Dodger Prospect Chat with Kyle Glaser (BA)

Dodger fans are no different than other teams’ fans.  They read what team personnel say about their prospects and build them up to be can’t miss.  I like to watch them play, see videos, and read from objective baseball pundits.  Baseball America is that kind of publication.  In short scouting reports, they tell the fan all they want to hear.  But in chats, the pundits can be more objective.  Kyle Glaser of Baseball America is one of the best.  Below are some of his comments on various Dodger prospects.

From an overall standpoint, when asked what Dodger prospects are considered untouchable.  His reply, 

None of these players are untouchable. No one is ever really untouchable, but no one in this top 10 rises to the level of a prospect you really, really, really don’t want to trade (i.e. Wander Franco, Adley Rutschmann, Julio Rodriguez etc.). There’s a lot of guys you like and feel like can be good big leaguers, but if the right deal is there, any one of them can and should be on the table.”

With respect to the organization, and the belief that the Dodgers may have dipped a bit:

“The top of the Dodgers system isn’t as strong but it’s for the right reasons – they graduated their top four prospects last year to the majors, which is the point of all this. The strength of the system this year is its depth. You go all the way down to the late 20s and you’re looking at players who might be top 10 in some other systems. It’s a really good system still with a lot of good players. As for the Top 100, I think we’ll see the top three in there, but that’s my opinion and my colleagues may or may not agree. We’ll see how the final list shakes out once everyone’s input is gathered and front office officials provide their feedback.”

For players not considered in the Top Ten…

Alex De Jesus, Kendall Williams, Jimmy Lewis, Leonel Valera, Landon Knack, Jerming Rosario, Yeiner Fernandez, Nick Robertson…all are breakout candidates who could shoot up in the next year. (Some of those guys are in the top 30, some aren’t.) Those are just the main candidates. This system is insanely deep in quality players who could break out in a big way.”

Outfielders: 

The Dodgers still need that standout OF in their current system.   I have already written his comments on Luis Rodriguez and Jake Vogel.

He has no hopes for Jeren Kendall.  When asked if Kendall had made enough adjustments to get back on the radar:

He did not. It was a lot of the same. Even the Dodgers internally don’t consider him one of their top 40-50 prospects at this point. Opposing teams have told me they’d have zero interest in a trade for him either except for as a throw-in third or fourth piece as well. There’s just been no indication to date that he can hit. We’ll see if that changes in 2021, but it hasn’t changed in three years now.

Glaser is more pro-Andy Pages than any other OF with the Dodgers.  On what improvements he saw:

“The Dodgers widened Pages stance a little bit to get more balanced and handle off-speed pitches better. They also tamped down his leg kick a bit. Those are the main adjustments that were made and he’s getting into a better hitting position more consistently as a result. Now, even with that, even the Dodgers internally see Pages topping out as a 45-grade hitter just because his swing path and aggressiveness are always going to lead to a fair share of swings and misses. Still, with his power and defense, that will be enough for him to start in the majors. He’s moving in the right direction and he’s young and he’s intelligent, so it’d be foolish to say it will never get any better, but at this point the 45 hit grade is seen as the best-case scenario even within the organization.”

Andy Pages

Glaser considers Pages a better prospect than Rodriguez. 

When asked about Luke Raley, Kyle was very generous.  The Dodgers believed that Kody Hoese was the best hitter at the alternate site.  But they also liked Raley.  They felt Raley was their second-best. He had a dominant summer and was hitting balls to the parking garage beyond the RF at USC. They already thought highly of him and think even more so now. It’s 55-60 game power.  His downside is his 45-55 hit grade which shows a lot of difference in terms of actual production. 

I know many like Zack Reks, but IMO, Raley is the better option for the #4/#5 OF and LH bat off the bench.

Infielders:

The most discussed infielders were obviously Kody Hoese and Michael Busch.  Glaser was high on both players.  It came across that he was more impressed with Busch’s overall hit tool.  While Hoese was the Dodgers best hitter at the alternate site, Busch separated himself from other teams prospects at the Instructs, and Hoese did not impress.  On Busch: 

“Busch will get playing time at some point. If you can hit, they’ll find a spot for you, and he can hit. I don’t know if it will be in 2021 – pending injuries, of course – but at some point he projects to get significant ABs for the Dodgers. It just might be more 2022, 2023. We’ll see what happens with the roster around him.”  “Michael Busch honestly raised his stock probably more than any prospect in baseball at instructs.”

Michael Busch

On Hoese if he is the long term answer at 3B: 

“If Kody Hoese shows he was the guy at the alternate site more than the guy he was at instructs, he’d be the guy, but there are some questions about him on both sides of the ball (namely his arm).”

Mark mentioned that Hoese was working out at SS.  The question was posed to Kyle Glaser, but Glaser had not heard that Hoese was considered for short.  Per Kyle, he has good hands, reads hop well and has a knack for being in the right spot.  But his range and arm strength are the questions.  Shortstop would be a stretch.

Kody Hoese

On Gavin Lux: 

“Lux would still be No. 1 amongst this current group. In terms of his outlook, there is some concern with how much he swung and missed and was just not on plane with the baseball. That said, he arrived late to summer camp, was visibly not up to game speed on both sides of the ball and was playing catch up the rest of the year. It just wasn’t an ideal situation. There is still a lot of optimism that, given a regular season and given consistent ABs to work through things, he’ll be the hitter he was projected to be coming into the year.”

Gavin Lux

Kyle also had a lot of good things to say about Leonel Valera.  He is a very slick fielding defender, who needs to hit.  Valera did stand out (along with Busch and James Outman) as position players at the Instructs. 

I mentioned yesterday and the day before about a teenager who Kyle is also very high on.  He sees a huge upside for Alex De Jesus.

De Jesus took part in Dominican instructs and hit really, really well there. Everything looks on track offensively. He got a little heavier so it’s purely third base now, but he showed enough to be an average defender there. He’s in a good place heading into 2021.”   

Alex De Jesus

Kyle likes him as a potential top 5 player.  He has been my darkhorse long term answer at 3B since he was signed.  There was no mention of one of my other darkhorse candidates, Miguel Vargas.  Nor any discussion on Jacob Amaya.

On Devin Mann:   

“Mann continued to show a really good combination of hit and power at the alternate site. He’s a good hitter who should get to the majors, it’s just a matter of what role he plays. His defense continues to be a work in progress. Realistically he’s going to move around to a couple of different positions and just be as versatile as possible.”

If Busch and Hoese can stick, the Dodgers will be set.  They do not have that prospect who is a plus defender and carries a big bat.  It is one or the other.  If there is a difference, it is going to be the bat that will dictate who will play. 

Pitchers:

I got the impression, if there is a position player that Glazer is most impressed with it was Michael Busch.  But I believe that his overall top prospect for the Dodgers that he may be most impressed with might be RHP Bobby Miller.  Ryan Pepiot was considered the best pitcher at the alternate site, but at the Arizona Instructs, Miller stood out…way out.  He had nothing but great things to say about Miller. 

Specifically on Bobby Miller: 

“Miller made some adjustments to his posture and delivery and now he’s a consensus starter. His delivery became a lot more compact and online to the plate. His direction was better, his front side was better, he repeated better…everything was better. There is a very strong sense he could explode into a front-of-the-rotation type of starter. He’s someone to watch as a breakout candidate in 2021.  Miller is in his own tier of that group. Right now he’s getting No. 3 starter grades at worst, with even the evaluators turning him in as that noting he could be more. There is a very real sense, both inside and outside the organization, that the Dodgers got a steal at the back of the first round.”

Bobby Miller

Not as high on Clayton Beeter. 

“The Dodgers will start him for now, but even their evaluators who thought he had a chance to start out of the draft are significantly lower on those chances based on what they saw at the alternate site. It’s two pitches only and he really struggled to command the ball or repeat his delivery or execute consistently. Again, it was a weird year with a long layoff so maybe things look better in 2021 when he’s on a more normal routine, but the Beeter the Dodgers saw in 2020 at the alt site even they acknowledge was a 100 percent reliever.” 

There was recognition that Beeter has a 70 fastball and curve, but he does not throw a slider and has problems with command.  He has a 40 command, and until that improves, Beeter will be a MiLB pitcher with good stuff but no command, and no spot on a roster.  In summary,

“At this exact moment in time, they see Beeter’s likely future as a reliever. Not a multi-innings reliever, just a straight one-inning power reliever who blows his stuff by hitters, which is valuable.  Now, again, we’re talking about a weird year where he was coming in off a long layoff, so maybe he comes into spring training next year, gets into a normal routine and the CH and control improve and we’re talking about a starter again. It’s something to keep an eye on. He’s a talented pitcher with big stuff and it’s certainly possible his control and changeup improve. The Dodgers will run him out as a starter for as long as they can to see if that happens. Just right now, based on what they saw at the alternate site, the Dodgers saw someone whose long-term future is more likely to be in relief than as a starter.”

