Nevermind the fact that all the superstar and high-value players on that roster... Kershaw, Buehler, Ryu, Jansen, Bellinger, Seager, Turner, Pederson. They were all drafted, traded for, or signed before he got there. The best acquisition Friedman has made has probably been Max Muncy and the best FA signing with the best return on investment has probably been Brandon Morrow. His highest-profile trades were for 2-month rentals of Yu Darvish and Manny Machado. He let Zack Greinke walk and traded Yordan Alvarez for Josh Fields and has spent most of his FA money on retaining the talent they already had before he got there and securing their rights well past ther prime years. You can say that guys like Bellinger and Buehler thrived in a development environment that Friedman had put in place, but the Dodgers were never short on young talent coming up through the ranks and those were higher profile draft picks. Friedman is good at keeping costs down and drafting and developing talent, and that's great that the Dodgers are doing a bang-up job in that department, but Friedman makes garbage outside acquisitions and big money decisions. He Dusty'd his way into a juggernaut of a team. The next 5 years will determine how good Friedman really is vs. the past 5 years when he's relied on the talents of players that were brought into the organization by Ned Colletti, who got fired after back to back 1st place finishes resulted in NL playoff losses. Meanwhile, Friedman's teams have finished first every year of his tenure and lost 3 NL playoff series and back-to-back world series. That means the Dodgers have finished first for 7 years in a row and have nothing to show for it and 5 of those years were at Friedman's helm. But he's a genius or something.