Breaking news:5 Star pitcher from San Francisco flip agrees to three-year, $69-million deal with the Dodgers..

0

Breaking news:5 Star pitcher from San Francisco flip agrees to three-year, $69-million deal with the Dodgers

Dodgers

Column: By re-signing top prospect star adding to

Teoscar Hernández salutes the Dodgers dugout after hitting a grand slam during Game 3 of the NLDS against the Padres.

Teoscar Hernández salutes the Dodgers’ dugout after hitting a grand slam during Game 3 of the NLDS against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on Oct. 8. Hernández agreed to a three-year, $66-million deal with the Dodgers on Friday. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

 

Just how valuable is Teoscar Hernández to the Dodgers?

 

Shohei Ohtani is baseball’s most valuable player. Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman are superstars too.

 

Advertisement

 

Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell are among baseball’s top pitchers. Roki Sasaki will be too, and the Dodgers might sign him too.

 

Hernández would rank behind all of them, joining Max Muncy and Will Smith atop the supporting cast.

 

It’s a star-studded supporting cast, of course. Hernández hit 33 home runs last season, the most of any National League outfielder. He batted cleanup in the clinching game of the World Series, driving in the final two runs of that fateful five-run fifth inning at Yankee Stadium.

 

 

Teoscar Hernandez celebrates after scoring on a home run by Tommy Edman in Game 6 of the NLCS against the Mets.

Dodgers

 

Plaschke: Fans are heard, title hopes are solidified, Teoscar Hernández is back with Dodgers

Dec. 27, 2024

But think about this: With Friday’s agreement to bring back Hernández, the Dodgers are liable for more than $45 million in new financial commitments next year, all to secure the services of someone who might be no better than their eighth-best player.

 

Talk about commitment to excellence. The Dodgers live that slogan every day.

 

The Raiders, the team that claims that slogan as its own? They have not won a playoff game in 21 years. They have not won a Super Bowl in 40 years.

 

More to Read

Hyeseong Kim, left, and Teoscar Hernandez

Dodgers sign Hyeseong Kim, finalize Teoscar Hernández return as roster takes shape

Jan. 3, 2025

BRONX, NEW YORK – OCTOBER 30, 2024: Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Teoscar Hernandez (37), center, celebrates on the field. Game 5 of the World Series against the Yankees at Yankees Stadium in New York City Wednesday, October 30 2024. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

Teoscar Hernández agrees to three-year, $66-million deal with the Dodgers

Dec. 27, 2024

Vision without execution is just happy talk. Critics scoffed when Mark Walter and the Dodgers’ ownership group paid $2 billion to buy the team — Forbes estimated the franchise value at less than half that — but Walter and Co. bet they could find gold in local broadcast rights. They did, for $8.35 billion.

 

Advertisement

 

 

Critics denounced the Dodgers when Walter and Co. committed $700 million to Ohtani last year. They might net a profit on the contract. They already netted a championship.

 

The Dodgers already had passed the most punitive luxury tax threshold for next season, so they are liable for a 110% penalty on the average annual value of Hernández’s three-year, $66-million contract. After a modest discount to account for deferrals, that’s about $22 million next year. The signing bonus is $23 million — all payable next year, according to a source familiar with the contract.

 

Add it up, and that’s a $45-million commitment before paying Hernández a single dollar in salary. (Of the $66 million total, the deferrals and the signing bonus account for all but $19.5 million.)

 

Advertisement

Dodgers owner Mark Walter speaks during a news conference.

Dodgers owner Mark Walter. (Alex Gallardo / Associated Press)

The typical reaction about how much more fans will pay for hot dogs is hopelessly quaint. To be sure, a six pack of Dodger Dogs at the grocery store ($5.99) costs less than a single Dodger Dog at the ballpark ($7.99).

 

The Dodgers also charged $75 for parking at the World Series. They charge $77.25 for a photo opportunity with the World Series championship trophy, with a press box tour included.

 

Advertisement

To borrow another slogan the Raiders no longer need: Just win, baby.

 

Not all teams can spend like the Dodgers, but expanded playoffs mean teams do not have to keep up with the Dodgers all season.

 

Those teams just have to sneak into the playoffs with 80-some wins — no owner can say with a straight face he cannot afford a team that can do that — and get hot in October. The Dodgers won the World Series this year, but they were eliminated in the division series by an 89-win team in 2022 and an 84-win team in 2023.

 

That 84-win team, the Arizona Diamondbacks, on Friday agreed to a $210-million contract with star pitcher Corbin Burnes. The Diamondbacks are one of the teams most severely influenced by the implosion of regional sports networks, but the drop in television revenue did not stop them from playing to win.

 

Advertisement

 

BRONX, NEW YORK – OCTOBER 30, 2024: Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Teoscar Hernandez (37), center, celebrates on the field. Game 5 of the World Series against the Yankees at Yankees Stadium in New York City Wednesday, October 30 2024. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

Dodgers

 

Teoscar Hernández agrees to three-year, $66-million deal with the Dodgers

Dec. 27, 2024

The Dodgers play in the second-largest market in the major leagues. In Chicago, the third-largest market in the majors and the only major market represented in either of the Central divisions, the Cubs and White Sox need better management.

 

In each of the past six full seasons, the Milwaukee Brewers — playing in the smallest market in the majors — have posted a better record than the Cubs. The White Sox this year lost 121 games, a modern major league record, and attracted fewer fans than any American League team besides the Tampa Bay Rays and the on-our-way-out-of-Oakland Athletics.

 

In two other major markets, it is notable that teams that posted mostly losing records for years and now are run by former major leaguers — Buster Posey in San Francisco and Craig Breslow in

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *