Home US SportsMLB ‘Run it back.’ Will Dodgers keep roster core together for 2025 World Series defense?

‘Run it back.’ Will Dodgers keep roster core together for 2025 World Series defense?

by
‘Run it back.’ Will Dodgers keep roster core together for 2025 World Series defense?

Dodgers infielder Kiké Hernández offers a gesture of support to pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto as he is finishes his start in Game 2 of the World Series. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Before most of the Dodgers front office had even arrived in San Antonio on Monday for Major League Baseball’s annual general managers meetings, a certain pressure was already being applied on Andrew Friedman and Co.

Less than a week removed from winning the World Series, several Dodgers members voiced their desire for the team to keep its core intact for next year, and retain as many impact pieces from this season’s roster as possible for a 2025 title defense.

At a fan event at a Raising Cane’s restaurant in Alhambra on Monday morning, Kiké Hernández pounded that drum, stating his wish to remain with the Dodgers as he enters free agency following an up-and-down regular season but monstrous October performance.

“I really, really hope I’m back next year so we can run it back,” Hernández said to a gathering of more than 500 fans, the line receiving raucous applause. “So make sure you guys talk to Friedman and those guys, and let them know.”

Read more: Clayton Kershaw declines 2025 player option, but intends to return to Dodgers

Manager Dave Roberts not-so-subtly hinted the same during an interview on Mookie Betts’ “On Base” podcast, when asked what was on his holiday wishlist for the team.

“I want to bring back a guy we had in the bullpen this year,” he said with a sly grin, referring to fellow free-agent Blake Treinen, who became the Dodgers’ most trusted reliever in the playoffs.

“I would love for Santa to bring me another bullpen arm who is a high-leverage free agent,” he said, seemingly alluding to the Dodgers’ other veteran free-agent reliever this offseason, Joe Kelly.

“And I want to bring a guy that had a couple big homers for us in the postseason … and is from a Latin American country,” he added with a laugh, a description that applied to both Kiké Hernández and fellow free-agent outfielder Teoscar Hernández.

Already this week, the Dodgers’ front office started putting some of those plans into action. The team picked up its 2025 club options for veteran shortstop Miguel Rojas and backup catcher Austin Barnes. Longtime pitcher Clayton Kershaw declined his player option for 2025, but fully intends to return to Los Angeles on a new contract. Teoscar Hernández said he would “do everything in my power to come back,” too.

However, much work remains to be done.

On Monday, the Dodgers declined to extend a one-year, $21 million qualifying offer to pitcher Walker Buehler, leaving the door open for other teams to attempt to sign him in free agency.

Another starting pitcher, Southland native and key trade deadline acquisition Jack Flaherty, is also on the open market, where he might fetch offers beyond what the Dodgers are willing to spend.

The Dodgers will almost certainly have to make other external additions, too.

Their rotation remains in need of reinforcements — in a year where the free-agent market is headlined by two former Cy Young award winners Blake Snell (a past Dodgers free-agent target) and Corbin Burnes (whom the Dodgers had interest in trading for last offseason), and might include 23-year-old Japanese star Roki Sasaki if he is posted by his Nippon Professional Baseball league club.

The lineup will need to be bolstered, too, either through the addition of an outfielder (the Dodgers have the money and contending track record to appeal to this year’s biggest free-agent, Juan Soto) or a full-time shortstop (Willy Adames, another long-time target of the Dodgers’ front-office, is the biggest name among that position group on this winter’s market).

Still, Dodger players felt like the 2024 roster proved itself greater than the sum of its parts in the playoffs, managing to overcome a litany of starting pitching injuries by creating a clubhouse culture that Kiké Hernández compared to the franchise’s 2020 World Series squad.

“I mean, it took every single one of us in the locker room to do what we accomplished, and that doesn’t happen without the unit,” Hernández said. “That is the one thing that stands out the most about our October run, is how close we were. It brings memories back to 2020. That’s why we did well in 2020.

“But in 2020, we were all locked in a hotel for a month. And this year, to be able to be that together throughout a whole month, when everybody gets to go back home after games, you can only hope to be able to bring the whole group back and run it back next year again.”

In many ways, the Dodgers’ approach to both Hernándezes will serve as a signal of how strongly that hope is permeating the front office.

Teoscar Hernández should be in line for a big payday after his 33-homer campaign, one likely to lead to a robust market that might test how far the Dodgers are willing to go to keep him.

Read more: Teoscar Hernández gets qualifying offer from Dodgers, Walker Buehler does not

Kiké Hernández offers a different proposition, with the club having to weigh his regular-season struggles (he batted just .229 and had a below-league-average OPS) with his postseason heroics, when he batted .294 and hit — as Roberts noted — two key home runs in the National League Division and Championship Series.

Both players became glue guys on a team that, while lacking one overarching leader, bonded together by getting contributions from across the roster.

And both could help replicate that culture again in 2025, hoping to get the chance to remain in Los Angeles and defend their World Series title.

“We won the World Series a couple days ago, but I truly believe that this team is going to be even better next year,” Hernández said. “I know there’s going to be a lot of moving pieces. But, you know, a guy can only hope.”

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Source link

You may also like