A former Houston Astros executive seems to take a jab at the Los Angeles Dodgers for their heavy spending to acquire talent.
With the additions of Tanner Scott and Kirby Yates, the Los Angeles Dodgers have constructed by far the best bullpen in MLB.
The Los Angeles Dodgers have a star-studded roster heading into 2025. But, Chicago Cubs starting pitcher Jameson Taillon is confident his team can beat the Dodgers this season.
According to reports this week, the Los Angeles Dodgers might be looking to trade some players in order to accommodate their new signings and acquisitions
Kirby Yates is joining the Los Angeles Dodgers' bullpen just two days after the club went out and signed another All-Star closer in Tanner Scott.
The Los Angeles Dodgers' offseason spending spree might not be over, but their future salary commitments have risen to nearly half a billion dollars.
Heading into this offseason, the defending World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers had as good of a roster as any in MLB. The one 'weakness' teams could look
Reliever Tanner Scott's $72 million, four-year contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers includes $21 million in deferred salaries.
Two marginal moves the team could make is bringing back utility man Kiké Hernández and future Hall of Fame pitcher Clayton Kershaw. But outside of that, the roster appears to be set. That doesn't mean current free agents aren't interested in joining the reigning World Series champions, though.
The Dodgers have spent money like they were desperate. They have acquired stars like they were barren. Has any defending champion ever acted less like a defending champion?
The Dodgers and reliever Kirby Yates reached a "tentative" agreement, pending completion of a physical. Read more at MLB Trade Rumors.
Reliever Tanner Scott’s $72 million, four-year contract has been finalized by the Los Angeles Dodgers, raising the World Series champions’ offseason spending to $452 million on eight players