore campaign. He had four starts in which he gave up more than four earned runs. He gave up twice as many home runs this year compared to last. He has forgettable entrance music.

For entrance music, Yamamoto should embrace the anthem of another confident, stylish Japanese (fictional) icon: Char Aznable. Is it an excuse for 1970s’ beats at Dodger Stadium? Partially, but the horn intro would mesh well with the recent addition of Edwin Diaz.

A good place to start this final review in depth is to compare what he did from where he left off last year:

Going forward, Yamamoto needs to work further acclimating to the American pitch schedule and his pitch efficiency as he averaged about 4⅔ innings in the playoffs and five innings during the regular season…

If Yamamoto reaches even close to his NPB metrics for effectiveness and length in 2025, the Dodgers will certainly take those results without any complaint.

All that can be said about this goal is mission accomplished. But before rightfully celebrating Yamamoto as a player, it is worth taking a moment to celebrate him as a man.

Measure of a Man​


In October, Dylan Hernandez, previously of the Los Angeles Times, published an article on how Yamamoto helped his translator, Yoshihiro Sonoda, acclimate to the team, even though he was separated from his wife.

On Yamamoto’s first day of Spring Training in 2024, Yamamoto stopped Sonoda from collecting the javelins that Yamamoto has become famous for using in training by saying, “Please, you’re my interpreter,” he said. “You’re not my servant.” Hernandez continued:

In the months that followed, Sonoda noticed how Yamamoto treated others. He wasn’t kind only to other players. He was also conscientious of the organization’s rank-and-file employees.

“He pretends he’s not watching, but he’s watching,” Sonoda said. “He seems like he’s not listening, but he’s listening.”

Every day the Dodgers are on the road, Yamamoto has Starbucks coffee delivered to the team hotel. He always orders something for Sonoda.

Sonoda wanted to resign after two days because he had no experience as an interpreter. Sonoda reconsidered and has been a fixture with Yamamoto for the past two years.

“[Sonoda’s] efforts in the shadows have been to where I can feel them,” Yamamoto said. “He’s a very pure and straightforward person. I think he’s really wonderful.”

Vindication​


One might ask how the Dodgers gave the largest pitching contract to someone who had not thrown in MLB… if they had spent less than five minutes on research. If anything, as someone who did do the research, the public ignorance was amusing.

For the past two years, it has not been an overexaggeration to say that Yamamoto is the best credentialed pitcher in the world. I am all for healthy skepticism, but even with Yamamoto’s learning curve in 2024, the fanbase was slow to jump on the hype train regarding Yamamoto, even with shaky debut in South Korea aside.

If 2024 was his introduction, 2025 was his ascendance into Dodger lore.

While Yamamoto did not eclipse the most impressive Dodger regular-season performance in modern history (Kershaw, 2014), he was still worth every penny of his contract in both general effectiveness and being the first Dodger hurler to qualify for league leaderboards since 2022.

Yamamoto used his six-pitch arsenal to confuse hitters throughout the league, much as he had done in Osaka playing for the Orix Buffaloes. Yamamoto’s true splitter was one of the best pitches in baseball, as hitters hit just .132 against it in 2025.

Yamamoto finished third in the NL Cy Young race with a 12-8 record. While wins are not the end-all statistic that they once were, Yamamoto’s success in the regular season was deflated by two factors outside of his control. For instance, in September, Yamamoto gave up two runs all month. To be fair, one of those runs was a big one.

But in earning his second monthly award, two trends persisted all year, which, if addressed, could vault Yamamoto into legendary status for his third MLB campaign.

Oh, Offense, where art thou?


Yamamoto often had to be so efficient and effective because his offense literally did not show while he was on the mound. In 2025, Yamamoto had 2.9 runs of support while he was on the mound.

Only six qualifying pitchers received less run support while pitching: Miles Mikolas, Chase Dollander, Erick Fedde, Ranger Suarez, Antonio Senzatela, and Michael Wacha. In contrast, Kershaw received 5.8 runs of support per game in 2025, tied for third-best in the Majors.

