MLB World Series: Los Angeles Dodgers Primed to Three-Peat this Season

Written By Nick Crain | Published at March 2, 2026
Feb 21, 2026; Tempe, Arizona, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani against the Los Angeles Angels during a spring training game at Tempe Diablo Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

The Los Angeles Dodgers have won back-to-back World Series titles, and entering the 2026 season, they're the clear favorites to do it again. With March officially here, spring training winding down, and Opening Day right around the corner, the Dodgers are in the driver's seat.

And not just slight favorites.

The New York Yankees, who currently hold the second-best odds, sit at +1000. The Dodgers are at +210, according to DanDuel. That is an enormous gap in futures pricing. In a sport as volatile as baseball, where parity is real and October often feels like a coin flip, a number that short speaks volumes about how dominant this roster is viewed across the industry.

And honestly, it should not be surprising.

The Dodgers have effectively brought back the vast majority of their superstar core from a team that just went back-to-back. On top of that, they added an elite arm in Edwin Díaz via free agency and pulled off a blockbuster trade for Kyle Tucker. That is not tweaking around the edges. That is adding high-end, impact talent to a team that was already operating at a championship level.

This roster didn't just stay intact. It improved.

And what makes it even more daunting is the organizational philosophy behind it. Money is not an obstacle. Aggression is not an obstacle. The front office has made it clear that the only thing that matters right now is sustained greatness. Over the last two offseasons, they have treated being defending champions not as a reason to quietly run it back, but as a challenge to widen the gap.

That mindset is how dynasties are built.

Even if injuries inevitably hit, and they always do over a 162-game season, this team is constructed to withstand it. It is not just about top-tier stars. It is about layers. It is about having legitimate contributors at nearly every position. It is about having arms in the bullpen that would close games elsewhere. It is about lineup depth where the seven-hole hitter would be a middle-of-the-order bat on half the teams in baseball.

The Dodgers are a juggernaut in every sense of the word.

And when you zoom out to look at the rest of the league, there are contenders, real ones, but the separation is still obvious. The Yankees remain dangerous with their star power and postseason expectations. The Seattle Mariners have built a core that can compete with anyone. The New York Mets continue to push resources into contention. The Philadelphia Phillies are always a threat in a short series. The Boston Red Sox and Toronto Blue Jays have enough talent to surge if things click. You can give the Chicago Cubs and Atlanta Braves an outside chance as well, especially if health breaks their way.

But even when listing legitimate challengers, it still feels like everyone else is chasing Los Angeles.

A three-peat would elevate this run beyond just great team territory. It would cement them as one of the defining dynasties of the modern era. Sustained success in today’s MLB landscape, with expanded playoffs and increased competitive balance, is incredibly difficult. Winning once is hard. Winning twice is rare. Winning three straight is legacy territory.

And this organization is positioned to do it.

Opening Day arrives Thursday, March 26 at Dodger Stadium against the Arizona Diamondbacks. As the 2026 season begins, the storyline feels familiar. Everyone else is hoping to catch them, and the Dodgers are simply focused on stacking greatness.