Clayton Beeter

On Mitch White:

“The Dodgers were very pleased with White and felt this was the most consistent year he’s had as a professional. The interplay and execution of his stuff really came together. Consistency was always the thing that eluded him, in large part due to injuries, so it was good to see that shore up a bit. He made his major league debut this year as a reliever and most still think that’s his eventual role, but some Dodgers officials think he increased his chance of sticking as a starter with what he showed this year during summer camp and at the alternate site.”

Mitch White

On Jimmy Lewis: 

Lewis didn’t pitch after signing last year due to shoulder inflammation and spent a chunk of this year rehabbing in Arizona before taking the mound in instructional league, where he impressed a lot of people both inside and outside the organization. He showed a really polished delivery and command, was able to execute to both sides of the plate, FB and CB got good reviews (although the CB was a little inconsistent at times) and the CH has really come along. The polished delivery, command and well-rounded arsenal really impressed a lot of people. It was only 15 innings or so in instructs, so we have to see if it holds up over a more significant workload, but it was a good first look.”

Jimmy Lewis

On Gerardo Carrillo –  

“As for what he needs to work on, it’s pretty straightforward – throwing strikes. Carrillo’s control was a mess at Rancho Cucamonga, and it wasn’t great during summer camp or at instructs either in 2020. He’ll throw enough strikes for an inning and then it will implode quickly. Just finding some consistency will go a long way toward getting him up the ladder and into the Dodgers bullpen.”

Gerardo Carrillo

I particularly liked Kyle’s response to the following question.  Hi Kyle, hearing positive reports on Andre Jackson was he in the conversation for the top 10?


Kyle Glaser:

No. He wasn’t close. I’m not sure what reports you’re reading, but in speaking with Dodgers officials, they described his performance as “medium-ish”. Jackson has a ton of arm strength, but he has a long way to go to throw enough strikes consistently. The Dodgers spent a lot of time reworking his delivery and arm action and they’re getting better, but they still have a ways to go. Jackson’s stuff plays when it’s in the zone. It’s just a matter of getting it in the zone. He was starting to put it together by the end of instructs. We’ll see if it carries over into 2021.”

I liked the response because it was an honest objective comment on a Dodger prospect.  It wasn’t blog hype.  Kyle’s response was everything I have ever heard about Andre.  Just like all Dodger prospects, I hope he continues to develop and makes an impact with the Dodgers.

Have you heard anything promising about Michael Grove as he gets further away from the surgery?


Mark has been an advocate of Michael Grove since he was drafted.  I have questioned why Mark was so high on Grove since he has not been very good since he returned from TJ surgery.  Glaser added;  

The velo ticked up a bit to sit 92-94 (he was 89-93 at Rancho in 2019) and his curveball feel started to come back. He really worked a lot on his slider and changeup usage at the alternate site and they’re coming along. The main thing is just continuing to build his durability. He was limited to mostly two-inning stints in 2019 and he stretched out to four-inning stints in 2020. Consistently throwing five, six innings is the step that still has to come.”

This will be a big year for Grove.  Let’s hope it all comes together for him this year.  He is another that may very well end up in the pen.

Michael Grove

On Landon Knack and Edwin Uceta –

They’re very high on Knack and see him as a potential rotation piece moving forward. They’re hoping for some velocity gains from Uceta and think he could be a back-end starter if that comes, but Uceta didn’t do himself any favors by violating the Dodgers safety protocols at the alt site and getting sent home.”

This was a fantastic objective commentary on Dodgers prospects.  I would even add honest.  Glaser is a well respected baseball pundit who has tremendous connections.  That was well displayed when he had the ability to contact Dodger personnel to answer a specific question posed during the chat.

Glaser is still very high on the Dodgers farm system, but more as it is related to depth than top tier can’t miss prospects.  The Dodgers have more players in their system that will eventually make the ML, but may not be stars.  The Kershaw’s, Seager’s, Buehler’s, Urias’, Bellinger’s, Smith’s, and May’s have all graduated to the LAD.  I think Michael Busch will be relatively quick to the ML, but more as a hitter than as a specific position player.  There was no discussion positive or negative on Busch’s improvement defensively.  But for me, the one prospect that seems to have the highest ceiling is RHP Bobby Miller.  I very much look forward seeing how far Miller can move this year.  I think it would be a stretch for Miller to start at AAA before any of the remaining MiLB teams can start, but it sure would be intriguing to see if he would be overmatched at that level. 

