Dan Wilson’s grip on the Mariners’ dugout is starting to look awfully shaky, and the question now is less about whether Seattle will eventually need a new manager than about when the organization decides to make the move.
Three managers have already been fired this season, and Wilson has drifted into that same uncomfortable conversation. He wasn’t exactly hailed as a tactical mastermind when he took over for Seattle, but his in-game decisions have become harder and harder to defend.
Even so, the Mariners may be inclined to wait, at least for now. Jerry Dipoto has reason to believe the club still has time to climb out of its 42-43 start once injuries clear up and Cal Raleigh starts producing like he did in 2025.
If the Mariners do decide to move on from Wilson before the year is over, the likeliest path may be the one they already took once before: look inside the organization. That’s how Wilson got the job after Scott Servais was fired in 2024, when Wilson was serving as a special assignment coordinator.
Manny Acta would be the most natural in-house option. The bench coach has been in the Mariners’ organization since 2015 and worked under Servais before Wilson took over.
He has six years of managerial experience, plenty of respect in the clubhouse, and a clear philosophy about blending analytics with feel. That stands in contrast to Wilson, whose decisions too often leave people scratching their heads.
Jake McKinley is another name to keep in the mix, even if he feels more like a long shot. He only joined Seattle last December, but his background makes him interesting.
McKinley came in after a successful stint as head coach at Nevada, and his hiring reflected the growing overlap between college programs and major league organizations. Before Nevada, he also had firsthand experience with the Milwaukee Brewers.
He’s already made a strong impression in Seattle on both veteran players and younger ones.
There are other internal possibilities, too, including Edgar Martinez, Trent Blank, Eric Young Jr., Carlos Cardoza and Austin Nola.
If the Mariners wait until the offseason, the list opens up considerably. At that point, they could look beyond the organization and sell a candidate on the appeal of taking over an established contender with a core of stars and an elite pitching pipeline.
Alex Cora would sit near the top of that market. He was fired by the Boston Red Sox in April, which immediately put him in the conversation as the best available manager.
Cora owns a .534 winning percentage and a World Series title from 2018. He’s also got a family tie to Seattle, since his brother Joey was an All-Star for the Mariners in the late 1990s.
Grady Sizemore is another intriguing name. The Minnesota Twins first base coach grew up in Everett, starred at Cascade High School, and once had a scholarship to play quarterback at the University of Washington.
His coaching and front-office path has included stops with the Arizona Diamondbacks, Chicago White Sox and Twins, and he also got a 45-game audition as a manager when the White Sox fired Pedro Grifol in 2024. Austin Martin described Sizemore’s style as "quiet until he needs to be vocal."
Beyond those names, the field gets crowded fast. If Seattle wanted a manager with experience and a stronger track record, Rocco Baldelli, David Ross and Brandon Hyde would be part of the discussion.
There are also younger or less established candidates like George Lombard, Omar López, Walter McKinven and Morgan Ensberg. And while Albert Pujols, Carlos Beltrán and Yadier Molina are out there as well, they do not appear to be realistic Mariners options.
For now, though, the pressure stays on Wilson. Seattle has seen enough to know what he brings, and enough to wonder whether that’s good enough.
In Other News...
Mariners Add Buddy Kennedy As Another Infield Depth Debate Begins
The Mariners kept adding to their infield options Monday by bringing in Buddy Kennedy, a move that fits the kind of small, practical depth shopping Seattle has been doing as the season wears on. Kennedy arrives from the Giants for cash considerations after spending most of the year at Triple-A Sacramento, and he gives the organization another experienced minor league bat to plug into the system without costing much to acquire.
Kennedy is expected to report to Tacoma, where he can stay ready if Seattle needs an extra body at third or second base. His major league rsum is still thin, with just 8 plate appearances in 7 games this season and no hits to show for them, but the Mariners are clearly treating him as a viable fallback while the bigger infield picture continues to sort itself out, including the possibility of covering for Patrick Wisdom if the need arises. [Read more 🡒]
Mariners May Be Eyeing A Riskier Twins Pivot For Right-Handed Thump
As the trade deadline creeps closer, the Mariners search for offense is starting to look a little broader than the obvious names. Minnesota keeps popping up as a possible source, with Royce Lewis emerging as one alternative to Byron Buxton and Ryan Jeffers also mentioned as a right-handed bat who could help balance Seattles lineup. Lewis has shown some life since coming back from the minors, but the attraction is tied as much to his upside as to the frustration that has followed him for much of his career.
The risk is baked into both Twins options, which is why this feels more like a front-office debate than a clean fit. Lewis comes with the kind of injury history and inconsistency that can make any club hesitate, while Jeffers would need to prove he is healthy enough and worth the at-bats in a crowded mix. Even so, Seattle has the kind of payroll flexibility to chase a bat if it decides the upside is worth the gamble, and that is what makes this a name to keep on the radar. [Read more 🡒]
