The Los Angeles Dodgers have been baseball's busiest team this offseason, but that doesn't mean they're done making moves. Their activity began in late November with the first big splash acquisition of the offseason,
According to multiple reports, Kirby Yates has passed his physical and agreed to a one-year deal with the Dodgers. The Beverly Hills Sports Council client is guaranteed $13M and could unlock another $1M in bonuses — $500K each at 50 and 55 appearances. The team has still not officially announced the signing.
ESPN insider explains why the Los Angeles Dodgers have become the organization where "great players want to be."
The Los Angeles Dodgers are the defending champions of the baseball world. After such a boisterous offseason, L.A. has wasted no time retooling and padding the
According to reports this week, the Los Angeles Dodgers might be looking to trade some players in order to accommodate their new signings and acquisitions
A homecoming is scheduled for the trio of Japanese-born superstars on the Los Angeles Dodgers’ roster.  The Dodgers will open the regular season with a two-game
The Los Angeles Dodgers' offseason spending spree might not be over, but their future salary commitments have risen to nearly half a billion dollars.
The Los Angeles Dodgers added to their embarrassment of riches by signing Tanner Scott to the largest reliever contract of the offseason.
Reliever Tanner Scott's $72 million, four-year contract has been finalized by the Los Angeles Dodgers, raising the World Series champions' offseason spending to $452 million on eight players.
Blake Snell of the Los Angeles Dodgers shares a close bond with Chicago Bulls star Zach LaVine, as seen during a Clippers vs. Bulls game. Additionally, Snell welcomes Japanese pitcher Roki Sasaki ...
Yankees chairman Hal Steinbrenner responded to the Dodgers' run of recent signings, which has pushed them up to a projected 2025 payroll upwards of $375 million, in an interview with YES Network's Meredith Marakovits. His answer was something you'd expect to hear from a small-market team, rather than baseball's financial titan of the past century.