Dodgers notes: Bob Costas, Kyle Tucker, pitcher numbers

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Major League Baseball announced game times for the full 2026 schedule this week, which includes a 5:30 p.m. PT start for the Dodgers on opening day against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Dodger Stadium. That game will be televised exclusively by NBC and streamed on Peacock.

NBC’s coverage on March 26 begins at 5 p.m. PT, and on Thursday the network announced that Bob Costas will return to NBC Sports to host that pregame show, as well as the pregame show for the network’s Sunday Night Baseball telecasts during the season.

“As appreciative as I am of other aspects of my career, especially HBO and the MLB Network, for 40 years, my true broadcasting home was NBC,” Costas said in a press release.

Links​


Joshua Rodrigues at Baseball Prospectus looked at bat speed aging curves in relation to some of the bigger free agent contracts this offseason. Kyle Tucker, having just turned 29 and signed a contract that will last a maximum of four years, is less likely to decline precipitously during this deal with the Dodgers, Rodrigues argues.

“He’s still operating within a window where modest growth is reasonable before settling into a long-term plateau,” Rodrigues wrote. “From a bat speed perspective, he profiles as a player who should age into a stable, roughly league-average range rather than fall off a cliff.”

Rob Mains at Baseball Prospectus analyzed Tucker’s $240 million Dodgers contract, noting that Tucker will actually earn more than had he simply been paid $60 million per year in salary. That’s largely because Tucker got a $64 million signing bonus and $30 million in deferred salaries, which are both taxed in a player’s state of residence, and there’s no state income tax in Florida.

Blake Snell wears number seven with the Dodgers, and new closer Edwin Díaz will wear number three in Los Angeles. Michael Baumann at FanGraphs wrote about the recent upswing of single-digit numbers worn by pitchers, and he hates it aesthetically.

“The pitcher is the only player in baseball — maybe the only athlete in all of team sports — who spends most of the game with his back to the TV camera,” Baumann wrote. “And pitchers are big dudes, by and large; even a skinny two-digit number, like 11, feels inadequate for a pitcher’s broad thorax.”

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-links/109248/dodgers-bob-costas-nbc-kyle-tucker-pitcher-numbers
 
Five Dodgers ranked in MLB Pipeline 2026 top 100 prospects

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MLB Pipeline on Friday evening revealed its top 100 prospects heading into the 2026 season, including five Dodgers. Outfielders are the strength of the top of the Dodgers system, including their top four prospects at MLB Pipeline plus shortstop Emil Morales.

Josue De Paula is the top-ranked Dodgers prospect at MLB Pipeline, rated 15th overall, and either the third or fourth-ranked outfield prospect in baseball on the list. Konnor Griffin of the Pirates is the No. 1 prospect overall and has played both shortstop and center field, with more time at the former. Other outfield prospects ranked ahead of De Paula are Max Clark of the Tigers at 10th overall and Walter Jenkins of the Twins at No. 14.

De Paula last season hit .250/.391/.400 with a 132 wRC+, 12 home runs, and 32 stolen bases in 102 games, 98 of them with High-A Great Lakes before getting promoted to Double-A Tulsa in the final week of the season. He also won Futures Game MVP in July in Atlanta.

De Paula was ranked the 40th-best prospect by MLB Pipeline at the beginning of last season, and shot up to 12th overall in their August update.

Zyhir Hope was also promoted to Double-A in the final week of 2025, and like his fellow outfield teammate is heading into his age-21 season. Hope was ranked the No. 27 prospect by MLB Pipeline, up from 75th at the beginning of last season.

Eduardo Quintero is a year younger than De Paula and Hope, and was the top-ranked Dodgers prospect this week at Baseball America. Quintero checks in at 30th overall at MLB Pipeline after winning California League MVP last season before spending the last month and a half in High-A Great Lakes.

MLB Pipeline ranked outfielder Mike Sirota the 60th-best prospect in baseball, up from 66th last August.

Emil Morales is the only non-outfielder Dodgers prospect on this list, ranked 92nd overall by MLB Pipeline after hitting .314/.396/.515 with 14 home runs, 24 doubles, and a 141 wRC+ between rookie-level Arizona and Class-A Rancho Cucamonga before turning 19 in late September.

From MLB Pipeline’s scouting report this year of the Dodgers’ top international signing from 2024:

Morales moves well for his size — 6-foot-3 and at least 15 pounds stronger than his listed 191 — and is an aggressive runner with average speed. He’s not the rangiest shortstop but moves well and puts himself in position to make plays. His instincts, hands and arm help his chances of sticking at short, though he’ll wind up at third base if he loses any quickness as he continues to mature physically.
PlayerPospreseason 2026preseason 2025Aug 2025
Josue De PaulaOF154012
Zyhir HopeOF277519
Eduardo QuinteroOF30NR55
Mike SirotaOF60NR66
Emil MoralesSS92NRNR

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...5/dodgers-top-100-prospects-mlb-pipeline-2026
 
Dodgers notes: Shohei Ohtani, Yu Darvish, Craig Kimbrel

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During last year’s New York Baseball Writers’ Awards Gala, Shohei Ohtani was unable to attend the event despite being awarded his 2024 NL MVP plaque. This time around, in receiving his second consecutive NL MVP and third consecutive MVP, Ohtani was in person to present his acceptance speech. Just as he did when he accepted his second MVP award with Angels, Ohtani decided to present his speech in English with a bit of a comedic twist wrapped within.

“To all the writers who voted for me, thank you,” Ohtani said. “This MVP award is very meaningful, and winning it again means so much to me… To the ‘86 Mets team, I now know the feeling of what it’s like to become a world champion— and it’s great— so congratulations on your 40-year anniversary. Thank you to the Dodgers organization for believing in me and embracing my vision.”

Shohei Ohtani accepts the 2025 National League MVP Award! pic.twitter.com/w9KhoUSViZ

— Foul Territory (@FoulTerritoryTV) January 25, 2026

Links​


Former Dodger and current San Diego Padres right-hander Yu Darvish is at a crossroads in his playing career. Darvish only made 15 starts with San Diego this past season as he dealt with right elbow inflammation to begin the year. He will miss most, if not all, of the 2026 season after undergoing UCL repair surgery.

Kevin Acee of the San Diego Union Tribune reported that Darvish intended to retire and that he would forfeit the remaining three years and $43 million still left on his extension that he signed back in Feb. 2023. Darvish later refuted Acee’s claim by taking to his Twitter (X) account to announce that his retirement was a premature report. Should Darvish fail to complete his rehab, he will announce his retirement.

“You may have seen an article, and although I am leaning towards voiding the contract, there’s still a lot that has to be talked over with the Padres so the finer details are yet to be decided. Also I will not be announcing my retirement yet. Right now I am fully focused on my rehab for my elbow, and if I get to a point where I can throw again, I will start from scratch again to compete. If once I get to that point I feel I can’t do that, I will announce my retirement.”

Old friend Craig Kimbrel will try to play in his 17th big league season, as the reliever signed a minor league deal with the New York Mets. Jon Heyman of the New York Post was the first to report the signing.

