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Reds’ Scott Schebler Hitting Plenty Of Home Runs, But Dodgers Remain In Strong Position Despite Trade

Jeff Spiegel
3 Min Read
John Geliebter-USA TODAY Sports

If you look at the National League home run leaders, you’ll find a familiar name: former Los Angeles Dodgers prospect Scott Schebler. He was included in a three-team trade that sent Schebler, along with Jose Peraza, to the Cincinnati Reds.

The Dodgers landed Micah Johnson, Frankie Montas and Trayce Thompson in the deal. At the time, the move was assumed to be a good one for the Dodgers. They swapped roughly equivalent outfielders, roughly equivalent second basemen and added Montas (the real prize for the Dodgers side of the trade).

A few years later? Mayyyyyybe not so good.

Now, it’s obvious that you’re not going to win every trade, and despite the Dodgers recent hot streak, it appears as if this deal remains a disappointment.

Sure, Schebler is slashing .241/.309/.540, but it’s hard to ignore the 16 home runs he has this season. Schebler had slugged a mere 12 homers in his previous 312 big league at-bats.

On the other side, the Dodgers’ end of the deal is hard to evaluate. Montas was traded to the Oakland Athletics as part of the Rich Hill/Josh Reddick rental package last season. Montas has a 6.11 ERA in 20 games for Oakland this season.

Meanwhile, Johnson was sent to the Atlanta Braves in January for a player to be named later. Then there’s Thompson, who has bounced between the Majors, Minors and the disabled list.

But the question I keep asking myself is this: if Schebler were still in the Dodgers system, where exactly would he be?

At the time of the trade, there’s no other way to put it than by saying that the 25-year-old Schebler was expendable. As an outfielder, Schebler found himself behind Yasiel Puig and Joc Pederson, and even the likes of Carl Crawford, Andre Ethier and Scott Van Slyke.

Fast-forward to 2017 and I’m not even sure things would have been better. During the offseason, Schebler still would have found himself behind Alex Verdugo — who was featured in Baseball America’s top 100 prospects in both 2016 (No. 100) and 2017 (58) — and one Cody Bellinger.

The point is, the Dodgers may have lost a trade and Schebler appears to be a good baseball player, and neither of these things really matters. The Reds remain a non-factor in the NL and, well, things are going okay in Los Angeles.

The Dodgers are 35-23 entering play Monday night, they’ve won eight of their last 11 games, and have Bellinger faring just fine in the outfield.

So yeah, mash your heart out Scott. (Just not when the Dodgers are around).

Jeff Spiegel was raised in California but currently resides in Portland, Oregon. After graduating from the University of Oregon, he worked in sports before entering journalism full time — first as a Sports Reporter and then as the Associate Editor of a local newspaper. Online, he has been writing about both the Dodgers and Raiders since 2012 — having written for DodgersNation.com and SBNation.com prior to joining both DodgerBlue.com and RaidersNation.com. He left full-time journalism in 2012 to become a pastor. Jeff can be found on Twitter at @JeffSpiegel. Favorite Dodger I'm going past and present (sort of) on this one. Recently, I was a die hard Yasiel Puig guy. The energy he played with was amazing and the hope and expectation he brought every single night was captivating. Whether it was a rifle from the warning track to throw a guy out at second, an aggressive bat flip or licking his bat, I was here for ALL of the Yasiel Puig era. Past tense, I'd go with Eric Gagné. This wasn't so much about Gagné himself as it was the experience of cheering for him. Yes, he was on steroids — but the dude was unlike any pitcher I've ever seen — he was NASTY. I still stand by the claim that if I needed one out and my life depended on it, and could choose any pitcher from any era to get me that out, I'm taking roided up Gagné in a heartbeat. Favorite Dodger Moment A few jump to mind immediately. Being born in November of 1988, I missed the last World Series by weeks — which also meant I didn't get to see the Dodgers win a playoff game until I was nearly 16. They had made the playoffs in 1995 and 1996, but were swept both times. In 2004, though, I got to see them win behind a complete game shutout from Jose Lima, and that was pretty freaking special. The next in-person moment that came to mind was the Manny Ramirez bobblehead night pinch-hit grand slam from 2009. Vin Scully claimed it was the loudest he had heard Dodger Stadium in 20 years, and it's hard to disagree. As far as ones I didn't get to see live, I'll throw one more out there: the back-to-back-to-back-to-back home runs that tied a game against the Padres in 2006 (plus the walk-off from Nomar Garciaparra in extra innings) was an all-timer. Obviously, the impending Dodgers World Series will quickly jump to the top of this list...