When Yamamoto left a game he pitched, the team’s offensive output spiked to 4.1 runs of support. Accordingly, Yamamoto had many more no-decision and tough-luck loss outings than one would think, considering his statline.

Dirty Work


Looking over the game logs, there were several games throughout the year where Yamamoto left the game winning, having thrown a quality start or better, only for Tanner Scott, Blake Treinen, or a combination of both to spoil excellent outings.

  • May 20: vs. Diamondbacks (Scott)
  • July 13: @Giants (Scott)
  • August 31: vs. Diamondbacks (Scott)
  • September 6: @Orioles (Treinen and Scott)

Admittedly, some of these outings were dampened by the lack of offense as described above.

Yamamoto had the grace to accept these setbacks and move forward, when many others would have held a grudge or complained publicly. The closest thing to reproach was said after the September 6 debacle to The Orange County Register:

“Obviously, it’s really hard to swallow,” Yamamoto said of the loss through his interpreter. “But the only thing we can do is we’ve got to get together, put things together, and overcome it.”

The no-hitter in Baltimore would have been the only no-hitter in MLB in 2025 and the first of Yamamoto’s MLB career. Yamamoto previously threw no-hitters in 2022 and 2023 in NPB, becoming the first pitcher in that league to toss no-hitters in consecutive seasons.

“Losing Isn’t an Option”​


Yamamoto had the most outstanding Dodger postseason for a pitcher in the franchise’s history, inarguably. Hitters had a slash line of .174/.224/.258 against him during the entire postseason run, which was comparable to last year in almost double the workload (18 2/3 IP in 2024 vs. 37 1/3 IP in 2025).

Yamamoto started slowly, by his standards, with only a 6 2/3 inning, two runs (none earned), nine strikeout performance against the Cincinnati Reds in Game 2 of the Wild Card Round, followed by a middling, 4 inning, three run, two strikeout outing against the Philadelphia Phillies in Game 3 of the National League Division Series, being outpitched by the tandem of Aaron Nola and Ranger Suarez, who in a change of pace actually got run support.

Before Game 2 of the National League Championship Series, the Dodgers Social Media Team produced a gem about Yamamoto’s next start in Milwaukee, featuring a battle cry that he carried for the rest of the postseason.

"Losing isn't an option."

Go get 'em, Yoshinobu. pic.twitter.com/I6qCah51lI

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

Yamamoto gave up a leadoff home run to Jackson Chourio and then breezed through the Brewers, striking out seven, in the first postseason complete game in the Majors since 2017, to put the Dodgers up two games to none, in a series that would end with an emphatic sweep.

The Bane of Toronto​


In the World Series, Yoshinobu Yamamoto became the Bane of Toronto (and Canada as a whole), earning three victories in the Fall Classic against the Toronto Blue Jays, all in Toronto. Per Sarah Langs of MLB.com, Yamamoto was the first pitcher to win three games in a single World Series since Randy Johnson in 2001 and the first pitcher to ever win three games in the same Fall Classic on the road. Further, Yamamoto became the fourth pitcher ever to win both Games 6 and 7, joining Johnson, Harry Brecheen (1946), and Ray Kremer (1925).

Contrary to Derek Jeter’s definitive proclamation that Yamamoto would not throw a consecutive complete game after dispatching the Brewers, Yamamoto did just that feat in Game 2, allowing a single run and striking out eight to even the Fall Classic at one game apiece. He retired the final 20 batters in a row, setting a new franchise record, supplanting Carl Erskine (19) in 1952 World Series Game 5.

With Yamamoto’s second complete game of the postseason, he joined Curt Schilling as the only pitchers with multiple consecutive complete games since 1993. Moreover, these complete games were the first of Yamamoto’s MLB career, joining Josh Beckett as the only two pitchers to do the feat for the first time in the postseason. Yamamoto had eight career complete games while pitching for the Orix Buffaloes in NPB.

