Scottafied… Again!

It seems to me that a certain number of Dodger fans like to criticize Andrew Friedman’s signings and/or trades. Of course, it is usually done with perfect 20/20 hindsight. While fans of any sports team may criticize general managers, it’s not simply to feel superior, although that may be a factor in some cases.  Fans lack the complete information and context that a GM has when making decisions. GMs work with significantly more data about player health, readiness, and team finances. Fans, on the other hand, often base their opinions on limited information and subjective preferences, leading to criticism of decisions they don’t understand.

While some fans may criticize GMs out of a misplaced sense of superiority, it’s more common that criticism stems from a passion for the sport, a desire for their team to succeed, and a lack of understanding of the complexities of the GM’s job. Ultimately, GMs are under constant scrutiny, and their decisions are subject to intense public debate. This is no more evident than with the Dodgers under Andrew Friedman. This season, many fans have roundly criticized his acquisitions of Michael Conforto, Tyler Glasnow, Blake Snell, and others. Personally, I am afraid of Kirby Yates, but it was a one-year deal, just like Conforto, so it’s just a matter of opinion.

The signing that seemed most difficult for me to comprehend was Tanner Scott, who was signed to a four-year, 72 million deal. Like most relievers who “get it” or finally become a solid closer in their late 20s, Tanner Scott followed that same path. He spent his first five years in the Majors in Baltimore and had Tommy John Surgery in 2019. His ERA at Baltimore was 4.73. He then moved to Miami for parts of three seasons, where his ERA was 2.70. Finally, in 2024, he was traded to San Diego, where he put up a 2.73 ERA. The Dodgers signed him as a free agent this past offseason.

Andrew Friedman knows all too well that relievers are a fickle bunch, so he is frequently loath to sign them to big, long-term deals. He has been largely successful with developing relievers from Dollar General or the Bonepile. I was surprised by the deal, but I also know that Friedman has vastly more information at his disposal than I do. I voiced my displeasure, but moved on. However, the fact remains that Tyler Scott has mainly been responsible for seven (count ’em, 7) of the Dodgers’ losses. Let that sink in. The Dodgers might be 43-17 if he had done the job he was paid to do. Last night was just the latest example.

Tyler says it’s poor location, and the Dodgers validate that, but I am thinking that it’s more than that. His fastball and breaking ball velocities are down from his previous years, while his exit velocity is up. Hitters are hitting against him with a higher launch angle, and his whiff percentage is way down. I am wondering if that UCL is fraying… again! There, I said it. We shall see, but this is getting beyond silly. Maybe he needs an IL stint… if for nothing more than to clear his head. Kirby Yates will be back by this weekend (allegedly). That was a bitter loss last night… snatching defeat from the jaws of victory!

https://twitter.com/BaseballAmerica/status/1929573156936626598
https://twitter.com/SportsNetLA/status/1929786607420559712
https://twitter.com/BlakeHHarris/status/1929573254357721543
https://twitter.com/AM570LASports/status/1929590901627834736
https://twitter.com/espn/status/1929211464666972168

This article has 41 Comments

  1. Showed a lot of fight coming back on Edwin Diaz. We just missed a couple HR’s to end it, Max, Shohei, Pages….

    Dont feel it was a crushing loss at all. The schedule makers did us no favors by playing the NYY on Sunday night baseball and then turn around and play the Mets.

    This is out toughest part of the schedule (and we are weathering it OK), after this patch we have the easiest schedule the rest of the way.

    Love where we are at.

  2. Baseball American listed 10 Top Prospects in the Complex League, here’s two:
    Brendan Tunink, OF, Dodgers
    The Dodgers are rich with outfield prospects, including the fab four of Josue De Paula, Zyhir Hope, Mike Sirota and Kendall George at High-A Great Lakes and Eduardo Quintero lurking in Low-A. On the complex, Tunink is working to raise his stock to the level of his higher-ranked peers. Tunink is as athletic as they come, and he’s hitting for both average and power in Glendale, though his strikeouts are a touch high.

    Chih-Hsien Ko, OF, Dodgers
    Ko is leading the ACL in just about everything. The list includes all three triple-slash categories, hits and doubles. The 18-year-old has shown outstanding zone control for his age and has surprised internal evaluators with the quality of his defense. More than a third of his 30 hits have gone for extra bases, including nine doubles, and he has nearly as many walks (13) as strikeouts (14).

    1. Ko is really interesting. A big, strong kid from Taiwan who could expand the Dodgers’ Asian connection.
      There’s a lot of OF talent ahead of him like Hope, Sirota, de Paula and Quintero. If the Dodgers believe in Ko, perhaps one of the others would be packaged in a trade deal.
      Given his size, perhaps Ko could get some work at 1B. Someday somebody will have to replace Freddie.

