
Could Trade to Dodgers Be Secret Recipe to Return Ace to 'Former Glory'?
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
The Los Angeles Dodgers came into the season with seemingly the best pitching staff in baseball, but injuries have destroyed most of the top arms. Los Angeles' pitching staff is barely averaging four innings per start at this point.
ESPN's Jeff Passan recently suggested the Dodgers would be one of the best fits in a trade for Miami Marlins ace Sandy Alcántara ahead of the upcoming trade deadline.
MIAMI, FLORIDA - JULY 18: Sandy Alcantara #22 of the Miami Marlins pitches against the Kansas City Royals d1i at loanDepot park on July 18, 2025 in Miami, Florida.
MIAMI, FLORIDA - JULY 18: Sandy Alcantara #22 of the Miami Marlins pitches against the Kansas City Royals d1i at loanDepot park on July 18, 2025 in Miami, Florida."Alcantara was arguably the best pitcher in baseball in 2022, winning the NL Cy Young unanimously. He was more solid than spectacular in 2023 and missed 2024 with Tommy John surgery," Passan wrote. "He has been tinkering this season to try to get his pitch mix and locations right in hopes of regaining his former glory. His 7.14 ERA is unsightly, and with the Marlins still valuing him as a top starter, they could hold on to him until the winter, when teams such as the Baltimore Orioles would be more inclined to acquire him and the final two years of his contract."
The Dodgers are certainly the level of aggressive it would take to land a star like Alcántara. The righty also has a few years of affordable team control left on his deal, which would fit perfectly with the Dodgers' payroll.
The Marlins need to trade him before he drops his trade value any further. Trading him now would almost certainly net at least one star prospect in return.
If the Marlins hunt a trade with the Dodgers, they could pursue former top prospects Bobby Miller and James Outman as well as talented prospects like Justin Wrobleski and plenty of others.
Either way, the Dodgers are the right level of aggressive and desperate to make a deal like this come to life this month.
More MLB: Shocking Deadline Deal? MLB Insider Links Phillies To All-Star Outfielder

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Hernández: 'Still a threat.' Why Shohei Ohtani needs to remain a two-player for the Dodgers
The day after he pitches, Shohei Ohtani turns into Michael Conforto. Ohtani has played four games on days following his starts, and he's taken a total of 15 at-bats in them. He's collected just one hit. He's struck out six times. Ohtani pitched three innings in the Dodgers' 5-2 victory over the Minnesota Twins on Monday night, which led to manager Dave Roberts being asked about Ohtani's anticipated Confortization on Tuesday. Read more: Tanner Scott injury overshadows big nights from Shohei Ohtani, Will Smith in Dodgers win 'In the batter's box, he's certainly still a threat,' Roberts said. 'So I don't think right now we're giving that too much thought.' Good. Suspicions that Ohtani's pitching has negatively affected Ohtani's hitting have become almost immaterial. Ohtani will remain a two-way player. He will remain a two-way player for the remainder of the regular season, and he will remain a two-way player in October. He should provide more than a couple of innings here and there. He should be a full-blown starter. Because he wants to. Because the Dodgers need him to. Ohtani is the best hitter on a team that can't hit much of anything lately. He is the best pitcher on a team with an injury-ravaged pitching staff that sustained another likely loss on Monday night when closer Tanner Scott departed the game with forearm pain. His value as a two-way player was evident in the opening game of the three-game series against the Twins, as he gave up a leadoff homer to Byron Buxton and returned the favor by crushing a two-run homer in the bottom of the first inning. The 2-1 lead was gradually extended, by a pair of solo home runs by Will Smith and another bases-empty shot by Andy Pages. Ohtani pitched three innings, the damage inflicted against him limited to Buxton's homer even though he was plagued by control problems. Ohtani struck out three batters and was charged with four hits and a walk while throwing 46 pitches. 'I thought I wanted to go four innings, but my pitch count was piling up,' Ohtani said in Japanese. He will be extended to four innings in his next start, Roberts said. The Dodgers might need every one of them, considering they have lost 10 of their last 13 games. Ohtani didn't know it at the time, but he spent six seasons preparing for something like this. On the Angels, he was a great player on a horrible team, which is what the Dodgers are at this moment. The sorry state of the team didn't stop Ohtani from trying to carry it then, and that's not stopping him from trying to carry it now. 'I think he's very mindful of where our team is right now,' Roberts said. 'I feel he's trying to will his way to kind of getting us over the hump. He's competing. He's taking really good at-bats. And he's fighting. So I love what he's doing.' Ohtani has homered in each of the last three games. 'There's just an extra level of focus I see in the decision-making at the plate,' Roberts said. Roberts observed that Ohtani wasn't driven by personal glory. He pointed to how Ohtani offered no resistance when he said he wanted to switch him and Mookie Betts in the batting order, with Ohtani dropping from the leadoff to No. 2 spot. Ohtani batted first in every game until Sunday when Roberts moved a slumping Betts to the top of the lineup with hopes of jump-starting his season. When Roberts texted Ohtani his thoughts the previous night, Ohtani replied by telling him to do whatever was best for the team, even if that meant batting him ninth. Read more: From a day off to the leadoff spot, Dodgers try unraveling mystery of Mookie Betts' slump 'I have absolutely no problem with it,' Ohtani said. 