Kimbrel most recently had a short-lived reunion with the Atlanta Braves that last all of an inning before spending the rest of the season with the Houston Astros. Between Atlanta and Houston, he posted a 2.25 ERA across 12 innings of work.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-links/109278/dodgers-shohei-ohtani-yu-darvish-craig-kimbrel
 
The continuing education of Buster Posey

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We have reached the portion of the offseason where most of the major pieces have come off the board (and shocker — for the third offseason in a row, the Dodgers are drinking everybody’s milkshake, allegedly bullying everyone, much to everyone’s agita).

Never mind that the Dodgers have created an environment that both keeps and attracts the league’s best talent. No one can accuse the Dodgers of sitting on their laurels.

“We’ve agents reach out and say, ‘Hey, I know you haven’t called, but our player would really like to play there.’”

Andrew Friedman on the Kyle Tucker signing & the Dodgers culture.

( 🎤: @THEREAL_DV) pic.twitter.com/3qk9BshK4y

— AM 570 LA Sports (@AM570LASports) January 22, 2026

At this point, as fans, we await the upcoming World Baseball Classic and the potential returns of Kiké Hernández (think when the 60-day injured list goes live) and Evan Phillips (think All-Star Break).

Rather than devote column inches today on the Gondola, or the absurd narratives that the Dodgers are responsible for the impending lockout in December of this year, which is just so dumb, but when does a lion worry about the shrill bleating of sheep, it’s really the same story but from different angles.

Let us instead look northward and at our northern cousins to see what, if anything, they have gotten up to.

With the hoopla of signing Kyle Tucker and Edwin Diaz, one could be forgiven for not paying close attention to what the NL West was getting up to. For instance, the San Diego Padres’ arguably biggest news this winter was a report on Saturday that old friend Yu Darvish was going to retire before additional reporting that Darvish “was thinking” about retirement with three years to go on his deal.

As for the Arizona Diamondbacks, I have nothing to say as they are the last team to vanquish the Dodgers in October. Game recognizes game, even if you only thumped a now-retired-as-a-three-time-champion Clayton Kershaw, Bobby Miller, and Lance Lynn. I have been respectfully silent for three offseasons, which will be long enough once play resumes in March.

As for the Colorado Rockies, well, my mother picked Denver for the August trip.

But the Giants? I always pay attention because of the fact I live less than an hour from Oracle Park. Even if I wanted to ignore them, the citizenry will not oblige. And the Giants’ offseason can be summarized as follows:

Firm, Masterly Inactivity​


To quote one of my favorite British comedies, Yes, Prime Minister, which debuted in 1986, featuring Paul Eddington playing Jim Hacker, a well-meaning doofus who ascended to Prime Minister at the conclusion of Yes, Minister (the previous series), squaring off against Sir Nigel Hawthorne playing Sir Humphrey Appleby, the Cabinet Minister: the Giants have mastered “firm, masterly inactivity” during this offseason.

I have been on record lamenting the obstinate, persistent mediocrity of our northern cousins during these past five years. Apart from a sugar high fluke of 2021, you can basically write the Giants being non-contenders in pen, while glancing and wondering whether a chisel and stone tablets might be more appropriate.

When I last left off, I had the following to say about our northern cousins:

Much like a kid who peaked in high school, instead of engaging in self-reflection and therapy when life did not go according to plan, the Giants assumed everyone else was the problem, 2021 was the norm, and they continued to double down.

And double down and double down. The fun part, especially as a Dodgers writer who lives in the Bay Area, the locals are starting to notice and grouse about this fact.

The Giants signed pitchers Tyler Mahle, Sam Hentges, and Adrian Houser…in a market that had Tatsuya Imai, Bo Bichette, Kyle Tucker, Edwin Diaz, etc. The Dodgers paid almost as much in luxury tax as the Giants paid in total to their roster last year. Talk about not leaving home.

When a head-scratching manager hire is the most notable thing about your offseason, even the locals are starting to wonder if Buster Posey has lost the plot. Sure, he will likely get elected into the Hall of Fame next year, but at this rate, he is mimicking the arc of other star athletes who went into the front office: woefully inadequate.

Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle spoke to Foul Territory on January 20, and she did not hold back.

"They missed the playoffs by two games last year."@SplashHitPod contributor @SusanSlusser is a little baffled by the Giants underwhelming offseason up to this point. pic.twitter.com/7crGWgnVgb

— Foul Territory (@FoulTerritoryTV) January 20, 2026

To gently disagree with Ms. Slusser on one point, yes, the Giants finished two games out of a playoff spot.

However, portraying the Giants as having any serious postseason aspirations in 2025 is generous to the point of absurdity, without discussing the LOLMets trainwreck. The Mets started 45-24 with the best record in MLB on June 12 before melting down over the next 93 games, going 38-55, worse than everyone except the Rockies, the Washington Nationals, the Minnesota Twins, and the Chicago White Sox.

Yes, the Dodgers were maddeningly inconsistent this summer and even putrid in stretches, but they managed to right the ship, which clearly the Mets did not.

And even if the Giants had somehow bumbled their way into the postseason a la the Cincinnati Reds, their prize would have been facing…the Dodgers, who could be forgiven for what that thumping noise was while easily dispatching the Queen City boys.

Ms. Slusser summarized how team president Buster Posey has said he will make moves, yet ownership has largely been absent in this postseason regarding Bo Bichette (Mets), Tatsuya Imai (Astros), Cody Bellinger (Yankees), and Munetaka Murakami (White Sox). All were available at non-exorbitant contracts.

"He seems convinced that when he wants to spend big, they will let him, but we just aren't seeing it."

There's sort of a disconnect between what Buster Posey and Giants ownership are saying, says @SplashHitPod contributor @SusanSlusser. pic.twitter.com/YOEuvhpGZG

— Foul Territory (@FoulTerritoryTV) January 20, 2026

Attendance was up marginally in 2025, finishing 7th in baseball while averaging 36,121 per game, compared to 10th in 2024, when the average was 33,096 per game. At this rate, one wonders why.

Farhan 2.0?​


Dave Tobener of SFGate was even less complimentary of the Giants’ offseason on January 22 in a delightful essay titled “I thought Buster Posey had changed the SF Giants’ ways. Looks like I was wrong.” Some highlights to bask in include:

It’s been an underwhelming offseason for Farhan Zaidi and the Giants. Coming off a year when they missed the playoffs by a handful of games, it seemed like the organization was just a few key moves away from making a real push this season. But instead of addressing their most pressing needs in free agency or through a trade, the Giants instead settled for a series of moves that Zaidi is known for: signing pitchers coming off major injuries, loading up on backup catchers, and crossing their fingers that platoons can give them enough offensive production to get by. Very, very underwhelming.

Whoops, hang on – sorry, this is a lede I wrote a few years ago. I opened the wrong Word doc. Let me see here… well, actually, it still works. I just have to change Zaidi’s name to Buster Posey, and it’s good to go…

…As it stands now, the Giants are going to roll out a team that’s remarkably like the one that just went 81-81, only this time with a weaker bullpen, clear lineup holes and a shaky rotation beyond their ace. They seem to be counting on a new manager to generate excitement and right the ship, but has anyone ever bought a ticket to see the manager? Tony Vitello has been making the rounds lately to talk about how he wants the Giants to be the villains of baseball this season (which is laughable considering the team they share a division with), but what reason would anyone have to hate this Giants team? What have they done to make anyone fear them, let alone hate them?

