Tag: Seattle Mariners

Seattle Mariners: Lineup Switch Proves Smart in Win Against Oakland

I know it’s only the third game of the season, but you can’t help but get your hopes up when watching a game like this one. 

On Friday night, in what felt like the real season opener, the Mariners bats came alive. They put up seven runs on 13 hits against the Oakland A’s, including seven hits and five run against ace Brandon McCarthy. And no bat was bigger than new leadoff man Chone Figgins, who finished the game 3-for-4 with two RBI. 

After a rough two games in the Tokyo Dome last week, where he only recorded one hit in eight at-bats, Figgins seemed to be more focused at the plate back on domestic soil. Granted, two of his hits were bunts and the other was a bloop single, but he still got on base. And that’s all that manager Eric Wedge and M’s fan can ask for after his struggles at the plate over the past two years. 

When Figgins gets on base it opens up many opportunities thanks to his speed, as shown when he recorded his first stolen base of the young season. It also gives Dustin Ackley the chance to thrive in the situations he was made for, which he also did against the A’s in going 3-for-5. If those two can get on base as well as they did Friday night, then it sets up the ideal situation Seattle was hoping for when they moved 10-year leadoff man, Ichiro, to the three hole. 

Though Ichiro was hitless on the night, he came through with a sac fly to bring in the team’s seventh run of the game. If he can get productive outs on an off night, wait till he’s playing like the Ichiro we all know and love with runners on (career .334 with RISP). 

When the top three players in your lineup have the potential to be three of the best in the league when playing at their best, you are guaranteed to see the numbers soar in the win column. Once the young power trio of Justin Smoak, Jesus Montero and Mike Carp (who bat 4-6 in the lineup) all get into their grooves, the Mariners will be one team to watch out for.

The key for me is Figgins though, and if he can get on base by any means necessary like he did in Oakland, then things are looking good for the Seattle Mariners

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Mariners vs. Athletics: 2012 MLB Season Opener from the Tokyo Dome

The Seattle Mariners (0-0) and Oakland Athletics (0-0) will open up the 2012 Major League Baseball season inside the Tokyo Dome on Wednesday, with the first pitch scheduled for 6:10 a.m. EDT.

Las Vegas oddsmakers have established the Mariners as -130 favorites in a unique situation, while the total is 7 across the board.

Seattle will receive a majority of wagers in the betting market due to outfielder Ichiro Suzuki playing in his home country, while also possessing an edge on the mound between scheduled starters.

Felix Hernandez is certainly one of the best pitchers in the American League, but comes off a rather pedestrian season in going 14-14 with a 3.47 ERA in 33 starts last year.

The Mariners didn’t supply much run support for the 2010 Cy Young Award winner or for any of their hurlers, finishing last in the majors in scoring 556 runs in 2011.

Hernandez is set to make his fifth Opening Day start and seems poised to lead his team to victory in the opening game of a two-game series.

He has registered an impressive 12-4 record and 2.54 ERA in 21 career starts versus the Athletics, including a perfect 3-0 mark and 1.45 ERA in four starts last year.

Bettors will find that the Mariners are 14-3 in Hernandez’s last 17 starts in this American League West series.

Oakland hopes its 14-5 record during spring training will translate into success during the regular season, especially since the franchise finished with a 74-88 mark and 22.0 games behind the division-winning Texas Rangers a year ago.

The Athletics are hoping that right-hander Brandon McCarthy can build off a solid 2011 campaign, finishing with a 9-9 record and 3.32 ERA in 25 starts.

He registered a disappointing 1-3 mark in four starts against the Mariners a year ago despite allowing just seven runs and 19 hits in 31 2/3 innings (1.99 ERA).

From a betting perspective, I’m going to pass on making a full-game selection in this contest, but will recommend a proposition wager.

I expect the visitor to get on the scoreboard first.

Pick: Seattle Mariners (-160) to score first

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Ichiro Suzuki Goes Home: The Importance of Opening Day in Japan

Early tomorrow morning, or late tonight depending on your point of view, the 2012 regular season will kick off with a game between the A’s and Mariners at the Tokyo Dome in Japan.

