š¢ TOP STORY: Edwin DĆaz didnāt just sign with the Dodgers, he picked the smartest offerāhereās what his contract truly tells you ā”.NL

On paper, itās a three-year, $69 million deal that resets the closer market. But Jon Heymanās breakdown shows how intentionally the Dodgers structured it: a $9 million signing bonus, plus annual salaries of $14 million (2026), $23 million (2027), and $23 million (2028), with $4.5 million deferred each season. Thereās also a conditional team option for 2029 worth $6.5 million, and performance escalators in 2029 that pay $750K for 45 games finished and another $750K for 50, plus $1 million if he reaches 55 games finished.

Thatās not just āDodgers spend big again.ā Thatās a contender using every leverācash flow, deferrals, upside triggersāto make the player feel taken care of while keeping the organizationās flexibility intact.
The Contract Tells You What DĆaz Wanted
DĆaz could have chased pure length. Instead, he chased elite money with elite contextāand this structure delivers both.

The headline number matters: $69 million over three years makes DĆaz the highest-paid reliever on an annual basis, and the signing bonus puts real money in his pocket immediately. The deferralsā$4.5 million per yearāhelp Los Angeles keep the present-day payroll cleaner while still paying DĆaz like the premier ninth-inning weapon he believes he is.
And then thereās the 2029 layer. The Dodgers didnāt just tack on a generic optionāthey attached a conditional option and games-finished bonuses that basically say: If youāre still closing at a high volume, youāll get rewarded again. Thatās a smart fit for a 31-year-old closer (32 in March) who wants to win now, but also wants a runway if he keeps dominating.

Los Angeles Sold The Whole Plan
DĆaz made the simplest part public at his introductory press conference: he chose the Dodgers because heās ālooking to win,ā calling them a winning organization and saying the decision became āpretty easy.ā
Thatās not empty talk if you zoom out. The Dodgers were defending champs, but their bullpen didnāt play like one for long stretches in 2025āa 4.27 reliever ERA and 27 blown saves, numbers that left them scrambling for stability until October forced creativity.

DĆaz brings the kind of clarity they didnāt consistently have: a true ninth-inning hammer with recent dominance. In 2025 with the Mets, he posted a 1.63 ERA, 28 saves in 31 chances, and 98 strikeouts in 66.1 inningsāthe exact rĆ©sumĆ© that makes teams stop mixing and matching and start shortening games again.
The Metsā context matters, too. DĆaz opted out of the remaining money on his previous deal after the 2025 collapse, and New York pivoted by signing Devin Williamsāproof the market moved fast once DĆaz hit it.

So yes, DĆaz picked the Dodgers because he wants rings. But Heymanās contract details show the other truth: Los Angeles made it easy to choose themātop-of-market status, immediate cash, smart long-term upside, and a roster built to make every ninth inning mean something.