Two days later, Yamamoto etched himself into Dodgers’ lore by being willing to pitch on one day’s rest in the entertaining marathon that was Game 3 to the shock and admiration of his teammates. Had Freddie Freeman had a walk-off home run for the second World Series in a row, Yamamoto would have pitched in the nineteenth inning to the conclusion of the game.

Instead, Yamamoto returned to pitch the first elimination game back in Toronto in Game 6, stymying the Blue Jays over six innings and again only allowing one run, while striking out six.

At this point, Yamamoto had become the de facto final boss for the Blue Jays to overcome. During Game 7 at the watch party of nearby Scotiabank Arena, the crowd reacted visibly when Yamamoto started warming up on no day’s rest in the do-or-die classic.

On no rest, clearly tired and aided by his defense, Yamamoto bent but did not break, pitching the final 2 2/3 innings, which was the longest outing of any Dodgers’ pitcher in Game 7, rightfully earning Most Valuable Player honors as the Dodgers repeated as champions for the first time in franchise history.

At the Championship Rally, Yamamoto addressed his adoptive hometown crowd in both Spanish and English, proudly proclaiming that losing wasn’t an option. Finishing his age-26 season, Yamamoto stands atop the pinnacle of the sport, lacking only a Cy Young in his American trophy case.

Now, Dodgers fans hold their breath as Yamamoto returns to play for Samurai Japan in the 2026 World Baseball Classic. Yamamoto’s unique mobility mechanics lend him to effectively be a rubber band man, and his youth lead him to wear life gloriously. For as good as Yamamoto was in 2025, based on his prior successes in NPB, he still has another gear to unlock in MLB.

No one doubts Yamamoto anymore.

2025 particulars​


Age: 26

Stats: 30 G, 12-8, 173 2/3 IP, 2.49 ERA, 2.94 FIP, 59 BB, 201 K, 2.72 xERA, 0.990 WHIP, 4.9 rWAR, 5.0 fWAR

Postseason Stats: 6 G, 5-1, 37 1/3 IP, 1.45 ERA, 2.79 FIP, 6 BB, 33 K, 0.780 WHIP

Salary: $10 million

Game of the year​


While honorable mentions must be given to his near no-hitter on September 6, his consecutive complete games of NLCS Game 2 and World Series Game 2, and his stopper of a start in World Series Game 6, Yamamoto’s Game of the Year was the final day of the year, Game 7 on November 1.

With no rest, he pitched 2 2/3 scoreless innings, serving as the final boss of the World Series in a performance so gritty and legendary that Yamamoto rightfully earned World Series MVP honors. About a month later, Blue Jays Manager John Schiender could only remark, “I hope he’s still tired” in response to Yamamoto’s Game 7 heroics.

Schiender may not have gotten the memo: losing for Yamamoto was not an option.

Roster status​


Yamamoto is under contract through 2035 and will earn $12 million in 2026. He has two opt-out clauses, the first of which could potentially be triggered after the 2029 season, barring any right elbow injury lasting for at least 134 consecutive service days during the 2024 through 2029 seasons.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...107646/yoshinobu-yamamoto-2025-dodgers-review
 
Brusdar Graterol 2026 salary arbitration preview

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Salary arbitration season is upon us, with the exchange date coming next Thursday, January 8. Among the four Dodgers eligible for arbitration this offseason, Brusdar Graterol has the easiest salary to predict.

Brusdar Graterol did not pitch at all during 2025 as he recovered from surgery to repair a torn labrum in his right shoulder. There are plenty of precedents in recent years for players eligible for arbitration who either did not pitch the previous season or pitched sparingly, earning either the very same salary or quite close to it.

Last offseason, Tony Gonsolin ($5.4 million) and Dustin May ($2.135 million) each avoided arbitration with one-year deals for 2025 that matched their 2024 salaries after not pitching the previous year while recovering from elbow surgeries. Ditto for Walker Buehler, who missed the 2023 season while recovering from his second Tommy John surgery and re-signed in 2024 for $8.025 million, matching his previous salary.

