The Los Angeles Dodgers made too many impactful roster moves in a very short period of time, and the roster fluctuation must catch up. That is Andrew Friedman's
The Los Angeles Dodgers' offseason spending spree might not be over, but their future salary commitments have risen to nearly half a billion dollars.
It's been an unrealized goal of Andrew Friedman's for years. This summer, however, it finally might come to fruition.
Reliever Tanner Scott’s $72 million, four-year contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers includes $21 million in deferred salaries.
In addition to his motivation in joining the Dodgers, Sasaki was asked about the impact both Ohtani and fellow Japanese star Yoshinobu Yamamoto had on his signing. He made it known it wasn't a priority to have Japanese teammates, but wanted to ensure he would be embraced by his new city.
After winning their second title in five years, the Dodgers kept utilityman Tommy Edman with a $74 million, five-year contract, outfielder Teoscar Hernández with a $66 million three-year deal and right-hander Blake Treinen for $22 million over two years.
In his first year as a Dodger, Sasaki will earn the league minimum of $760,000 after classifying as an international amateur.
It has been 25 years since a team has won back-to-back titles. But in an effort to end that drought, the reigning champions have already committed $445.5 million in guaranteed dollars this winter. That’s more than the $370.5 million spent by the previous four World Series winners combined.
Roki Sasaki signing with the Los Angeles Dodgers broke the baseball world, albeit momentarily. It's tough to blame Andrew Friedman and Co. for taking advantage
Left-handed reliever Tanner Scott is a new addition to the Los Angeles Dodgers' bullpen, who could serve as the team's closer in 2025.
Sure, mapping out games for 18 teams coast to coast is challenging, but do you miss the relative sanity of the old Pac-12’s basketball schedules?