No Juan Soto! Dodgers should focus on keeping World Series champs - Los Angeles Times
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Column: No Soto! Dodgers should focus on keeping World Series champs together

Dodger Teoscar Hernández celebrates with teammate Mookie Betts after hitting a two-run homer during the World Series
Dodgers outfielder Teoscar Hernández (37) celebrates with shortstop Mookie Betts (50) after hitting a two-run homer to give the Dodgers a 3-1 lead against the Yankees in Game 2 of the World Series on Oct. 26.
(Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)
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So the Dodgers begin their title defense this week by flirting with baseball’s hottest available star.

Here’s hoping they get ghosted.

No Soto.

So the Dodgers can strengthen baseball’s best lineup, deepen their historic batting order, tighten their versatile defense, become even more exciting, more enchanting, more unbeatable.

Dodger Teoscar Hernández hugs teammate Mookie Betts during the team's World Series celebration on Nov. 1.
Dodger Teoscar Hernández hugs teammate Mookie Betts during the team’s World Series celebration on Nov. 1 at Dodger Stadium.
(Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)

Thanks, but no thanks.

No Soto.

It’s not that Juan Soto would be a bad acquisition. He’s one of baseball’s best young players, he raked the Dodgers for a 1.084 on-base-plus-slugging percentage in the World Series, he was everything Aaron Judge was not, and heaven knows the Dodgers can afford him.

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But to sign the New York Yankees’ free-agent outfielder, they would need to make him the highest-paid annual-salaried player on the team, his no-deferred paycheck close to $50 million a year, and that just doesn’t work in a clubhouse that doesn’t need a new leader.

This is Shohei Ohtani’s team, it’s Mookie Betts’ team, it’s Freddie Freeman’s team, and there’s no way you can send the message that it now also will be Juan Soto’s team.

Soto never has been a clubhouse problem, but his flamboyant aura, while great for baseball, won’t so easily work in the Dodgers’ grind-it-out culture.

Ohtani is known for his professionalism, Betts is known for his unselfishness, and Freeman is known for his guts. Soto? He’s known for his batter’s-box shuffle.

Agreed, he’s a 26-year-old superstar who would be worth every penny. He just needs to get paid somewhere else, anywhere else, while the Dodgers should focus their attention on the gleaming product directly in front of them.

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The Dodgers are already well on their way to paying luxury tax penalties for a fifth consecutive year. But the Dodgers are not facing typical financial restraints either.

You know, the World Series champions.

Keep them together. Strengthen that chemistry. Build on that bond.

Andrew Friedman did such a spectacular job in shaping such a special team, it would verge on heartbreaking if he allows some of the Dodgers’ important free-agent pieces to go their separate ways.

Remember when the Lakers’ Rob Pelinka tore apart the 2020 championship team by ridding it of important role players so he could add Russell Westbrook? Here’s hoping a similarly bad remodel job doesn’t happen here.

Brusdar Graterol had right shoulder labrum surgery on Thursday and is expected to return for the second half of the 2025 season, the Dodgers announced.

The Dodgers have shown they have the money, and the smarts, and everything else required to sign the cornerstones who can keep the championship foundation strong. Now they just need to fight the urge to turn everything upside down with a shiny new toy.

They have six free agents. They should maximize their efforts to bring back four of them.

Certainly, they will add another starting pitcher or two — Japanese phenom Roki Sasaki is one leading candidate — and they probably will add a bullpen arm and veteran journeyman outfielder.

But they should focus their attention on those four free agents.

Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy is showered by sunflower seeds tossed by Teoscar Hernández after hitting a homer
Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy is showered by sunflower seeds tossed by teammate Teoscar Hernández after hitting a fifth inning homer against the New York Mets in Game 2 of the National League Championship Series at Dodger Stadium on Oct. 14.
(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

Bring back Teoscar Hernández.

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He’s 32 and bound to regress from last year’s 33-homer, 99-RBI numbers, but goodness, outside of Ohtani, did any other Dodger make a more consistent impact?

When the regular-season Dodgers needed a lift, he was there. When the postseason Dodgers needed a hero, he had big hits in the division series opener, the division series clincher, and the clinching World Series Game 5.

He’s more than just a shower of sunflower seeds. He’s a big part of this club’s soul.

Players run to celebrate with Dodgers pitcher Walker Buehler after he tossed the final out to win the World Series
Players run to celebrate with Dodgers pitcher Walker Buehler, far left, after he tossed the final out against the Yankees to win the World Series on Oct. 30 at Yankee Stadium.
(Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)

Bring back Walker Buehler.

Yes, he’s had two Tommy John surgeries and, yes, he made an awfully slow recovery from his most recent operation, going 1-6 with a 5.38 earned-run average in the regular season.

But perhaps no Dodger is more unhittable in October. He has an 0.47 ERA in four career World Series appearances and the steely nerve to take the mound on one day’s rest for the last three outs of this fall’s clinching Game 5.

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The Dodgers value players who get stronger under the spotlight. Buehler has made a career out of being one of those players.

Kiké Hernández holds the World Series trophy on the stage with his teammates during a celebration at Dodger Stadium
Kiké Hernández holds the World Series trophy on the stage with his teammates during a celebration at Dodger Stadium on Nov. 1.
(Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)

Bring back Kiké Hernández.

This one is simple. You endure a regular-season OPS of .654 for a postseason of two homers, eight RBIs and a go-ahead dinger against the San Diego Padres in the deciding Game 5 of the division series.

Hernandez has a career .874 OPS in 86 postseason games. He is Señor October. You keep Señor October.

Dodgers pitcher Blake Treinen reacts recording the last out in the eighth inning of Game 5 of the World Series
Dodgers pitcher Blake Treinen reacts recording the last out in the eighth inning of Game 5 of the World Series against the Yankees at Yankees Stadium on Oct. 30.
(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)
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Bring back Blake Treinen.

He has struggled through injuries and he’ll be 37 next October but he had a 1.93 ERA in 50 appearances during the regular season and when the Dodgers needed him for 2⅓ innings in the World Series clincher, he shut the Yankees down.

It was one of the biggest moments of the postseason, one of the most strenuous moments of his career, yet he performed like a champion. The Dodgers should be in the business of retaining champions.

There’s at least one more member of the title team who has earned a new contract. He’s not a free agent but he’s on the verge of becoming a lame duck. There’s no doubt the Dodgers will take care of him before the final year of his contract, but it would be nice if it happened soon enough to have an impact with potential incoming free agents.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts reacts after winning the World Series on Oct. 30 at Yankee Stadium.
(Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)

He is Dave Roberts, and there are very few managers walking this earth who could have matched his deft handling of all the October bullpen games and injuries and intrigue.

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Tommy Edman and Freeman received special trophies, but Roberts was the Dodgers’ overall postseason most valuable player.

It’s time to pay him like it.

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