This is not the first time Major League Baseball will make Pacific overtures to its fans in the Chrysanthemum Kingdom and it won’t be the last. In an ever-shrinking world, one in which businesses must go where the money is if they are to remain vibrant and profitable, baseball’s overseas fans are crucial to its future.

Baseball has come a long way from barnstorming Japan both before and after World War II, tours that brought teams of All-Stars, not to mention whole Yankees and Giants rosters and such luminaries as John McGraw, Casey Stengel, Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig and Joe DiMaggio. Another visitor of note was two-time National League batting champ Lefty O’Doul, who made many trips back to Japan to teach and help establish the country’s version of professional baseball. Now, through these official games, Japan is actually a part of the official baseball season. 

The game was ever a common language between the two countries, even at war. At times during World War II, when the two sides were in close enough combat to hear each other’s shouts, Americans would call out, “To Hell with Hirohito,” a blasphemy to Japanese ears given the divinity of the emperor. In return, the Japanese would cry, “To Hell with Babe Ruth.” Word got back to the Babe. Offended, he purchased $100,000 in war bonds. 

It would be years before an actual exchange of players took place. Don Newcombe and Larry Doby were the first American ballplayers to play for a Japanese team (with the Chunichi Dragons in 1962), beginning an outflow of talent that hasn’t ceased to this day. The reverse, Japanese players coming to America, didn’t happen for much longer due to the tight grip that Nippon Professional Baseball kept over its players as well as a cultural bias against playing elsewhere. Left-handed pitcher Masanori Murakami was the first Japan-born player to reach the major leagues, debuting with the San Francisco Giants in 1964. Though only 21, he returned home after the 1965 season and spent the rest of his career in Japan. 

It would be many years before another Japanese professional established himself in the majors. That was the Dodgers’ 1995 Rookie of the Year winner Hideo Nomo. Nomo was successful enough that major-league clubs began taking a more serious look at Japanese players. This roughly coincided with an economic crunch for the Japanese clubs that made American posting fees for their players increasingly attractive. Suddenly there was Shigetosi Hasegawa, Hideki Irabu, Kazuhiro Sasaki and more, climaxing with Ichiro Suzuki

Ichiro is the most successful major league to come over from Japan, easily surpassing his closest rival, Hideki Matsui. Already a star with the Orix Blue Wave, Ichiro made his stateside debut with the Mariners at 27 in 2001 and was an immediate sensation. A throwback to the Deadball Era, Ichiro pounded out a league-leading 242 hits, many of them infield singles, also led the league in batting average and stolen bases, won both Rookie of the Year and Most Valuable Player awards and picked up a deserved Gold Glove for defense.

In the years since, the outfielder has won another batting title and led the American League in hits another half-dozen times, breaking George Sisler’s ancient single-season hits record in 2004. Despite his late start in the majors, he retains an outside chance of reaching 3,000 hits on these shores. 

Ichiro has served an important dual purpose. His success has helped bind American talent-watchers to Japan and Japanese fans to the American game. As good as players such as Matsui, Nomo, Akinori Iwamura, Kaz Matsui, Tadahito Iguchi have been at times, as many good seasons as pitchers such as Nomo, Hasegawa, Daisuke Matsuzaka, Takashi Saito, Tomo Ohka and others have had, these were mere transients. Ichiro is a real star, a legitimate Hall of Famer purely for what he has done in a Mariners uniform. 

Ichiro’s off-year in 2011 brings his career to a difficult crossroads. As great as he has been overall, with the exception of the 2001, 2004 and 2009 seasons, he has not been a dominating offensive player. Hitting .300, running the bases well and playing strong defense are all valuable, and Ichiro has certainly been that, but walking and hitting for power are also essential components of productive hitting. Ichiro cannot (or, some would argue, will not) do those things, and when his batting average drops closer to .300 than .350—or, as last year, when it dropped well below that mark—he has less to fall back on than a player with a wider array of skills. 

When Jason Giambi hit .342 with 38 home runs and 129 walks in 2001 (the same year rookie Ichiro hit .350/.381/.457) he had one of the best offensive seasons of all time. When he hit .271 with 32 home runs and 108 walks for the 2005 Yankees, he was no longer historic, but still quite valuable. The same cannot be said of Ichiro as a .272 hitter last year. The baserunning helps. The defense helps. By themselves, they do not make up for a player at a power position posting an on-base percentage of .310 or slugging .335. 

