Edwin DĂaz was supposed to be the answer.
After a chaotic 2025 season that turned late innings into a nightly stress test, the Los Angeles Dodgers finally landed the kind of closer managers dream about.
Power. Swagger. Proven dominance. For Dave Roberts, DĂaz represented something simple and rare: certainty.

And yet, certainty is exactly what the Dodgers donât have right now.
DĂaz didnât just bring elite stuff with him from New York. He also brought a memory the organization canât ignore.
In 2023, while celebrating a World Baseball Classic win for Puerto Rico, DĂaz suffered a devastating knee injuryâone that erased an entire MLB season and reshaped how teams think about risk beyond their control.
That moment still echoes.

On paper, DĂaz stabilizes everything. His 2025 bounce-back was undeniable: a 1.63 ERA, 98 strikeouts in just over 66 innings, and the unmistakable look of a pitcher who had reclaimed his edge.
For a Dodgers team chasing a third straight World Series, that version of DĂaz is a luxury most contenders never get.
But baseball doesnât operate on paper.

The unease isnât about performance. Itâs about exposure.
DĂaz is expected to pitch for Puerto Rico again in the upcoming World Baseball Classic, a tournament loaded with emotion, national pride, and moments that donât come with pitch counts or October-style caution.
The Dodgers remember what happened last time.

So does Dave Roberts.
The irony is sharp. DĂaz chose Los Angeles because winning matters. Because the Dodgers promised opportunity, structure, and the chance to be the final piece of something historic.
In return, the Dodgers accepted not just his talentâbut the uncontrollable variables that come with it.
This is where the tension lives.

The Dodgers are already being painted as baseballâs villainâthe super-spender, the imbalance, the team âruining the sport.â DĂazâs arrival only adds to that narrative.
But behind the scenes, the concern isnât public perception. Itâs fragility.
What happens if history repeats itself?
There is no obvious Plan B that matches DĂazâs impact. The bullpen depth is improved, but not interchangeable. A closer doesnât just end games; he defines how the entire staff is deployed.
Remove that anchor, and even the most talented roster starts making uncomfortable adjustments.

Thatâs why the Dodgers are watching the WBC so closely.
Not with celebration. With calculation.
DĂazâs dip in 2024âhis first year back from the knee injuryâserved as a reminder that dominance isnât instantly restored. It takes time. Rhythm. Trust in the body.
The resurgence in 2025 restored confidence, but it didnât erase memory. Injuries donât just affect ligaments; they linger psychologically, especially in organizations that build seasons around precision.
The question now isnât whether DĂaz can dominate.
Itâs which version of him will arrive in Los Angelesâand under what circumstances.
For Puerto Rico, DĂaz represents pride and power. For the Dodgers, he represents control. Those two ideas donât always coexist comfortably.
National tournaments are unpredictable by nature, and unpredictability is the one thing L.A. has spent years trying to eliminate.
Roberts hasnât said it publicly. He doesnât need to.
Every team chasing a dynasty knows this truth: the margin between legacy and regret is thin. The Dodgers arenât worried because DĂaz is unreliable.
Theyâre worried because they know how quickly the entire equation can change.
Right now, Edwin DĂaz is both the solution and the anxiety.
He could be the final lock on a historic three-peatâor the reminder that even the most carefully constructed teams canât protect themselves from everything.
And until the season begins with DĂaz healthy, dominant, and in uniform, the Dodgersâ biggest relief remains just out of reach.
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