The Seattle Mariners have been blessed with some pretty great players in their team history. Over the last decade, the Mariners have seen three of their franchise’s most special players be inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
Rikkuu Nishida got a chance to meet Ichiro last weekend as his Chicago White Sox took on the Seattle Mariners, and he was left speechless by the experience.
Underneath the sun in Peoria, Ariz., Ken Griffey Jr., Ichiro Suzuki, Mike Cameron and Franklin Gutierrez convened for a great photo.
Former Major League pitcher Paul Abbott recalls Ichiro Suzuki's transformative impact during the Mariners' 2001 season, highlighting his preparation, humility, and five-tool prowess.
Ken Griffey Jr., Edgar Martinez and Ichiro Suzuki took a picture together and were recognized on social media.
This is a team that had baseball’s greatest collection of pitchers last year, but were burdened with an offense that ruined a potentially magical season. Instead of earning their first World Series berth in their 48-year franchise history, the Mariners sat home and missed the playoffs for the 22 nd time in the past 23 years.
San Diego Padres shortstop turned outfielder Fernando Tatis Jr. have earned comparisons with several greats of the game. Among them is Seattle Mariners legend Ichiro Suzuki.
The arrival of Ken Griffey Jr. meant the Mariners had three Hall of Famers in camp, joining Edgar Martinez and Ichiro Suzuki.
SEATTLE--Ichiro Suzuki was inducted into the Seattle Mariners Hall of Fame on Saturday night, giving his entire 16-minute speech in English while reflecting on his career. Suzuki became the 10th ...
The volume was up a notable notch at the Mariners’ Spring Training facility on Monday morning, but to no surprise given who was in town for his annual visit to camp. Ken Griffey Jr. doesn’t give much heads-up when he’s dropping in,
Returning to Seattle as the Mariners in 1977, the franchise has had a mostly tough 50 years. Although they lack the pedigree of success and longevity of teams like the St.
Donovan Solano walked into a clubhouse on Saturday where he was a stranger to mostly everyone, but there was at least one familiar face to the Mariners’ new infielder. It’s been 10 long years since they were teammates in Miami in 2015,