Dodgers Fans Are Starting To Question Kyle Tuckers Accountability

Can Kyle Tucker turn his lackluster season around and justify his lucrative contract with the Dodgers?

Kyle Tucker’s first season with the Dodgers has already turned into a test of patience, and the numbers are doing him no favors.

The $240 million outfielder is hitting .249 with a .730 OPS, and for the first time since 2021 he was left out of the All-Star selections. That alone would be enough to put him under a microscope. When a player is tied to the second-highest AAV in baseball history, underwhelming production doesn’t just register - it irritates.

The Dodgers have stayed publicly supportive. Dave Roberts even tried to frame Tucker’s struggles through the lens of Michael Conforto’s rough 2024, a comparison that was meant to reassure more than persuade. The message from the organization has been clear: Tucker’s track record matters, and the club will keep working to get him right.

But a recent ESPN profile doesn’t exactly scream “all-in response.” Alden Gonzalez reported that Tucker has begun taking postgame batting practice, calling it “a rarity in the major leagues.” That’s the headline detail, and it’s hard to see how that alone is supposed to change the conversation.

Gonzalez also wrote that Tucker “won't religiously show up for early on-field work like Betts and Freddie Freeman and so many of the Dodgers' position players do, but, as [Dodgers hitting coach Aaron] Bates said, 'You can care in a different way.' Those postgame batting practice sessions are proof of that.”

Maybe they are. Maybe they aren’t.

What’s clear is that Tucker arrived in January with a reputation that had already sparked plenty of chatter about how much extra work he really put in. The Dodgers signed him anyway, betting that the bat would outweigh any concerns about the rest of the package. So far, that gamble hasn’t paid off the way they hoped.

Gonzalez noted that former teammates and coaches have described Tucker as “relatively apathetic” about baseball and said he “puts in less extra time working at it than most.” The postgame work in Los Angeles is the main sign that anything has changed. If that’s the bar for praise, it’s a pretty low one for a player of this caliber.

The Dodgers don’t need Tucker to be the entire offense. They don’t need him to be flawless for the team to keep winning. But with that kind of money attached to his name, and with the production lagging behind the expectation, fans are going to want more than the bare minimum.

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