The Dodgers Bring Back Blake Treinen, Add Michael Conforto

While the New York Mets were busy spending three-quarters of a billion bucks, the defending champion Dodgers were making a couple of lower-key moves, re-signing reliever Blake Treinen and signing outfielder Michael Conforto. Treinen, a Dodger since 2019, will make $22 million over the next two seasons. Conforto arrives in Los Angeles on a one-year, $17 million contract after two seasons with the organization’s biggest rival, the San Francisco Giants.
Treinen is a known commodity for the Dodgers, so this is basically a status quo signing. He had a solid first season with the organization in 2020 — 3.86 ERA, 3.15 FIP, 25 2/3 innings — and won a World Series, and then he was even better in 2021, posting a 1.99 ERA and 2.88 FIP across 72 1/3 innings. However, in 2022, Treinen’s shoulder started becoming a problem. After the season, he had surgery to repair his labrum and rotator cuff, forcing him to miss all of 2023. This March, his spring training was interrupted when he was hit by a line drive that bruised his lung, but that didn’t prevent him from having a successful campaign. His velocity was down a bit, though the dip had little effect on his results: 1.93 ERA, 3.00 FIP, 46 2/3 innings. And while his sinker wasn’t the weapon it was before the shoulder surgery, his sweeper was scarier than ever.
Year | W | L | ERA | G | GS | IP | H | ER | HR | BB | SO | ERA+ | WAR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2025 | 6 | 3 | 3.13 | 49 | 1 | 46.0 | 37 | 16 | 4 | 14 | 49 | 131 | 0.8 |
2026 | 6 | 3 | 3.61 | 52 | 1 | 47.3 | 42 | 19 | 5 | 16 | 47 | 113 | 0.6 |
Percentile | ERA+ | ERA | WAR |
---|---|---|---|
95% | 318 | 1.28 | 2.0 |
90% | 242 | 1.69 | 1.7 |
80% | 188 | 2.17 | 1.4 |
70% | 165 | 2.48 | 1.2 |
60% | 144 | 2.84 | 1.0 |
50% | 131 | 3.13 | 0.8 |
40% | 120 | 3.41 | 0.7 |
30% | 107 | 3.82 | 0.4 |
20% | 93 | 4.38 | 0.2 |
10% | 78 | 5.22 | -0.1 |
5% | 68 | 6.04 | -0.4 |
Bringing back Treinen doesn’t really change the outlook of the Dodgers bullpen, simply because it already looked pretty nasty, especially if you agree with ZiPS. (Steamer isn’t quite as bullish on their relief corps.) Treinen does have some associated downside risk to keep in mind beyond the normal pitcher injury stuff. He didn’t reach his final form until he was around 30, so he’s probably a bit older than most people think; he turns 37 at the end of June. While I always tell people that “hitters age, pitchers break,” Treinen is approaching ages where actual decline beyond normal injury/attrition is a thing that happens. The Dodgers have more than enough depth to deal with this, should it come to pass.
Adding Conforto isn’t quite as sexy a move as it would have been four years ago. With the Mets, Conforto had established himself as an All-Star talent, with a 133 wRC+ and 13.5 WAR in just under 2,000 plate appearances from 2017 through 2020. But a hamstring injury and a case of COVID marred his 2021 season, and a shoulder injury from a workout during the offseason lockout resulted in surgery that cost him the entire 2022 campaign. Signed with the Giants to a make-good contract before 2023, Conforto’s first season back from injury was rather underwhelming, with a bland .232/.344/.384 triple-slash line, a 99 wRC+, and 0.8 WAR, but he bounced back in 2024, though not quite to his previous levels. Across 488 plate appearances, he hit .237/.309/.450 with 20 home runs, a 112 wRC+, and 1.3 WAR.
Naturally, the Dodgers will not be counting on Conforto to be one of the grand movers of the offense. At this stage in his career, he’s basically taking over the role of late-period Jason Heyward, in that he’s a lefty-hitting corner outfielder who’ll complement the team’s righty-hitting role players, such as Andy Pages and Chris Taylor. ZiPS projects a .766 OPS from Conforto against right-handed pitchers in 2025 for the Dodgers.
Year | BA | OBP | SLG | AB | R | H | 2B | 3B | HR | RBI | BB | SO | SB | OPS+ | WAR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2025 | .232 | .317 | .422 | 388 | 52 | 90 | 18 | 1 | 18 | 66 | 43 | 108 | 1 | 104 | 1.0 |
Percentile | 2B | HR | BA | OBP | SLG | OPS+ | WAR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
95% | 26 | 28 | .279 | .366 | .535 | 144 | 3.1 |
90% | 24 | 25 | .266 | .354 | .503 | 133 | 2.5 |
80% | 22 | 22 | .254 | .340 | .471 | 122 | 1.9 |
70% | 20 | 21 | .246 | .331 | .453 | 117 | 1.7 |
60% | 19 | 19 | .237 | .324 | .439 | 110 | 1.3 |
50% | 18 | 18 | .232 | .317 | .422 | 104 | 1.0 |
40% | 17 | 17 | .224 | .310 | .402 | 99 | 0.7 |
30% | 16 | 15 | .215 | .303 | .387 | 93 | 0.4 |
20% | 14 | 13 | .205 | .291 | .365 | 83 | -0.1 |
10% | 12 | 11 | .191 | .274 | .334 | 71 | -0.8 |
5% | 10 | 9 | .179 | .259 | .308 | 60 | -1.3 |
Having Conforto on the roster clarifies a couple other unanswered questions when looking at the Dodgers. Dalton Rushing saw a good bit of time in the outfield for Triple-A Oklahoma City this past year, but I suspect that until the Dodgers are ready to use him in a full-time role, they’d rather see him get at-bats in the minors than fight for scraps in the majors. It also likely ensures that Mookie Betts will primarily be an infielder in 2025, unless injuries strike. Conforto’s signing probably doesn’t have much of an effect on whether Los Angeles brings back free agent Teoscar Hernández returns, though Pages may end up without a roster spot should Hernández return.
Do Treinen and Conforto make the Dodgers a significantly better team? Of course not. But they are a deeper, more resilient group with the two of them around.
Dan Szymborski is a senior writer for FanGraphs and the developer of the ZiPS projection system. He was a writer for ESPN.com from 2010-2018, a regular guest on a number of radio shows and podcasts, and a voting BBWAA member. He also maintains a terrible Twitter account at @DSzymborski.
One thing with Conforto was that in 2024 he was much much better away from Oracle Park. He hit 17 of his 20 homers on the road. So this does seem a bit like the Teoscar Henandez signing when he really struggled at home with the Mariners but was fine on the road in 2023. And it doesn’t stop the Dodgers resigning him either.
I wouldn’t be surprised if he had a bounce back year, especially as he’ll be another year on from the shoulder surgery. (I also wouldn’t be surprised if he’s no longer on the team by the trade deadline)
Hernandez was reportedly ready to sign sunday so unless he sees opportunity in seeing what the teams that missed out on Soto offer he should be back pretty soon.
The Dodgers being the Dodgers, they have options for the outfield.
Conforto’s xwOBA was quite a bit higher than his wOBA. I think he’s going to hit a lot better than he did last year.
he was also significantly better in 2023 away from oracle; two seasons coming back from the shoulder and covid and he still ended up .248-26-82 with a .332 obp and .471 slugging. at the very least a hell of a platoon bat and potentially more – good signing.