📰 NEWS FLASH: The Brewers’ edge in their trade with the Yankees grows sharper than ever thanks to Devin Williams’ pivotal decision ⚡.vt

Former Milwaukee Brewers closer, Devin Williams, is staying in New York, but not with the team that Matt Arnold and company traded him to last offseason. As initially reported by Will Sammon of The Athletic, Williams has agreed to a three-year contract with the New York Mets, the last team he pitched against in a Brewers uniform.

Reliever Devin Williams and the Mets are in agreement on a three-year deal, league source tells The Athletic.

— Will Sammon (@WillSammon) December 2, 2025

Many expected Williams to sign a one-year, prove-it deal, knowing that one season resembling the ones he put together in Milwaukee would net him a huge free agent contract a year from now. However, rather than accept a deal that would return him to the free agent market next offseason or one that keeps him away from it until the final years of his playing career, Williams took a medium-length, three-year deal that guarantees him $51 million.

Star Infielder Named Yankees Trade Possibility

Devin Williams Mets deal: $45M for 3 years. $5M per deferred for 11/20 years with $6M bonus prorated equal over 3 yrs

— Jon Heyman (@JonHeyman) December 2, 2025

It’s a double-whammy for Brewers fans; not only is their former closer joining the team that he surrendered a crushing ninth-inning home run to in the postseason during his final year in Milwaukee, but he’s doing so after being signed by David Stearns, the Brewers’ former President of Baseball Operations. Williams and Stearns’ reunion in New York is enough to make any Brewers fan uncomfortable, but at least the Mets’ prying away of Williams from their cross-town rivals puts a bow on yet another successful trade from Matt Arnold and the Brewers’ front office.

New York Yankees News, Videos, Schedules, Roster, Stats - Yahoo Sports

Brewers officially win Devin Williams trade after Yankees lose closer to cross-town rivals

Regardless of where Williams signed this offseason, the Brewers only traded one year of his services when they acquired Caleb Durbin and Nestor Cortes for him last December. Therefore, Milwaukee’s win of the trade was solidified the second Williams’ lackluster 2025 campaign came to an end while Durbin was named a finalist for the NL Rookie of the Year Award.

However, had Williams re-signed with the Yankees this offseason and turned into the second-coming of Mariano Rivera, many fans would be quick to forget that the Brewers traded just one season of Williams. Instead, blame would be placed on Milwaukee for connecting Williams and the Yankees in the first place, and the lopsided nature of the trade would feel less so.

Thankfully, looking at the bright side of Williams joining the bullpen of an NL contender, Brewers fans and their team’s front office don’t have to worry about that reality as Williams’ time in pinstripes has officially come to an end. After posting the worst season of his career in New York this past year, one that saw his ERA jump from a dazzling 1.25 mark in 2024 to a shocking 4.79 in 2025, it’s fair to say that the Brewers traded Williams at the perfect time, and now have the pleasure of watching Durbin impact their big league squad for the next six seasons.Dodgers Named Best Fit for Yankees' 34-Homer Slugger in Free Agency

Therefore, regardless of how Williams performs for the Mets and regardless of the fact that Nestor Cortes made just two starts in a Brewers uniform, Arnold and his team unequivocally won the Devin Williams trade last offseason, and his decision to leave the Yankees for the Mets makes the win even sweeter. Sure, it’s going to be weird to see Williams in a Mets uniform just two seasons after he was watching their orange and blue jerseys celebrate on his home field, but at least Brewers fans can take pride in the fact that they were the winners of the trade that initially sent him out of Milwaukee.

Related Posts

🚨 JUST IN: Brittney Sykes steps onto the All-Star stage for the first time and leaves fans buzzing with her dynamic debut ⚡mt

Syracuse alumna and Washington Mystics guard Brittney Sykes ’16, G’17 made her first WNBA All-Star Game appearance this past Saturday July 19 at the Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. Representing…

Read more

🚨 JUST IN: Mackenzie Holmes’ brilliant Hoosiers career comes to a bittersweet end as Indiana falls to South Carolina in the Sweet 16 ⚡mt

Mackenzie Holmes’ stellar career at Indiana is over after a loss to top-seeded South Carolina in the Sweet 16. She finished as the winningest player in school history and the…

Read more

💥 BREAKING NEWS: Dana Evans’ full biography revealed — from her measurements to her relationship timeline and growing fortune ⚡mt

Who Is Dana Evans (basketball)? Age, Biography and Wiki Dana Evans was born on August 1, 1998, making her 27 years old as of 2025. Hailing from Gary, Indiana, Dana…

Read more

📢 TOP STORY: Jackie Young makes franchise history with her first triple-double, putting on a masterclass in scoring, playmaking, and hustle ⚡mt

Number 0 made history Monday night and did it with ease, notching the first triple-double of her career while also climbing to fourth on the franchise’s all-time steals list. LOS…

Read more

📢 TOP STORY: The DBB team will move forward without Nyara Sabally, a surprising omission that shifts expectations dramatically ⚡mt

Following star player Satou Sabally, her younger sister Nyara has also withdrawn from the upcoming Women’s EuroBasket tournament. The reason is persistent knee problems for the 25-year-old WNBA champion New…

Read more

💥 BREAKING NEWS: After Caitlin Clark and Sabrina Ionescu, Azzi Fudd is now added to the alleged reasons behind Stephen Curry’s decision to end a 12-year partnership ⚡mt

Another standout from women’s basketball was added to Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry‘s reported list of factors for ending his partnership his long-time partner brand, Under Armour. On Wednesday, @soleretriever…

Read more

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *