The Dodgers have spent plenty of time in the Tarik Skubal conversation, but for now, the noise around a blockbuster deal may be louder than the reality.
According to MLB insider Jon Heyman of The New York Post, Los Angeles is reportedly “not in” on the Detroit Tigers ace as the trade deadline approaches. Heyman wrote, “Either way, Skubal needs to go.
The real question is where. The stacked Dodgers, for now at least, are believed 'not in.'
And baseball breathes a hopeful Cy of relief over that,”
That would mark a notable turn from the way the Dodgers have often been discussed when top-tier talent hits the market. Skubal, after all, is one of the best pitchers in baseball and has won two straight Cy Young awards in the American League. With Detroit not looking like the playoff team it was a year ago, speculation has swirled that the Tigers could move him rather than risk losing him in free agency this offseason.
Still, the Dodgers may not feel pressure to chase him. Their rotation has been strong even with several key starters sidelined, and the club already has a loaded group on the mound. At some point, Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell are expected back from the injured list, giving Los Angeles even more firepower.
Snell and Glasnow would join a rotation that already includes Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Justin Wrobleski and others. That kind of depth gives the Dodgers a clear path to staying dangerous without paying premium deadline prices.
It also fits the way the organization has tended to operate. Rather than making huge splashes at the deadline, the Dodgers have often preferred to build out the roster during the winter. If Heyman’s report holds, that approach appears to be guiding them again.
Of course, trade talks can shift fast, and the Dodgers could always revisit the idea. But right now, the front office seems more inclined to bet on health than on a major deadline swing.
In Other News...
Padres Deadline Fears Just Shifted In A Way Fans Know Too Well
The Padres slide in the National League West has pushed them out of the wild-card picture, and now the front office is staring at a deadline that feels more complicated than it did a few weeks ago. Rather than locking into one lane, the club is reportedly weighing both buying and selling scenarios, a sign of just how much the standings have changed the conversation around this roster.
Walker Buehler sits at the center of that uncertainty, which is where the tension really starts to build for San Diego. His season has been uneven, and the questions around his value are now tangled up with what the Padres decide to do next, whether they try to keep chasing or turn the deadline into an opportunity to recoup something before the market moves on. [Read more 🡒]
Padres Fans May Need To Brace For A Real Deadline Reset
If the Padres decide this month is less about chasing the race and more about reshaping the roster, the conversation gets bigger than a routine deadline shuffle. San Diego has enough recognizable pieces to at least entertain the idea of a reset, and the appeal would not be in nibbling around the edges. It would be in turning veterans and established bullpen arms into future value, then using the rest of the season to sort out what the next version of the club should look like.
Mason Miller stands out as the kind of arm that can change the conversation quickly, while Adrin Morejns role as a trusted lefty only adds to the appeal of moving a pitcher with real leverage value. Jake Cronenworth is also part of the calculus, even with his bat stuck in a rough stretch, because clubs always weigh track record against current production. The real question for San Diego is whether it settles for modest returns or pushes for the kind of deal that actually changes the direction of the roster. [Read more 🡒]
Padres Turn To Another Arm As Pitching Desperation Deepens
The Padres are reaching deeper into their pitching depth chart again, this time bringing Jhony Brito back into the mix as the club tries to navigate a staff hit hard by injuries. Brito has been working his way back from elbow surgery and has not appeared in the majors since 2024, but his recent rehab work has at least put him back on the radar as San Diego looks for any healthy arm it can trust.
Britos path back has been encouraging enough to earn him another look, with the right-hander performing well in rehab outings at Triple-A El Paso and Double-A San Antonio. For now, the bigger issue is simply getting him available, because the Padres injured list keeps growing and the need for pitching help keeps getting more urgent by the day. [Read more 🡒]
