Dodgers had noise complaint during Winter Meetings for Edwin Diaz signing
Briefly

Dodgers had noise complaint during Winter Meetings for Edwin Diaz signing
"It is electric. I was at Citi when Timmy Trumpets came and performed it live, where the night before, he was there but didn't have a save opportunity so they got him to come back the next day. It's funny, the night into Tuesday morning, as we're getting closer to finishing this, in our suite we were pulling up on YouTube the different intro and getting all fired up."
"So much so, that hotel security came and they were like, 'We got a noise complaint.' I'm like, I promise you, 'This is a very lame group. We're actually watching an entrance walkout.' So he was like, 'OK, no problem,' and left. But it was fun to go through it, and I cannot wait for the first one at Dodger Stadium and just how electric it will be."
The Los Angeles Dodgers have a strong history of iconic closers whose entrance music creates an electric, concert-like atmosphere at Dodger Stadium. Songs like 'Welcome to the Jungle' for Eric Gagné and 'California Love' for Kenley Jansen became synonymous with those pitchers and provided fans a sense of security. Edwin Díaz signed a three-year, $69 million contract and will bring his 'Narco' entrance song to Dodger Stadium when he debuts in 2026. Dodgers president Andrew Friedman and front office members celebrated the expected signing by playing the intro loudly at the Winter Meetings, prompting a hotel noise complaint, and he anticipates a similarly electric reception at Dodger Stadium.
Read at Dodger Blue
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