Mariners president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto met with reporters this afternoon after the team finalized the one-year deal to retain Jorge Polanco. Seattle’s longtime front office leader addressed the team’s atypically quiet offseason while providing a couple injury updates.
Dipoto said the front office entered the winter believing they could be in for a slow offseason. “One of our points going into this offseason, and I know I made it sitting in the dugout in the final series, was that we didn’t anticipate a great deal of movement around the team,” he told the beat (including Ryan Divish of the Seattle Times). “As we are now about a week away from heading to Spring Training, I’d say that probably played out to be spot on, much to, I think, the dismay of a few. But we have a good team.”
Seattle has made two major league free agent signings. They brought Polanco back on a $7.75MM guarantee and added Donovan Solano as a part-time righty bat for $3.5MM. Reporting from both The Seattle Times and MLB.com throughout the offseason has suggested that ownership was only allowing the front office to allocate between $15MM-20MM to the MLB payroll. While the lack of free agent activity has certainly been a source of frustration for much of the fanbase, it’s not especially surprising.
The more interesting development has been the M’s willingness to sit out the trade market. They’ve made four trades this offseason, all of which have been depth acquisitions for players who were in DFA limbo: Austin Shenton, Miles Mastrobuoni, Blake Hunt and Will Klein. Those are akin to waiver claims. The Mariners essentially haven’t made a single notable move on the trade market, a stark contrast to Dipoto’s reputation as one of the game’s most prolific traders. The “Trader Jerry” nickname has been well earned in prior offseasons.
Most trade speculation concerned the possibility of the Mariners moving a starting pitcher to add a hitter. As Dipoto noted today, he did indeed downplay that notion before last season even ended. He famously called dealing from the rotation the M’s “Plan Z” for the offseason in the referenced media scrum. That didn’t stop other teams from inquiring on Seattle’s young rotation nucleus of George Kirby, Logan Gilbert, Bryce Miller and Bryan Woo, but there’s nothing to suggest the Mariners gave strong consideration to moving any of them.
The one starter who was available was Luis Castillo. The veteran righty is under contract for another three seasons and $68.25MM (plus a 2028 vesting option). Trading Castillo could have created spending room while netting the M’s immediate lineup help. It wasn’t going to be a straight salary dump, though, and Seattle hasn’t found an offer it finds compelling. The Seattle Times’ Adam Jude reported last week that Castillo was unlikely to move at this point.
Dipoto implied as much in today’s comments. He told Jude and other reporters that the front office received some proposals that warranted real consideration, but those obviously did not result in a deal. “Not shockingly, we had inquiries on all five of our starting pitchers and dozens of prospects along the way,” he added. “But obviously we opted not to go that route.” While he left open the possibility of making another move, he noted that the front office would be happy with the roster “if this is our team going into Spring Training or Opening Day” (via Divish and Jude).
The Mariners will go into Spring Training with arguably MLB’s best 1-5 in the rotation. Their depth behind that is lacking, though perhaps quick-moving prospect Logan Evans can soon be a factor. Seattle benefited from excellent rotation health last year. Woo was the only member of their front five who made fewer than 30 starts. That’ll be difficult to replicate, but when the rotation is at full strength, they’re giving the ball to an above-average starter every night.
As has long been the case, the question is whether they’ll score enough runs. Dipoto expressed confidence in the lineup, pointing to their success later in the season after the managerial and hitting coach changes. Seattle hitters had a .216/.301/.365 batting line through August 21. After dismissing Scott Servais and Jarret DeHart in favor of Dan Wilson and Edgar Martinez, respectively, they hit .255/.347/.417 in their final 34 games.
Attributing that entirely to the coaching changes is overly simplistic. They improved the lineup at the deadline with the Justin Turner and Randy Arozarena pickups and league-wide offense tends to peak later in the summer with warmer weather. Still, the change in voice probably played some part in the much improved finish. The Mariners play in the sport’s toughest home park for hitters. Only the White Sox had a lower team OPS in home games. Seattle ranked 13th in OPS on the road. Mike Petriello of MLB.com examined some reasons behind T-Mobile Park’s extreme pitcher-friendly environment last week in a column that’s well worth a full read.
Dipoto also addressed a few injury situations. He expressed confidence in Polanco’s health after the veteran infielder played through a left knee injury that eventually required a meniscus repair. The Mariners believe the move from his longtime second base position to third base will take less of a toll on him physically. Meanwhile, reliever Troy Taylor suffered a lat strain during his offseason workouts and will not be ready for the start of camp. It’s not clear if he’ll need to begin the regular season on the injured list. The righty turned in a 3.72 ERA while striking out nearly 31% of opposing hitters across 21 appearances as a rookie.
I want more bullpen, Jerry. Just leave the bats alone for now.
This team as it sits today isn’t going anywhere other than home at the end of the season! Rodriguez didn’t turn out to be the superstar everybody was hoping for and the pen, bench and hitting aren’t playoff caliber!
Rodriguez is only 24 and you are writing him off?
Julio hasn’t even hit his prime years and his “worst” year was still a 4 WAR season. Slow your roll.
What bats?
Bullpen? If we don’t pick up a bat or two, it won’t matter how good our pitching is
We can’t make the playoffs when we strike out this much and do nothing on the road
I know people say our WRC+ was great which means our offense is great but that’s because everyone sucks in the Seattle air (and no one talks about our WRC+ on the road etc etc advanced stats)
At this point it’s literally insanity we do the same thing expecting different results
He’s gone from Trader Jerry to Neutered Jerry in less than a year. It has to be killing him not to even be able to pickup the phone this offseason, let alone make one single trade to try and improve the club.
At the rate it’s going, the only news coming from the Mariners will be to start using They/Them pronouns when addressing the front office.
why do people bring up politics on a sports website where most people go to get away from that crap?
Can we please just stick to baseball?
Someone’s a little sensi-poo.
nope. just tired of politics popping up all over the damn place. I’m here for baseball, not your political viewpoints. Play ball.
I believe you dropped your shoehorn. Here you go.
Team wRC+ was 104 at home (#11), 103 on the road (#13). Offense was a little above average in most categories on the road, problem is the pitching was a lot worse away from home, particularly the bullpen, Improving the pen (some of which should happen naturally if Brash/Santos return to health) is at least as important as better road hitting.
Yes, we need to take the millions we have left and go get Robertson, Raley, or Finnegan. Use the newcomer to bridge to Munoz until Santos and Brash are good to go, then once July rolls around, that’s a deep pen.
Sad Tormented, we need to bring back Tommy LaStella, Kolten Wong, Keon Wong, Jeff Cirillo, Chone Figgins, Corey Hart, Jack Cust, Russel Branyon, Smoaky, Dustin Ackley, and Ryan Langerhans. Kick the tires. Throw them out there. I was at the second game in M’s history in 1977. Long time fan, now delirious.
Jeff cirillo and chone figgins make my head hurt
Why was Keon Wong, a minor league signee who never got called up to the M’s, included on that list? Weird.
Bucky Jacobsen, Rich Aurilia, Scott Spezio…
Definitely not happy watching the M’s sit on their hands this offseason after two straight years of finishing one game out of the playoffs, but I do agree with him that it’s a good ballclub. The question is whether it’s good enough and I don’t have faith that it is at this point.
Julio is going to have to take a big leap toward consistency, Arozarena is going to have to get comfortable playing here, JP is going to have to be at least a big league average player, etc. There’s a lot of ifs.
I understand the frustration from M’s fans. But with that rotation I’d be pretty pleased. In the end pitching wins games and that’s one of most formidable rotations out there.
But they don’t win playoff games if you can’t get in.
I think the last two years have shown that pitching does indeed win games, but it still hasn’t been enough to make the playoffs for two straight seasons. If the M’s could even just have average run output this season, I have no doubt they’re a playoff team.
