Kyle Tucker? A top closer? Dodgers deciding between wants and 'needs' as offseason begins

Kyle Tucker? A top closer? Dodgers deciding between wants and 'needs' as offseason begins

Almost everyone in baseball, it seems, is waiting to see how aggressive the Dodgers will be this offseason.

For now, that appears to include the two-time defending champions themselves.

As the clubs front office arrived at The Cosmopolitan Hotel for MLBs annual general managers’ meetings this week, the teams plans for this winter remained in a formative stage.

The Dodgers should have plenty of financial flexibility to play with in the coming months, with more than $60 million in salary from last season set to come off the books (resulting from Clayton Kershaws retirement, the expiration of contracts for Michael Conforto, Kirby Yates, Michael Kopech and others, and the teams decision to designate Tony Gonsolin for assignment last week).

Read more: ‘Work to do’: Four questions the World Series champion Dodgers face this offseason

They could also use upgrades at some of the deepest positions in this years free agent class, namely a corner outfielder (where Kyle Tucker beckons as the biggest name available) and another top relief arm at the back end of the bullpen (where Edwin Díaz, Devin Williams, Robert Suarez and Pete Fairbanks will all be on the open market).

Add in a farm system that MLB Pipeline ranked as the best in the majors this year giving the Dodgers plenty of chips to use in a potential trade as well and the team could be poised for another splashy offseason of big-name acquisitions.

Or they could stand relatively pat.

After all, there is no blockbuster move the Dodgers feel like they need to make this winter. Having virtually all of their star-studded core intact means, even compared to last winter, their urgency for another offseason of star additions could very well be less pressing now.

That was the tone general manager Brandon Gomes struck on Tuesday while discussing the teams winter plans acknowledging the outfield and bullpen as areas the Dodgers will explore this winter, but stopping short of describing either as outright needs.

By being aggressive over the last couple offseasons, we do have a very, very good core in place, Gomes said. So its continuing to fine-tune and look at what the weaknesses on the roster are and try to address those Its being very targeted in who we go out and look to acquire. I think that holds true across the board, without many glaring holes.

As a reminder, heres where the Dodgers 2026 roster stands.

The starting rotation? Stacked, with Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow, Roki Sasaki, Emmet Sheehan and a host of other young pitchers all slated to be back (including Gavin Stone and River Ryan, breakout rookies in 2024 expected to have normal offseasons after missing last year with surgeries).

The lineup? Relatively unchanged, with Kiké Hernández and Miguel Rojas representing the only out-of-contract players who played important roles in the postseason (and they, of course, remain options to be re-signed, too).

The bullpen? That group could certainly use some more help, after Tanner Scott struggled in the closer role last year. But even there, the Dodgers still possess plenty of depth in Alex Vesia, Anthony Banda, Jack Dreyer, Blake Treinen, Ben Casparius, Justin Wrobleski, Brock Stewart, Edgardo Henriquez and a number of other young pitchers who could step into big-league roles (plus the returns of Brusdar Graterol and Evan Phillips from injury).

Read more: How Dodgers’ Will Smith turned into a Game 7 World Series hero

And on the whole, Gomes described the Dodgers expected 2026 pitching staff as being as good as weve ever had.

Thats why, at least at this juncture, the Dodgers aggressiveness this winter remains unclear.

They are in their preferred place as an organization able to see how the market develops, without facing an overwhelming need at any one spot.

I think the mindset is still to approach the offseason and not have to go out and make big splashy trades at the deadline, Gomes said. But what that all looks like? Thankfully, we havent had a ton of time to dive in, but were gonna look to do that here over this week and the coming weeks.

The teams pursuit of Tucker could provide the first big tell of the offseason.

As far back as the summer, the Dodgers were seen around the industry as a likely front-runner for the four-time All-Star and two-time Silver Slugger. As a left-handed bat who would fit perfectly into the middle of their lineup, and someone who will be only 29 by the start of next year, Tucker represented the kind of still-in-his-prime, star-caliber player whom the Dodgers always want to be in position to go after when available.

However, Tucker will not come cheaply. He is likely to field offers of 10-plus years. He could drive a bidding war upwards of $400 million to $500 million.

For all the Dodgers short-term financial flexibility, it is fair to wonder how many more lucrative, long-term deals they want to add to what is already an aging core.

Thus, the higher the price for Tucker becomes, the less likely it could be he winds up in Los Angeles.

On Tuesday, Gomes spent more of his time touting the internal outfield options the Dodgers already boast from deadline addition Alex Call, to utilitymen Hyeseong Kim and Tommy Edman (who will undergo surgery next week on his nagging ankle injury, but is hoped to be ready for spring training), to triple-A MVP Ryan Ward, who was added to the 40-man roster last week and is expected to get a bunch of opportunities at some point this year, Gomes said. The door also remains open to backup catcher Dalton Rushing potentially getting some time in the outfield again, after he struggled with limited playing time behind Will Smith.

Read more: Dodgers pick up club options on Max Muncy and Alex Vesia; Tony Gonsolin and Justin Dean DFA’d

Gomes was similarly complimentary of the Dodgers current relief corps, even maintaining belief in Scott to come back and have a great year for us next year, and be right there in the mix to pitch at the back end of games.

It would still be a surprise if the Dodgers dont swing some notable addition to the bullpen. The depth of options on the free-agent market (especially in players such as Williams and Fairbanks, who have been trade targets of the team the past couple years) should make finding an acquisition there a more likely endeavor.

Yet, Gomes insisted that a top reliever is less of a need and more of a nice-to-have.

Really, that figures to be the theme of the Dodgers entire offseason: Searching for upgrades on terms they like, without feeling pressured to make another wave of top-dollar acquisitions.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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