The talent pipeline between the American and Japanese majors is now secure enough that Japanese-born players will continue to star in the States. If Ichiro cannot rebound while batting third for the Mariners this year, another hero will rise up to take his place. Perhaps that will be the Rangers’ Yu Darvish. The next step, for a native of Japan to come up through the American minors without first making a long stop in his home leagues, may have difficult implications for the viability of the Japanese majors, but it will eventually need to happen if there are to be more representatives of the island nation in Cooperstown following Ichiro.

In the meantime, we have games such as the two to be played between the A’s and the Mariners. The home fans will get to see one of their stars playing in a game that counts in a league with a higher level of difficulty than their own (American lineups are deeper than their Japanese counterparts). Just as even Hollywood’s biggest bombs can eke out a profit by appealing to foreign audiences (Disney’s hope for John Carter), baseball’s growth will depend not just on the continuing loyalty of American audiences, but of its ability to become a spectacle that can attract a world audience.

Baseball the game has already won Japanese hearts; Major League Baseball, through games such as these and its embrace of Ichiro, must do the same. 

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Seattle Mariners: Top 10 Moments of Ichiro’s Career

Prior to 2001, only Japanese pitchers had made the journey stateside to play in the MLB. When Ichiro Suzuki arrived, many experts as well as fans were skeptical whether or not he would make much of an impact. 

Over a decade later, I think it’s safe to say that Ichiro has done that and more. In fact, Ichiro has played so well over this time that, for many, a season in which he hit only .272 with 184 hits as he approaches an age where most ball players are retired was considered a disappointment.  

It’s with that sentiment in mind that I thought it might be fun to look back and review some of the most special moments and achievements of Ichiro’s career since coming stateside in 2001.

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Seattle Mariners vs Oakland Athletics Live Blog: Play-by-Play Analysis, Reaction

The Seattle Mariners and Oakland Athletics will kick off the 2012 MLB regular season in Tokyo on Wednesday, March 28th at 6:10 AM EST.

The AL West division rivals have spent the last few days in Japan, hosting baseball clinics, visiting tsunami relief sites and playing exhibition matches against Japanese ball clubs.

The international tours for the M’s and A’s will culminate in a two-game series that will mark the beginning of the regular season. The A’s are listed as the home team, though there obviously isn’t any home-field advantage for either club.

While these two teams aren’t the best that the MLB has to offer, they do generate quite a lot of buzz in Japan due to the presence of countrymen Hisashi Iwakuma, Munenori Kawasaki, Kurt Suzuki and most of all Ichiro Suzuki, who is idolized in his home country.

Both teams are looking to improve a bit from last year with key additions including Jesus Montero for the Mariners and Yoenis Cespedes for the Athletics.

This should be an exciting game to watch due to the supercharged atmosphere that the Tokyo Dome and its devoted fans help to create.

Since the game is being played in Japan, it starts at 7:10 PM JST, which unfortunately translates into 6:10 AM for East coasters and 3:10 AM for West coasters. It’ll be a drag to get up early, but don’t let timing prevent you from tuning in to the MLB 2012 season opener!

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Ichiro Suzuki and the 2012 Seattle Mariners’ Commercials

The Seattle Mariners are currently in Arizona with the home opener still a month away, but that does not mean you can’t get your Mariners fix.

To help build the excitement for a team that is looking really good in the preseason, the 2012 Mariners commercials were just released.

Even Ichiro Suzuki gets in on the action. 

Normally around this time, I’d be preparing myself for another year of Mariner disappointment; however, the M’s have not been disappointing yet during the 2012 preseason.

With nine wins and three losses, Seattle is currently at the top of the preseason Cactus League standings. A .750 Pct, is not too shabby.

Also with a .750 Pct in the preseason Cactus League is Oakland (9-3) and the Los Angeles Dodgers (6-2).

The Mariners’ current record puts them above everyone else in the preseason Cactus League including (in order of highest to lowest): San Francisco, Los Angeles Angles, Chicago Cubs, Kansas City, Cincinnati, Milwaukee, Colorado, San Diego, Texas, Cleveland, Arizona and the Chicago White Sox.