Graterol was in a similar situation last offseason, sidelined for over four months in 2024 with a shoulder strain then missing another month with a hamstring strain. He earned $2.7 million that season and pitched in only seven games during the regular season and three more in the postseason (remember his barehanded stab of a grounder back to the box in the World Series?). Graterol for 2025 avoided arbitration in January with a one-year deal for $2.8 million, a slight raise over his previous salary.

With five years, 167 days of major league service time, Graterol is eligible for arbitration for the fourth and final time before free agency. MLB Trade Rumors projected a $2.8 million salary for Graterol, and Cot’s Baseball Contract predicted the same. There’s no reason for me to vary from this, so let’s mark down Graterol for $2.8 million, in ink.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-payroll/108502/brusdar-graterol-salary-arbitration-dodgers-2026
 
Look, I gotta hand it to the Dodgers - they really know how to run an organization. Yamamoto was an absolute BEAST this year and that World Series performance was legendary stuff. Pitching on no rest in Game 7? That's the kind of heart you love to see.

But can we talk about how RIDICULOUS it is that people are STILL fighting over that Ohtani 50/50 ball?? The thing already sold for over $4 million and these clowns couldn't even reach an agreement in mediation! Classic American lawsuit nonsense right there. At least Goldin had the sense to get them to let the auction happen first. Greed really does make the world go round, doesn't it?

The arbitration stuff is pretty straightforward this year for LA. Graterol getting the same $2.8 million after missing the whole season with shoulder surgery makes total sense - that's just how it works when you don't pitch. Smart move by the front office to non-tender Evan Phillips though. Can't be paying guys coming off Tommy John who are about to hit free agency anyway.

And that Kershaw farewell video... man, end of an era right there. Dude was one of the best to ever do it, even if he never quite dominated in October the way Yamamoto just did. Speaking of which - Yamamoto better stay healthy during the WBC because that guy is the engine that makes this whole repeat thing possible.

Still think the Bills would've made a better story this year but whatever, congrats to LA on the back-to-back! 🙄
 
Dodgers notes: Bo Bichette update, Tatsuya Imai to Astros

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Although the offseason is now two months through, there is still a plethora of major talent still waiting on where their careers will take them next.

Outfielders Kyle Tucker and Cody Bellinger, who are at the cream of the crop for free agents at their position, still don’t have a home for the 2026 season. Bo Bichette’s name has come up in recent rumors, and his market now includes three previously unreported teams, being the Dodgers, the Chicago Cubs, and New York Yankees, per Jon Heyman at the New York Post.

With Mookie Betts slated as the primary shortstop after a phenomenal season defensively, a move for Bichette would place him at second base, with Mark Feinsand of MLB.com previously indicating that the now-former Blue Jay would be willing to switch over to second base full-time. Bichette had never played outside of shortstop until the 2025 World Series, where he started both at second base and designated hitter.

Links​


It only took nine and a half hours for the first major signing of 2026 to take place, and a pitcher who was determined to take down the Dodgers now has that opportunity.

Japanese pitcher Tatsuya Imai agreed to a three-year, $54 million deal with the Houston Astros with opt-outs after every year of the deal. Jesse Rogers at ESPN was the first to report the contract details. The 27-year-old starter pitched in 24 games for the Seibu Lions, posting a 10-5 record with a 1.92 ERA and 0.892 WHIP, striking out 178 hitters while walking 45 over 163 2/3 innings of work. He will serve as a frontline member of Houston’s rotation behind AL Cy Young contender Hunter Brown as they look to bounce back after missing the postseason in 2025.

2025 gave Dodgers fans and Los Angeles sports fans a lot to be thankful for. Whether it be the Rams defeating the Minnesota Vikings in the Wild Card round right after the multiple wildfires, the Lakers making a blockbuster trade for Luka Dončić, or the Dodgers repeating as champions, it was a memorable year full of pleasant surprises.

Bill Plaschke of the Los Angeles Times writes a touching piece on how sports allowed him to find strength in the face of adversity, as he was personally affected by the Eaton fires that ravaged the city of Altadena.

