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Deep down, every baseball fan is upset about the Los Angeles Dodgers’ spending spree, but they know one thing deep down—you’re most likely just jealous that your team’s owner is not doing the same. With a payroll that hovers around $332 as per Spotrac, the Dodgers would become the poster child for being the “evil empire” of being the team with excess. Name the stars, and they have it. They even had to go out and get Roki Sasaki off the market—with all teams gawking and hoping for them to get a chance. You bet many things; they are the selfish Dodgers. And the latest flashpoint in MLB’s ongoing battle over money.

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Now, sure, MLB’s financial system is not perfect. But isn’t blaming everything on the league all too convenient? Baseball, after all, has always been uneven—some teams buy stars, some build them. Yet, this season’s National League Championship Series between the Dodgers and the Milwaukee Brewers is not just about who advances to the World Series. It’s bigger because it could perhaps shape the future of the sport.

Crazy, right? But think about it—if the Dodgers with a record-breaking payroll win back-to-back titles, then owners of other teams would have something in hand to demand a salary cap. But if somehow the small-market brewers pull it off, it proves one thing—winning is not about the dollars but about depth, smarts, and development.

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ESPN rightly pointed it out, saying, “The truth, of course, exists somewhere in between. But in between is not where the two parties stake out their negotiating positions in what many expect to be a brutal fight to determine the future of the game’s economics. And that is why whoever comes out victorious likely will be used as a cudgel when formal negotiations begin next spring for a collective bargaining agreement that expires Dec. 1, 2026.” And that’s where things get interesting. If LA wins again, MLB owners, many of whom are already irritated over LA’s spending as much as the bottom six teams combined, will only get louder. They will point their fingers, talk about the unfairness, and maybe push harder for limits. A lockout in 2027 suddenly feels less like speculation and more like something that is bound to happen.

The Players Union, however, is not budging, and they have stood firm against a cap for almost half a century now. They have already started talking about how to handle another shutdown if and when the situation arises. So to shun their beliefs, the Brewers’ potential win is crucial. It can prove that success can bloom even without a billionaire budget. And honestly, it can—isn’t New York Mets already watching the games from home—proof enough?  The truth is that now this matchup is not just a playoff series. It is a battle of philosophies, or money vs. method, or luxury vs. grit. Sure, both teams will take the field to play baseball, but the outcome might just decide how the game is played—and paid for years to come from now.

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What’s your perspective on:

Are the Dodgers ruining baseball with their spending, or just playing the game smarter?

Have an interesting take?

How the Milwaukee Brewers’ small-market blueprint is redefining MLB success

The Milwaukee Brewers are honestly living proof that one doesn’t need a Hollywood budget to build a powerhouse team in MLB. Sure, the dollars help, but that alone can’t be the only factor. So over the past eight years, they have quietly become the league’s most consistent team. They have won five NL Central titles, made the playoffs seven times, and finished 2025 with the best record in baseball at 97-65. And the best part—they never broke the bank while achieving this feat.

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According to ESPN Research, 15 of Milwaukee’s 26 players on their NLCS roster came via trade and now free agency. This includes stars like Christian Yelich, William Contreras, Freddy Peralta, and Trevor Megill. The rest are a mix of homegrown draft picks like Bruce Turang or Jacob Misirowski, whom insiders are suddenly having doubts about. Only one player, who is left-hander Jose Quintana, came from major league free agency, signing a one-year $4 million deal—pretty humble if you ask.

The stat alone says everything about how the Milwaukee Brewers really operate. While the teams like the Mets, Dodgers, and Yankees chase those marquee names, Milwaukee focuses on scouting and development. They are honestly giving the 101 front office masterclass to every team that’s out there.

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Are the Dodgers ruining baseball with their spending, or just playing the game smarter?

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