I think we are going to see a multitude of prospects pushed this year.  But I do not believe the Dodgers will set back development for expediency.  I believe in the Dodgers development team and I believe in time, the next group of prospects will become impact players for the Dodgers, or become vital elements to a strategic trade.  I am not afraid of trading prospects in the right deal.  The only factor to be considered as a Dodger fan is whether the player the Dodgers acquired improved their chances at winning.  As Bear mentioned, it is irrelevant as to how many batting championships Alex Verdugo may win, or how good Jeter Downs turns out to be, because Mookie Betts was the missing ingredient in getting the Dodgers across the finish line. 

Who will be next…Keibert Ruiz, JoJo Gray, Bobby Miller, Michael Busch, Kody Hoese, Diego Cartaya, or some more long term prospects like a couple of my darkhorses, Alex De Jesus and Jerming Rosario.  Baseball America has Bobby Miller making his major league debut this year. Dodgers version of Garrett Crochet? It is a good time to be a Dodger fan.

This article has 43 Comments

  1. Thanks, I know more about these kids now than I did yesterday. Yanks and DJLM not close to reaching an agreement. He told his representatives to re engage with other teams. Seems now that the Mets are showing some interest. All Quiet On the Dodger Front…..sounds like a movie title.

  2. Jeff, this is fantastic information on our future Dodgers! It’s exciting that you were able to find a source that you respect to give us a knowledgeable and honest evaluation of the Dodgers minor league system and players. There is so much lazy and uninformed analysis on the internet on this subject. I’m happy that you were able to find Kyle Glaser. Again, LADT continues to provide us with incredible articles that are hard to find in the national publications.
    Thank you.

  3. Thanks, AC, for the forwarded comments of Kyle Glaser of Baseball America along with your knowledgeable analysis. They should hire you. It was very interesting and gave me a positive feeling for the future of some of our valued minor league players, players like Michael Busch, Bobby Miller, Gavin Lux and Andy Pages, just to name a few. Good job.

    1. That is actually his Twitter picture. I saw a few others where he looked like Walker as well.

  4. Thanks Jeff, great information about our young guys. Seems to me that our strength has been to develop good young controllable pitching. Same with Atlanta and now the Padres. If you look,at the downfall of the Cubs and Giants they were not able to. And the Yankees seem to be struggling developing their young pitching. Considering where we’ve been drafting major props to our front office and development team. Keep em coming! Can’t wait to see Miller pitch!

  5. Btw, I’m not worried about the talk of Beeter possibly being a reliever; one look at his delivery tells you this guy has beyond electric stuff. Harnessing it will be his challenge.

    As for Bobby Miller, I couldn’t be more excited [baseball-wise]. He is truly our next ace-in-training.

    1. Beeter was always a reliever for me. Two pitch pitcher, but 70 fastball with a potential wipe out slider for swing and miss. We need the development boys to work some magic. Beeter has closer stuff written all over. It is not just a cliche…it does not matter how hard you throw or how nasty the pitch is, if you cannot throw it for strikes, what good is it.

      The development team has done wonders for Miller. Since being drafted with reliever risk, he has jumped to at least #3 in the rotation to front line starter. I will be very interested to see where he starts this spring. In a normal year, Miller would start at High A (Great Lakes this year) and gain success before moving up. It is possible that he would move to AAA before the end of the year. With AA and A teams starting about 6 weeks behind AAA, do the Dodgers take a chance and start Miller at AAA and see if he can survive. Dodgers do not mind pushing, but they do not like to skip levels. They like to see success at each level. It does not have to be long term success, but success it must be. Walker Buehler, Caleb Ferguson, Brock Stewart , Trevor Oaks are some recent examples. Two were ready, two not so much.

      Same for Busch and Hoese. Do you push them right now? 6 weeks is a lot of catch up time.

      1. Also, do you even think of “need” when it comes their development as prospects? With the high end guys I say no.

        Miller is not needed in the rotation for the next two years. Kershaw, Price, Buehler, Urias, May, Gonsolin & Gray should form the core and we can always add or subtract.

        Busch is a little more interesting because Lux plays 2b too. I’m curious if Busch sees any LF time this year [or if Lux does for that matter].

