PHOENIX â The Los Angeles Dodgersâ first official workout of the spring didnât begin with batting practice, bullpen sessions, or conditioning drills. It began with a message. And that message came directly from manager Dave Roberts, who wasted no time putting his newest superstars under the spotlight.
Over the offseason, All-Star outfielder Kyle Tucker and elite closer Edwin DĂaz stunned the baseball world by agreeing to shorter-term, higher-salary deals to join the Dodgersâ pursuit of an unprecedented third consecutive World Series title. The contracts made headlines. The dollars sparked debate. But on Tuesday morning, Roberts made it about something deeper.
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He asked them to stand.
In front of a clubhouse packed with veterans, young prospects, coaches, and front-office staff, Tucker and DĂaz were invited â no, challenged â to explain why they chose Los Angeles.
âI think itâs powerful for our guys to hear it from the other side,â Roberts said afterward, his voice calm but deliberate. âFrom somebody who hasnât been here.â
The moment wasnât theatrical, but it carried weight. Tucker, never one to seek microphones, spoke briefly but clearly. DĂaz followed, echoing sentiments heâd heard even from his brother Alexis during his own stint around the organization last year. Their reasoning wasnât complicated. It wasnât about Hollywood. It wasnât even primarily about money.
It was about detail. Professionalism. Culture.
According to Roberts, both stars emphasized the Dodgersâ meticulous preparation, the seriousness with which they approach every inning, and the way the organization treats not only players â but their families. It was a subtle but unmistakable reinforcement of a narrative the Dodgers have been pushing amid growing criticism of their aggressive spending.

Inside the organization, there is a belief that the payroll headlines miss the point.
The Dodgers donât just win because they can outspend opponents, officials insist. They win because they outwork them, out-plan them, and out-develop them.
And increasingly, that belief is being echoed by rivals.
Just two days earlier, Philadelphia Phillies superstar Bryce Harper and San Diego Padres cornerstone Manny Machado â both leaders on teams chasing the Dodgers â openly praised Los Angeles. Harper, in particular, highlighted the Dodgersâ player-development machine as a foundational advantage that money alone canât buy.
That praise wasnât lost on Andrew Friedman.
âI think one of our most overarching goals is to be a destination spot,â the Dodgersâ president of baseball operations said. âMost important, where our own guys donât want to leave. But where players from other teams are looking longingly, like, âOh, I want to be on the Dodgers.â Thatâs our goal.â
The statement wasnât arrogance. It was strategy.
Because if this spring in Phoenix is any indication, that strategy is working.

Hundreds of fans line the fences daily at the Dodgersâ spring training complex. Media members crowd the walkways. Live batting practice feels like a postseason event. Every bullpen session draws cameras. The energy is less âcampâ and more âcoronation tour.â
And why wouldnât it be?
The Dodgers have owned three consecutive winters in the transaction market. It began with the seismic arrivals of Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, and Tyler Glasnow ahead of 2024. Then came Blake Snell, Tanner Scott, and Roki Sasaki entering 2025. Now Tucker and DĂaz headline the 2026 class â another wave in what feels less like roster building and more like dynasty construction.
But while the stars grab attention, continuity remains the backbone. Will Smith. Teoscar HernĂĄndez. Max Muncy. Enrique HernĂĄndez. Tommy Edman. Miguel Rojas. Blake Treinen. Evan Phillips. Extensions signed. Deals renewed. Familiar faces choosing to stay.
That, perhaps, speaks louder than any free-agent splash.
âWe have it really good here, and we definitely donât forget that,â Muncy said Tuesday. âBut itâs always refreshing when you hear that from the outside, and then you get that little extra hunger from guys who want to go out there and win a ring. It keeps everyone else in here hungry, as well, because you just start feeding off each other.â
And that hunger may be the most dangerous ingredient of all.
Because this isnât a complacent champion. Itâs a roster infused with newcomers who chose this pressure. Who willingly stepped into the expectations of October or bust. Who stood up on Day 1 and told their teammates why they believe this is the best place in baseball to win.
Roberts, entering his 11th season at the helm, understands the psychological value of that moment. Championships arenât defended on spreadsheets. Theyâre defended in clubhouses â in shared belief systems, in accountability, in collective purpose.
By making Tucker and DĂaz speak, he wasnât testing them. He was binding them.
And if the Dodgers complete the three-peat theyâre chasing, Tuesday morning in Phoenix may be remembered not for the jokes about âpicking on the new guys,â but for something far more significant â the moment two outsiders confirmed what the clubhouse already believed.
This isnât just where championships happen.
Itâs where players choose to chase them.