  3. Tanner Scott is 30 and coming off his two best years, where he was dominant and and his four seamer velo was trending upward.

    If you’re going to sign a guy to a four year deal and spend that kind of money, it’s not a foolish signing. You’re locking up a reliever at the top of the performance bell curve.

    …but his FB velo is down a tick and a half, and his K% is down, and HR% is up.

    Who knows? Maybe touched by the Frayed UCL Fairy?

    And that tweet above by Cole … is this guy spreading stuff about Glasnow malingering? First I’ve heard about Glasnow’s recovery stalling because of general soreness.

    1. I have no clue. Howard is a different cat…

      I don’t know him, but I know people who know him. (Raised Eyebrows)

  4. A loss is a loss, seen this too often to lose anymore hair over it. Offense shut down by two mediocre pitchers, Yarbrough-Blackburn. After this stretch of good teams, they get the Nats, Rockies then the Royals. White Sox, Astros, Brewers and Giants leading into the all-star break.

  5. Once again, Mark argues that it’s simply wrong that fans criticize Andrew Friedman’s decision. We are mere fans, after all, and thus lack the knowledge and insight that the Almighty AF has.
    To wit: “Fans lack the complete information and context that a GM has when making decisions. GMs work with significantly more data about player health, readiness, and team finances. Fans, on the other hand, often base their opinions on limited information and subjective preferences, leading to criticism of decisions they don’t understand.”
    Well, no shit, Sherlock.
    But I humbly submit that AF, like Mark, is sometimes mistaken despite all the information at his disposal.
    Obvious case in point: As he has often pointed out, Mark questioned Gavin Lux’s ability to be a high-quality major league SS because of his arm. Many of us had our doubts–and yet AF and his brain trust apparently didn’t. In fact, AF & Associates had convinced themselves that Lux and Miguel Vargas would be a dynamite keystone combo. Remember? But Lux got hurt and Miguelito did not live up to AF’s (and Mark’s ) expectations.
    It’s a pretty glaring example, I think, of AF’s fallibility. And this was hindsight for a lot of fans: We saw Lux’s flaw when he took over for Seager, and a lot of us realized that Vargas had not proven himself at all on a major league level before he was anointed the starting 2B. He had the job for several weeks before management sent him back to OKC.
    AF obviously has made many excellent decisions–like signing Shohei, which someone around here opposed. But what’s wrong with alleging his blunders?
    When AF signed Conforto for $17 million, I certainly trusted the rationale. But in hindsight, how many people here think it was a savvy move?
    Anyone?
    Anyone at all?
    I still have faith that Tanner Scott’s long-term deal will pay off, but who knows? Come to think of it, Mark criticized that deal. (How dare he! The impudence!)
    The latest bad news is that Glasnow has apparently had a setback in his recovery, solidifying his injury-prone reputation. Am I wrong to argue that a deal for Dylan Cease would have been wiser? A similar talent, but much more durable.
    I was fine with Glasnow deal, because I trusted AF and felt better reading about how surgery would make him less fragile. Now that seems like wishful thinking.
    I remember some fans were bummed that the Dodgers lost Ryan Pepiot in that deal.
    Didn’t bother me…. but let’s see how Pepiot is doing now for the Rays.
    In ’25, he’s posted 12 starts and has pitched 70 innings to a 3.21 ERA. Those are nice numbers. His record is 3-5–but then he’s pitching for the Rays, not the Dodgers.
    The previous season, his numbers were remarkably similar to Pepiot’s, with a 3.60 ERA over 130 innings pitched.
    When the Dodgers landed Glasnow, they extended him with a fat five-year contract. I certainly hope he recovers and helps the Dodgers win another championship, and more in the years to come.
    But right now, it looks like the Dodgers might have been better off keeping Pepiot.

    What

    1. Glasnow is signed for three more years after this. When healthy, he is elite… Pepiot is simply good. History will be the judge, but the jury is still out….. for three more years.

      Cease would have required a lot more prospect collateral than Glasnow. Perhaps Friedman wanted to keep Rushing , Hope, and DePaula.

      Hindsight is never wrong, Progress is not Linear, and Miguel Vargas is getting there! I won’t even mention Outman!

      1. With Glasnow, the operative phrase is “when healthy.”
        We’re all waiting…
        Like I said, I was fine with the trade when it happened–but I prefered both Burnes and Cease. How high was the price? Beats me. But I don’t think it was high as you suspect, because this is what the Padres gave up:
        RHP Drew Thorpe (MLB Pipeline’s No. 85 prospect; SD No. 5), OF Samuel Zavala (SD No. 7), RHP Jairo Iriarte (SD No. 8), RHP Steven Wilson.

