Mariners Bullpen Pressure Just Put One Deadline Arm In Focus

Could Huascar Brazobn be the secret weapon the Mariners need to bolster their bullpen and capture the AL West title?

The Seattle Mariners keep getting linked to the idea of building a “super 'pen” as they chase a second straight AL West title, and one of the more intriguing names in that conversation is not the flashiest one on the board.

It’s Huascar Brazobán.

For now, he belongs to the New York Mets, a team that has been described here as bad - the kind of bad that includes a fired manager one day and an embarrassing little league home run the next. A full sell-off may be the only route that matters for them now, and while the Mets don’t have a ton to shop, their bullpen does have some pieces worth watching. Adam Jude of The Seattle Times also mentioned Luke Weaver, an old friend who has posted a 1.95 ERA in 35 appearances.

Brazobán, though, is the name that deserves a closer look. He doesn’t even show up in ESPN’s top 100 for the August 3 trade deadline, which fits his profile as a 36-year-old who was barely on the radar before 2026. But the numbers he’s putting up now are hard to brush aside: a 3.00 ERA and a 1.070 WHIP that look a lot more real when you dig into the underlying data.

On Sunday morning, Brazobán sat No. 4 on the xERA leaderboard for relief pitchers at 2.20. His arsenal is built around a sinker and a changeup, and both pitches are holding hitters to averages in the .100s. The sinker is averaging 96.0 mph, while the changeup comes in at 90.6 mph with better-than-average vertical and horizontal movement.

The results have followed the stuff. Right-handers are managing only a .434 OPS against him, and left-handers are at .573 OPS. Both sides are hitting under the Mendoza line.

He also gives a bullpen something the Mariners don’t have much of right now: length. Brazobán has gone more than three outs in 13 of his 36 appearances, while no Seattle reliever has done that more than seven times.

There’s a reason his name isn’t getting the same buzz as some of the bigger deadline targets. He’s only a second-year arbitration-eligible player for 2027, and his club control runs through 2029, which gives the Mets plenty of reason to think carefully before moving him. Baseball Trade Values pegs his surplus value at $2.5 million, though that may be too low for a reliever performing at this level.

And that’s the catch for Seattle: elite bullpen arms usually come with a price. But the Mariners have the prospect capital to chase almost anyone they want, and if they’re serious about the World Series path they’re trying to build, the cleaner move may be the best one.

If the goal is a true “super 'pen,” Brazobán belongs near the top of the list.

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The fit is where the debate starts to get messy. Second base is already occupied by Cole Young, while designated hitter has effectively been tied to Dominic Canzone, so Polanco would arrive with no obvious lane and plenty of questions attached to his role. Add in the fact that he is in Year 1 of a two-year, $40 million deal and still owed $29.9 million, and it is clear why this idea has enough upside to intrigue the front office but enough risk to split the fanbase. [Read more 🡒]