The Los Angeles Dodgers, if you ask the rest of the sport, may have broken baseball.

They’ve won back-to-back World Series titles, and all they did this offseason was get better with the signings of Kyle Tucker and Edwin Diaz.

Is baseball broken? That’s not really a simple premise.

But what is clear is that the Dodgers don’t exactly have a lot of needs.

They have maybe the best MLB roster in the sport. They have one of the best farm systems in the sport. They have a great coaching staff and front office. They’re at the forefront of analytics and other trends.

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Really, it’s hard to imagine the Dodgers being much better.

That was summed up quite simply in a new ESPN article by Bradford Doolittle, with the premise being that each team left a question unanswered this offseason.

But for the Dodgers, he couldn’t come up with something, and so this is what he wrote:

“Why the heck didn’t the Dodgers get the Holy Grail? No, I’m not talking about some kind of baseball holy grail. I’m talking about the actual Holy Grail. It’s about the only thing the Dodgers have yet to acquire. Surely they can do it. In the end, I guess no team, even the Dodgers, can have it all. But they come pretty close.”

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And yeah, he’s right. The Dodgers can probably pull off a deal for the Holy Grail. They’ll just have to backload it with an absurd amount of deferred money and it should all come together quite nicely.

They don’t need that to three-peat, though. They’ve got it all. They’re the champs until someone can dethrone them, if that’s even possible at this point.

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