Chris Taylor retirement reminds Dodgers dynasty needed more than stars
Chris Taylor has called time on his 12-year Major League career, having spent time with the Mariners, Dodgers and Angels.
His CV is quietly impressive. Taylor won two World Series titles with the Dodgers, was named an All-Star in 2021 and shared the 2017 NLCS MVP award with Justin Turner.
It is not the kind of record that screams superstardom, but that is exactly why it matters.
Taylor’s career is a reminder that the Dodgers’ success was never just about the headline names. Dynasties need more than stars. They need players who fit around them and still have the ability to shape big moments.
Chris Taylor gave the Dodgers what stars alone could not
Taylor was never the best player on those Dodgers teams. That is what made him so valuable.
Los Angeles had the power, money and talent to win games in bulk. Taylor gave them something different, playing across six defensive positions and giving the roster flexibility.
That kind of player matters more in October than it does in box scores. Managers need answers when injuries hit and matchups change.
Dave Roberts once called Taylor’s mindset a “superpower”, saying he was always ready for whatever came his way.
The Dodgers did not need him to be Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman or Shohei Ohtani. They needed him to be available, adaptable and comfortable in roles that changed week to week.
His October moments made the legacy impossible to ignore
Taylor’s regular-season numbers were solid, if unspectacular. He finished with 1,123 games, 860 hits, 110 home runs, 443 RBI and a .746 OPS.
But Dodgers fans will remember him for what he did in the playoffs.
In 2017, Taylor shared NLCS MVP honours with Turner as the Dodgers reached their first World Series since 1988.
He later added the 2021 Wild Card walk-off against the Cardinals, one of the cleanest moments of his Dodgers career.
Then came the three home runs in a 2021 NLCS elimination game against Atlanta. That alone would have secured his place in Dodgers postseason history.
Across 80 playoff games, Taylor hit nine home runs with 24 extra-base hits and 26 RBI. That is where his legacy goes beyond that of a typical utility player.
The Dodgers dynasty was held together by players like Taylor
The Dodgers’ modern era is usually told through their stars. But that is only part of the story.
During Taylor’s time with the club, Los Angeles made nine straight postseason appearances, reached the World Series four times and won it twice.
The stars drove that era. Taylor helped explain why it lasted.
His value was not just in one swing or one series. It was in the way he gave the Dodgers a credible option in multiple positions, lineup spots and playoff roles.
That is what separates great teams. Their tenth or twelfth most famous player can still matter in October.
Taylor’s role faded late in his career, and he left the Dodgers in May 2025. But that should not overshadow what he gave them.
Chris Taylor leaves with the right kind of legacy
There is no need to exaggerate Taylor’s place in Dodgers history. That would miss the point.
He was not the face of the franchise or the highest-paid player. He was not the one filling stadiums around the world.
He was the player who made the edges of a great roster stronger. He was trusted because he could change jobs without changing his standard.
That is why his retirement matters. It marks the end of a career that gave the Dodgers something beyond their stars, the kind of depth that turns strong teams into dynasties.
Taylor leaves with the right kind of legacy. The Dodgers will be remembered for their superstars, but their dominance needed players like him to feel complete.
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