🔥 BASEBALL BLAST: Ben Verlander fires back at the “Dodgers ruined baseball” narrative — sharp takes, unapologetic truth, and a reminder that dominance isn’t destruction.. ll

ENGAGE - Ben Verlander

 

When Dave Roberts boldly declared that the Los Angeles Dodgers planned to really “ruin baseball” by winning four more games in the World Series, it only confirmed the frustrations of angry fans around MLB.

The Dodgers, boasting the most expensive roster in baseball – though not by much – have really turned things up a notch during their postseason run as the NL’s third seed, winning all but one game they’ve played to punch their tickets to the World Series while the American League might still have two more games to play before they can name a champion.

And yet, in the opinion of Ben Verlander, LA isn’t the problem with baseball. No, the real problem is franchises that refuse to pay their players and allow them to hit the open market, where they inevitably want to sign with a team like the Dodgers who value them according to their talents.

“Why are people mad at the Dodgers? Calling them a super team? Saying this is bad for baseball? Let me tell you something. The problem is not the Dodgers. The problem is all these other teams not willing to pay their own players when they have them,” Verlander explained.

“The league would look totally different if the Pittsburgh Pirates paid Tyler Glasnow and the Tampa Rays paid Blake Snell and the Boston Red Sox paid Mookie Betts, and the Los Angeles Angels paid Shohei Ohtani. Shohei Ohtani is the greatest player in the world. He was with the Angels, became a free agent, went back to the Angels with the same contract he ended up signing, and they said no. So he goes to the Dodgers. Freddie Freeman was with the Braves. They offered him less money, a hometown discount. That became a fiasco. Dodgers took him. Mookie Betts was traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers by the Boston Red Sox. They literally sent him to the Los Angeles Dodgers. Tyler Glassnell, Blake Snell, Tampa Bay Rays didn’t want him. Didn’t want to pay them. Dodgers decided to pay them.”

Interesting stuff, right? Well Verlander took it a step further, noting just how much LA reinvests into their on-field product, which is a stark contrast to some other organizations.

“The Los Angeles Dodgers spend about 75% of their revenue on the team whereas most everybody else in the league is in the mid 30%. So it’s not that the Los Angeles Dodgers are a problem. It’s that these other teams just need to pay their players when they have them,” Verlander noted. “We should not be mad at the Los Angeles Dodgers for putting the money in the team and wanting to be a competitive team and winning championships. Freddie Freeman wanted to stay in Atlanta. Mookie Betts traded to the Dodgers. Shohei Otani offered the Angels the same thing. Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell didn’t get paid by the Tampa Rays. We wouldn’t be sitting here blaming the Dodgers. Don’t blame the Dodgers. Blame the other teams.”

Now granted, Los Angeles makes money at a borderline unprecedented clip in professional sports, so their administrative costs are a much smaller segment of their budget than a small-market team barely getting by. But still, if an organization with means is willing to re-invest its profits into the players who actually get the job done on the field, why does that bother fans more than their own favorite team not being willing to do the same?

The Dodgers are NOT ruining baseball…@BenVerlander explains why pic.twitter.com/6J9keOuCdy

— Flippin’ Bats Podcast (@FlippinBatsPod) October 18, 2025

Related Posts

🧨 BREAKING UPDATE: Braves Manager Search Heats Up — Front Office Eyes Bold Hire as Player Reviews Reveal Hidden Issues!

Atlanta Braves news and notes from Saturday

Will Valuable Red Sox Role Player Return In 2026?

After four strong seasons with the Boston Red Sox, will free agent outfielder Rob Refsnyder re-sign with them?

🔥 DREAM DERAILED: Phillies pour cold water on Bryce Harper’s Pete Alonso wish — the fantasy fizzles, tensions simmer, and the rivalry fire burns even hotter heading into next season.. ll

The Phillies won’t be moving Bryce Harper off first base to sign Pete Alonso, or any other first baseman, this offseason.

⚡ OFFSEASON SHOCKER: Phillies’ sudden move opens the door for the Royals — a surprise decision turns into a golden winter target that could reshape both teams’ plans.. ll

The MLB offseason will really get underway for the Royals soon enough. And perhaps the Phillies may’ve just given them an upgrade to consider in the outfield.

🔥 PHILLY STANDOFF: The Phillies send a chilling warning on Kyle Schwarber — contract clouds, future in limbo, and a brewing power shift that could shake the clubhouse to its core.. ll

The Philadelphia Phillies bringing back Kyle Schwarber might not be the best move to make at all.

💥 PHILLY PUZZLE: Could the Phillies’ blueprint for Otto Kemp depend on Alec Bohm’s future? — shifting roles, quiet strategy, and a decision that could reshape the team’s long-term core.. ll

The Phillies know what the rookie, Otto Kemp, went through over the course of his first big league season.