WikiBit 2026-03-02 03:52Dodgers manager Dave Roberts says the media should focus on how close they came to losing rather than the money they spend. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles
Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts is trying to turn the page after winning back-to-back World Series championships. But with the focus this spring on the Dodgers‘ spending, it’s been hard for him to ignore all the talk about his club ruining baseball.
It comes up over and over again as the Dodgers try to “three-peat,” a term coined by former NBA coach Pat Riley. His Los Angele Lakers didnt get it, but maybe the Dodgers, with their Major League Baseball leading $381.6 million payroll for luxury tax purposes, will.
“I think we do a great job keeping our eyes looking forward to our goal versus looking to the side at who‘s around us and chasing us,” Roberts said recently. “Knowing that we have a target on us as defending champions, but ignoring all that—that’s what we do a good job of.”
The Dodgers are back with the same cast of characters, plus free agent signees outfielder Kyle Tucker and closer Edwin Diaz. Those additions set off a frenzy among Dodger haters across the country.
Roberts Has His Own Job To Worry About
But here‘s the deal: The Dodgers are not ruining baseball and should not be the impetus for MLB to propose a salary cap in upcoming negotiations for a new Basic Agreement. The union and the players are dead set against it causing a pitched battle between the two sides and a probable lockout if the contract isn’t settled by its expiration date of Dec. 1.
If any one of a handful of plays in the 2024 and 2025 World Series had turned the other way, the Dodgers would have been back-to-back losers rather than the first team to win consecutive titles since the 1998-2000 New York Yankees. Had they lost instead, the baseball world would be mocking them for signing Shohei Ohtani to a 10-year, $700 million contract and spending $770.3 million on player payroll over those two seasons.
“You‘re right about all that, absolutely,” Roberts said. “That’s why the biggest conversation should be about that versus a payroll conversation. Because if you really watched the games, all the things that could have happened to change history—that‘s what I thrive on and get my juices going about sports and baseball in particular. It’s mind boggling.”
Here Are Some Plays Roberts Is Talking About:
“We got our breaks,” Roberts said. “We got big hits. When I think about all that it just blows my mind. How many different plays came out on our side? But you have to have stuff like that. If not, coming into this year, this whole conversation would be different.”
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