Weird, I would think the last 2 years has shown that pitching is not good enough without a proper offense.
I hear you, and that would make perfectly logical sense in most cases.
However, many of us who have been fans since before the 20 year drought remember watching true pitching greatness every five days while simultaneously watching us STILL find ways to lose most of those games by scoring only 1-2 runs—at best.
Not only are Ms fans keenly aware of how a team can absolutely squander entire careers worth of excellent pitching, we then get the privilege of (likely) watching them miss out on the HOF because of it.
But you still need to be able to score runs, no matter how great the pitching staff is.
They had more total Rs than 12 other teams. And they were less than 10 behind 4 others. 2 they were within 20 of. With that pitching that’s enough Rs to win games. Now it would be more comfortable to be winning by a wider margin, but as it stands they still have a competitive team.
But it wasn’t enough. We finished 1 GB of the playoffs. Offense needs to improve and the pen does, too. The pitching is great and wins lots of games, just not enough on its own.
Runs win games. Doesn’t matter how good your pitching is, if you don’t score more runs than your pitchers give up, you don’t win. With the M’s offense (I use that term loosely), they too often don’t score enough runs. The pitching staff is being wasted. The M’s are one dimensional.
This is neither here nor there but have there been any updates on Verdugo’s market?
The Astros are in dire need of a LH bat. I’m resigned to the fact that Verdugo is the best of what’s available
I was reading stuff like people assuming Verdugo has limited options/appeal but is kind of a name and that someone like the A’s or the Pirates might make a “splash” by signing him to like 2 years/$25M or 3 years/$42M etc. or as little as like a 1 year/$8M prove it deal.
The thing I’ll give the Astros is that they’re a bit like the Braves, in that they hand out a lot of modest-length, modest-priced but still fair market value deals to journeymen/middle of the road players, such as that Josh Reddick 4 year/$52M deal, which by today’s standards would likely be like 4 years/$72M or so.
I don’t think they’d give Verdugo *that* much, but I could see 1 year/$15M w/ a $2.5M buyout on a $17.5M option or a straight up 2 years/$32.5M or something like that.
I can’t see Verdugo getting more than a 1 year deal after that horrible platform year. He was below average offensively, defensively, and on the basepaths.
Oh I agree, but when I see some of these deals for barely replacement level players, where plenty of guys get sizable commitments purely because they’ve finally hit free agency and earned the right to make that big life changing money, it’d surprise me if Verdugo would be the odd man out who doesn’t get anything decent from *someone*. And again, something “decent” from *someone* could mean as little as 1 year/$8M or maybe 2 years/$25M and not like 3 years/$42M or 4 years/$72M or something like that.
Grichuk
Classic disconnect on player valuations. Mariners overvalue their pitching in a pitcher’s park an undervalue hitters they could acquire. Hence no trades.
They should be buying players, not trading pitchers.
Preach
The rotation was actually quite good on the road; it was the relief corps that brought down the staff ERA away from T-Mo. I don’t know what the final tally was, but with 3 weeks left in the season, the rotation was 8th or 9th in road ERA, but the pen was 20th.
Ma2: When we acquired Yimi Garcia at last yrs deadline I thought for sure he and a healthy Santos would help us turnaround a very poor record in 1 Run games. Did that work out? I’ve been up in the ISS for 6 months …..no!?
The cautionary tale of injuries to “high leverage RPers” Yimi Garcia, Gregory Santos and Matt Brash in 2024 is a story that could repeat itself again this year. I do wish the team would add 1 more RPer from FA. David Robertson would do nicely thanks.
At this point, I would absolutely rather spend $5M or whatever on a solid relief pitcher than another 1 WAR position player like Solano. Robertson, Raley, Finnegan would all do for me. I think there’s greater impact potential there than most of the $5M or less position player options remaining in FA.
