Mariners Enter Draft Day Facing A Problem Fans Will Want Explained

With the MLB Draft rapidly approaching, the Seattle Mariners aim to navigate financial constraints creatively to bolster their roster while continuing their legacy of strategic player development and acquisition.

The MLB Draft opens Saturday morning in Philadelphia, and the Mariners enter it with a familiar kind of pressure: make the most of every pick, because this organization lives and dies by the draft.

That’s not just a slogan in Seattle. The Mariners have built around it, calling themselves a “draft, develop and trade” club, and the list of homegrown names tells the story: Logan Gilbert, George Kirby, Emerson Hancock, Bryan Woo, Cal Raleigh, Cole Young, and Colt Emerson all came through the draft. The same pipeline has also helped Seattle land talent such as Luis Castillo, Josh Naylor and Brendan Donovan in recent years.

This year’s draft is a two-day event, with rounds 1-4 set for Saturday and rounds 5-20 on Sunday. The first day begins at 10 a.m.

PT on Saturday, followed by an 8:30 a.m. PT start on Sunday.

The full draft runs 20 rounds.

Seattle will make four picks on Day 1, selecting at No. 24, No.

65, No. 101 and No. 129.

The club’s most recent first-round selection was Kade Anderson, SP (LSU).

There is one important wrinkle for the Mariners: they traded away a competitive balance pick to the St. Louis Cardinals in the deal that brought back Brendan Donovan. That means they do not have the extra pick or the extra money that comes with it.

That matters because of how the bonus pool works. Every pick in the top 10 rounds carries a slot value, and teams have to stay within their overall allotment.

A club can go heavy on one pick, but that means less money for the rest of the class. In other words, the draft is as much about financial juggling as it is about talent evaluation.

Seattle’s pool is tighter for a couple of reasons. The Mariners are picking late, and late picks come with lower slot values. On top of that, the loss of the Comp B pick in the Donovan trade took away both a selection and the money attached to it.

Joe Doyle of Overslot Baseball laid out the challenge on a recent “Refuse to Lose Territory” podcast.

"The Major League Baseball Draft is not like the NBA Draft. It's not like the NFL Draft. You don't just take the best player available because they're hard-slotted into a certain amount of money.

There are players with high school eligibility, with commitments to LSU and Tennessee, that are tough to draft and sign away from those college commitments because they can get more money in college, and they can get more money in the 2029 Draft.

So I think without a Competitive Balance B pick, Seattle's probably going to have to do one of two things.

One, they can either play it straight up. They can just draft exclusively college players because college players lack the leverage to negotiate a way back to school in 2027.

Or they can do what they did in 2024, and that is draft a player from the college ranks in the first round and then spend big on a player in the second round, a Ryan Sloan type.

But what that does is it means you have to take money that was applied to the third-round pick and the fourth-round pick and apply it to that massive overpay in the second round. So you're punting two of your later picks.

But we'll see what Seattle ends up doing. It's certainly the least amount of buying power and spending power they've had in recent years.

I think they're going to be creative like they always are."

The latest “Refuse to Lose Territory” podcast also digs further into where the Mariners stand right now, including trade possibilities with ESPN MLB Insider Buster Olney.

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