Baseball America, Seattle Mariners
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Even after Alex Bregman, Kyle Tucker and Bo Bichette recently joined new teams in free agency, one of the league's best middle-of-the-order hitters remains available on the open market.
The Mariners will have many players absent for portions of spring training while competing in the international tournament
For the Seattle Mariners, the 2025-26 offseason has been a bit unpredictable. They have had some success, mostly by re-signing free agent first baseman Josh Nay
Bryce Miller and the Mariners will not go through arbitration after landing on the same page for a new contract.
The 2025 Seattle Mariners were littered with homegrown talent. Cal Raleigh, George Kirby, Logan Gilbert, Bryan Woo, and Julio Rodriguez were all difference-makers — and all of those players came through the system.
Getting to Major League Baseball is hard, and staying there often proves much harder. Right-handed pitcher Trevor Gott has already had a longer big-league caree
The Mariners are in talks with the Cardinals over a left-handed reliever with a $4.25 million pre-arbitration deal for 2026.
On International Signing Day 2026, the Seattle Mariners bolstered their farm system by adding multiple global prospects, highlighted by three Dominican Republic standouts ranked among MLB Pipeline’s top 50 international players.
There are few events more nerve-racking -- and anticipated -- in MLB than a player’s debut, and that’s especially true in Seattle, where the Mariners have had countless high-end prospects earn their calling to The Show.
Hello, Luis Arráez! In all likelihood, Arráez would be Washington's Opening Day first baseman, as the Nationals don't currently possess a proven first baseman after designating veteran Nathaniel Lowe for assignment in August.
Seattle's all-time leader in wins, the pitcher sees his Hall of Fame voting numbers jump significantly, but not enough to receive his proper induction among the game's greats