Years
1
Total Value
$1.2M
AAV
$1.2M
Guaranteed
$720,000
The Dodgers' signing of Andy Ibáñez to a $1.2M deal has generated a notably lukewarm reception, with most observers viewing it as a sensible but uninspiring depth move that raises more questions than it answers. Media coverage has focused on the puzzling nature of LA's infield construction, questioning whether this signing signals uncertainty about their internal options or simply represents prudent organizational depth building. Dodgers fans are split between appreciating the low-risk nature of adding a versatile left-handed bat and wondering why the front office continues to collect replacement-level infielders rather than addressing more pressing needs. This move fits the organization's pattern of casting a wide net for bench pieces, but it also suggests they're not entirely confident in their current infield depth chart heading into spring training. While the modest financial commitment means there's little downside, this signing will likely be forgotten quickly unless Ibáñez significantly outperforms expectations — and given his limited MLB track record, that seems like a long shot.
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The Dodgers signed Andy Ibanez (INF) on January 13, 2026. FanVerdicts covers every reported MLB move — and asks fans to weigh in on each one. Cast your Fan Verdict on this move, see where the crowd lands, and argue the call. FanVerdicts brings its own read too — sentiment and Contract Value Index — as one honest input alongside the crowd's. Where FanVerdicts has weighed in so far: Contract Value Index C, Sentiment B.
Contract details below show the years, total value, average annual value, and guaranteed money behind the Contract Value Index read. That read does not change once written — it reflects market expectations at the moment of signing, recomputed only if the contract is restructured.
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Andy Ibáñez's one-year, $1.2M signing earns a C Contract Value Index (CVI) — a fair-market deal that reflects his depth utility role without overpaying for replacement-level production. At $1.2M on a one-year pact, the Dodgers are banking on a low-cost, low-risk infielder who can slot into the roster without cap strain as they navigate a competitive regular season push toward the playoffs. The salary structure is precisely what you'd expect for a mid-30s bench infielder with limited counting stats — no multi-year commitment, no arbitration risk, minimal guaranteed exposure. For Los Angeles, this is prudent roster management: a veteran depth piece on a short deal during the stretch run costs almost nothing against their payroll architecture and provides positional flexibility without mortgaging future flexibility. The CVI assessment reflects that there's no value asymmetry here in either direction; it's a straightforward market-rate transaction for a reserve. The downside is nonexistent given the contract's brevity and modest AAV; the upside is capped by his role and career arc, which limits this from climbing into B territory.