Considering their sustained success, you might already consider these Dodgers a dynasty. They’ve made the playoffs 13 straight seasons, won their division 12 of the last 13 years, captured World Series titles in two of the last five seasons and are about to play in the Fall Classic for the fifth time in nine years.
But on the precipice of making history, Kiké Hernández isn’t ready to make that declaration just yet.
At least, not until the Dodgers finish what they set out to do this spring after walloping the Yankees in five games in last year’s World Series and returning a group with even more talent.
“You don’t really talk about dynasties when teams lose the World Series,” Hernández said in the aftermath of sweeping the Brewers last Friday. “To do that, we’ve got to win it. If we do win it, and we go back-to-back like I think we can, we can potentially talk about a dynasty.”
No Major League Baseball team has repeated as a champion since the 1998-2000 Yankees took home hardware in three straight seasons.
The Dodgers, on paper, looked capable of breaking that drought after another offseason of exorbitant spending that restocked their already stacked roster. They entered this year as the favorites to win it all again after adding the top starting pitcher on the market in Blake Snell, the top reliever on the market in Tanner Scott (in addition to Kirby Yates) and the most sought-after international free agent in Roki Sasaki, among a litany of moves. They also brought back Teoscar Hernandez, Kiké Hernández and Blake Treinen, key cogs from last year’s run.
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Back in February, manager Dave Roberts laid out the potential history ahead for the group and how special it would be to accomplish something that hadn’t been done in 25 years.
“I brought it up I think on the first day of spring training,” Roberts said, “and haven’t talked about it since. I think it’s one of those added pressures that I don’t think I want to take on, that I don’t think our players need to take on.”
Especially with the way the unexpected slog of a summer unfolded in Los Angeles.
The Dodgers, a team many expected to challenge for the all-time wins record, went 25-27 in July and August, at one point losing their grasp on the NL West lead in the process. They were 35-30 after the break. Injuries decimated their rotation. Their bullpen was in shambles. Scott, Yates and Treinen all had ERAs well north of 4.00. Mookie Betts was mired in his worst offensive season. Teoscar Hernández regressed from last season’s bounceback. After starting the season 8-0, the Dodgers were 70-64 over their next 134 games. It was a team that at times looked disinterested in the marathon, despite always recognizing the potential.
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Sometimes, they would address those possibilities in their group chat. In the low points, it served as motivation. “We got a really good opportunity to do something really big,” Miguel Rojas recalled one text reading. “Not just for us, but for the city, and for the organization, for baseball.”
Even if Roberts didn’t address the history again, the players knew the expectation.
“Our goal is to win the World Series,” said Max Muncy. “That’s what we expect. Anything less than that is a failure. For us, showing up to spring this year it was, ‘Hey, we need to repeat.’ It wasn’t like we wanted to repeat. It was like, ‘Hey, we need to repeat.’ Obviously, the season went the way it went. It’s a long season. It’s a lot of games. We dealt with a lot. But we always knew what we had in the clubhouse. We always knew what we had on the field. Now, you’re starting to see it.”
It took a late-season surge — during which they won 15 of their final 20 games, shortly after Roberts held a team meeting in Baltimore in an attempt to strike some positivity into a scuffling group — for the Dodgers to get to 93 wins.
Through it all, they expressed confidence that they still had the pieces to get where they envisioned. They ultimately held off the Padres to win the NL West by three games, despite compiling their lowest win total over a full season since 2018.
“We talked about it in September when there were a lot of questions about whether us winning 93 games was a disappointment,” said president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman. “Our strong feeling was that we were going to be going into October with the most talented team we’ve ever had.”
It has played out that way.
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The Dodgers entered the postseason hot, sparked by a return to form from Betts and a return to health across the roster, particularly in a rotation that has been the best in baseball since getting whole again in August.
In October, they’ve trampled every foe in their way, looking every bit the juggernaut everyone expected to see back in February. The Dodgers have now won 24 of their last 30 games dating back to Sept. 7, including a 9-1 mark in the playoffs, as they get set to see the Blue Jays in the World Series.
“I think as a group, when you go through what we’ve gone through, especially coming down from behind against San Diego last year — that series, it was only five games, but it felt like a 162-game season — you get this feeling of like, ‘Nothing can go wrong. We’re not losing,’” said Kiké Hernández. “Yoshinobu [Yamamoto] had an important quote earlier than his final begin, ‘Dropping will not be an choice.’ That’s type of just like the mentality we have now as a bunch.”
That mentality has introduced them again to the game’s largest stage. They’re the primary World Sequence champion to return to the Fall Traditional the next season for the reason that 2008-09 Phillies.
With that, the “dynasty” dialog has resurfaced.
Whereas some gamers outline it by the variety of titles gained, others focus extra on a group’s skill to contend 12 months after 12 months, which the Dodgers have completed higher than nearly any franchise ever.
“I’m not going to base it on what number of championships you’re going to win,” Rojas instructed me. “I base it on how constant you might be getting so far. However I really feel prefer it does not matter. Proper now, all we wish to do is win the World Sequence. That’s the one good consequence we’re going to get after this 12 months.”
“I feel simply because I’m in it, I understand how laborious it’s, I don’t actually take into consideration dynasties,” Betts stated. “I don’t actually know what it consists of. However I suppose for those who’re interested by going to the postseason, clearly having an opportunity to win the World Sequence 12 months after 12 months, I suppose that might qualify as some sort of dynasty. However I don’t know what it takes to name it that. So I’m simply going to take pleasure in being in no matter mode we at the moment are.”
The Dodgers’ 13 consecutive journeys to the postseason are tied with the 1995-07 Yankees and path solely the 1991-05 Braves (14 straight) for the longest streak in MLB historical past. These Braves groups solely gained one World Sequence title throughout that stretch. The Dodgers, in the meantime, have an opportunity to win their second straight and third in six seasons, a feat Roberts stated would put them on the “Mt. Rushmore of sports activities organizations.”
“Simply successful one is tough,” stated Freddie Freeman. “So dynasty, I feel if you may get three in 5 – 6 years, I suppose you may say it’s one. However I feel it’s the sustained successful that the Dodgers have completed for thus lengthy after which to cement it with some championships, yeah, I suppose you may name this — if we do do it — a modern-day dynasty.”
There have been different dynastic runs from groups over the past quarter century. The Astros gained two World Sequence and made two others from 2017-22. The Giants gained the World Sequence 3 times over a five-year span within the early 2010s, although they missed the playoffs within the different two seasons throughout that stretch. The Crimson Sox gained two World Sequence in a four-year span from 2004-07.
However none of these groups repeated as champions, and none of them skilled the perpetual success of those Dodgers, who now discover themselves again the place they anticipated to be — on the sport’s pinnacle, with an opportunity to cement their dynasty standing.
“The legacy, dynasty speak, plenty of that’s — I really feel is — meant for different people who aren’t taking part in, and allow them to have these debates,” Roberts stated. “It’s our job to place these subjects on the desk, and we have now the chance to try this.”
Rowan Kavner is an MLB author for FOX Sports activities. He beforehand coated the L.A. Dodgers, LA Clippers and Dallas Cowboys. An LSU grad, Rowan was born in California, grew up in Texas, then moved again to the West Coast in 2014. Comply with him on X at @RowanKavner.