In the Grapefruit League, only Toronto (9-2) and Detroit (6-1) have a better record than a .750 Pct. 

In the Mariners’ 7-4 win over Milwaukee today, Mariners catcher Jesus Montero, who came into the game hitting .389, ended up striking out in all three at-bats.

Despite the win, Montero was cold as a fish today, which makes his new Mariners’ commercial all the more fun to watch.

I’ll stop here with the scores, stats, and standings. Continue clicking to watch all five of the new 2012 Mariners MLB commercials and the blooper reel. 

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Mariners Trade Scenarios: How Can They Make Up for Not Getting Prince Fielder?

After missing out on Prince Fielder in free agency, the Seattle Mariners must inquire with other teams about a player who can propel them to the playoffs immediately.

It’s not going to be easy.

Fielder is a premiere player. His talents are duplicated by few.

Most superstars of Fielder’s caliber are already on teams looking at a playoff run. Those teams are unlikely to part with any player who will provide a boost into the postseason.

Instead, the Mariners will have to hope for the best. They’ll need a diamond in the rough.

They’re off to a good start by acquiring Jesus Montero. He’ll certainly contribute very soon. Ichiro Suzuki remains a top talent and Dustin Ackley has a bright future.

But they need more pieces in place if they want to compete now.

Here’s a couple of players the Mariners should look at to help fill the void.

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Seattle Mariners: Ichiro Suzuki Looks to Have Rebound Season in 2012

If any other baseball player on the planet saw his batting average fall to .272 for the season after hitting nearly .330 for his entire 10-year career, there would be maybe only a slight cause for concern.

But Seattle Mariners‘ right fielder Ichiro Suzuki is no ordinary ball player. Thus, there are some major issues to address regarding the future production of the Mariners’ superstar.

Can he rebound from an un-Ichiro-like 2011 season, one in which he batted .272 with an abysmal .645 OPS? Or was last year the signal of an eminent decline for the 38-year-old?

If Ichiro played in a larger media market, this would be a huge story. But being tucked in the damp and cozy confines of the Pacific Northwest, the prognostication of Ichiro is only slightly on the radar of MLB’s hottest topics.

Last week it was announced by ESPN.com, that Seattle manager Eric Wedge is seriously considering moving Ichiro out of his famed leadoff spot. There is a strong possibility that the speedy Ichiro will slide down to the No. 3 slot in the order come Opening Day.

It would be the first time in Ichiro’s 11-year MLB career that he wouldn’t be the clear-cut starting leadoff hitter.

Part of this move is to ignite some life into the motionless Seattle offense that has set several records for futility over the past two seasons. One intention is to move Chone Figgins to the top of the lineup in order to improve his production.

Hitting ahead of Ichiro instead of behind him may provide Figgins with better pitches to hit, while giving Ichiro the opportunity to drive in some runs instead of hitting with the bases empty so often.

But a latent function of Ichiro moving down in the order would be to provide him with more patience at the plate. Having runners on ahead of him—or at least the possibility of such—would give Ichiro a chance to start sitting back and waiting on pitches instead of aggressively applying his patented chop swing early in the count.

With the opposition pitching out of the stretch more frequently, Ichiro can wait to see a fastball—or a certain pitch—and do with it what he has done throughout his career: disrupt the defense.

With Figgins setting the table, and possibly Dustin Ackley or Michael Saunders as candidates for the two hole, Ichiro can initiate some offense, either through hit-and-run executions or simply driving in runs himself.

Last season, Ichiro logged 47 RBI, roughly the same as his career median output. While his overall batting average slumped by his own high standards, he did hit a respectable .302 with runners in scoring position, and his on-base percentage climbed to .401. By comparison, Ichiro batted a sorrowful .249 when leading off an inning. Yikes.

This 2012 campaign will be an interesting one for the Mariners and Ichiro. He is in the last year of his contract, one that will see him earn $18 million this season. Will Seattle extend him to another long-term deal?

Given his age (38), Ichiro needs to prove that last year was an aberration. Most athletes are on the decline by the time they reach Ichiro’s age. Though he still has some bat and foot speed (40 stolen bases), the M’s have to be concerned about how he’ll perform this season in assessing his future moving forward.