The only vitriol may be coming from their own fan base. There’s a clear path to the playoffs in the National League that they seem to have no interest in taking. It’s maddening. Posey may not be turning into Zaidi, but the differences are getting harder to spot.

When it rains, it pours, because just before this essay was to be submitted, a news alert gave us one last gift.

A thimble for the ocean​


To conclude, the media asked Giants’ pitcher Logan Webb after the Giants’ FanFest in San Ramon about his participation in the upcoming WBC. During the scrum, someone asked Webb his thoughts about the Giants’ offseason.

To his credit, Webb was diplomatic, while looking like someone being asked to empty an ocean with a thimble.

View Link
“It’s not my job to add guys or do anything,” Webb told reporters Saturday at Giants FanFest in San Ramon. “It’s our job to just go out there and try to compete. Obviously, yeah, it’s not fun for me to watch the team that won it and the team that kicked our ass a lot last year go out and get some really good players just to make it more difficult.

The Dodgers prevailed in nine of 13 contests in 2025. For the record, if not for Blake Treinen and Tanner Scott, that count would have been eleven out of 13 contests. And the Dodgers just added to their bullpen and upgraded their corner outfielder play, while likely saying goodbye to Giantkiller Michael Conforto.

Do I have much pity for an organization that helped nudge the Oakland Athletics into their exile in West Sacramento? Sometimes you reap what you sow.

The Giants did make an acquisition back in December that I almost forgot about: the Curran Theater, which is about a mile and a half from the ballpark and the Mission Rock development. I do not recall the McCourts ever buying a theater, but considering that 15 years ago, the Dodgers were the punchline, the recommendation for the Dodgers faithful is to enjoy every drop of this golden era.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/general/109279/giants-still-boring-dodgers-peanut-gallery-costas-eisen
 
Dodgers have 6 Saturday games exclusively on Fox in 2026

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Fox Sports unveiled the bulk of their 2026 schedule on Friday, which includes six planned exclusive Saturday games on Fox and two more games on FS1.

Saturday games on Fox are exclusive broadcasts, which means no local telecast for those games, no SportsNet LA broadcast for the Dodgers games. The Dodgers’ six games exclusively on Fox include facing each of their last two National League Championship Series opponents as well as a 2024 World Series rematch against the Yankees in The Bronx. All of these Saturday games starting at 4:15 p.m. PT, except for July 18 against the Yankees:

  • April 25 vs. Chicago Cubs
  • May 2 at St. Louis Cardinals
  • May 23 at Milwaukee Brewers
  • July 18 at New York Yankees (5:08 p.m. PT)
  • July 25 at New York Mets
  • August 15 vs. Brewers

The Dodgers also had exactly six games exclusively on Fox each season dating back to 2022, the first four years of the network’s seven-year contract with Major League Baseball that runs through 2028.

Two other Dodgers games in 2026 will be on FS1, which are non-exclusive broadcasts and available locally, offering the rare dual-broadcast option for folks in the home markets for these games. Both of the FS1 Dodgers telecasts are road games — Monday, April 6 at the Toronto Blue Jays, and Thursday, August 27 at the Atlanta Braves.

To date, the other Dodgers games known to be exclusive to national television are opening day March 26 against the Diamondbacks on NBC and Peacock, and on Jackie Robinson Day Wednesday, April 15 against the Mets on ESPN. There are also two Tuesday games in the first half of the season on TBS, with those telecasts not exclusive.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...a/108521/dodgers-schedule-fox-television-2026
 
Dodgers have 7 prospects in The Athletic top 100

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It’s prospect-ranking season, with both Baseball America and MLB Pipeline unveiling top-100 lists last week. On Monday, Keith Law at The Athletic revealed his annual preseason ranking of the top 100 prospects in baseball. Seven Dodgers made this list, their most prolific showing yet among these groups.

Just like at BA and MLB, four outfielders comprised the top four slots on Law’s list at The Athletic. The youngest of the group, Eduardo Quintero, earned the top spot among Dodgers here, ranked No. 9 by Law. Josue De Paula checked in at No. 20, Zyhir Hope was 36th, and Mike Sirota was 51st.

We’ve covered the outfielders of late here, so let’s focus here on the other three prospect ranked in the top 100 at The Athletic.

Shortstop Emil Morales ranked 65th at The Athletic, after showing up at No. 92 by MLB Pipeline last week.

River Ryan is ranked the 55th-best prospect by Law, who has always been the highest on the pitcher, ranking the right-hander 33rd overall in 2024 and 52nd in 2025. Ryan debuted with the Dodgers in 2024 but succumbed after only four starts, needing Tommy John surgery that wiped out his 2025 season as well.

From Law at The Athletic:

Ryan should be ready to pitch in some role this spring after hitting 100 mph during his rehab. If he were completely healthy, he might be the No. 1 pitching prospect in baseball. He has above-average to plus stuff across the board, with ride on the upper-90s four-seamer, a slider, a cutter that was new in 2024, a two-plane curveball and a changeup, with the cutter probably the worst pitch at the moment because his other stuff is so good.

The other Dodgers prospect ranked in the top 100 at The Athletic is shortstop Alex Freeland, the switch-hitter who made his major league debut in 2025 and played all over the infield in his five weeks with Los Angeles. Freeland is ranked the 87th-best prospect in baseball by Law, who said of the infielder, “He’s played shortstop, and could probably be a fringe-average big leaguer there, but he’s best suited to second or third.”

PlayerPos2026 preseason2025 preseason
Eduardo QuinteroOF9NR
Josue De PaulaOF2026
Zyhir HopeOF3658
Mike SirotaOF51NR
River RyanSP5552
Emil MoralesSS65NR
Alex FreelandIF8768
Source: The Athletic

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-prospects/109298/dodgers-prospects-top-100-river-ryan
 
Josue De Paula leads 5 Dodgers in ESPN top 100 prospects

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Kiley McDaniel unveiled his preseason rankings of top 100 prospects in baseball on Tuesday at ESPN. Like the previously released lists — Baseball America (120 names), MLB Pipeline (110 names), and The Athletic (100 names so far) — McDaniel will likely reveal more names beyond the top 100. Last year his list went to 200, for instance. But for now we have his top 100.

A total of five Dodgers are in the top 100 at ESPN, led by outfielder Josue De Paula at No. 21 overall. De Paula in the four national prospect lists that have been revealed in the last week has settled into a fairly narrow range, ranked 15th by MLB Pipeline, 20th at The Athletic, 21st at ESPN, and 24th at Baseball America.

McDaniel had high praise for De Paula, comparing him to Yordan Alvarez “if it clicks.”

Eduardo Quintero continued to rocket up these lists, ranked 37th by McDaniel after his preseason ranking of 106th overall prior to the 2025 season. Quintero, who is a year younger than De Paula and Zyhir Hope, won California League MVP last year and finished the season with extended time at High-A Great Lakes.

“His raw power, bat-to-ball ability, and raw foot speed are all around average, but Quintero makes the most of them, putting up big numbers while being young for his level,” McDaniel wrote. “As is, his hit/power/speed/defense in center field tools are all average to a tick above to go with his plus arm.”

Last preseason, seven Dodgers were ranked in the top 100 prospects by ESPN, led by pitcher Roki Sasaki at No. 1 overall and catcher Dalton Rushing 16th. Both played in the majors last season.

