ST. PETERSBURG -- Randy Arozarena is back at Tropicana Field, and the setting figures to bring plenty of emotion with it.
The Mariners outfielder played Friday at the ballpark for the first time since Tampa Bay sent him to Seattle in July 2024. Before the series opener, Arozarena made it clear the return meant something to him.
“I’m very happy to come in here,” Arozarena said via Mariners interpreter Freddy Lllanos prior to Friday’s series opener. “This building gave me a lot.
I know I have a lot of fans here. There’s a lot of good memories that come by when I step on this field.”
The Rays are set to spend Saturday and Sunday honoring Evan Longoria, the greatest player in franchise history. But Arozarena’s return added another familiar face to the weekend at the Trop, one who built a huge part of his career in Tampa Bay.
No one hit more home runs inside Tropicana Field over the previous four seasons than Arozarena, who launched 44 there. He arrived as a rookie in 2020 and immediately became a centerpiece of one of the most memorable stretches in Rays history, including an ALCS MVP run that helped Tampa Bay win its first pennant since 2008.
“Randy did a lot of special things in this building, and he's always a joy to see,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “Some of our best seasons, best runs, he was right in the middle of it.”
Arozarena’s breakout October was followed by the 2021 AL Rookie of the Year Award. He reached his first All-Star Game in 2023, the same year “Randy Land” opened in the left-field seats behind his usual spot. Arozarena said he remembers sitting with those fans on the day he was traded.
Now he’s back in a different uniform, but the feelings haven’t changed.
“I know it’s going to be emotional,” he said. “I love these fans. They gave me a lot.”
The 31-year-old was named an All-Star for the third time last week. Through 86 games with Seattle this season, he has 10 homers, 19 stolen bases and a .287/.380/.455 slash line.
His Tampa Bay run was loaded with production, too: from 2020-24 with the Rays, Arozarena put up 85 homers, 94 steals and a .786 OPS after the club acquired him from St. Louis ahead of the 2020 campaign.
“Very grateful for this organization,” Arozarena said. “The Rays organization, they gave me that opportunity to just grow, blossom into the player I was.”
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