(Ken
Griffey Jr.'s #24 and Alex Rodriquez's
#3
have not been given out since they
departed
while Randy Johnson's #51 belongs to
Ichiro)
42: Jackie Robinson* (huh?)
* - Hall
of Famer
The Mariners played their first game on April
6, 1977 to a sold-out crowd of 58,000 at the Kingdome
(they lost 7-0 to the California
Angels). The early history of the team during the 1970s
and 80s is
characterized by perennial non-achievement. The Mariners finished last or
next-to-last in their division
in 10 of their first 13 seasons, and did not record a winning season until
1991.
The rookie season (1989)
of centerfielder Ken
Griffey, Jr., acquired with the 1st pick in the 1987
amateur draft, gave fans hope that a change of fortunes may not be
long in coming. Acclaimed as one of the most talented young athletes in
all of baseball, Griffey's combination of stellar defensive ability,
hitting power, and baserunning speed made him one of baseball's preeminent
superstars of the 1990s,
and helped to steer the Mariners to much greater success during his 11
seasons in Seattle.
Virtual90s
In 1991,
the Mariners had their first winning season, finishing 83-79 under manager
Jim
Lefebvre. Though it was the team's best season, it was only good
enough to end in fifth place in their seven-team division, and Lefebvre
was fired. Bill Plummer served as manager in 1992.
Prior to the 1993
season, the Mariners hired manager Lou
Piniella, who managed the Cincinnati
Reds to a 1990World
Series win.
By 1995,
the Mariners had added a core of strong players built around center
fielder Ken
Griffey, Jr., pitcher Randy
Johnson and designated hitter Edgar
Martinez. An early-season injury to Griffey seemed to doom the 1995
season. In mid-August, the Mariners were 13 games behind the first-place California
Angels. A September winning streak marked by late-inning comeback
wins, combined with a losing streak by the Angels, opened the way for the
Mariners to tie the Angels for first place on the last day of the season.
The Mariners won the tiebreaker game 9-1 and clinched their first-ever
trip to the playoffs. Down 2-0 in the ALDS,
in one of the game's most dramatic moments, the Mariners won three games
at home to beat the New
York Yankees and advance to the ALCS.
One of the most memorable moments of Mariners history happened in Game 5
with a double by Martinez in the 11th inning that scored Joey
Cora and Griffey to win the game 6-5. "The Double", as
Martinez's clutch hit has since been called by Mariners fans, is credited
as being the moment that "saved baseball in Seattle" by
generating interest in the team and making a new, baseball only stadium
possible. Unfortunately, the Mariners' memorable championship run was
halted by another up and coming club, Mike
Hargrove's Cleveland
Indians. 1995 is fondly remembered as The Magical Season.
Mariners
One of the few
historic moments in the early years of
Mariner baseball was Gaylord Perry's 300th
victory, commemorated here on the front
cover of the May 17, 1982 edition of Sports
Illustrated. (Cover courtesy of
Time-Warner.)
In 1996, the Mariners, led by Griffey, rookie shortstop Alex
Rodriguez, and sluggers Jay
Buhner and Edgar
Martinez, won a then team record 85 games but missed the playoffs. The
juggernaut offense set the record for most home runs by a team in a
season, but ultimately the M's lack of pitching, exacerbated by Randy
Johnson's midseason injury, doomed the team.
The Mariners won the division title again in 1997, but were defeated in
the ALDS
3-1 by the Baltimore
Orioles. They were again hurt by a lack of pitching depth to
complement the outstanding offense, which was, as usual, led by Griffey,
who won the MVP award (a first for both him and the Mariners).
In 1998 and 1999, the Mariners had losing records due to their lack of
pitching depth (Johnson was traded at the July Non-Waiver Trading Deadline
to the Houston
Astros after being inconsistent in the first half of the season; some
fans and press thought he was trying to force a trade through malaise).
Midway through the 1999 season, the Mariners moved to Safeco
Field. After the 1999 season, Ken
Griffey, Jr. requested and attained a trade to the Cincinnati
Reds, leaving Alex
Rodriguez as the face of the franchise at the beginning of the Safeco
Field era.
21st Century
2000 was a return to respectability for the Mariners, as they won the
Wild Card. They finished half a game behind Oakland
Athletics, as they played only 161 games. The tiebreaking rules had
already awarded the division crown to Oakland, so the rained out 162nd
game was not made up. While Ken
Griffey, Jr. was no longer patrolling center or lurking in the middle
of the batting order, he was adequately replaced by the incredible
glovework and solid hitting of new center fielder Mike
Cameron. Alex
Rodriguez replaced Junior as the face of the franchise and Edgar
Martinez provided his usual excellent hitting in the cleanup spot. Freddy
Garcia and Jamie
Moyer were steady parts in the rotation. Closer Kazuhiro
Sasaki, a former professional in his home country of Japan, won the
Rookie of the Year award. The Mariners swept the White Sox in the ALDS,
but lost to the New
York Yankees in six games in the ALCS. The following offseason was as
important as any in Mariners history, as Rodriguez was up for free agency.
Ultimately, Rodriguez
was lost to the Texas
Rangers for what was then the richest contract ever in professional
sports. However, the Mariners were able to weather the loss by adding
Japanese superstar Ichiro
Suzuki, who won the Most Valuable Player award and Rookie of the Year
in 2001, and slick fielding, power hitting second base veteran Bret
Boone, who was also an MVP candidate.
Mariners
A Mariners program
from the first game at Safeco Field, July
15, 1999.
