SNEAKY TRADE ALERT! Dodgers Pull Off SURPRISING Move — Fans STUNNED by the Strategy | Dodgers News #XM

The Los Angeles Dodgers have executed a surprising swap of minor-league pitching talent, acquiring right-hander Chase McDermott from the Baltimore Orioles in exchange for 20-year-old international signee Axel Perez. The transaction, announced by President of Baseball Operations Andrew Friedman, continues a pattern of bolstering organizational pitching depth as the club sends McDermott to join the Triple-A Oklahoma City Comets.

 

This marks the third pitcher acquisition by the Dodgers since the regular season commenced, following trades for Griff McGarry and Jake Eder and a waiver claim for Grant Holman. McDermott directly fills the 40-man roster vacancy created when Holman was subsequently claimed by the Detroit Tigers earlier this week. The move raises immediate questions about the front office’s evaluation of its upper-minors pitching pipeline.

 

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The player departing the organization, Axel Perez, was a recent investment, signed as an international free agent out of the Dominican Republic in January 2024. He posted a 5.48 ERA across ten games in the Dominican Summer League last year. Trading a recently-signed young arm suggests the Dodgers’ scouts may have identified concerns or simply saw an opportunity to convert an asset for more immediate minor-league reinforcement.

 

In return, the Dodgers receive the 27-year-old McDermott, a former prospect who was designated for assignment by Baltimore over the weekend. McDermott’s 2024 season with Triple-A Norfolk was a stark mix of promise and peril; he struck out nine of the 28 batters he faced but also walked six and surrendered four home runs in just five and one-third innings, resulting in a 6.75 ERA.

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His brief major league resume is equally tumultuous, featuring a 12.79 ERA over 12.1 innings. However, historical scouting reports highlight a potentially redeemable arsenal. Prior to the 2024 season, Baseball America noted McDermott’s “excellent” slider with great depth and sweep, a distinct curveball, and a serviceable changeup, labeling him a potential future top-100 prospect.

 

The Dodgers’ pitching development apparatus is renowned for maximizing such raw tools, suggesting this acquisition is a classic reclamation project. Analysts speculate the club sees a fixable flaw in McDermott’s mechanics or pitch usage that led to his extreme vulnerability despite strong underlying stuff, including a previously excellent ground-ball rate.

 

This trade also fuels broader speculation about the organization’s internal assessment of its pitching health. While the major league bullpen boasts a top-ten ERA, the proactive accumulation of Triple-A arms could signal proactive insurance against the injury wave that devastated the rotation last season. It may also reflect a specific need for experienced depth at Oklahoma City.

 

The immediate effect is a reshuffling of the Comets’ pitching staff, with McDermott joining Eder and McGarry as available options. For the Orioles, they add a youthful lottery ticket in Perez while clearing a 40-man spot. For the Dodgers, this is a low-risk gamble on a once-highly-regarded arm whose career has stalled, leveraging their developmental strength to potentially uncover a useful contributor.

 

Industry observers note the timing, just ahead of a series at hitter-friendly Coors Field, is likely coincidental but underscores the perpetual search for viable arms. The transaction exemplifies the Friedman-era philosophy of constant roster churn and depth building, leaving no stone unturned in the quest to maintain a sustainable pitching reservoir.

 

As the Dodgers continue their series in Colorado, the focus remains on the big-league club. Yet, in the background, the player development machine is actively tweaking its components, hoping a change of scenery and advanced coaching can unlock the potential that once made Chase McDermott a notable name on the prospect landscape. The success or failure of this minor deal will be measured in the months to come on the mounds of the Pacific Coast League.