        So the 85th “Pipeline” prospect and three guys with lesser pedigrees.
        Who knows? Maybe they’ll all blossom into all-stars. But it sure doesn’t look like what the Pads gave up to get Soto. (BTW, I’d have no problem dealing De Paula to get an ace-caliber SP. All prospects are suspects until proven otherwise, right?)

        Anyway, it’s spilt milk.
        But after thinking about this stuff, I remembered one reason why I wasn’t that bummed about losing Pepiot. At the time, he was considered the Dodgers second second-best pitching prospect–after Bobby Miller.
        And Miller’s rookie season had been so promising…
        Sure hope he can make a comeback.

    2. Yada yada yada to come
      up with the amazing conclusion that Andrew Friedman is not INFALLIBLE? Great because there are other GM’s that ARE?

    3. STFU,…. That’s not what he said at all. Smells like typical MSM out of context cherry picking. He immediately went on to note that he questions the Scott signing while rightly pointing out the team has more info than he. Professional gadflies are BORING after awhile.
      Book that shit

    4. Glasnow’s a better pitcher than Pepiot.

      Pepiot’s ERA is pretty decent, but his xERA and FIP are much higher, so there’s a little luck involved.

      Pepiot is a good 3rd or 4th starter in a contender. Glasnow is a 1 or 2, and has elite stuff.

      1. Yes, Glasnow is more talented. He’s also much more highly paid, even though he has been less productive.
        Pepiot is promised at least $100 million less than Glasnow, who’s return to the mound has been delayed indefinitely. Smart trade by the Rays, and the Dodgers were willing to assume the risk.
        I’m rooting for Glasnow, of course.
        But I also know that when he returns, we’ll all be worried that he’ll get hurt again.

  6. “The Dodgers are signing right-hander José Ureña, reports Jon Heyman of the New York Post. He’s expected to be in Los Angeles tonight to join their staff against the Mets, for whom he pitched earlier this year (albeit just one appearance)”.
    A corresponding move is necessary on the 40 man roster.

  7. May’s pants are too long.
    That being said Yarborough and Blackburn may be journeyman, but in these two games they found the magic sauce that confounds LA ( and really all teams). Getting secondary pitches over for strikes and in good location. Once you can’t sit on fastballs in hitters counts you are going to struggle. With Yarborough throwing mostly 70-80mph , hitters still seemed to be out in front too many times.

    1. Yarbrough had a nice run with the Dodgers last season throwing that stuff…

  8. The best ability is availability. A good Pepiot is better than what the Dodgers are getting from Glasnow at this time. General body soreness? Not sure I’ve heard that one before. I think Howard Cole is usually quite bad at what he does. I don’t think Glasnow is refusing to perform. However, I’m starting to worry his acquisition is going to rank right there with Dave Goltz, Don Stanhouse, and Jason Schmidt.

    1. Availability in June doesn’t mean shit. Availability and ability in October is what matters.

  9. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts confirmed after Monday’s 4-3 extra-inning loss to the Mets that Betts (toe) is expected to return to the lineup Tuesday, Alden Gonzalez of ESPN.com reports.

  10. The Dodgers are going to designate catcher Chuckie Robinson for assignment, reports Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic. That will be the corresponding 40-man move for signing right-hander José Ureña, which was previously reported. The Dodgers will also have to make a corresponding active roster move for Ureña.

    1. 06/03/25 Los Angeles Dodgers optioned RHP Will Klein to Oklahoma City Comets.

  11. 10:10 PM ET

    Mets (38-22)
    Dodgers (36-24)

    SP Tylor Megill R
    4-4 3.52 ERA
    SP Clayton Kershaw L
    0-0 4.91 ERA

    Confirmed Lineup
    DH S. Ohtani L
    SS Mookie Betts R
    1B F. Freeman L
    RF T. Hernandez R
    C Will Smith R
    3B Max Muncy L
    CF Andy Pages R
    LF M. Conforto L
    2B Hyeseong Kim L

    66° Wind 10 mph Out

  12. At the beginning of the Friedman era, he signed several oft-injured but relatively-inexpensive pitchers – can we forget Scott Kazmir, Brandon McCarthy, and Brett Anderson? They were rarely healthy and except for one good year by Anderson, rarely good.

    He is trying his luck with better oft-injured pitchers. He is paying them a lot more money but thus far, they have been equally-unavailable. Glasnow has never had a healthy season. We were all hoping that his injury issues were behind him after Tommy John surgery, but I guess not. Blake Snell has thrown more than 129 innings twice (his 2 Cy Young campaigns). This is year is not going to be one of his infrequent injury-free years.

    I agree with Mark that the upside of both pitchers is really high. But they have to pitch to have upside. Thus far both have been bad gambles. At the end of Snell’s 5 year $182 MM contract and Glasnow’s 5 year, $136.5 MM contract, we can judge whether these were good gambles or not.