If Ichiro truly bounces back to his prototypical form, the Mariners will gladly ensure that he finishes his career in Seattle.

It’s a bit tricky to evaluate how productive Ichiro is, however. After all, he has set the bar so incredibly high in his career that it’s hard to truly determine that a season in which he tallied 184 hits, stole 40 bases and scored 80 runs is completely terrible.

Especially when taking into consideration that the team as a whole ranked dead last in all of baseball in nearly every major statistical category.

Yet Ichiro and his ball club knows that this is a very important season for him. Ichiro is a tremendously proud person and baseball player. He knows that there is a lot riding on him: if he demonstrates his ability to recover from last year, he can finish his career on his own terms in the next three to five years. 

Unfortunately, if he racks up numbers similar to last year, or somehow regresses even further, it’s possible that this could be his last year in an M’s uniform. Even if Seattle does attempt to retain him, it will not be even close to the $18 million pay rate that Ichiro has been accustomed to for all these years.

Make no mistake, if there’s any player who can iron out the kinks and smooth out the hitting mechanics, it’s Ichiro. But the Mariners as an organization must make stronger efforts and longer strides in becoming a successful and winning ball club as a whole.

Otherwise, Ichiro will continue to lose interest in the excitement for playing for such a dreadful team. After all, who wants to play for the worst offense in the history of baseball?

It’ll definitely be a story to follow all season. Can Ichiro regain his all-world form? Tune in and find out.

 

Follow me on Twitter: @nathanieljue

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Chone Figgins Leading off for the Seattle Mariners Will End in Disaster

Seattle Mariners manager Eric Wedge recently made a groundbreaking decision to move Ichiro to the No. 3 hole and have Chone Figgins and Dustin Ackley hit 1-2 at the top of the order.

I have no problem with Ichiro hitting No. 3; I believe the time has come for Ichiro to start utilizing his power more than his speed and finesse.

What I’m still trying to wrap my head around is Figgins leading off after two embarrassingly bad seasons.

Who could’ve possibly thought this was a good idea?

His OBP (on-base-percentage) last year was .241. That wasn’t his batting average, that was his OBP!  His batting average was a mind-boggling bad .188 in 81 games last year.

It is possible that he went through some miracle transformation over the offseason, but then again he is 34 years old and hasn’t been relevant at the plate since 2009.  According to his WAR (Wins Above Replacement), he’s actually been one of the worst players in the majors since he came to Seattle.

Considering the money they Mariners are paying him, I wouldn’t say anything if they put Figgins at the bottom of the lineup just so they could get some bang for their buck.

There is no reason for him to leadoff; a leadoff hitter needs to have a extremely high OBP. His job is to get on base; that’s what Ichiro has been doing for the last decade.

 

 

I have no problem with Ackley batting No. 2. He is one of the best pure hitting prospects in the game.  He sprays line drives all over the ballpark, a perfect No. 2 lefty.

There are other candidates to lead off for the Mariners.

Franklin Guiterrez is an intriguing option.  Guti enters hot and cold streaks, but overall I think he is a much butter leadoff option than Figgy.

I’m all for second chances, but let Figgins prove himself at the bottom of the lineup, and if he can prove he can handle the responsibilities, then give him a chance.

With Ichiro hitting No. 3, I think the Mariners expect him to get more RBIs than home runs.  Which is OK.

With runners on base, Ichiro can be dangerous with his ability to simply put the ball in play and put the game in motion.

Unfortunately, with Figgins leading off, I’m not sure how many runners on base there will be for Ichiro.

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Seattle Mariners: Projecting the 2012 Rotation

You hate to see a young stud pitcher like Michael Pineda go, but even with this loss, the Mariners’ 2012 rotation isn’t exactly in shambles.

Anytime Felix Hernandez is your ace pitcher, your rotation is going to be better than 40% of the teams in the league. Even if your other four pitchers are just average, you’re still going to have an above-average rotation with King Felix at the top.

Several new pitchers have arrived, including Japanese sensation Hisashi Iwakuma. 

With the departure of pitchers like Doug Fister, Erik Bedard, and Michael Pineda this 2012 rotation will look completely revamped.

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