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Seattle Mariners

Category:Baseball teams\nCategory:Seattle, WA\n The Seattle Mariners are a Major League Baseball team based in Seattle, Washington. They are in the Western Division of the American League.
Founded: 1977 (American League expansion)\n:Home ballpark: Safeco Field (1999-present), Kingdome (1977-1999).\n:Uniform colors: Navy Blue, Emerald Green, Silver\n:Logo design: A baseball on an 8-pointed compass.\n:Wild Card titles won (1): 2000\n:Division titles won (3): 2001, 1997, 1995\n:League pennants won (0): none\n:World Series championships won (0): none

Table of contents
1 Franchise history
2 Players of note
3 Managers
4 Broadcasters
5 External links

Franchise history

The Mariners were added to the American League in 1977, and were for many years perennial non-achievers. Despite having stars such as Alvin Davis and Gaylord Perry, the Mariners did not have a winning record until 1991. By the mid 1990s, under manager Lou Piniella, the Mariners added a core of strong players built around center-fielder Ken Griffey, Jr, pitcher Randy Johnson and designated hitter Edgar Martinez. They won their first division title in 1995, having trailed the California Angels by 13 games in mid-August. Their dramatic championship run that year was halted in the ALCS by the Cleveland Indians. The Mariners won the division title again in 1997. In 2001, despite the loss of superstar shortstop Alex Rodriguez, the addition of Japanese sensation Ichiro Suzuki helped the Mariners to have one of the most successful regular seasons on record, leading the major leagues in winning percentage from start to finish, easily winning the American League West championship, setting a new American League record for most wins in a single season (116), and matching the major league record for single season wins set by the Chicago Cubs in 1906. They 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. At the end of the 2002 season, manager Lou Pinella left the Mariners to manage the Tampa Bay Devil Rays over the management policy of non-aggressive hiring. The Mariners signed Bob Melvin to be their new manager. Despite an excellent start to the 2003 season, the Mariners failed to make the playoffs. 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. Despite this fact, many experts figured the Mariners would be a contending team, but one that would not win the World Series. 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 behind the first-place Texas Rangers.

Players of note

\n

Baseball Hall of Famers

\n*
Gaylord Perry

Current stars

\n*Bret Boone (
second baseman)\n*Eddie Guardado (closer)\n*Edgar Martinez (designated hitter)\n*Jamie Moyer (starting pitcher)\n*Ichiro Suzuki (right fielder)\n*Dan Wilson (catcher)

Not to be forgotten

\n*Chris Bosio (retired)\n*
Jay Buhner (retired)\n*Mike Cameron (signed with New York Mets)\n*Alvin Davis (retired)\n*Freddy Garcia (traded to Chicago White Sox)\n*Ken Griffey, Jr (traded to Cincinnati Reds)\n*Randy Johnson (AL Cy Young Award 1995) (traded to Houston Astros, now with Arizona Diamondbacks)\n*Tino Martinez (traded to New York Yankees, now with Tampa Bay Devil Rays)\n*Jeff Nelson (traded to New York Yankees, now with Texas Rangers)\n*John Olerud (designated for assignment)\n*Ken Phelps (retired)\n*Harold Reynolds (retired, now with ESPN)\n*Alex Rodriguez (signed with the Texas Rangers, now with New York Yankees)\n*Kazuhiro Sasaki (returned to Japan)

Managers

\n*
Darrell Johnson (1977-1980, 229-362)\n*Maury Wills (1980-1981, 26-56)\n*Rene Lachemann (1981-1983, 140-180)\n*Del Crandell (1983-1984 93-131)\n*Chuck Cottier (1984-1986, 98-119)\n*Marty Martinez (1986, 0-1 - Interim manager)\n*Dick Williams (1986-1988, 159-192)\n*Jim Snyder (1988, 45-60)\n*Jim Lefebvre (1989-1991, 233-253)\n*Bill Plummer (1992, 64-98)\n*Lou Piniella (1993-2002, 840-711)\n*Bob Melvin (2003-present, 125-123 at 2004 All-Star Break)

Broadcasters

\n*Dave Niehaus (1977-present)\n*Ron Fairly\n*Rick Rizz\n*Jay Buhner

External links

\n*
Seattle Mariners official web site\n

"A scholar who cherishes the love of comfort is not fit to be deemed a scholar." - Lao-Tzu (570?-490? BC)