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Home-field advantage not top priority for Dodgers’ Don Mattingly

Dodgers Manager Don Mattingly talks to reporters before a game earlier this season.
(Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)
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Although Manager Don Mattingly said Monday that he would like for the Dodgers to have home-field advantage in the playoffs, he made clear it wasn’t at the top of his list of priorities.

The Dodgers will have home-field advantage through the National League playoffs if they finish with the league’s best record. They went into their series opener Monday against the Arizona Diamondbacks with an 83-59 record, which was second-best in the league to the Atlanta Braves’ 86-57.

“What’s the risk-reward of that?” Mattingly said. “A guy’s leg’s been sore and his hammy is a little tight, do you keep playing him or give him the breather and try to get him healthy?”

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For the sake of argument, Mattingly offered a hypothetical situation involving shortstop Hanley Ramirez. If the Dodgers have clinched the NL West title and Ramirez is dealing with a tight hamstring, should he play Ramirez?

“It wouldn’t make much sense,” Mattingly said. “If we get to that point — we’re all hypothetical, right? — and I play Hanley and he screws up a hammy and can’t play Game 1, 2, 3 or 4 of the playoffs and you tell me that’s worth it, then I’ll play him.”

Mattingly said he would rather have home-field advantage than not but didn’t sound as if he thought it would severely alter his team’s chances of winning a World Series.

“We’ve seen wild-card teams win the whole thing,” he said.

Because the American League won the All-Star game, its representative in the World Series will have home-field advantage in the World Series.

Another Cuban in the mix

The Dodgers could be close to adding another high-profile Cuban defector, as they are moving toward a multi-year deal with infielder Alexander Guerrero, according to multiple people familiar with the situation who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

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Guerrero could be in the major leagues next season, according to some Dodgers officials, who raved about his bat.

Guerrero, 26, was an All-Star in Cuba’s top league, which also produced Yasiel Puig. Guerrero represented Cuba in international play in 2011 and 2012.

Listed at 5 feet 11 and 205 pounds, Guerrero defected from Cuba this year. He established residency in Haiti and participated in a showcase at the Dodgers’ training facility in the Dominican Republic.

Guerrero’s deal could be worth at least $30 million, according to multiple reports.

dylan.hernandez@latimes.com

Twitter: @dylanohernandez

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