The Seattle Mariners are looking for help on the right side of the plate, and with the trade deadline drawing closer, ESPN’s Jeff Passan has pointed them toward two names from the AL East.
In a Thursday piece, Passan identified Orioles outfielder Taylor Ward as Seattle’s “best match” and Red Sox first baseman Willson Contreras as the “dream match.”
Ward, who used to play for the Angels, has given Baltimore steady production even as the club has fallen short of expectations. Passan made the case that his profile fits what the Mariners need right now.
"Ward is the best of the likely accessible bunch, and he is a completely different player than the 36-homer slugger last year. Only Mike Trout, Nick Kurtz and James Wood have higher walk rates than Ward's 16.5%," Passan writes. "With Rob Refsnyder's failure to serve as the right side of a platoon and neither Victor Robles nor Buddy Kennedy the answer, Ward's on-base ability and relative lack of strikeouts would be an improvement."
Contreras brings a different kind of appeal. He’s in the middle of a career year at the plate, and Passan called him the most impactful possible addition for Seattle. The problem is fit.
"The most meaningful upgrade would come from Contreras, who has been one of the 10 best hitters in baseball this season," Passan writes. "At the same time, the Mariners taking an already-crowded first-base/DH situation and adding Contreras would put pressure aplenty on manager Dan Wilson to navigate playing time and egos. Compound that with Contreras' ability to block any trade and this is the sort of dream that will be tricky to manifest in reality."
Seattle came within a hair of reaching its first World Series last season, and the front office now has a clear month ahead to try to push the roster over the top. An upgrade feels necessary if the Mariners want to finish the job this year.
In Other News...
Mariners May Be Near A Pitching Move Fans Never Saw Coming
The Mariners are sorting through a bullpen puzzle as the All-Star break approaches, and Bryan Woo has unexpectedly entered the conversation. Seattle has a stretch of time between his starts, and manager Dan Wilson said the club is looking at every way to manage the pitching staff while keeping the rotation and relief corps in balance.
What makes this especially interesting is the roster squeeze around the bullpen, where returning relievers and possible additions could force a move sooner rather than later. Luis Castillo has been seen as the likeliest starter to shift into relief, but Seattle is still weighing all of its options as it tries to create room and keep the staff flexible for the weeks ahead. [Read more 🡒]
Jerry Dipoto May Be Setting Up An Unusual Mariners Deadline Move
Jerry Dipoto is signaling that this deadline may not follow the usual seller-and-buyer script, with the Mariners executive suggesting more contender-to-contender deals could emerge because so many teams in the race have real needs to fill. For Seattle, the list is familiar: a left-handed bat and bullpen help remain priorities, and especially a high-leverage reliever if the market lines up right.
The wrinkle is that the Mariners also have pieces other contenders want, particularly starting pitching depth and left-handed bats, which could make them both shoppers and suppliers in the same week. ESPNs Jeff Passan said those kinds of deals are complicated to build, and he pointed to the possibility of Seattle using its prospect capital in the right kind of swap, a setup that would fit the kind of deadline move Dipoto has been willing to chase before. [Read more 🡒]
