Dodgers Face A Huge Trade Deadline Question With Tarik Skubal

As the Dodgers eye Tarik Skubal to bolster their rotation, explore how this strategic trade could both enhance their World Series prospects and prevent rivals from gaining an edge.

The Dodgers are already in a position plenty of teams would envy. They’re well ahead of the rest of the NL West, and unless something goes sideways, they should be headed for a first-round bye.

That kind of cushion changes the way a front office thinks at the deadline. For Los Angeles, the conversation isn’t just about adding help.

It’s about whether to go big.

That’s where Tarik Skubal enters the picture.

ESPN’s Jeff Passan called Skubal the Dodgers’ “best” and “dream” match at this year’s trade deadline, and the logic behind it is easy to see. The Dodgers have the kind of prospect depth that can actually make a deal like this work. Passan wrote, “The Dodgers have the sort of farm system Detroit would love to raid.”

If Los Angeles wanted to build a package around prospects, it has options. Justin Wrobleski and Emmet Sheehan could be part of a deal.

So could outfield prospects Josue De Paula, Mike Sirota, Zyhir Hope, and Eduardo Quintero, all of whom Passan identified as possible centerpieces. On the pitching side, River Ryan, Christian Zazueta, Jackson Ferris, and others could also help get a trade across the finish line.

The baseball case for Skubal is even louder. Passan wrote that “adding Subal to a rotation that includes Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, and Blake Snell would make them damn near unassailable.”

That’s the kind of rotation that can tilt October. Ohtani, Yamamoto, and Skubal would form a trio that could handle nearly every game in a postseason series if everything lines up the right way.

And the Dodgers wouldn’t be short on follow-up options. Wrobleski, Sheehan, Roki Sasaki, Snell, or Tyler Glasnow could all be used out of the bullpen or as starters if injuries or a long series forced the issue.

There’s also the less obvious advantage: keeping Skubal away from everyone else. Passan put it plainly: “Other teams need Skubal more, certainly, but that's of little concern to the Dodgers.”

That matters because a move like this wouldn’t just strengthen Los Angeles. It would also keep him out of reach for clubs such as the Atlanta Braves, Milwaukee Brewers, and Chicago Cubs.

With a three-peat in their sights, the Dodgers have the luxury of thinking bigger than most teams at the deadline. Skubal would be expensive, both in trade capital and financially.

But Los Angeles has the rotation, the prospect base, and the competitive edge to make the swing. From the Dodgers’ side, it’s a fit that makes plenty of sense.

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