Seattle Times writer Ryan Divish explained what it would take for the Seattle Mariners to acquire major league talent outside of a pair of teams.
Spring training is coming, and so is the annual ritual of Seattle Mariners executives pretending to care about winning.
The Mariners are still in the market for infield improvements, but with a limited budget and few teams willing to trade MLB talent, what options are left?
The Cubs traded Cody Bellinger to the Yankees for a fairly small return; surprisingly, a team that's had a quiet offseason kicked the tires on Bellinger too.
Mariners’ president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto tried solving this problem at the trade deadline by adding Justin Turner and Randy Arozarena. However, these additions weren’t enough to stop the Astros from flying past them to win the division.
In some odd multiverse, the Seattle Mariners are a Bizzaroworld version of Andy Defrense from the Shawshank Redemption. Fans, convicted to serve in Shawshank prison, listen intently as the Mariners say, “Remember, hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies."
The Seattle Mariners added to their position player depth Monday by ... in the game over the past six years," Mariners president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto said in a team press release. "His veteran presence, consistent performance and positional ...
The Seattle Mariners and veteran infielder Donovan Solano agreed to a one-year contract, the club announced Monday.Solano will make $3.5 million in 2025, a source told FanSided's Robert Murray."Donovan has been among the most underrated hitters in the game over the past six years,
It had been a quiet offseason for the Mariners. That was until recently when they claimed a pair of relief pitchers off waivers. Now, the M’s have signed their first player of the 2024-25 offseason.
At long last, the Mariners have signed a Major League free agent. The club announced on Monday that it had agreed to a one-year deal with veteran infielder Donovan Solano, who will earn $3.5 million i
Spring training is fast approaching and so is extension season. Generally speaking, MLB teams use November, December, and January to improve their roster. In February and March, they shift their focus to retaining their own players.
Ask any Mariners fan what they think off the offseason so far, and you’ll be met with anger and disappoint. After a self-imposed $15 million budget for the offseason, Seattle has been one of the quieter teams in the free agent market landing Donovan Solano and a few minor league deals.