In 2025, sports showed me that life can get better, life will be better, that if we hang in there long enough we can all hit that Miggy Ro homer, make that Andy Pages catch, stay forever young. And thus I offer a heartiest and hopeful welcome to 2026.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...tes-bo-bichette-update-tatsuya-imai-to-astros
 
Breaking down the 2026 Dodgers schedule for value

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Adric at Truist Park. June 5, 2021. | Michael Elizondo / True Blue LA

The 2025 season is over, and the Dodgers are champions — again! Neat. We have finished signing Auld Lang Syne, and it’s time to turn the page!

Schedule-release videos are common and popular in other leagues, such as the National Football League. However, in 2025, MLB and the Dodgers inadvertently released the 2026 schedule on the same day that Taylor Swift announced her engagement. Oops.

In fact, the Dodgers did not announce anything, and the closest anyone got to a schedule release post was my publishing my own tweets on BlueSky in real-time, while I was writing down dates on a literal napkin, frantically hitting refresh.

Okay, the Dodgers schedule has been released. I'm sure we'll get an official announcement at some point. Here's the home portion, all series are three games unless otherwise listed.March 26-31: AZ-CLEApril 10-15: TEX-NYMApril 24-29: CHC-MIAMay 9-14: ATL – SF (4)May 25-31: COL-PHI

Michael Elizondo (@elidelajandro.bsky.social) 2025-08-26T17:59:49.135Z

For those keeping track, there is no international travel for the Dodgers in 2026, for which I have the following ot say: Thank. God.

I enjoyed Japan immensely. I will treasure the memories of traveling to the Tokyo Series with Mom for the rest of my life. But being on the shelf for months afterwards, and watching the team stumble in a hangover for months, is a heck of a cost.

Some of you may not enjoy traveling and prefer to visit Dodger Stadium. I understand and salute you, as Dodger Stadium needs its regular denizens. The team cracked four million attendees at home for the first time in franchise history in 2025, and one expects that figure to go up while being bombarded with “back-to-back champions” merchandise and taglines.

The players and the team would agree with the following argument: Dodger road fans are the best road fans in baseball. Pick an away game, any away game, and you will find a vocal contingent of the Dodger faithful — we show up.

It has been a fun five seasons doing these entries for True Blue LA and six seasons since I started this adventure. The circuit finally closes this season as I tick off the last three domestic stadiums from my list.

Truthfully, I start planning for away travel the day the following year’s schedule is released and finalize details such as flights, tickets, and hotels six months before the games. I also set up price alerts to ensure I do not miss a good deal.

For a home game at Dodger Stadium, you will have 82 chances in 2026. I do not live in Los Angeles, but stadium giveaways would likely guide me, which have not been released yet. To help break down the 82 away games next year, this essay will cover each scheduled road trip, provide comments, and link to any relevant Guide entries, if applicable.

The Dodgers’ 2026 road schedule​


We are on the Bronx cycle, and the Dodgers will not visit Seattle, Arlington, Cleveland, Kansas City, Tampa, Boston, or Baltimore. Those teams will instead be visiting Dodger Stadium. If you did not go to these locations in 2025, you must wait until 2027 — assuming we even have a season, which is a topic for a later day.

All series are three games, unless otherwise noted.

April 3-9 — 3 at Washington Nationals, 3 at Toronto Blue Jays: Ah, a rerun of the 2024 classic “Poutine on the Ritz.” The first road trip of the year will have no shortage of drama, with a potential repeat White House visit and the Dodgers’ return to Toronto.

If one visits the Capital in April, one is likely to see cherry blossoms, but one can also expect cold weather. On the flip side, visiting Toronto from D.C. is as easy as it can be if you’re already on the East Coast.

I am sure the Toronto faithful will give the Dodgers a warm welcome after being such lovely hosts last November. Drama aside, Rogers Centre is just fine unless the dome is open. The dome will not be open in April.

