The Los Angeles Dodgers faced severe crises with starter injuries towards the end of last year. They had to rely on bullpen games to get them over the line during the postseason.
With less than a month to go until pitchers and catchers report, the Dodgers appear primed to enter the season once again considered the favorites to capture the title.  Naturally, that got us to thinking about what it would take for the Dodgers to not just fall short of the World Series -- any seasoned baseball observer knows there are few guarantees so far as postseason success goes -- but to miss the playoffs entirely.
If it wasn’t already obvious, the Los Angeles Dodgers have cemented their status as MLB’s new “Evil Empire” with a mid-January free agency spending spree.Fresh off reportedly agreeing to a deal with Japanese ace Roki Sasaki and signing All-Star closer Tanner Scott to a four-year,
The Los Angeles Dodgers are "shopping" players including veteran relief pitcher Ryan Brasier in order to make room on their roster for offseason
The Japanese Connection could be historically good for the Dodgers as they follow-up their championship season.
The Los Angeles Dodgers are Major League Baseball's newest Evil Empire. They spent over $1 billion last offseason on Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Gl
Blake Snell joined Tyler Galsnow in the Los Angeles Dodgers rotation this year, with former Rays infielder Brian O'Grady reckoning both pitchers are worth the money spent on them.
The Los Angeles Dodgers are doing something in baseball that many teams are not doing by a very large margin. They are pouring out billions of dollars into players with hopes of forming a super
The Los Angeles Dodgers have reached a tentative deal with free-agent right-handed reliever Kirby Yates, USA Today reported on Tuesday.
And on Sunday, they agreed to a four-year, $72 million deal with All-Star closer Tanner Scott — with the contract including a $20 million signing bonus and $21 million in deferred money, according to ESPN — in free agency, The Post’s Jon Heyman confirmed.
Step aside New York Yankees, there's a new evil empire in Major League Baseball. The Los Angeles Dodgers have taken the reigns as MLB's most hated team, and for good reason. Twenty-nine fan bases are incredibly jealous of one of the best teams we've seen in recent memory, at least on paper.