The Los Angeles Dodgers are headed towards another questionable offseason after getting swept out of the MLB playoffs by the Arizona Diamondbacks.

And while most are expecting change, it appears Dodgers President of Baseball Operations Andrew Friedman is opting to stay patient.

In all, Friedman appears to be shouldering the blame once more.

"It's fair to say it's an organizational failure ... our goal was to win 11 games in October, and we didn't win one," Friedman told reporters.

It was the same excuse that Friedman gave last season. Most still recall him saying that it was an organizational failure. Additionally, he mentioned that there will be no staff changes and that team manager Dave Roberts will continue to hold his post per Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register.

"I think Doc and our coaching staff did an incredible job this year. And none of us did a good job for those three games against Arizona," the MLB executive explained.

Another disappointing end for the Dodgers

The Dodgers had a good run after winning 100 games in the regular season. It was reportedly the third-most in MLB history. Unfortunately, all that went up in smoke after losing again to a team that had just won the Wild Card series.

The Dodgers drew a bye in the wild-card round but bungled it all in the divisional round to the playoffs, ESPN reported.

After two seasons of dominating in the regular season, it will be interesting if Los Angeles will do the same next MLB season. However, the more pressing question for the Dodgers is whether they have what it takes to win games that matter most.