Edwin Diaz-Los Angeles Dodgers Agree On 3-Year Deal
The Los Angeles Dodgers, apparently tired of merely being “very good,” decided to go full super-villain mode by reportedly agreeing to a three-year, $69 million deal with former Mets Closer Edwin Díaz. Yes, you read that right. The team that just won the World Series looked at its roster and thought, “You know what we’re missing? The guy with the trumpets.”
This isn’t just a signing; it’s a statement. Díaz is coming off a vintage 2025 season where he posted a microscopic 1.63 ERA and struck out 98 batters in just over 66 innings. He was, by nearly every metric, the most dominant reliever in the National League. So naturally, he’s now a Dodger.
The Trumpets Are Moving To Hollywood
For Mets fans, this one stings. Díaz was the electric jolt at Citi Field, the guy who made the ninth inning feel like a rave. After opting out of the remaining two years and $38 million on his deal in New York, he bet on himself. And wow, did that bet pay off.
The new contract sets a record for average annual value for a reliever at $23 million per year. It’s a massive payday for the 31-year-old right-hander, especially considering the rollercoaster ride he’s had over the last few years—from the high of his 2022 campaign to the freak knee injury during the World Baseball Classic that wiped out his 2023 season. But 2025 proved he’s back to being the “Sugar” Díaz that hitters possess nightmares about.
Why This Move Is Terrifying (For Everyone Else)
Let’s be real: The Dodgers didn’t need a miracle. They just won a title despite their bullpen losing 33 games last year. But that’s exactly why this move is so quintessentially Los Angeles. They don’t wait for the wheels to fall off; they just buy a new Ferrari to park in the garage.
By adding Díaz, they shore up their only perceived “weakness.” He brings that elite fastball-slider combo that makes grown men look silly at the plate. He limits home runs, he misses bats, and he locks down games.
The Dodgers will have to surrender some draft capital because Díaz rejected the Mets’ qualifying offer, but let’s be honest—when you’re chasing rings, draft picks feel like a problem for the future.
So, get ready, LA. The ninth inning is about to get a whole lot louder at Dodger Stadium. And for the rest of the NL West? Good luck. You’re gonna need it.