Completely agree! I’ve been enviously watching the Relief Pitcher Abacus slide from FA to new teams all Offseason
I’m going “well, there’s one more RP bead the Ownership Group let slide away!” Bloody Owners. Tut! Nothing changes with those numpties. They’ve had a low risk minimum spend mindset since the day I emigrated to Seattle. During the teams ‘glory years’ – I believe it was that very same financial approach (combined with Owners meddling into team building,) is what drove Lou Piniella out of town.
Sell the team Stanton!
Remember when we said the same thing about Nintendo and then rejoiced when Stanton took over? Careful what you wish for.
I actually didn’t rejoice. If a new owner bought and moved the team, I’d still follow it, as long as they were committed to spending some, and winning…the city can then turn T Mobile into a huge homeless encampment with a retractable roof.
This team won’t move. There is no reason or profit in moving the team. They have an awesome field great fans and would cost a fortune to move. I also do not believe the commissioner is as crooked as Stern was to get together with his buddy and steal the Sonics.
I miss the Sonics.
You must not really follow team. When Nintendo owned a majority of the team Stanton was in charge. The only thing that changed is he has more control now. The team needs to be sold to one owner or at least the majority guy should be willing to spend money like the Yankees or angels owner. If that happens maybe changes could be made to make the stadium more hitter friendly and can go after players to field a winning team. If certain trades of the past hadn’t happened we would have at least one world series win. We were so close once. But trading a catcher and pitcher to the red Sox if we kept them wow the team could have had for minimum five years. Both are in hall of fame and player we got washed out of league quickly.
Wrong. Stanton was appointed CEO after Nintendo sold their majority stake. There was 17 minor owners under Nintendo. Don’t think Stanton was running the show.
He’s been gaslighting the fans for 10 years people need to wake up to what this group is all about it’s not to make money it’s to keep saying next year next year and do promotions to get families to come out. They are all about making money we need to STOP enabling then we are a bunch of suckers…
This is not a World Series contender, and that’s what fans were promised. Lying ownership has compelled Dipoto, Hollander, and now Dan Wilson to lie as well (“I know there’s a lot of talk about the batter’s eye, but it’s been years since I stood at the plate.” Dan, that’s just BS.). Here’s your potential opening day batting order.
RF Robles
CF Rodriguez
LF Arozarena
C Raleigh
1B Raley (or Solano)
3B Polanco
DH Haniger
2B Bliss
SS Crawford
Bench: Moore, Solano (or Raley), Garver, Canzone (or Rivas or Shenton or whoever surprises at ST). Too many guys will have to have career years for anything better than 86-76. And PS: there is absolutely no depth behind these studly hitters. So… No injuries permitted.
These owners should be ashamed of themselves, but they’re completely devoid of believing that winning means more to Seattle than lining their pockets with high profits. Somewhere in their clouded 1% minds, they honestly believe they’re heroes. And that’s the saddest art of all.
Agree with you but Haniger won’t be the DH or in the lineup most days. It’ll be garver or solano/raley most days as it stands now.
Can’t be Garver very much because he’s the only backup catcher. And the whole purpose of Solano is to be a LH/RH platoon partner at 1B and occasional 3B. That leaves Haniger, as lousy as that sounds. (Actually, none of them are even average choices at DH. They might choose to pick up JD Martinez and solve that problem for not a lot of money for one year.)
Theyre going to carry 3 catchers if Garver is hitting and not use him at catcher much
Even worse.
I mean if garver is hitting like 2023 it would be great. If they get 2023 garver polanco and 2022 JP, they’ll be solid offensively this season
A lot of ifs and hopes though
Again, I’m happy that Dipoto hasn’t traded our pitchers or prospects, because he’s typically very irresponsible. So it’s been a breath of relief so far, though I don’t trust Dipoto one bit.
Just trust him 54 percent of the time. We all win that way…
Lolololololololololololololololololol
“Jerry Dipoto gaslights fanbase.”
Fixed it.
Jerry Dipoto’s offseason trading strategy is so quiet, even a mime in a silent retreat would say, ‘Dude, take some notes!’ Guess ‘Trader Jerry’ is now practicing Zen instead of deal-making—maybe he’s waiting for his inner unicorn to appear on the trade block.
Is a payroll in the 150 million range really not doable for the Mariners? Unless it’s already in that range, then I apologize to Mariners fans.
Isnt that roughly where they stand as things sit? 150m or so? They need to be at 180 to 200 million, or more, to really add
We need more DFA guys to fill in the infield positions, come on Jerry get on the ball.
I can see this team making the playoffs this year… I can also see them being out of it by the middle of May and Dipoto being fired by June. We shall see.
As long as they are making money Dipoto will have the job as long as he wants it…
I don’t think so. Fans are tiring of Dipoto’s act. Once the product is stale and revenue dips, Stanton will make Jerry the fall guy for his poorly run franchise and he’ll hire someone new to get the fanbase excited again. It’s not like Dipoto does anything uniquely good. One playoff in a decade should be fairly easy to replicate for the next guy.
Dipoto should’ve been fired right after Servais was.
The Tigers could take on all of Hanigers’ contract.
Just cost you one measley prospect…..
Maybe you get a little something something back in retrurn…..
I expected this actually a team like the Tigers wanting to add as they start to exit a rebuild could keep prospect depth up this way and seems like a modern way to add. I dount it takes someone like Cole Young or Colt Emerson but would need to be a decent prospect. The issue with prospect for mlb swaps is even the teams looking for prospects are trying to keep and acquire mlb talent not give it away. Only a couple teams would be willing to do that and they would be able to command more due to that. Maybe the Mariners end up winning with this strategy, but getting rid of dead contracts would have helped them add without blowing up payroll, so they don’t seem to want to do either strategy. There’s a chance this works but good chance it fails.
I looked at it as a win-win-win proposition. Both teams win, the players win.
There are still available lots of FAs to be had out there. The money would be useful. At the very least, it’s pure profit.
M’s actually DID drastically upgrade this offense…they just didn’t do it this offseason! They did it last year in-season!
They made a splash trade for Randy Arozarena, who’s hitting in the middle of the order, and then we got an absolute steal nabbing Victor Robles, who is now a spark-plug at the very top of the order(knocking JP to become the best 9-hole hitter in baseball…if/when healthy!)
We also got Cole, Colt, Harry and Laz nearing an impact on this lineup in the next season or two! No need to mortgage the future off(if you really believe in these guys) for a marginal one-year upgrade! Now, if some team wants to blow our socks off with an offer we can’t refuse, so be it! 🙂 Still GO M’s!!!
Well I guess the good news is that Jerry will be able to trade Castillo, and his outrageously expensive contract, in Mariners terms, of course for prospects that don’t cost much at the trade deadline because the Mariners will be 12+ games back… Because they didn’t UPGRADE THE OFFENSE!
It’s just about time for the annual post from Fred Park declaring it a wonderful offseason and his belief that the team is looking like the front runners in the pennant race.
Maybe Fred’s dead…
John Stanton is laughing all the way to the bank.
Lifelong Mariners fans are switching team allegiances in disgust.
If they’re lifelong Mariners fans, they’d be used to the heartbreak and wouldn’t “leave in disgust” like fair weather fans do. When did our fanbase turn into entitled whiners?
After 48 years putting up with the old same crap different season routine.
But you do you. Ownership appreciates your support. John Stanton has his eyes on a brand new mega yacht.
After following this team through its history and having experienced minimal winning, it’s not too much to expect they field a decent team that can win. That’s not entitlement, that’s being realistic.
seattletimes.com/sports/mariners/defending-the-dis…
sports.yahoo.com/mlb-offseason-grades-grading-ever…
lookoutlanding.com/2025/2/3/24358006/pecota-projec…
clutchpoints.com/mariners-news-ken-rosenthal-seatt…
sodomojo.com/polarizing-athletic-writer-absolutely…
si.com/mlb/mariners/news/jeff-passan-of-espn-rips-…
forbes.com/sites/maurybrown/2025/01/20/mariners-fa…
This team disgusts me…