    In the meantime, what do they do for pitching?

    1. I have found myself wondering if Glasnow, Snell and others have been put on the shelf for “injuries” so they will be fresh for the playoffs – when we will need them the most.

      It seems like something that AF would do. Let our AAAA pitchers handle most of the slog of the long season and reserve our best arms for the last half of the year and the post season. And that all of the hand wringing about 15 pitchers currently on the IL is actually happening mostly by design and not by accident. I know that MLB supposedly has rules in place to prevent this from happening but I also believe someone as smart as AF could figure out how to circumvent them.

      Would anybody care if Glasnow, Snell, Sasaki, Graterol and Treinen end up pitching less in the regular season if they are healthy and rested for the post season and we win another WS? I know I won’t.

      1. ^^^ Likely not 100% accurate but a helluva lot more plausible than Friedman suddenly forgot how to evaluate players!

        ALL GM’s will win some and lose some. Nearly all of them worse at it than Andrew Friedman.

      2. I wonder that, too, mostly because it’s something I would do, and I hope it works out that way.

        I think there are rules, though. You can just flat out lie about a player’s injury.

        The season is really long and pitchers work harder than they used to. Even if a starter doesn’t injure himself, he’s probably mentally and physically pretty spent at the end of the regular season.

        Since half the league now makes it to the playoff tournament, the regular season just isn’t as important.

        I’d prioritize the playoffs over the regular season.

  13. Shohei Ohtani is NL Player of the Month for the second time as a Dodger

    Ohtani hit .309 (34-for-110) with 15 homers, 17 RBI, five doubles, a triple, 17 walks, 31 runs scored, two stolen bases, a .782 slugging percentage and a .398 on-base percentage across 27 games.

    1. Yeah, I mean, I was reading some of his other tweets, and he was openly speculating that the Dodgers could/should try to void Glasnow’s contract under grounds that Glasnow is faking injury bc he doesn’t want to play.

      WTF? Where does this stuff come from?

      1. The voices in his head. I made a few calls today, and what I am hearing is that he is doing fine, BUT the Dodgers are slow-playing him. Howard is an ass!

  14. Friedman seems to be back in his comfort zone with his recent moves to piece together a bullpen. Shuffling the deck hoping to get one or two reliable arms. Whether the Scott signing ends up being worth it or not (and it is way too early to decide that), I do trust that the Dodgers FO will have a very good bullpen by mid-August.
    Not surprised by the news on Glasnow. That has got to be frustrating for both the Dodgers and Glasnow. Can’t imagine the source of Howard Cole’s reporting, if any. Personally, I was more optimistic that Ohtani, Snell, and Sheehan make it back by the end of July. Keep our fingers crossed that this five man rotation stays healthy until reinforcements arrive. If Bobby Miller has really turned a corner that would be a godsend.
    Off to a good start tonight. Muncy is on one of those heaters. Should Conforto change his number from 23 to 4-3?

  15. Passan previews the Dodgers @the trading deadline.
    ($$$$$$)
    https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/45434376/mlb-2025-early-trade-deadline-preview-all-30-teams-jeff-passan-buehler-bichette-gallen#lad

    Objective: Get to October with a full rotation.

    Best fit: Walker Buehler

    What to know: The notion that the Dodgers were going to win 120 games was always fanciful. They don’t build their team for regular-season wins. They want to put together the most devastating 26-man squad for the postseason. ..
    Beyond that, the Dodgers’ farm system is so deep … to bring in someone who knows their system, knows their culture and knows how to show up in the biggest moments is a fit that’s almost too good to be true.

  16. Nice comeback win!!!! Roberts trusted Tanner Scott in the 10th and he got the job done and the win.

  17. Fun stat:
    Max’s 2-HR game lifted his OPS over the past 30 days to 1.001, which trails Shohei’s 1.177 and Freddie’s 1.063.
    Max’s plate discipline was on display too. He walked 16 times, K’d 15.
    Today Max also had a hard shot skip between his legs, of course….

    I kind of like the idea of Buehler coming back. Don’t expect it, but it would be interesting… Meanwhile, scribe Ken Rosenthal has mentioned four or five Orioles who could be traded, including possible Dodger fits Cedric Mullins and RP Felix Bautista… “Mount Bautista”–listed at 6-8, 285 pounds–isn’t having a great year by his standards but he has converted 10 out of 11 save opportunities.
    I did not expect the bullpen to be a great area of need, but….

  18. Gutty win.

    Came back vs the Mets twice now in the 9th. Heart of a champion.

    If you bash Scott when he does poorly, praise him for yesterday.

    Lets do it again tonight!

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