'What's most important is that everyone can hit comfortably.' Ohtani's homers in the last two games came right after Betts reached base in front of him, with a single on Sunday against the Milwaukee Brewers and with a walk on Monday against Twins starter David Festa. 'He wants to win,' Roberts said of Ohtani. 'I think that him playing every day, him pitching, him taking walks when needed and switching spots with Mookie in the order, whatever is in the best interest of the ballclub, that's what he's doing.' Ohtani is now 31. There are questions about whether his body can still withstand the workload required to play both ways, and rightfully so. But as the Dodgers have trudged through this midseason slump, Ohtani has revealed the spirit that was fundamental in making him the best player in the world. Roberts will wager the season on it. He has no other option. Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


Los Angeles Times
5 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
‘Still a threat.' Why Shohei Ohtani needs to remain a two-player for the Dodgers
The day after he pitches, Shohei Ohtani turns into Michael Conforto. Ohtani has played four games on days following his starts, and he's taken a total of 15 at-bats in them. He's collected just one hit. He's struck out six times. Ohtani pitched three innings in the Dodgers' 5-2 victory over the Minnesota Twins on Monday night, which led to manager Dave Roberts being asked about Ohtani's anticipated Confortization on Tuesday. 'In the batter's box, he's certainly still a threat,' Roberts said. 'So I don't think right now we're giving that too much thought.' Good. Suspicions that Ohtani's pitching has negatively affected Ohtani's hitting have become almost immaterial. Ohtani will remain a two-way player. He will remain a two-way player for the remainder of the regular season, and he will remain a two-way player in October. He should provide more than a couple of innings here and there. He should be a full-blown starter. Because he wants to. Because the Dodgers need him to. Ohtani is the best hitter on a team that can't hit much of anything lately. He is the best pitcher on a team with an injury-ravaged pitching staff that sustained another likely loss on Monday night when closer Tanner Scott departed the game with forearm pain. His value as a two-way player was evident in the opening game of the three-game series against the Twins, as he gave up a leadoff homer to Byron Buxton and returned the favor by crushing a two-run homer in the bottom of the first inning. The 2-1 lead was gradually extended, by a pair of solo home runs by Will Smith and another bases-empty shot by Andy Pages. Ohtani pitched three innings, the damage inflicted against him limited to Buxton's homer even though he was plagued by control problems. Ohtani struck out three batters and was charged with four hits and a walk while throwing 46 pitches. 'I thought I wanted to go four innings, but my pitch count was piling up,' Ohtani said in Japanese. He will be extended to four innings in his next start, Roberts said. The Dodgers might need every one of them, considering they have lost 10 of their last 13 games. Ohtani didn't know it at the time, but he spent six seasons preparing for something like this. On the Angels, he was a great player on a horrible team, which is what the Dodgers are at this moment. The sorry state of the team didn't stop Ohtani from trying to carry it then, and that's not stopping him from trying to carry it now. 'I think he's very mindful of where our team is right now,' Roberts said. 'I feel he's trying to will his way to kind of getting us over the hump. He's competing. He's taking really good at-bats. And he's fighting. So I love what he's doing.' Ohtani has homered in each of the last three games. 'There's just an extra level of focus I see in the decision-making at the plate,' Roberts said. Roberts observed that Ohtani wasn't driven by personal glory. He pointed to how Ohtani offered no resistance when he said he wanted to switch him and Mookie Betts in the batting order, with Ohtani dropping from the leadoff to No. 2 spot. Ohtani batted first in every game until Sunday when Roberts moved a slumping Betts to the top of the lineup with hopes of jump-starting his season. When Roberts texted Ohtani his thoughts the previous night, Ohtani replied by telling him to do whatever was best for the team, even if that meant batting him ninth. 'I have absolutely no problem with it,' Ohtani said. 'What's most important is that everyone can hit comfortably.' Ohtani's homers in the last two games came right after Betts reached base in front of him, with a single on Sunday against the Milwaukee Brewers and with a walk on Monday against Twins starter David Festa. 'He wants to win,' Roberts said of Ohtani. 'I think that him playing every day, him pitching, him taking walks when needed and switching spots with Mookie in the order, whatever is in the best interest of the ballclub, that's what he's doing.' Ohtani is now 31. There are questions about whether his body can still withstand the workload required to play both ways, and rightfully so. But as the Dodgers have trudged through this midseason slump, Ohtani has revealed the spirit that was fundamental in making him the best player in the world. Roberts will wager the season on it. He has no other option.