This year, shortstop Emil Morales is the youngest Dodger in the ESPN top-100 list, with the 19-year-old checking in at No. 65 overall. From McDaniel:

Morales has all of the traits to project big homer totals down the road (loft to his path, pull/lift, hard-hit rate, etc.), but that means that giving up some contact is part of that trade. His pitch selection is also below average, so in combination, that gives evaluators pause on his offensive projection.

In-game power usually comes later in the development process, but the Dodgers are the right development group to shepherd him through this process, and the pieces are here for a top-10 prospect in the sport if everything clicks.
PlayerPos2026 age2026 preseason2025 preseason
Josue De PaulaOF212120
Eduardo QuinteroOF2037106
Zyhir HopeOF214070
Mike SirotaOF2355NR
Emil MoralesSS196580

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange.../109307/josue-de-paula-top-100-prospects-espn
 
Dave Roberts wants to manage in 2028 Olympics, per report

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The Summer Olympics are coming to Los Angeles in 2028, and baseball will be played at Dodger Stadium. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts wants to be involved, telling Dylan Hernández of the California Post that he wants to manage Team USA.

From Hernández:

“I went to school here,” the UCLA graduate said. “I manage the Dodgers.

“It’s a no-brainer.”

There’s a seemingly long time between now and the 2028 Olympics, but also a lot of logistical items to be resolved. But aside from that, there’s also the question of whether major league players would be allowed to play in the Olympics, which would require a disruption to the MLB schedule that season.

During the World Series last October, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred expressed optimism that a deal could be struck between the league’s owners and the player’s union for MLB players to be used in the Olympics, per Bill Shaikin at the Los Angeles Times:

“I am positive about it. … I think the owners have crossed the line in terms of, we’d like to do it if we can possibly make it work, but there are logistical issues that still need to be worked through.”

The schedule for the 2028 Olympics runs from July 14-30. When baseball will be played hasn’t been finalized, but Dodger Stadium will host the games, as it did in 1984 when the Summer Olympics were last in Los Angeles. Back then, baseball was only a demonstration sport in the Olympics. Baseball was an official medal sport from 1992 to 2008, and again in the 2020 Olympics, which were played in 2021.

Team USA did not qualify for the Olympics in 2024, and were led by college coaches in the 1992 and 1996 games. Since then, the team has been managed in Olympic play by former Dodgers.

In 2000, Tommy Lasorda managed Team USA to a gold medal in Sydney. Davey Johnson, who managed the Dodgers from ., helmed Team USA to a bronze medal in 2008 in Beijing., Longtime Dodgers catcher and Angels manager Mike Scioscia led the team to silver in 2021 in Tokyo, with a team that included former Dodgers Edwin Jackson and Tim Federowicz.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-links/109304/dave-roberts-olympics-2028-dodger-stadium
 
Dodgers notes: Mookie Betts, catching depth, Dino Ebel

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From Corey Seager, to Trea Turner, to Mookie Betts, the Dodgers had a carousel of options at shortstop from 2021 to the beginning of last season. It was Betts who stepped up in 2025 and ensured that the team had to look no further than inward as to which player would be their primary shortstop.

After putting in a full offseason of work to prepare for the position, Betts, in his first full season at the position, was one of the best defensive shortstops in all of baseball, with his 17 defensive runs saved leading all qualified shortstops last year. While he proved to be the team’s firm option for the foreseeable future, his offense on the other hand steeply declined.

2025 was undoubtedly the worst season at the plate for Betts, as he posted career-lows in batting average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage, finishing the year four percent better than the league average hitter in terms of wRC+. Entering his second season as the Dodgers’ starting shortstop, the goal for Betts is to equate the amount of offseason work he puts in defensively and offensively rather than lean heavily into one facet, per Sonja Chen of MLB.com.

As general manager Brandon Gomes said at the Winter Meetings, he has “a little more bandwidth” to strike a more regular balance between his offensive and defensive work. The Dodgers have already seen how an offseason’s work can transform Betts in one aspect of his game. They’re counting on his hard work paying off this year as well.

Before Betts heads off to Camelback Ranch, he will be a coach at the NBA All-Star Celebrity game on Feb. 13 at Intuit Dome.

Links​


Heading into spring training, the Dodgers have two catchers on their active roster, with Will Smith continuing to assume starting duties and Dalton Rushing serving as the replacement. Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register previews the Dodgers’ catching depth as pitchers and catchers report in two weeks.

Third base coach Dino Ebel spoke with David Vassegh of AM 570 about getting a front row experience for Miguel Rojas’ dramatic game-tying home run with one out in the top of the ninth of Game 7 of the World Series.

“I’ve been in some big moments and big games, where last year, Freddie Freeman in Game 1 hits the grand slam which we’ll never forget,” said Ebel. “When [Rojas] hit it, my hand went straight up. I knew it was gone.. When that ball went over the fence, it was just pure chills in my body… Him coming around third base was probably the best feeling I had just because he tied the game, giving us a chance to go into extra innings.”


Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...l-smith-dalton-rushing-dino-ebel-miguel-rojas
 
What roster moves are left for the Dodgers?

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The Dodgers’ two biggest needs this offseason were bullpen help and outfield production, and they went and signed the two best free agents at those positions in Edwin Díaz and Kyle Tucker, each contract setting records for average annual value.

With Tucker the lineup looks much deeper, and can be considered stacked even for a Dodgers team that has finished first or second in the National League in both runs scored and wRC+ in each of the last eight seasons.

But after signing Tucker, what moves remain for the Dodgers, with pitchers and catchers having their first workout at Camelback Ranch on February 13?

“There’s some things, but I think in terms of more seismic changes, It feels pretty well set,” Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said at Tucker’s introductory press conference last week. “There are still a few things we’re kicking around, and conversations that have been going for a bit that we’re going to continue to look at, try to enhance and build up depth.”

Let’s take a look at the current roster to see where some of those depth needs might arise.

Position players​


Lineup locks (9): Shohei Ohtani, Will Smith, Freddie Freeman, Tommy Edman, Mookie Betts, Max Muncy, Teoscar Hernández, Andy Pages, Kyle Tucker

Bench locks (3): Miguel Rojas, Andy Ibáñez, Dalton Rushing

Depth with options (4): LF/RF Alex Call, 2B/SS/CF Hyeseong Kim, SS/3B/2B Alex Freeland, LF/RF/1B Ryan Ward

The caveat here is we aren’t yet sure of Tommy Edman’s readiness at the start of the season after his November right ankle surgery. There’s room for one more position player on the active roster, and someone who can play the outfield will almost certainly fill that spot. Alex Call is probably the in-house favorite at the moment, but there’s always room for yet another reunion with Kiké Hernández, who is coming off left elbow surgery of his own.

