
#86 RP · Dodgers
Height
6'2"
Weight
205 lbs
Age
27
College
N/A
Experience
1 yrs
Bats/Throws
R/L
Grade this player:
| Year | Team | GP | ERA | W-L | K | WHIP | IP | SV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Career | ![]() | 76 | 2.836576 | 4-2 | 85 | 1.0272374 | 0.0 | 4 |
Length
1 year
AAV
$780K/yr
Jack Dreyer is establishing himself as a legitimate above-average bullpen piece for the Dodgers in what is still early in his career, earning a B performance grade that reflects genuine promise without overstating where he currently stands. His most notable credential at this stage is not a traditional counting stat but a contextual one — earning a World Series roster spot in his second professional season, which speaks directly to how quickly the Dodgers organization has come to trust him in high-stakes situations. The honest limitation here is the absence of a clearly defined high-leverage role, and until Dreyer secures a consistent spot in the late-inning hierarchy rather than floating as a situational arm, the ceiling on his performance grade stays capped, regardless of the moments he has already contributed to. At 27, he sits in an interesting developmental window — old enough to be expected to perform but still young enough in terms of big-league experience that the organization is likely managing his workload and role with the long view in mind. The media framing around him is notably clean, with coverage centering on rapid ascension from prospect to October contributor and an absence of the negative noise that tends to follow young pitchers who struggle with the transition to high-pressure environments. With the Dodgers sitting at 16-6 and playing deep into the regular season, Dreyer has every opportunity to sharpen his performance grade — which is already trending upward over the last 30 days — by carving out a more defined role as the roster continues to take shape.
| Date | OPP | Result | AB | H | R | HR | RBI | BB | SO |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wed, 5/6 | @ HOU | W 12-2 | - | - | - | 0 | - | - | - |
| Tue, 5/5 | @ HOU | W 8-3 | - | - | - | 0 | - | - | - |
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Jack Dreyer is a player on a rookie-scale contract listed at RP for the Dodgers. FanVerdicts maintains four independent grades for every MLB player on an active roster — Contract Value Index for the deal itself, Performance for on-field production, Sentiment for media and fan reaction, and Fan Verdict for community voting. Current grades for Jack Dreyer: Contract Value Index pending, Performance B, Sentiment B, Fan Verdict pending.
Every grade refreshes on its own cadence as new data lands. Performance recalculates when MLB game stats post; Sentiment updates with new media coverage and fan discussion; Contract Value Index recomputes when contract terms change; Fan Verdict reflects live community voting on this profile. Contract details below show the structure (years, total value, average annual value, guarantees) the Contract Value Index grade is computed against.
For league-wide context, the MLB hub has team rankings, GM report cards, the transactions feed, and live scoreboards. The MLB player rankings page sorts every active player by performance and contract value within their position.
Jack Dreyer's public perception sits at a solid B, reflecting genuine enthusiasm for a young reliever who made the most of a high-stakes opportunity in his rookie season. The driving force behind that narrative is his World Series appearance with the Dodgers in 2025 — a moment that dramatically elevated his profile and gave the feel-good Iowa backstory a championship-stage platform to land on. That sentiment aligns cleanly with his B performance grade, suggesting the public is reading his on-field production accurately rather than overcooking the hype on a limited sample. It is worth noting that sentiment has cooled slightly over the last 30 days, sliding from an A down to a B, which tracks with the natural recalibration that follows an initial breakout moment once the offseason glow fades. The Dodgers have been aggressive in adding pitching this spring — signing Blake Snell and Brock Stewart among others — and that bullpen competition shapes how Dreyer's role is perceived heading into the regular season, with fans and analysts watching to see whether he carves out a defined spot on a crowded staff. The bottom line is that Dreyer enters this phase of the 2026 season with real goodwill banked, a legitimate narrative hook, and enough legitimate upside as a young arm that the positive perception feels earned rather than inflated.
| Sat, 5/2 | @ STL | L 2-7 | - | - | - | 0 | - | - | - |
| Wed, 4/29 | vs MIA | L 1-2 | - | - | - | 0 | - | - | - |