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Dodgers' Díaz deal might be precursor to more big moves
Los Angeles Times
|December 11, 2025
The team likely will monitor market for a short-term contract that makes sense.
EDWIN DÍAZ was lured to L.A. with a better deal than what the Mets offered.
ORLANDO, Fla. - As the hotel lobby at the Signia by Hilton Orlando filled at MLB's winter meetings on Tuesday morning, an unexpected prize was falling into the Dodgers' lap.
Edwin Díaz, the top reliever on this year's freeagent market, was suddenly slipping away from the incumbent New York Mets, who reportedly made the fan favorite closer only a three-year offer that did little to entice him to re-sign with the team.
The Dodgers, meanwhile, were swooping in late to snatch away the hardthrowing right-hander, submitting a more lucrative three-year bid that would pay Díaz a relief-pitcherrecord $23 million per season.
Just like that, the Dodgers had gone from a perfectly content, but unremarkably quiet winter, to one in which they'd once again flexed their financial muscles and stunned the baseball industry.
"There were a lot of scenarios [that could have potentially played out this winter] where we didn't necessarily end up with a top-end reliever," president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said Tuesday night, while declining to comment on Díaz directly since the transaction wasn't finalized. "But we just kind of prepared on a bunch of different fronts. And being aggressive, if something lined up, we've known all along [it is something we would do]." The Díaz signing was an affirmation of the team's operating procedure on the free-agent market. They always at least target top talent. They always at least stay around the proverbial blackboard, as Friedman calls it, in case a player's market doesn't develop as expected. And now, they are armed with the kind of endless resources that can make them a threat to scoop up any rebound.
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