Pitchers​


Rotation locks (5+1): Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow, Shohei Ohtani, Emmet Sheehan, Roki Sasaki

Bullpen locks & can’t be sent down (6): Edwin Díaz, Tanner Scott, Blake Treinen, Alex Vesia, Anthony Banda, Brusdar Graterol

Injured list (1): Brock Stewart

Starting depth (5): Gavin Stone, River Ryan, Ben Casparius, Justin Wrobleski, Landon Knack

Right-handed reliever depth (5): Will Klein, Edgardo Henriquez, Kyle Hurt, Bobby Miller, Paul Gervase

Left-handed reliever depth (2): Jack Dreyer, Ronan Kopp

Graterol had shoulder surgery after the 2024 season and did not pitch in 2025, so his readiness for the start of 2026 is at least somewhat in question, though he’s expected to be ready to go at the start of spring training. The Dodgers will have at least two and maybe three active roster spots to fill on the pitching side.

Gavin Stone and River Ryan are intriguing rotation options after coming off major surgeries and not pitching at all last year.

Ben Casparius and Justin Wrobleski have gotten extended roster runs in hybrid roles. Jack Dreyer was active for all of last season. With Tanner Scott, Alex Vesia, and Anthony Banda, the Dodgers already have three left-handers in the bullpen. Do they add another for a half-southpaw pen?

The point here is, at the moment, the Dodgers have functional depth, with so many pitchers who could be optioned if needed, and two potential roster spots that can used for swapping as needed. Adding another reliever wouldn’t be much of a surprise, even if it limits that depth somewhat.

In somewhat the same mold as a Kiké Hernández return, it wouldn’t be all that surprising if the Dodgers find a way to bring back Evan Phillips, who will miss the first half or so of this season after Tommy John surgery last June. But that would be more for later in the season, and wouldn’t necessarily preclude adding another reliever as well.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/109189/dodgers-roster-moves
 
Dodgers news – how long will the Dodgers window last?

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All of Major League Baseball has been debating for a while if A), what the Dodgers are doing with their payroll is the ‘correct’ way of doing things; B), how long it would be sustainable; and C) will it finally trigger a salary cap.

For the Dodgers front office, doing it ‘correctly’ is just semantics. Whatever one thinks of how Andrew Friedman and Co have gone about things, there’s no denying that winning three World Series in six seasons is something to be envied. They employ the best player on the planet in Shohei Ohtani, who has brought them untold amounts of revenue in advertising and other areas. The winning ways, combined with their clubhouse culture, has made it a top destination for the top free agents.

On Wednesday, Jack Harris posited that the Dodgers Front Office will not be able to do what they have been for very much longer.

While the Dodgers will still have their winning culture and ability to assess talent and be an enviable destination, when the salary cap or something similar in implemented, the “Golden Age” of this iteration of Dodgers Baseball will be over. As Harris puts it, the Dodgers will go from being a team that ‘should’ win it every season to a team that ‘could’ win it all.

Harris also wonders just how long the Dodgers will have their dominance with their aging core. Kyle Tucker and Andy Pages are the only two everyday players that are under the age of 30, with Tucker not being far off, at the age of 29. Max Muncy, Freddie Freeman, and Teoscar Hernandez have contracts expiring at the end of the next two seasons. The Dodgers do have one of the top farm systems in all of the majors but had to give away their second and fourth round drafts to sign both Tucker and Edwin Diaz this offseason. But, as this organization has shown time and again, they will find a way to field the best team possible.

—————————————————————————————————————————————————————————

The Dodgers have been doing a Dodgers Love LA Community Tour. On Tuesday, Dodgers alumni Dennis Powell and Matt Luke visited Hollydale Elementary School, hosting a Playworks Recess Takeover. They also handed out groceries and essentials to food insecure families.

To close out today's #DodgersLoveLA Community Tour, Matt Luke and Dennis Powell visited Hollydale Elementary School in South Gate. They hosted a Playworks Recess Takeover with eighth grade students and participated in movement-based programming. pic.twitter.com/8kJvWQYBa9

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) January 28, 2026
Back on the #DodgersLoveLA Community Tour, Dodger Alumni stopped by Christy’s Foundation in Northridge to hand out groceries and essentials to families experiencing food insecurity. pic.twitter.com/veH3PrpJ9j

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) January 28, 2026

On Wednesday, Steve Yeager and Billy Ashley met with emergency personnel to thank them for their services.

Steve Yeager continued the #DodgersLoveLA Community Tour presented by Bank of America by stopping at a special appreciation lunch with the World Series trophy for the San Bernardino Police Department. pic.twitter.com/8HFUEielax

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) January 29, 2026
On the next stop of the tour, Dodger Alumni Billy Ashley met with employees at the City of Los Angeles Emergency Management Department to recognize their dedication and service to our communities. #DodgersLoveLA pic.twitter.com/UsrpNFaqCj

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) January 29, 2026

The tour will continue before its culmination at Dodger Fan Fest this Saturday at Dodger Stadium.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...s/109321/dodgers-news-how-long-dodgers-window
 
Yoshinobu Yamamoto will pitch for Japan in World Baseball Classic

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Japan unveiled its 2026 World Baseball Classic roster on Monday, which included Los Angeles Dodgers stars Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto, as expected.

Ohtani was announced in November to play for Japan, though its not yet known whether he will pitch. Yamamoto’s inclusion was expected as well, though whether he pitched was at least somewhat in question after pitching 211 innings between the regular season and postseason combined, culminating in a heavy World Series workload that included starting and winning Game 6, and getting the final eight outs in Game 7 on zero days rest.

Yamamoto on Monday put those questions to rest. From Taro Abe at Chunichi Sports:

The Dodgers were initially reluctant about Yamamoto’s participation after his full workload last season, but his strong desire prevailed. He returned to Japan immediately after the World Series last year and carefully adjusted his training with his personal trainer, Osamu Yada, building his body to be able to compete in the WBC despite a shorter-than-usual offseason. He commented, “I’ve been training diligently this offseason to build the condition to compete in the WBC.”

Japan won the 2023 World Baseball Classic with strong performances from Yamamoto (two runs allowed in 7 1/3 innings, struck out 12 of his 27 batters faced), who was then pitching for the Orix Buffaloes, and Ohtani (.435/.606/.739 in 33 plate appearances; 9 2/3 innings, two runs, 11 strikeouts, got final three outs in title game).

At the winter meetings in December, Dodgers manager talked about the push and pull of players committing to play in the World Baseball Classic, which takes players out of spring training for potentially a few weeks, and can be especially disruptive for starting pitchers building up toward the major league regular season.

“I don’t want to be dismissive of what it means to them representing their country,” Roberts said in December. “I know the organization doesn’t but I do think that the conversations need to be had, will be had, as far as what each individual is taking on and whatever role that they might be taking on and what potential costs there might be. … But you can’t debate the emotion, what a player might feel of this potential opportunity.”

Japan manager Hirozaku Ibata said at a press conference Monday that the MLB players on Japan are expected to join the team for exhibition games against the Chunichi Dragons on February 27-28. Japan begins its World Baseball Classic schedule in Pool C in Tokyo, with its first game on March 6.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/world-ba...shinobu-yamamoto-world-baseball-classic-japan
 
That's quite the collection of Dodgers updates. A few things stand out to me.

Dave Roberts managing Team USA in 2028 at Dodger Stadium would be pretty fitting given the Dodgers' connection to Olympic baseball. Lasorda, Davey Johnson, Scioscia - there's a real tradition there. The bigger question is whether MLB actually works out the logistics to let major leaguers participate. Manfred sounds cautiously optimistic, but a mid-July break during the season would be unprecedented.

