The Los Angeles Dodgers are the defending champions of the baseball world. After such a boisterous offseason, L.A. has wasted no time retooling and padding the
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
The Dodgers are building a super bullpen to round out their super team. Los Angeles has agreed to a one-year contract with right-handed reliever Kirby Yates, sources told MLB.com's Mark Feinsand on Tuesday.
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.
We kept one part of MLB's superteam in L.A. -- and moved the rest to Brooklyn. Would the Los Angeles Dodgers and Brooklyn Trolleys BOTH rule baseball?
Before landing Yates, the Dodgers agreed to terms with former Padres closer Tanner Scott on a four-year, $72 million deal. And before that, they brought back Blake Treinen on a two-year, $22 million deal.
A homecoming is scheduled for the trio of Japanese-born superstars on the Los Angeles Dodgers’ roster. The Dodgers will open the regular season with a two-game
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
The Dodgers and reliever Kirby Yates reached a "tentative" agreement, pending completion of a physical. Read more at MLB Trade Rumors.
The Dodgers have added six free agents this offseason — the same number as the rest of the division combined. Were there any non-Dodgers moves that could possibly move the needle, or is L.A. destined for another decade of dominance?
Per reporting from earlier this week, the Mets have an agreement in place to re-sign Ryne Stanek to a one-year deal. They almost made a very different bullpen addition, however.