In 2001, despite the loss of Rodriguez
(He would be greeted on his return to Safeco with Monopoly money dropped
by irate Seattle fans), the addition of Ichiro
(who wears his first name on the back of his jersey) and a career season
by Boone
helped the Mariners to the most successful regular season on record in the
modern era. The 2001 Mariners led the major leagues in winning percentage
from start to finish: easily winning the American League West
championship, setting a new Major League Baseball record for most wins in
a single season with an unprecedented 116, and matching the previous
record for single season wins set by the Chicago
Cubs in 1906.
At the end of the season, Ichiro
won the AL MVP, AL Rookie of the Year, and one of three outfield Gold
Glove awards, becoming the first player since the 1975 Boston
Red Sox' Fred
Lynn to win all three in the same season. The Mariners pulled off a
come-from-behind 3-2 series win over the Cleveland
Indians in the ALDS
to advance to the American League Championship Series against the New
York Yankees, but succumbed to the Yankees for the second year in a
row in the ALCS, 4 games to 1, in a hard-fought series: a sad end to such
a historic year.
At the end of the 2002 season, manager Lou
Piniella left the Mariners to manage his hometown's Tampa
Bay Devil Rays, reportedly due to his anger with the management policy
of investing in low quality free agents. The Mariners signed Bob
Melvin to be their new manager. The local press speculated that a
first year manager (especially one of Melvin's temperament) would be
easier for the front office and ownership to control. While they started
the season hot (they were on pace to win 100+ games again well into the
summer), the Mariners missed out on the playoffs due to their failure to
find a substantial contributor at the trade deadline and the unbelieveable
hot streaks by the Anaheim
Angels and Oakland
Athletics in the later months of the season. Ultimately, the Angels
won the World Series as the Mariners won 93 games, still the second best
total in their history.
Despite an excellent start to the 2003 season, the Mariners contended
and reached the same record as in 2002, but were again beat to the
playoffs by the Athletics.
failed to make the playoffs, which was again blamed on management's
failure to bring in a bat at the trading deadline and the aging roster's
decline. General Mangager Pat
Gillick became a consultant midway through the offseason to make room
for Bill
Bavasi.
The Mariners stayed competitive in 7 of the 9 seasons from 1995 to
2003. The 2004 season, however, saw the demise of the Mariners' dominance
of their division. Although many of their players were aging, the Mariners
continued an apparent practice of "content to contend," starting
the 2004 season having not made a major deal in three years. The team lost
their first five games and went into the All-Star Break with a 9-game
losing streak, a 32-54 season record (.372), and a 17-game deficit
compared to the first-place Texas Rangers. After the All-Star break,
unable to ignore the dreadful state of their team, the Mariners gave the
team a complete overhaul, moving aging and unproven players away from
center stage (the most notable move was trading Freddy
Garcia to the Chicago
White Sox for Miguel
Olivo, Jeremy
Reed, and Mike
Morse, all of whom started for the big club at some point in 2005) and
inserting over a dozen call-ups into the 25-man roster. The season's end
was enlivened by Ichiro breaking George
Sisler's single season record of 257 hits (finishing with 262) and by
events honoring the retirement of Mariner icon Edgar
Martinez. Just days after the end of the season, the Mariners fired Melvin.
On October 20, 2004, the Mariners announced the signing of their new
manager, Mike
Hargrove. Hargrove was the manager who led the Cleveland
Indians past the Mariners in the 1995 ALCS. In the offseason, the
Mariners and Bavasi
surprised fans and the local press by signing two premier free agents,
third baseman Adrian
Beltre and first baseman Richie
Sexson, ending the organization's practice of making piecemeal
signings and trades.
Despite many changes and large player signings touted by the Mariners
ownership after the 2004 season, the team stayed at the bottom of the
divisional standings throughout the 2005 season and finished in last
place, though they won six more games than the year before. The brightest
spot of the season was the emergence of the vaunted 19 year old Venezuelan
pitching prospect "King" Felix
Hernandez (he was generally agreed to be baseball's overall best
pitching prospect) who became the youngest major leaguer to debut since Jose
Rijo of the New York Yankees entered the league at the age of
nineteen. Unfortunately, stars Ichiro
and Adrian
Beltre had off years. However, Sexson
matched expectations, authoring a batting line that featured 39 home runs
and 121 RBI. Aside from Hernandez, some promising rookie middle infielders
became part of the Mariners' long term plan: Cuban defector, shortstop and
defensive wizard Yuniesky
Betancourt and Venezuelan second baseman and former top prospect Jose
Lopez became next season's starters. However, the Mariners' rotation
beyond Hernandez and the aging Moyer was poor; the Mariners had the most
suspendees under the new drug testing policy, notably Ryan
Franklin and Morse;
and fan attendance declined significantly. The Mariners realized that in
order to return to respectability and stay in black ink, they must make a
splash in the weak free agent and trade markets this winter, particularly
in regards to the rotation. The Mariners began the 2005-2006 off-season
with a splash, signing Japan's top catcher, Kenji Johjima, to a 3-year
deal.
Our sites have always been by you and about you. If
you check
our TV Forums or our Technology & Science forums, you'll find literally thousands of messages from fans
of 1970s TV shows, survivors of hurricanes or aircraft accidents, etc. from all over the world sharing their memories, asking
questions, making comments. Our baseball section is new, but don't let
that stop you from sharing
your memories of the first game you went to, your favorite player, a
now-forgotten stadium, etc. Of course you can also ask questions, post
trivia, tell the world what you think of Barry Bonds, or just read what
others are saying.
Logos and team names may be trademarks of their respective franchises or leagues. This site is not recognized, approved, sponsored by, or endorsed by Major League Baseball nor any sports league or team. Any marks, terms, or logos are used for editorial/identification purposes and are not claimed as belonging to this site or its owners. Any statistical data provided courtesy of Retrosheet (see credits).