Teoscar Hernández has signed a $66 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers after considering offers from multiple teams. He chose the Dodgers due to comfort and his desire for stability for his family.
The Los Angeles Dodgers continue to make waves with their roster upgrades ahead of the 2025 MLB season. Teoscar Hernandez expressed hope for one more key addition. If there’s one team that has dominated the headlines this offseason,
The Los Angeles Dodgers have faced criticism for their exorbitant spending in free agency over the last few years, but one player believes other teams
Kirby Yates is joining the Los Angeles Dodgers' bullpen just two days after the club went out and signed another All-Star closer in Tanner Scott.
After six seasons in L.A. that included plenty of viral moments and concluded with a World Series championship, Hernández signed with the Boston Red Sox. After two-and-a-half seasons in Boston, the Dodgers reacquired Hernández at the 2023 trade deadline.
Veteran outfielder Teoscar Hernandez walked into free agency following the conclusion of his one-year deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers at the end of the 2024 season.
Teoscar Hernandez extended his stay with the Los Angeles Dodgers this offseason by signing a three-year, $66 million contract.
Two marginal moves the team could make is bringing back utility man Kiké Hernández and future Hall of Fame pitcher Clayton Kershaw. But outside of that, the roster appears to be set. That doesn't mean current free agents aren't interested in joining the reigning World Series champions, though.
MLB vet expects the Los Angeles Dodgers deferral overkill will set up a work stoppage after the current CBA expires.
Much has been made in recent weeks about the Dodgers signing free agents such as reliever Tanner Scott, outfielder Teoscar Hernandez and utility man Hyeseong Kim, as well as Japanese pitching phenom Roki Sasaki, to boost a lineup filled with All-Stars and more than $1 billion in deferred money from 2028 to 2046 .
The Los Angeles Dodgers are Major League Baseball's newest Evil Empire. They spent over $1 billion last offseason on Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Gl
If it wasn’t already obvious, the Los Angeles Dodgers have cemented their status as MLB’s new “Evil Empire” with a mid-January free agency spending spree.Fresh off reportedly agreeing to a deal with Japanese ace Roki Sasaki and signing All-Star closer Tanner Scott to a four-year,