        As for Ruiz it’s win-win. I’m happy if he job-shares with Smith in the future with Smith maybe seeing some at DH/IF. Or, if he allows a trade for a perfect fit that works too.

        Hoese is 3b all the way. The job is his when he’s ready.

        In AF we trust.

  6. A very enjoyable read! We LADT readers love nothing more than hearing about a good “steal” from a draft. Thank you!
    Question for those with negotiating experience: if you are a GM and want to trade for lefty reliever “Joe Smith”, do you ask them what they want for Joe Smith, or do you say “We’re a little low on left handed relievers, what have you got to trade?” Or is there even a better approach?

    1. The way it was explained to me was that teams have a “list” of LHRP (in this case) they might be interested in. They will start high and work themselves down. A couple of years ago the Dodgers were trying to work something out with the White Sox. White Sox wanted Joc and as it turns out the Dodgers were very interested in LHRP Aaron Bummer. For me, Bummer would have been a great get. The White Sox were not going to move Bummer, but instead were said to be offering LHRP Jace Fry and RHRP Evan Marshall. The Dodgers passed because they wanted Bummer. Dodgers do not generally settle. We may not agree with who they get, but AF wants the player.

      I would have been all in on Bummer and said so at the time. His numbers were not jaw dropping in 2018. In fact they were pretty bad. Eric would never have even looked at him because of his OPS against RHB. But his K/BB ratio was on the rise in 2018, meaning he was starting to fool hitters. He was lights out in 2019 as both the White Sox and Dodgers thought he would be, in spite of his +.800 OPS against RHB the year before. The Dodgers wanted both Bummer and Fry, but they were not going to trade Joc for Fry. Now Bummer, Fry, and Marshall are all going to be setting up for Hendriks. ChiSox have the makings of a great bullpen in 2021.

    1. It is well worth the read. I caught it live, but it isn’t any more special because my subscription paid for it live. BA is a great source.

      1. I love their Prospect Handbook. I had them from about 2008-2015 then stopped ordering them.

    1. I don’t know enough about other rotations but I wouldn’t put ours first. A lot depends of the the years Urias & May have.

  7. According to the experts, our system has dropped a bit. Granted due to some graduations and due to some early round misses in 2017 and 2018. So in magazines and rankings , we’re no longer top 5, and maybe no longer top 10. Combine that with no “sure thing” prospects anymore, but tons of depth and future good mlb players.

    Now, our guys (like every other teams’ guys) didn’t get a chance to grow last year and thus move up or down these top 100 rankings. So it looks like the Dodger system doesn’t have the studs to use in a big trade, or that we better not trade too much of what we have left, for fear of depleting our system even more.

    This is the precise reason I don’t see any of these crazy 5 for 2 trade scenarios actually occurring. But not because we don’t have the ranked capital to trade; but because we don’t really know what we have!! Friedman and Friends aren’t going to potentially overpay in draft capital, just because some of our draft capital aren’t ranked as high, or because they didn’t get a chance to play minor league games last year. We may, in reality, have 5-6 top 100 prospects, but they just aren’t ranked there because they didn’t get a chance to play and grow last year. I think Friedman holds on to those guys because he feels they establish themselves and increase their value throughout 2021. The MILB player rankings going in to 2021 are based on a few alternate site games, some AZ league games, and opinions. I don’t think they are as accurate as prior years’ rankings, and for obvious reasons. Let’s these updated rankings after a half season of MILB, or at the end of 2021.

    Personally, I think we’re the best team in baseball and won’t make too many major changes. We will be a bit more frugal than before, but due to Covid it makes sense. We will use 2021 to build our system back up to top 10 and top 5. I think that we re-sign JT, maybe another reliever, and then let all of our talented kids showcase themselves and build up their “rankings” by mid season and the trade deadline. I’ve been saying since November that Kris Bryant is a real getable player for us, because the Cubs are dumping salary and he won’t cost too much. But I’d play Bryant in LF, as he’s just an average 3b, and try moving Pollock. But giving up 5 guys for Suarez and Gray, or whatever? No chance.

    Gavin Lux has star talent, at a cheap price for the next 4 years. He will be given every opportunity to take over 2b for the next 10 years. A resigned JT and Edwin Rios can man 3b/DH for the next 2 years. If Hoese is the real deal, great. If not, let’s talk after the 2022 season. If we can trade Pollock and cash for a reliever or some minor leaguers, do it. If we can get Kris Bryant on the cheap, do it. Otherwise, let’s run this back with all of our depth and see if our scouts made the right calls on Miller, Beeter, Vogel, Busch, Hoese, etc.

    1. Your first paragraph said it all. The Dodgers no longer have that can’t miss player, but they are so deep down to #30 and beyond, that many can become ML players. Tampa Bay, Toronto, San Diego, Seattle, Detroit, Minnesota all have elite prospects, but their system is not as deep as the Dodgers. If the Dodgers can catch fire with one of their reaches, they can come up with another potential AS. I think Bobby Miller is that for pitching. Michael Busch is going to be that hitter. The NL is going to have the DH at the right time for Busch.

    2. Good post.

      I was thinking about Pollock yesterday and wondering if he has a full, productive season in him.

      We either need another OF or someone of Lux/Beaty/Rios/McKinstry might need to log some ABs in LF this season.

      Taylor can’t play everywhere at once!

  8. If LA can lock up Seager, Bellinger, Buehler, Urias, Smith, long term to go with Mookie, they’ll still need plenty of guys to round out a roster. If Josiah Gray ends up a #3 starter, but is slotted at #5 for LA rotation is will make for a lot of advantages game by game over the course of the season.

    As much as I love LA being highly ranked for the farm, having graduates perform in MLB is even better!

    1. Don’t forget the “smaller” pieces too like Graterol, Gonzalez, Gonsolin, etc.

      Being able to plug in cheap quality players where other teams need to sign FAs is huge.

  9. I got my Beeter and Miller, and Cartaya rookie cards. Also Hoese, and Busch. Never have done that before, but they were reasonable. Kluber threw for teams as did Cishek. Kluber topped out at 90 MPH. Video on Twitter of Price throwing is pretty impressive. Ball just flying out of his hand. Some minor signings happening, but not many rumors about the major free agents, including JT.

    1. I watched Price throw on Twitter. The ball jumped out of his hand and the catchers glove did not move. The Dodgers won the WS without DP, and if he is anywhere close to being as dominant as he was 2016-2018, he will be the best #3 in MLB this year. ST cannot come soon enough.

  10. Great article, Jeff!
    Thanks for the great analysis, and thanks also to Kyle Glaser who is a fantastic writer as well.

  11. Names from the chat I know almost nothing about:

    Outman, Anderson, Rosario, Yeiner Fernandez.

    And Valera & Carson Taylor to a lesser degree.

    1. I have been writing about Rosario since he was signed. Everyone knew about Diego Cartaya, but not so much about Alex De Jesus, and even less about Jerming Rosario. Rosario spent 2019 in the DSL for the entire season while both Cartaya and De Jesus came stateside. Rosario was rated #11 prospect from the DSL in 2019, and the only pitcher. As a 17 year old in 2019, in 45.1 IP (13 games started), he had a 0.79 ERA and less than a 1.00 WHIP.

      Scouting report by BA after the 2019 DSL season:

      “When Rosario signed, he was throwing 88-91 mph with a projectable body and a loose, fast arm, indicators that he would throw harder once he filled out. By the end of 2018, he reached 93 mph and his velocity continued to climb in 2019, reaching 95 mph. Rosario has the attributes to project as a starter as an athletic pitcher who repeats his delivery, fills the strike zone and shows feel for two secondary pitches. His best offspeed pitch is his changeup, which has plus potential and consistently fooled DSL hitters. Rosario sells that pitch well by maintaining his arm speed and throwing it in the low-to-mid 80s to get good separation off his fastball. That’s his primary strikeout weapon, though his upper-70s curveball has good depth and shape as well, although he can get around the ball at times.”

  12. Friday is an important day, it is when they have to exchange figures with their arbitration eligible players. Seager and Belli among those. Should be interesting to see how the Dodgers feel about Seager after his outstanding season.

  13. Watching MLB Now.

    There are so many FA relievers right now.

    Some if these will fall to 1-2 mil for one year.

    They just can’t all get paid.

        1. Pedro Baez is dead to me…

          Going to the Assteriks? Forget the money… they are cheaters!

  14. Ozuna?

    Can’t remember anyone mentioning him as a potential signing.
    Excellent hitter, not so good defensively obviously.
    He’s 30, so I guess he’s looking for a long contact, and won’t be cheap?

    Very interesting

  15. Really enjoyable read, Jeff! Remarkable that the Dodgers have so much depth, given their low draft picks and how many of their prospects have recently graduated to the majors. Can’t wait to see who is next, especially excited about Bobby Miller.

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