Originally published by DodgerBlue.com
The Los Angeles Dodgers exercised the club options of Max Muncy and Alex Vesia to keep them under contract for the 2026 season, the club announced on Thursday night.
Muncy’s option was for one-year at $10 million, while Vesia’s is for one-year at $3.65 million. The deadline for teams to decide on options was Thursday at 2 p.m. PT.
Muncy played in 100 games last season for the Dodgers, slugging 19 homers and driving in 67 runs.
During Game 2 of the National League Championship Series, he swatted his 14th career postseason homer, passing Justin Turner for the all-time lead in franchise history, and ended the playoffs with 16.
The 35-year-old helped the Dodgers win their second straight World Championship, posting a .764 OPS with three homers and three RBI.
Muncy has been with the Dodgers since 2018, playing in 1,020 games, clubbing 209 homers and driving in 587 RBI.
He began his career with the Athletics, playing in 96 games with five homers and 17 RBI. He was drafted by the A’s in the fifth round of the 2012 First Year Player Draft out of Baylor University.
Vesia made 68 appearances for the Dodgers, going 4-2 with a 3.02 ERA. The 29-year-old finished second on the team in appearances, while his 59.2 innings ranked second among Dodger relievers.
Vesia has been with the Dodges for the last five seasons, going 19-12 with 13 saves and a 2.67 ERA in 295 games. He began his career with the Miami Marlins in 2020, pitching in five games, allowing nine runs in 4.1 innings.
The left-hander joined the Dodgers organization on February 12, 2021 via trade along with right-handed pitcher Kyle Hurt in exchange for right-handed pitcher Dylan Floro.
Dodgers make multiple transactions
Earlier in the day, the Dodgers added Ryan Ward and Robinson Ortiz to their 40-man roster. To make room, Justin Dean and Michael Grove were outrighted to Triple-A Oklahoma City, and Tony Gonsolin was designated for assignment.
Dean was claimed by the San Francisco Giants on waivers. The Dodgers have seven days to either trade Gonsolin, grant him his release or allow another team to claim him off waivers.
Gonsolin could also clear waivers and head to the Minor Leagues, but he can reject that and become a free agent due to having more than three years of MLB service time.
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