LOS ANGELES — The never-ending quest for depth in Chavez Ravine just took another dramatic turn. On Saturday, in a move that barely made a whisper before detonating across baseball circles, the Los Angeles Dodgers claimed outfielder Jack Suwinski off waivers from the Pittsburgh Pirates. What looks like a routine roster maneuver on paper could quietly evolve into one of the most fascinating subplots of the Dodgers’ season.
Suwinski’s exit from Pittsburgh came swiftly and without ceremony. Earlier in the week, the Pirates designated him for assignment following their signing of veteran slugger Marcell Ozuna, abruptly ending Suwinski’s four-year run with the club. For a player once viewed as a developing power cornerstone, the fall was steep. For the Dodgers, however, it represented opportunity.

Acquired originally from the San Diego Padres in the 2021 Adam Frazier trade, Suwinski flashed legitimate thunder in 2022 and 2023, launching 45 home runs over those two seasons with a combined 106 wRC+, establishing himself as a dangerous left-handed bat with pull-side power and center-field versatility. But baseball can be merciless. Over the last two years, the production cratered. Across 455 plate appearances in 2024 and 2025, Suwinski slashed a brutal .169/.271/.297 with a 59 wRC+, falling below replacement level and slipping out of Pittsburgh’s long-term plans.
And yet, this is exactly the kind of gamble the Dodgers have built their empire on.
The numbers tell a tale of volatility, not absence of talent. Suwinski’s defensive metrics hint at a player still capable of contributing: plus-2 Outs Above Average in center field over his career, minus-3 in right, and minus-6 in left. He’s spent more than half his major league time patrolling center, a position that demands range, instincts, and athleticism — attributes Los Angeles values heavily in its run-prevention blueprint.

The context makes the claim even more intriguing. Before Suwinski’s arrival, the Dodgers had 17 position players on their 40-man roster. But the depth chart is not as stable as it appears. Both Tommy Edman and Kiké Hernández are sidelined and will not be ready for Opening Day, leaving manager Dave Roberts juggling options as camp competitions intensify. Hernández, recovering from left elbow surgery in November, was officially transferred to the 60-day injured list to clear roster space for Suwinski — a transactional footnote that could have meaningful ripple effects.
In center field, starter Andy Pages currently stands alone as the only established option. Michael Siani remains on the roster with an option year, while Hyeseong Kim — primarily an infielder competing for second base — offers emergency coverage but is hardly a long-term solution in the outfield grass. Suwinski, notably, is out of minor league options, meaning the Dodgers will need to decide within weeks whether he fits their major league puzzle or becomes roster collateral yet again.
There is also a financial nuance at play. With two years and 170 days of major league service time, Suwinski qualified as a Super Two player this offseason, placing him among the top 22 percent of players between two and three years of service. He avoided arbitration in November by agreeing to a one-year, $1.25 million contract — a modest figure by Dodgers standards, but not insignificant for a player fighting to reclaim relevance.
So what is this move really about?
For an organization that treats roster construction like a living organism, this is about optionality. It’s about buying time — four weeks, perhaps more — to evaluate whether Suwinski’s bat speed still flashes, whether the power that once produced tape-measure shots can be unlocked with swing adjustments, and whether a change of environment can reverse a downward spiral. It’s about depth not just for April, but for the inevitable attrition of a 162-game grind.
Inside the clubhouse, the Dodgers are betting on their infrastructure — their analytics department, hitting lab, and veteran core — to squeeze value from overlooked assets. They have revived careers before. They have turned waiver claims into October contributors. And in a division and league where margins are razor thin, even a platoon-ready left-handed bat with defensive flexibility can swing a postseason game.
The Pirates may have closed the chapter. The Dodgers are opening a new one.
For Jack Suwinski, this is not merely a waiver claim. It is a crossroads. For Los Angeles, it’s another calculated roll of the dice in pursuit of sustained dominance. And as Opening Day looms with roster battles heating up, one thing is certain: what looked like a minor transaction on a quiet Saturday just became one of the most compelling roster gambles of the spring.