The Los Angeles Dodgers continued their offseason whirlwind Sunday, reportedly agreeing to terms with an All-Star closer on a 4-year, $72 million contract.
The Los Angeles Dodgers are intent on continuing their reign of terror over Major League Baseball, and they have spent big on yet another free agent.
The left-hander, who had a 1.76 ERA and a team-high 67 relief appearances in 2024, agrees to a 1-year deal worth $2.25 million with a club option for 2026
The Dodgers are committed to not being a "one and done" team, as they continue to dominate free agency. But how should the rest of the league feel about their spending?
The Los Angeles Dodgers added to their already-stacked roster by signing the top free agent reliever on the market in left-hander Tanner Scott.
While the Dodgers operate from a financial advantage, they also are schooling opponents with a relentlessness not enough rival owners share.
The defending World Series champions, the Los Angeles Dodgers, built argubaly the best starting pitching rotation in the National League when they won the sweep
The left-hander Scott, 30, is the indeed the top remaining reliever on the free-agent market. He was an All-Star in 2024 (splitting time between the Miami Marlins and San Diego Padres) and posted a microscopic 1.75 ERA with 84 strikeouts over 72 total appearances.
Roki Sasaki's MLB debut with the Los Angeles Dodgers may be hindered by health concerns. The Dodgers, known for struggling to keep pitchers healthy, are particularly worried about Sasaki's injury history.
The Dodgers signed lefty Alex Vesia to a one-year deal with a 2026 club option, thereby avoiding arbitration. Read more at MLB Trade Rumors.
Deep in the heart of every baseball fan fuming about the spending of the Los Angeles Dodgers, there lies an uncomfortable truth: You’re just mad your owner isn’t doing the same thing.