logo
Hall of Famer Ichiro Suzuki joins Mariners legends with No. 51 retirement

Hall of Famer Ichiro Suzuki joins Mariners legends with No. 51 retirement

SEATTLE (AP) — The Seattle Mariners retired the iconic No. 51 on Saturday, honoring Ichiro Suzuki in a pregame ceremony at T-Mobile Park before facing the Tampa Bay Rays.
'What's up, Seattle!' Suzuki screamed. 'I'm so grateful to be here today, to receive this highest honor.'
The recent Hall of Fame inductee becomes just the third Mariners player to have his number retired by the franchise, joining legends Ken Griffey Jr. (No. 24) and Edgar Martinez (No. 11).
'Congratulations on being inducted into the Hall of Fame and having your number retired,' Griffey said in a video tribute. 'It's about damn time. I mean, what took you so long? I've been there for five years.'
Suzuki made history as the first Japanese-born player inducted into the Hall of Fame, earning a near-unanimous 99.7% of the vote from the Baseball Writers' Association of America.
After spending eight seasons in Nippon Professional Baseball, Suzuki made his major league debut at the age of 27. In his rookie season in 2001, he captured both the American League Rookie of the Year and Most Valuable Player awards, becoming just the second player ever to do so in the same season, joining Fred Lynn.
Over a 19-year MLB career, Suzuki was a 10-time All-Star, 10-time Gold Glove winner, two-time AL batting champion, and three-time Silver Slugger. He set the single-season hits record with 262 in 2004, which still stands today. Across NPB and MLB, he amassed 4,367 hits, including 3,089 in MLB.
Before Suzuki's arrival, Hall of Famer Randy Johnson also donned No. 51 for nine seasons in Seattle.
Johnson threw the franchise's first no-hitter in 1990 and won the Mariners' first Cy Young Award in 1995. After departing Seattle in 1998, The Big Unit added four more Cy Youngs and a World Series title with the Arizona Diamondbacks.
'For nine years, that was the only number I had in Japan,' Suzuki said. '(No.) 51 was my identity. But I knew that number already had a rich history here.'
But Seattle won't forget Johnson's legacy. The club announced that in 2026 they will also retire Johnson's No. 51, a unique and rare honor shared by two icons in the Pacific Northwest.
'I'm grateful to Randy for attending my ceremony today,' Suzuki said. 'It will be a great honor to attend his next season.'
After brief stints with the New York Yankees (2012–14) and Miami Marlins (2015–17), Suzuki returned to Seattle in 2018 and officially retired in 2019 following a two-game series in Tokyo.
As Suzuki made his way in from center field, chants of 'Ich-i-ro! Ich-i-ro!' echoed throughout a sold-out crowd. He was awaited by former teammates and Mariners Hall of Fame members Johnson, Griffey, Jay Buhner, Alvin Davis, Felix Hernandez, Edgar Martinez and Dan Wilson.
'I'm also damn proud to be a Seattle Mariner,' Suzuki said, referencing Griffey's 2016 Hall of Fame induction speech.
Thursdays
Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter.
Chairman John Stanton announced that the Mariners will place a statue of Suzuki at T-Mobile Park in 2026. He said it will feature his iconic batting stance pose.
Suzuki has remained a fixture with the Mariners, serving as a special assistant to Stanton. Suzuki is often seen in full uniform, working out with players during pregame routines in Seattle.
'Although I can no longer help you with a hit or laser beam throw, my will and desire is always there for you,' Suzuki said.
___
AP MLB: https://www.apnews.com/hub/MLB
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Orioles and Mariners meet with series tied 1-1
Orioles and Mariners meet with series tied 1-1

Winnipeg Free Press

time23 minutes ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Orioles and Mariners meet with series tied 1-1

Seattle Mariners (67-54, second in the AL West) vs. Baltimore Orioles (54-66, fifth in the AL East) Baltimore; Thursday, 1:05 p.m. EDT PITCHING PROBABLES: Mariners: Logan Evans (6-4, 4.96 ERA, 1.40 WHIP, 57 strikeouts); Orioles: Tomoyuki Sugano (9-5, 4.24 ERA, 1.31 WHIP, 80 strikeouts) BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Mariners -133, Orioles +111; over/under is 9 1/2 runs BOTTOM LINE: The Baltimore Orioles and Seattle Mariners play on Thursday with the winner claiming the three-game series. Baltimore is 54-66 overall and 29-30 in home games. The Orioles are seventh in the AL with 145 total home runs, averaging 1.2 per game. Seattle has a 30-29 record in road games and a 67-54 record overall. The Mariners have a 49-10 record in games when they have more hits than their opponents. The teams meet Thursday for the sixth time this season. The Orioles are ahead 4-1 in the season series. TOP PERFORMERS: Gunnar Henderson has 28 doubles, four triples and 14 home runs for the Orioles. Jordan Westburg is 9 for 38 with two home runs over the past 10 games. Cal Raleigh leads the Mariners with 61 extra base hits (16 doubles and 45 home runs). Julio Rodriguez is 14 for 41 with a double, a triple, four home runs and nine RBIs over the last 10 games. LAST 10 GAMES: Orioles: 4-6, .189 batting average, 4.14 ERA, outscored by 20 runs Mariners: 8-2, .220 batting average, 3.09 ERA, outscored opponents by 14 runs INJURIES: Orioles: Tyler O'Neill: 10-Day IL (wrist), Colton Cowser: 7-Day IL (head), Zach Eflin: 15-Day IL (back), Colin Selby: 15-Day IL (hamstring), Felix Bautista: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Maverick Handley: 10-Day IL (head), Scott Blewett: 15-Day IL (elbow), Jorge Mateo: 60-Day IL (elbow), Gary Sanchez: 10-Day IL (knee), Cody Poteet: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Grayson Rodriguez: 60-Day IL (elbow), Albert Suarez: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Tyler Wells: 60-Day IL (elbow), Kyle Bradish: 60-Day IL (elbow) Mariners: Trent Thornton: 15-Day IL (achilles), Luke Raley: 10-Day IL (back), Bryce Miller: 15-Day IL (elbow), Gregory Santos: 60-Day IL (knee), Victor Robles: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Ryan Bliss: 60-Day IL (biceps) ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Horton shines, Cubs hit two solo homers in 4-1 victory over Blue Jays
Horton shines, Cubs hit two solo homers in 4-1 victory over Blue Jays

