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Dodgers' Freddie Freeman aims to play through 2026 and beyond.
Summary
Freeman said he will prepare to play 162 games and floated a goal of roughly four more major-league seasons while reporting he feels fully healthy after offseason recovery.
Content
Freddie Freeman enters Dodgers camp with clear personal goals for 2026 and beyond. Manager Dave Roberts has indicated the team plans to give Freeman more scheduled off days to manage his workload. Freeman said he will prepare to play all 162 games and also floated a goal of playing about four more seasons. He reported feeling fully healthy after recovering from the ankle surgery he managed during the past year.
Key details:
- Dodgers manager Dave Roberts has signaled the team intends to give Freeman additional off days this season to manage rest.
- Freeman said he will prepare to play 162 games and plans to push for as much playing time as possible even if the team schedules rest days.
- He is entering his age-36 season and is a nine-time All-Star and former MVP.
- Freeman said the ankle injury that affected him in 2024 and 2025 is behind him and that he felt rejuvenated by a full winter training program.
- He has 2,431 career hits and said that roughly four more seasons would put him within reach of MLB’s 3,000-hit milestone.
- Freeman’s current six-year, $162 million contract with the Dodgers expires after next season; he said he would like to finish his career with the team but is not worried about another contract now.
Summary:
Freeman’s reported return to full health and stated goals frame his expectations for the 2026 season, with an emphasis on improving his defense and sustaining plate production. How the team balances scheduled rest with his desire to play frequently, and whether he extends his career past the current contract, will be determined over the coming season.