The Mookie situation is interesting. Career-worst offensive numbers last year after pouring everything into the shortstop transition. Makes sense that he'd be stretched thin trying to master a new position at this stage of his career. If he can find that balance this offseason, having a Gold Glove caliber shortstop who can also hit like vintage Mookie would be something else.

As for the window question - Harris has a point about the aging core, but I think people have been predicting the end of the Dodgers' run for years now. They just keep reloading. Tucker and Pages being the only everyday players under 30 is notable, but that farm system keeps producing. A salary cap would definitely change the equation though.

The Yamamoto WBC news is the one that makes me a little nervous. After 211 innings and that gutsy Game 7 relief appearance, jumping into international competition with a shortened offseason is a lot to ask. His desire to represent Japan is admirable, but hopefully they manage his workload carefully.
 
Blake Snell questionable to be ready by opening day

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LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - OCTOBER 29: Blake Snell #7 of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts during the fifth inning against the Toronto Blue Jays in game five of the 2025 World Series at Dodger Stadium on October 29, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Luke Hales/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In arguably the greatest World Series of the decade, the Dodgers went all in with their starting pitching to get the job done in a back-and-forth seven game series against the Toronto Blue Jays. This included Yoshinobu Yamamoto pitching on zero days rest to complete Game 7, while other starters such as Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow were given little time to recuperate for their efforts in the final two games of the series.

For Snell, the toll taken to his arm has been heavy this offseason, and as reported by Jack Harris of the California Post, it has limited his throwing program since the series’ conclusion. This could potentially render Snell unavailable for the beginning of the season, as the team is attempting to prioritize having their entire rotation at maximum health by opening day.

“You want to ramp up, but I gotta take my time and get healthy… I feel like I’m doing the right thing. I feel good. I’ve been throwing. It feels better. In the postseason, I gave everything I had for that. But on the front end of spring, I’ll have to be patient and let my body get to 100%.”

Snell notably spent four months on the injured list after his first two starts in a Dodger uniform last year, and the hope for both sides is to avoid having history repeat itself.

Links​


Miguel Rojas took to his Instagram story to announce that he will not be representing Team Venezuela for the World Baseball Classic. In a statement translated from Spanish, Rojas wrote, “I am very sad today… a real shame to not be able to represent my country and to put the flag on my chest. In this occasion, age wasn’t just a number.” Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic reports that the main reason for Rojas’ decision was due to insurance issues.

Game 3 of the 2025 World Series will go down as one of the longest postseason games in baseball history, and for president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman, emotions flared up during the 18-inning marathon. Friedman recounted his flare-up during an appearance on the Dodgers Territory podcast.

“Something I’m not very proud of; I may or may not have spiked a barstool in that Game 3, and it’s because of the range of emotions. Will Smith hits a ball to center that in my mind is definitely a homer, and Varsho goes back and catches it. The excitement of the homer to the catch next inning, I might have let the barstool slip.”
Andrew Friedman says he spiked a barstool during Game 3 of the World Series. 😂 pic.twitter.com/HghVi7tawU

— Dodgers Territory (@LADTerritory) January 29, 2026

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...-rojas-world-baseball-classic-andrew-friedman
 
Law Talk: The locker room rumble at Camelback Ranch, revisited

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Three years ago, a landlord/tenant dispute between the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Chicago White Sox, and the City of Glendale, Arizona, made national headlines. To wit: MLB established guidelines requiring facilities to have both male and female locker rooms, and the White Sox and Dodgers, tenants of the Camelback Ranch spring training facility, got into a dispute with their landlord, the City of Glendale, over who would pay for it. Sabers were rattled as the landlord/tenant dispute became quite public.

Initially, former writer Jake Dicker broke the story here at True Blue LA, and I wrote an investigative analysis essay that argued strongly that the City of Glendale was over a barrel of its own making on this singular issue.

The most relevant passages from that essay lay out what a slam dunk this case would have been had it escalated further:

There is an old saying in law: if you don’t have the facts [on your side], argue the law; if you don’t have the law [on your side], argue the facts; if you don’t have either, just pound the table and yell really loudly. This adage applies to the City’s position.

When this story broke, I thought that it was quite telling that the City Manager of Glendale was not arguing the terms of the contract. Moreover, the City Manager was attempting to make a moral argument in order to get the City out of its obligations as to the facility….

…But Michael, you say, the White Sox and Dodgers are only paying a dollar a year to lease this facility from the City of Glendale — how on earth is this contract fair? Shouldn’t the White Sox and Dodgers have to pay for these locker rooms out of moral fairness?

That statement is not how contracts work.

While the White Sox and Dodgers may be the bad guys in the court of public opinion, the City of Glendale dug its own hole for this mess. Digging up is not a solution, either.

Time marched on, and like with most things from the 2023 season, the vast majority of people moved on. I did not receive a follow-up comment after several attempts with the Dodgers and Camelback Ranch, which went unanswered in 2023 and 2024. These setbacks are now moot as I can finally report on what happened next.

The City of Glendale built a locker room​


On June 13, 2023, the Glendale City Council voted to hire RSP Architects to build a women’s locker room at Camelback Ranch at the cost of $106,217. The contract itself is unremarkable; the proposed locker room was approximately 3,500 square feet, and the plan was estimated to take 28 to 34 weeks to complete.

The locker room was completed in time for the start of Spring Training 2024.

At the same meeting, the City of Glendale approved a $75,000 contract with Beacon Sports Capital Partners to serve as a consultant for 12 months to provide advice and support in the operation of Camelback Ranch.

Specifically, Beacon Sports was to review the financial statements of Camelback Ranch (the facility), determine the level of annual usage of the facility, identify any aspects of the facility not up to MLB standards, how much it will take to bring the facility into compliance, prepare an estimate to the life cycle of the facility and related equipment with the intent to project any future obligations of the City of Glendale, prepare an assessment of current and planned real estate development of the facility, and prepare a valuation methodology of the facility.

Subsequently, upon review of the minutes and agendas of the Glendale City Council from 2024 to 2026, nothing unusual stood out in the facility’s operation, aside from the April 16, 2024, discussion of difficulties with the construction of a parking garage that the city expected to generate revenue from upon completion.

As parking is currently free at Camelback Ranch, this plan clearly fell through.

In the interim, the Dodgers, through the Canopy Team firm, completed construction of the Dodgers Performance Lab in 2024, consisting of 12,000 square feet of large-market, baseball precision flex, which certainly did not hurt during the title campaigns:

Completed in 2024, the Dodgers Performance Lab added 12,000 square foot indoor lab and outdoor agility space, comprised of two instrumented batting/pitching lanes as well as complimentary office/conference/work spaces, storage areas, and technology infrastructure. Initial siting and design was a careful balance struck with players, staff, and executive leadership while construction was planned/sequenced in order to only take nine months to complete and minimize disruption to the team’s occupancy.

The design and programming of the lab is intentionally flexible as the primary occupant besides players is the Dodgers Performance Science department, who are responsible for remaining on the cutting edge in both equipment and training methods. The enabling work in the building’s design is complicated on the design side in order to remain simple and flexible into the future in operation.

Have chair will travel​


In early April 2025, lifelong Dodgers fan Yolanda Garcia filed suit in federal court for alleged injuries sustained during a March 2024 Spring Training game at Camelback Ranch.