CTV News

time3 hours ago

  • CTV News

Horton shines, Cubs hit two solo homers in 4-1 victory over Blue Jays

Chicago Cubs pitcher Cade Horton (22) works against the Blue Jays during the first inning of a Major League Baseball game in Toronto on Wednesday, August 13, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette TORONTO — Michael Busch and Matt Shaw hit solo homers and Chicago starter Cade Horton was dominant as the Cubs defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 4-1 on Wednesday night at Rogers Centre. Toronto starter Kevin Gausman gave up Busch's 23rd homer of the year in the third inning. Shaw followed two innings later with his 10th of the season. Horton (7-3), one of the top rookies in the National League this season, held the Blue Jays (70-51) without a hit until Andres Gimenez singled with one out in the sixth inning. The right-hander retired the first 10 Blue Jays in order before walking Bo Bichette in the fourth. Horton was pulled after issuing a two-out walk to Bichette in the sixth. Reliever Andrew Kittredge gave up an RBI double to Vladimir Guerrero Jr. before retiring Addison Barger on a flyout. Chicago catcher Miguel Amaya was taken off the field on a cart in the eighth inning. He appeared to injure his left leg as he lunged for first base while beating out an infield single. The Cubs (68-51) tacked on two insurance runs later in the frame. Daniel Palencia worked a clean ninth inning for his 16th save. Gausman (8-9) allowed three hits and two earned runs over seven innings. He had three strikeouts and one walk. Chicago outhit Toronto 6-2. A sellout crowd of 43,120 took in the game, which took two hours 27 minutes to play. KEY MOMENT Blue Jays third-base coach Carlos Febles held Bichette at third base on Guerrero's double into the left-field corner. A night earlier, Ty France was thrown out at the plate after testing Ian Happ's arm in left field. KEY STAT The lone Toronto run was charged to Horton, ending his scoreless streak at 28 2/3 innings. He had eight strikeouts. JOJO MOJO Shortstop JoJo Parker said he's settling in nicely at the Blue Jays' player development complex after being selected by Toronto with the eighth overall pick in the MLB Draft last month. 'I've never had a hitting coach. I've never had a fielding coach,' Parker said on a video call. 'So I'm really excited to get involved with the coaches here.' The 19-year-old Mississippi high schooler was MLB Pipeline's ninth-ranked prospect in the 2025 draft class. UP NEXT The teams will close out the three-game interleague series on Thursday afternoon. Right-hander Max Scherzer (2-2, 4.21 earned-run average) was tabbed to start for the Blue Jays against left-hander Matthew Boyd (11-5, 2.45). This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 13, 2025. Gregory Strong, The Canadian Press

Two homers aside, Gausman sharp but outduelled by red-hot Cubs rookie
Two homers aside, Gausman sharp but outduelled by red-hot Cubs rookie

National Post

time5 hours ago

  • National Post

Two homers aside, Gausman sharp but outduelled by red-hot Cubs rookie

Hits and runs were sparse on Wednesday night at the Rogers Centre, in what turned out to be a very good game between the Blue Jays and the visiting Chicago Cubs. Article content Kevin Gausman and rookie Cade Horton engaged in a taut pitchers duel that the Cubs would prevail in, 4-1, counter-punching after the Jays took the series opener of this highly anticipated three-game set on Tuesday. Article content Article content The Jays' bats were silenced by Horton and failed to manufacture any threat. When only two hits are produced, while an opponent hits two solo homers, the margin gets pretty thin. Article content In their final at-bats, against Cubs closer Daniel Palencia, the Jays went quietly into the night, deserving of their fate as their record dropped to 70-51. Article content The following are three takeaways on a night when the Jays outdrew their season-high attendance from Tuesday night by attracting 43,120, witnessed an ugly injury when Cubs catcher Miguel Amaya tumbled over first base and was carted off the field; and maintained their 4.5-game lead in the AL East as the second-place Red Sox also lost. Article content TWO MISTAKES COSTLY Article content There wasn't much to find fault with in Gausman's performance as he provided his team with a quality outing — seven complete innings of three-hit ball. Article content The only problem was that two of those three hits left the yard as Michael Busch and Matt Shaw tagged him for solo home runs in the third and fifth innings, respectively. He also managed just three strikeouts. Article content Article content The one thing about Gausman is he will battle and his outing against the Cubs was no exception. He pitched into the seventh inning in a 2-1 game and looked as locked in as he did in the first. Article content First time through the order and Horton was well-deserving of an A-plus rating. Article content He entered the night having pitched a Cubs rookie record 23.2 scoreless innings, a stretch in which he surrendered just 10 hits. Article content In facing the order for the first time, Horton struck out five, while inducing four groundouts as his compact windup and delivery may have been difficult to pick up at first view. Article content The Jays finally had their first base-runner when Horton walked Bichette with one out in the fourth inning. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. then tagged him for a long fly ball to left that was caught at the warning track. Horton then struck out Addison Barger for the third out. Article content Horton's no-hit bid ended on an 0-2 count in the sixth inning when Andres Gimenez sent a ball up the middle for a one-out single.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store