The accusation has grown louder with every offseason signing.
Are the Los Angeles Dodgers ruining baseball?
For critics, the math feels unfair. Massive payroll. Deferred contracts stretching years into the future. Superstars stacking on superstars. A financial machine that smaller-market teams canât realistically replicate.

But inside the Dodgersâ clubhouse, the narrative sounds very different.
And Justin Wrobleski didnât hesitate to say it â with just enough sarcasm to make the point sting.
âI know, thatâs the worst, right? Itâs the worst to want to win.â
The 25-year-old pitcherâs tone wasnât defensive. It wasnât angry. It was amused.
Because from his perspective, the outrage feels backwards.

In a league built on competition, the Dodgers are being criticized for doing exactly what every organization claims to want: winning. Not occasionally. Not opportunistically. Consistently.
Wrobleskiâs comments cut through the noise in a way that feels almost disarming. He acknowledged the complaints â the whispers that Los Angeles is âbuying championships,â that deferred contracts distort competitive balance, that the sport risks becoming top-heavy.
Then he shrugged.

âIsnât that the point though?â
That simple question exposes the deeper tension in Major League Baseball right now. The Dodgers arenât hiding their ambition. Theyâre not apologizing for reinvesting revenue into talent. Theyâre operating aggressively in a system that technically allows it.
And that makes some uncomfortable.

The irony? Baseball history is filled with dominant teams built on financial muscle. The Yankees of multiple eras. The Red Sox resurgence. Even modern contenders leveraging market advantages.
Whatâs different now is visibility. Deferred contracts are public. Payroll totals are dissected daily. Every move is amplified by social media outrage cycles.
But as Wrobleski noted, money alone doesnât guarantee October success.

âYou can spend a bunch of money and not win games,â he said. âItâs unpredictable.â
That unpredictability is baseballâs safety valve.
For every heavily funded roster, thereâs a scrappy wildcard. For every powerhouse, thereâs an underdog run. The postseason remains chaotic. Thatâs why fans still watch.
And Wrobleski knows this firsthand.

Selected in the 11th round of the 2021 MLB Draft, he isnât a splashy free-agent acquisition. Heâs a development story. A pitcher who has quietly lowered his ERA year after year. A player fighting for innings, not headlines.
Yet somehow, he already owns a rare achievement: two World Series rings in his first two professional seasons.
That alone fuels the perception.
The Dodgers donât just contend. They sustain.
Heading into 2026, Wrobleski faces a pivotal stretch. Whether he locks down a bullpen role or battles for the fifth starter slot behind names like Blake Snell, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow, and Shohei Ohtani, the opportunity exists because the organization refuses to stand still.
For young players, that culture matters.
He called himself âblessed and fortunateâ to be part of a franchise that shows its fanbase it wants to win â and keep winning.
And maybe thatâs the part critics gloss over.
The Dodgers arenât hoarding talent for spectacle. Theyâre building a machine designed to compete every year. In a sport where rebuilding cycles often stretch half a decade, sustained aggression feels disruptive.
But disruption isnât destruction.
Itâs ambition.
The frustration from rival markets is understandable. Competitive balance debates arenât new. But Wrobleskiâs sarcasm carries a quiet truth: if the system allows spending, and ownership chooses to reinvest rather than pocket profits, is that corruption â or commitment?
The Dodgers might be polarizing.
They might be envied.
They might even be resented.
But inside their clubhouse, thereâs no guilt.
Only purpose.
And if the league fears a three-peat, the question may not be whether Los Angeles is ruining baseball.
It might be whether others are unwilling to match the hunger.
Because as Wrobleski implied â with a smirk you could almost hear â wanting to win isnât a crime.
Itâs the job.
And in October, jobs like that tend to speak for themselves.
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