While walking to the Dodgers’ gift shop, some stacked folding chairs on a dolly allegedly fell on Garcia, causing a laceration and eventual knee replacement surgery months later. Garcia alleged that the Director of Facility Operations publicly reprimanded the staff about the incident immediately afterwards.

Initially, Garcia filed suit in Arizona federal court against the Dodgers, the White Sox, the City of Glendale, the City of Phoenix, Maricopa County, Camelback Spring Training LLC, and other unknown entities, as is common practice. The case is ongoing, and the only defendant remaining is Camelback Spring Training LLC.

Premise liability cases are often fairly straightforward, and the facts that the case is in federal court under diversity jurisdiction (citizens of two different states with a dispute valued at more than $75,000 — a knee replacement would certainly do it) and that the case is still ongoing are unsurprising. True Blue LA will continue to monitor this lawsuit and provide updates as they become available.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...cker-room-rumble-at-camelback-ranch-revisited
 
The Snell news is concerning but not entirely surprising given what he put his arm through in October. After that IL stint last year and then the postseason workload, being cautious now makes sense. Better to have him at full strength by May than rush him back and risk another extended absence.

That said, the rotation depth is going to be tested early. Between Yamamoto heading to the WBC and now Snell potentially starting the season on a limited program, Roberts might be leaning on some of the younger arms more than expected in April. Hopefully Glasnow comes through the offseason in better shape.

The Friedman barstool story is pretty great though. Game 3 was absolutely brutal to watch - I can only imagine what it was like being in the front office for those 18 innings. That Varsho catch after thinking Will Smith had gone deep... yeah, I might have broken something too.

The Camelback Ranch legal stuff is interesting from a procedural standpoint. Nice to see the locker room situation finally got resolved, even if it took the city eating the cost like most of us expected. The premise liability case is pretty standard stuff - those kinds of lawsuits usually settle quietly once the insurance companies get involved.
 
A history of Dodgers brothers playing together

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VERO BEACH, FL - CIRCA 1992: Pitcher Pedro Martinez #45 and brother Ramon Martinez #48 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pose together for this photo during spring training circa 1992 at Holman Stadium in Vero Beach, Florida. Pedro played for the Dodgers from 1992-93 and Ramon played for the Dodger from 1988-98. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers have River Ryan returning from 2024 Tommy John surgery, and is expected to be part of the team’s starting rotation puzzle in the 2026 season. There’s also at least a chance that he might be teammates with his brother Ryder Ryan, who was signed by the Dodgers to a minor league deal that includes a non-roster invitation to spring training.

If River and Ryder play together with the Dodgers, they’d join a select group of brothers in franchise history.



Ramón Martínez pitched the first 11 seasons of his 14-year career with the Dodgers (1988-1998), finished second in Cy Young Award voting one year and fifth in another. He pitched a no-hitter in 1995, and struck out 18 in a game in 1990 to match the franchise record.

We obviously know what Pedro Martínez went on to do in his Hall of Fame career, winning three Cy Young Awards after getting discarded by the Dodgers at age 22, but his one full season in Los Angeles was quite effective. The younger Martínez posted a 2.61 ERA in 65 games, and his 113 strikeouts out of the bullpen was at the time second-most in a season by a Dodgers reliever, trailing only Mike Marshall in his 108-appearance, 206-inning Cy Young campaign in 1974.

Pedro made his major league debut in September 1992, but by then Ramón’s season had already ended with a sore elbow.

Ramón Martínez in 1993 put up a 3.44 ERA in 32 starts and 211 2/3 innings, the third of his four seasons with at least 200 innings. Ramón and Pedro pitched in the same game 12 times that season, with the best one likely on July 31 at Wrigley Field against the Chicago Cubs. Ramon allowed two runs in eight innings in his start, and the game needed 13 innings to decide. Pedro retired all six batters he faced in the final two innings, and earned the win after the Dodgers exploded for five runs in the top of the 13th.

“I didn’t take the win away from my brother–he was already out,” Pedro Martínez said, per Maryann Hudson at the Los Angeles Times. “I took it away from Chicago, not from him.”

There was also a third brother, Jesus Martínez, who also pitched in the Dodgers minor leagues from 1992-97. He reached Triple-A, but never made the majors.



Larry Sherry was the World Series MVP in 1959, pitching in all four Dodgers wins in the series in their second year in Los Angeles. He won two games and closed out the other two (10 years before saves became an official statistic). His older brother Norm, who like Larry was signed out of Fairfax High School in Los Angeles, did not play in that World Series.

Norm Sherry’s biggest contribution might have been the advice he gave a young, wild Sandy Koufax during spring training in 1961, telling him, “Why don’t you take something off the ball and just put it in there? Don’t try to throw it so hard. Just put it in there and let them hit it.”

The Sherry brothers overlapped for four seasons with the Dodgers (1959-62). They didn’t match up as a battery in 1959, but Norm caught Larry in 30 games from 1960-62, with Larry posting a 2.73 ERA in 52 2/3 innings with his brother behind the plate.

Norm Sherry hit 16 home runs with the Dodgers, one of them a walk-off winner on May 7, 1960 to beat Rubén Gomez and the Philadelphia Phillies. The winning pitcher was Larry Sherry, who pitched the final four innings.

From Richard Cuicchi at SABR:

After the game, Norm said, “It has to be my biggest thrill. Winning one in the majors for my brother was really something.” He added, “I knew it was hit well enough, but I was afraid it might curve foul. It was a slider inside. I wasn’t looking for anything especially. I was just trying to get a hit.”
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Paul and Lloyd Waner are probably the most accomplished brothers to ever play for the Dodgers, though the overwhelming bulk of their careers came with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Both outfielders are in the Hall of Fame, with Paul having by far the better career. At the very least, they have two of the best tandem nicknames in baseball history — Big Poison (Paul) and Little Poison (Lloyd).

Both came to the Dodgers later in their careers, 1941, 1943-44 for Paul, and 1944 for Lloyd. They played in 14 games together for Brooklyn, never both starting in the same game. Lloyd Waner drove in one run in his brief time with the Dodgers, and it came after Paul was intentionally walked to load the bases. In the ninth inning at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn on May 3, 1944 against the Boston Braves, Lloyd pinch-hit for shortstop Bill Hart with one out, and laid down a bunt single for the walk-off win.



Steve Sax and Dave Sax were the first set of Dodgers brothers I remember from growing up, but they very rarely played together. Steve was the team’s regular second baseman for seven years, while Dave was a catcher in the organization for seven years (1978-84) who only played in the majors for Los Angeles briefly in 1982-83.

Dave Sax played in nine games for the Dodgers, all of which were also played by his brother Steve. The one time they both started the same game was June 3, 1983 at Dodger Stadium against the New York Mets. Steve led off and Dave batted eighth, but both were 0-for-4 at the plate in a 5-2 loss.



Zack Wheat was one of the Dodgers’ great early stars in Brooklyn, and the outfielder was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1959. Wheat roamed the outfield for Brooklyn in 18 of his 19 seasons, and remains the all-time franchise leader in hits, total bases, doubles, triples, games played, and plate appearances. His brother Mack was a catcher, and played parts of five seasons (1915-19) with the Dodgers, overlapping with Zack.

