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Diaz thrills L.A. with trumpet entrance and first save
Summary
Edwin Diaz recorded his first save for the Dodgers on Friday in a 5-4 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks, and a live trumpeter echoed his entrance music as he walked in from the bullpen.
Content
Edwin Diaz closed out Friday's game for the Los Angeles Dodgers, recording his first save with the team. The Dodgers beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-4. As Diaz jogged in from the bullpen, a live trumpeter near the left-field fence played the trumpet portion of "Narco," echoing his entrance music. Diaz joined the Dodgers after seven seasons with the New York Mets and signed a three-year contract with Los Angeles.
Key details:
- Diaz retired three of four Arizona hitters in the ninth to secure a 5-4 victory and notch his first save for the Dodgers.
- Kyle Tucker delivered a run-scoring single in the bottom of the eighth to put the Dodgers ahead.
- A Long Beach trumpeter named Tatiana Tate mimicked Timmy Trumpet's portion of the song "Narco" as Diaz walked from the bullpen.
- Diaz spent seven years in New York, where he recorded 144 saves before opting out and signing with the Dodgers for three years and $69 million.
- Dodgers manager Dave Roberts participated in a Zoom call to recruit Diaz, and the team had not had an established closer since Kenley Jansen departed after the 2021 season.
Summary:
The save and the musical entrance highlighted the Dodgers' offseason move to secure an established closer and created a notable fan moment at Dodger Stadium. The appearance provided an early look at how Diaz will be used in late innings. Undetermined at this time.