NBC Sports
6 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
Brewers become first NL team to reach 60 victories, riding 11-game win streak
SEATTLE — At first, Brandon Woodruff was caught a bit off guard. The Milwaukee Brewers' starting pitcher was fresh off a dazzling performance, one in which he tossed six innings of two-hit ball en route to the club's 6-0 win against the Seattle Mariners. But upon learning the victory gave the Brewers 11 wins in a row but also the best record in the National League, Woodruff was taken aback — but only briefly. 'Doesn't surprise me,' Woodruff said. 'We got a lot of great guys in this clubhouse and it's a fun team. So, I feel like we say that every year, but this year's a little bit different in a way.' To Woodruff's point, the Brewers have won 60 of their first 100 games with a very different roster than the one that won the National League Central last year. Shortstop Willy Adames (San Francisco Giants) and right-hander Corbin Burnes (Arizona Diamondbacks) both signed massive contracts elsewhere this offseason. Long-time closer Devin Williams, meanwhile, was traded to the New York Yankees in December. Their departures, though, have hardly hindered the Brewers. Even though Woodruff missed most of the first half as a result of being brought along slowly following surgery on his pitching shoulder, the Brewers' rotation has been stout in his absence. Milwaukee starters have combined for the sixth-lowest ERA in the majors, thanks in part to shrewd pickups like right-hander Quinn Priester, who Milwaukee acquired in April. 'I think that's a lot of credit to our front office and our coaching staff, and just putting the right guys in the room,' Woodruff said. 'When you can get guys that play for each other and play with each other and just have fun. That's the biggest thing. There's a reason why we've done this over the last eight, nine years.' Since 2018, the Brewers have won the NL Central four times and are on track to make it three straight seasons, doing so mostly without 'household names', as Woodruff said. This season, it's been a collective, well-balanced effort propelling the Brewers to frequent victories, including six against the Los Angeles Dodgers during their active win streak. Second baseman Brice Turang is leading the club's position players with three Wins Above Replacement, per Baseball Reference. Twenty-one-year old outfielder Jackson Chourio remains a force to be reckoned with after a standout rookie season. And right-hander Freddy Peralta leads all major league pitchers with 12 wins. All of it has led to quite the positive clubhouse culture from the perspective of folks like shortstop Joey Ortiz. 'Winning's great, winning's fun, It's a blessing to come to a big-league field and play the game,' Ortiz said. 'So, I feel like winning is just an extra on top of that. Everyone's so close in the locker room that I don't even think – of course we want to win, but I don't think winning matters. I think we have a great time just being together, and I think it shows on the field.' It's a tight-knit group led by reigning National League manager of the year Pat Murphy. The baseball lifer is aware his team continues to gain confidence with each passing win, but that there is still much time remaining in the regular season. The trade deadline hasn't even come and gone, so the small-market Brewers still have plenty of time to work with – after all, as Murphy put it, it's only July 21. 'There's more to be done. There's more opportunity,' Murphy said. 'There's no reason to coast. There's every reason to know you're in a fight. You drop your guard, 'Whack!' and sometimes you don't recover from that.'