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April 17-23 — 4 at Colorado Rockies, 3 at San Francisco Giants: The Good: having an NL West-only road trip in April. The Bad: Doing four games in Colorado under any circumstances is taxing, plus it will likely be cold. Oracle Park is Oracle Park, regardless of the time of year. If you have been, you know; if you have not, bring layers and be tolerant if the Dodgers somehow lay an egg in the Lion’s Den.

If you miss your opportunity to visit Denver or San Francisco on this trip, it will be a lengthy wait until the Dodgers return to either location in 2026.


May 1-6 — 3 at St. Louis Cardinals, 3 at Houston Astros: I have yet to visit Daikin Park, as it is one of the last stadiums I have left to visit. Odds are that I will have an opportunity to heckle the newest Astro, Tatsuya Imai, during this series.

St. Louis in May is a fine time to visit if you have never been to The Lou. It is worth going up the Gateway Arch exactly once, and to do so requires plenty of planning. I admit I am not looking forward to going to Houston, but it is not my place to trash the city, nor will I bang on this point, even in garbage time. This level of humor will be constant during my likely misadventures in Cheattown, U.S.A.


May 15-24 — 3 at Anaheim Angels, 3 at San Diego Padres, 3 Milwaukee Brewers: This road trip is one of three trips visiting three cities, with nine games over ten days.

Anyone who follows the team around for these three series is quite the trooper. Anaheim is a vastly overpriced stadium, San Diego is a gem of MLB, albeit expensive when the Dodgers visit, and Milwaukee is worth what one puts in.

Starting in Anaheim and making the short trek over to San Diego is relatively painless. Personally, I would watch the Anaheim series from home. Traveling from San Diego to Milwaukee is an unusual choice, but it becomes easier if a traveling fan flies to Chicago and then drives an hour north to Milwaukee.

Since the Dodgers dispatched the Brewers with ease in the NLCS, I would expect the Brewers’ faithful to remember and react accordingly. The Brewers series concludes the day before Memorial Day, when the Dodgers return home.

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June 1-4 — 4 at Arizona Diamondbacks: Who does not love a random, early-week road trip to Phoenix in June?

The Dodgers opened the season at home against the Diamondbacks, so it makes a measure of sense that the first visit to the desert happens almost three months later. Chase Field is the runt of the NL West stadiums. The Guide has first-timers well covered. The only issue with this series is that it runs Monday through Thursday, making it difficult for people willing to make the trek from Los Angeles or elsewhere.


June 9-14 — 3 at Pittsburgh Pirates, 3 at Chicago White Sox: This road trip features a duality of a very good stadium followed by a very bad stadium. While PNC Park has lost a bit of luster and the Dodgers have been underwhelming in Steel City since 2022, even a dulled gem is vastly superior to arguably the worst active MLB stadium.

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June 22-July 1 — 3 at Minnesota Twins, 3 at Padres, 3 at (West) Sacramento Athletics: The second three-city soujourn with nine games in ten days again has a bit of a whipsaw effect in the final road trip before the All-Star Break.

Target Field is a wildly underrated ballpark, but in a perfect world, this visit and the first visit to Phoenix would be swapped logistically. June in Minneapolis will either be perfect or muggy and rainy. Such duality is just a fact of life in the Midwest.

Then, the Dodgers make their final visit to San Diego in 2026 — before the All-Star Break. Lastly, the Dodgers will travel to West Sacramento and endure the Sacramento heat in minor league Sutter Health Park. Odds are the ticket prices for Sacramento and San Diego will be comparable, which highlights the MLB’s broken pricing structure relative to the Dodgers. Padres fans may be insufferable, but Petco Park is a solid ballpark; the same cannot and will not be said about West Sacramento.

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July 17-26 — 3 at New York Yankees, 3 at Philadelphia Phillies, 3 at New York Mets: The first road trip of the second half starts with a figurative bang as the Dodgers have their third and final three-city road trip in 2026.

