If Los Angeles Dodgers fans had a dollar for every time they were forced to explain why the claim that “the Dodgers are ruining baseball” is rooted more in emotion than logic, they would be sitting on a fortune that looks suspiciously like the Dodgers’ own payroll. It is an argument that resurfaces every winter, every blockbuster signing, every deferred contract, and every moment Los Angeles reminds the rest of the league that it operates on a different level. But once again, that narrative has been forcefully dismantled — this time by one of the most respected evaluators in the sport.
Yes, the Dodgers spend. They spend aggressively, creatively, and unapologetically. Shohei Ohtani’s historic deal, their willingness to structure contracts in ways that maximize competitive windows, and their readiness to absorb luxury tax penalties have all made them an easy villain in the eyes of frustrated fan bases. But spending alone has never been the foundation of the Dodgers’ sustained dominance, and reducing their success to a checkbook argument ignores the far more uncomfortable truth: Los Angeles is simply better at baseball operations than most organizations.

Where Andrew Friedman and his front office have truly separated themselves is in the one area money cannot buy overnight — player development. While headlines fixate on free agency splurges, the Dodgers quietly continue to maintain one of the deepest, most productive farm systems in the game, a feat that requires patience, vision, elite scouting, and long-term organizational alignment.
In many ways, player development has become a lost art in modern baseball, particularly as more teams chase quick fixes through spending or short-term contention windows. Organizations like the Milwaukee Brewers are often cited as gold standards in this area, and for good reason. Milwaukee’s sustained relevance atop the National League Central has been built on smart drafting, sharp evaluations in trades, and an ability to turn overlooked prospects into major-league contributors.
The Brewers’ reputation as a player-development machine is also shaped by necessity. As a small-market team, Milwaukee does not have the financial margin for error that the Dodgers enjoy. They cannot simply spend their way out of organizational mistakes, which forces excellence in scouting and development. That reality has earned them respect across the league.
But here is where the anti-Dodgers argument collapses under its own weight. Having financial resources does not preclude a team from excelling at development — and Los Angeles has proven that repeatedly. The Dodgers have mastered contract structure in free agency, but they are just as formidable when it comes to identifying talent, refining it, and maximizing its value. Those two strengths are not mutually exclusive. In fact, together, they form the backbone of a modern dynasty.
What critics continue to overlook — or conveniently ignore — is that the Dodgers consistently field one of the best farm systems in baseball. That reality was underscored yet again by The Athletic’s Keith Law, whose latest organizational rankings placed the Dodgers’ system among the elite. Only the Brewers ranked higher. For a franchise routinely accused of “buying championships,” that detail is devastating to the narrative.

Law’s assessment did more than praise Los Angeles; it exposed how lazy the prevailing argument against them has become. The idea that the Dodgers are ruining baseball by outspending opponents falls apart when confronted with evidence that they are also out-drafting, out-scouting, and out-developing most of the league. That is not a flaw in the system — that is a blueprint executed at an elite level.
Lost beneath the noise of free-agent headlines is the Dodgers’ relentless ability to refresh their prospect pipeline. They do not simply hoard young talent; they deploy it strategically. Prospects are developed either to reinforce the major-league roster or to be leveraged as valuable trade assets. Few teams manage that balance as efficiently.
A prime example came before the 2024 season, when Los Angeles turned Michael Busch — a talented but blocked prospect — into Zyhir Hope and Jackson Ferris in a deal with the Chicago Cubs. In one transaction, the Dodgers converted surplus into two top-100 prospects, with Hope quickly emerging as one of the most exciting young players in the minors. It was a move that barely registered nationally, yet it perfectly illustrated how Los Angeles operates.

For every high-profile signing like Kyle Tucker, there is a quieter transaction like the Busch trade happening behind the scenes. Those are the moves that rarely dominate talk radio or social media outrage, but they are the real engines of sustained success. They are also the reason the Dodgers remain competitive year after year, regardless of injuries, departures, or market fluctuations.
The uncomfortable reality for critics is this: the Dodgers are not ruining baseball. They are exposing inefficiencies, raising the standard, and proving that excellence requires more than just money. It requires competence at every level of an organization. As Keith Law made clear, dismissing that reality is not analysis — it is avoidance. And the Dodgers will keep winning while the argument keeps losing.