The Wheat brothers played in a total of 113 games together with the Dodgers, including 69 games with both starting, the bulk of those coming in 1918-19.

Mack Wheat hit one home run in his 137 total games with the Dodgers, hit at Ebbets Field on August 7, 1918 against the Cubs. It was a three-run shot in the fourth inning off Cubs right-hander Phil Douglas that scored Zack Wheat, who reached base on an error earlier in the frame. Those three runs were all the Dodgers scored in the game, and was enough to secure a 3-2 win.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-history-records/109354/dodgers-brothers-history
 
Dodgers notes: Jackson Ferris, Ching-Hsien Ko, Austin Barnes

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SPRINGFIELD, MO - JUNE 10: Jackson Ferris #10 of the Tulsa Drillers pitches during the game between the Tulsa Drillers and the Springfield Cardinals at Hammons Field on Tuesday, June 10, 2025 in Springfield, Missouri. (Photo by Shanna Stafford/Minor League Baseball via Getty Images)

We’ve had a pair of top-100 prospect lists drop in each of the last two weeks, with between four and seven Dodgers included on those lists. But with those list also comes further analysis of the minor leagues, both with individual players and farm systems as a whole.

Taiwanese outfielder Ching-Hsien Ko was one of 11 prospects who just missed making the top 100 at The Athletic, with Keith Law very high on the 19-year-old who ended last season with Class-A Rancho Cucamonga: “Ko is going to end up hitting for power, though, as he’s 6-foot-3 and already north of his listed 215, with quick hands and good rhythm to the swing.”

Jackson Ferris was ranked the No. 126 prospect in baseball by Kiley McDaniel at ESPN, who praised the left-hander as one of a handful of pitchers who could someday carry a heavy major league workload. “He’ll probably need to take one more step forward in stuff or command to actually hit 200 innings in the big leagues, but the ceiling is there,” McDaniel wrote.

The Athletic and ESPN also this week ranked farm systems, with the Dodgers ranked No. 2 in the former (in the top tier along with the Milwaukee Brewers and Seattle Mariners) and rated fourth in the latter.

“They aren’t the No. 1 farm system in the sport anymore, but they are tied for first with the Rays in ‘quality depth,’ which is just the total number of prospects they have graded above 40 FV [Future Value],” McDaniel wrote at ESPN.

We’ll have more prospect talk soon as Baseball Prospectus is expected to unveil their top-101 list next week.

Battery of moves​


The Mets on Thursday signed longtime Dodgers catcher Austin Barnes to a minor league contract with a non-roster invitation to spring training, and also signed one-time Dodgers reliever Craig Kimbrel to a minors deal as well. Should Barnes reach the majors with New York, he’ll join a surprisingly large list of catchers to play for both the Dodgers and Mets.

That group includes Mike Piazza, Gary Carter, Todd Hundley, Paul Lo Duca, Sandy Alomar Jr., Rod Barajas, Gary Bennett, Henry Blanco, Chris Cannizzaro, Travis d’Arnaud, Jerry Grote, Brent Mayne, Jason Phillips, Joe Pignatano, Norm Sherry, Rick Wilkins, and Tom Wilson.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...dgers-prospects-jackson-ferris-ching-hsien-ko
 
Dodgers will play baseball this month

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GLENDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 16: Teoscar Hernandez #37 of the Los Angeles Dodgers participates in a fielding drill during spring training workouts at Camelback Ranch on February 16, 2025 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s February now, which means the Dodgers will play baseball games this very month. Sure, those games won’t count, but they will be televised nonetheless, and we will get to watch as the team gradually builds up toward the season.

This will be more of a normal spring training for the Dodgers, at least in the sense that they won’t have to depart camp in Arizona with two weeks to go, in order to travel to play games in Asia like they did the last two springs. There is still the World Baseball Classic this March, but for the bulk of Dodgers roster, their time at Camelback Ranch will be more like usual years in terms of getting ready for the season.

And it sounds like the Dodgers will need a full spring training camp to give them time to build up toward March 26.

“Having the experience of being in the World Series multiple years now, understanding how important rest is — Most of the guys I’ve talked to have kind of been on the same program I’ve been on, that we haven’t started any baseball activity until the middle of January almost,” third baseman Max Muncy said on Foul Territory on Wednesday. “Some guys are still just now starting, just trying to give your body as much rest as possible, knowing that if we want to make another run to November, you’ve got to be as rested as you can to get through the summertime.”

Blake Snell expressed a similar sentiment this week, noting that he’s behind in his usual offseason throwing program after the stress of last fall’s championship run. Whether that opens up an early-season rotation chance for other pitchers remains to be seen.

Dodgers spring training camp at in Arizona technically starts on February 13 with the first official workout for pitchers and catchers, and concludes on March 21 with their final Cactus League game at Camelback Ranch against the A’s.

We’re bringing back daily questions to the site, and today’s is a broad one. What are you looking forward to the most during this Dodgers spring training camp?

Let us know in the comments below.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/daily-question/109380/dodgers-spring-training-february
 
Shohei Ohtani won’t pitch in World Baseball Classic

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TORONTO, ONTARIO - NOVEMBER 01: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches against the Toronto Blue Jays during the first inning in game seven of the 2025 World Series at Rogers Center on November 01, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The last time Shohei Ohtani was in the World Baseball Classic, he struck out his then-Angels teammate Mike Trout to give Team Japan their third title in tournament history. Three years later, fans from around the world will only get to see half of the Ohtani experience.

After a 22 month absence from pitching on a big league mound, Ohtani tossed 47 innings in the 2025 regular season to the tune of a 2.87 ERA before tallying an additional 20 1/3 innings in the Dodgers title run. With a full offseason to prepare himself on both sides of the field, the goal for Ohtani in 2026 is to have his first full season of two-way activities in a Dodger uniform, notes Sonja Chen of MLB.com.

“I wasn’t surprised. I can’t even say I was relieved,” Roberts said. “Understanding what he did last year, what he had to go through to then how best to prepare himself for ’26 to do both — it just seemed like the right decision.”

Links​


After undergoing ankle surgery in November, the expectation for utility man Tommy Edman was that he’d be ready around the start of spring training. With just three weeks remaining until the Dodgers play their first cactus league game against the Angels, Edman provided an update to David Vassegh of AM 570 at DodgerFest on Saturday, stating that he is back to regular baseball activities and ready for the spring.

“I’m feeling good. I just started baseball activities again, so I’m feeling like I’m in a good spot going into the spring… I just very lightly started swinging and started throwing again this past week, and that’ll be ramping up as we get closer to spring. I’m really looking forward to being a baseball player again.”

The addition of outfielder Kyle Tucker gives the Dodgers one of the most complete and dangerous lineups in all of baseball, and Dave Roberts is starting to get a feel as to how the top half of the order will shape up for the 2026 season, per Jack Harris of the California Post.

Dave Roberts hasn’t decided exactly how the Dodgers’ batting order will look in the wake of Kyle Tucker’s signing, but he did drop some hints, saying Ohtani will still lead off, Betts will likely hit third, and Will Smith will hit fifth. That presumably leaves Kyle Tucker and Freeman for the Nos. 2 and 4 spots, in some order.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...-tommy-edman-injury-update-kyle-tucker-lineup
 
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