I have been waiting for a road trip like this one ever since the league switched to this schedule model three seasons ago. The Dodgers will basically be living on the East Coast for two weeks, and this trip is easily the trip of the year, as one can visit the Bronx, take a train to Philadelphia, and return by rail to see the Dodgers play in Queens.

If everything goes to plan, I will be visiting my final stadiums to complete the MLB circuit with this road trip.

  • The Guide for New York (AL) has not yet been developed, as I have not been there.
  • The Guide for Philadelphia has not yet been developed, as I have not been there.
  • The Guide for New York (NL) is right here.

August 3-9 — 3 at Chicago Cubs, 3 at Diamondbacks:

If I were recommending a road trip for the first-time Dodgers traveler, Chicago and Arizona would be a good choice. One can enjoy the history of the Friendly Confines before enjoying a pseudo-home game at Chase Field for the final visit to the desert in the regular season.


August 25-30 — 3 at Atlanta Braves, 3 at Detroit Tigers:

While I do have many issues with Truist Park, logistically, it is easy to get a flight to Atlanta from just about anywhere in the country. Moreover, traveling from Atlanta to Detroit is relatively easy, given the available flights. If money and time off were not objects, one could easily spend a couple of days in Atlanta before spending the weekend in Detroit.

Detroit does get a bad rap for urban blight, but the area near Comerica Park is solid. If you pick the right hotel, it’s a lovely weekend; otherwise, you are likely to curse the commute times of navigating downtown Detroit.

  • The Guide for Atlanta is here.
  • The Guide for Detroit is under development. (Spoilers: It’s pretty good, provided that you get the hotel choice correct.)
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September 11-17 — 3 at Miami Marlins, 4 at Cincinnati Reds:

The Dodgers will complete their obligatory visit to loanDepot Park, which has worked better for some Dodgers than others in recent years. Still, Miami in mid-September can potentially be quite rainy and/or humid. However, loanDepot is best observed through television screens rather than in person.

Cincinnati is not the easiest place to visit due to the logistics and location, but the midweek series should bring the cost of attendance down. However, one should be mindful of the Queen City’s Oktoberfest, which will be the city’s fiftieth in 2026. The majority of the festivities are right by GABP, inflating hotel prices and generally making it much more challenging to get around downtown Cincinnati. However, the festival starts on the final day of the road trip, so the impact should be minimal.

In 2021, I was not so lucky. Moreover, people were not exercising proper crowd control measures, given that the COVID pandemic was still winding down, which was less than ideal.

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September 25-27 — 3 at Giants: The Dodgers close out the regular season in San Francisco. ‘Nuff said.



With the Dodgers finally having a regular spring, it’s time to start planning travel, as the calendar has finally turned, if you have not already started planning. Which 2026 series are you looking forward to? Be sure to point it out in the comments.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...king-down-the-2026-dodgers-schedule-for-value
 
That Yamamoto piece really captures what made his 2025 so special. The part about him pitching on no rest in Game 7 is the kind of thing you tell your grandkids about. Have to admit, watching him become the final boss for Toronto was something else entirely. The man just kept showing up when it mattered most.

The character stuff with his interpreter Sonoda was a nice touch too. Says a lot about someone when they treat the people around them well regardless of status. Those little details tend to get lost in the stats and highlights.

Interesting to see Bichette's name linked to LA now. The irony of potentially bringing in the Blue Jays shortstop after what Yamamoto did to them isn't lost on anyone, I'm sure. Moving him to second makes sense with Betts locked in at short. Curious how that market develops.

That schedule breakdown is helpful for anyone planning road trips. The July stretch through New York and Philly looks brutal but would be an incredible experience for fans willing to make that trek. The author's right about West Sacramento though - paying Petco prices for a minor league park is a tough sell.

One thing I noticed in the Graterol arbitration piece - the precedent they set with Gonsolin and May last year makes this pretty straightforward. $2.8 million seems like a lock. Smart by the front office to keep things simple there.

The Imai signing to Houston is worth watching. Another NPB arm making the jump, and now he's in the division rival's rotation. Should make for some interesting matchups down the road.
 
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