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Seattle supersonic: Cal Raleigh is blasting his way toward a historic offensive season
Seattle supersonic: Cal Raleigh is blasting his way toward a historic offensive season

New York Times

time18 hours ago

  • Business
  • New York Times

Seattle supersonic: Cal Raleigh is blasting his way toward a historic offensive season

When the owners of the Seattle Mariners gathered last week for a meeting, Jerry Dipoto, the president of baseball operations, shared some data on their recent investment. At the end of spring training, the Mariners committed $105 million to catcher Cal Raleigh, keeping him under team control through 2030. Raleigh is enjoying a breakout season, and Dipoto wanted to convey just how rare it is for a catcher to produce like this. Advertisement Raleigh leads the majors with 23 home runs, to go with career highs in batting average (.364), on-base percentage (.379) and slugging percentage (.637). He's a switch-hitter coming off a Platinum Glove season, guiding a strong pitching staff for the first-place team in the American League West. He has played in every game this season. Add it all up, and Fangraphs gives Raleigh 3.8 wins above replacement, with 104 games to go — an extraordinary 10.6-WAR pace. Dipoto, who probably has the deepest knowledge of baseball history of anyone working in the sport, dove into his laptop to see how many catchers have done that. The answer: Nobody. Even if Raleigh falls off the pace and finishes with 8 fWAR, he would still be in hallowed territory. Dipoto shared this chart with his bosses, listing the very few 8 fWAR seasons by catchers in MLB history: That's eight seasons from seven players — five Hall of Famers; McCann, who made seven All-Star teams; and Posey, who is not yet eligible for Cooperstown and has the single-season fWAR record as the National League's MVP in 2012. 'And Cal, right now, is on pace to do better than that,' Dipoto said by phone on Monday. 'And if you look at what he's starting to accumulate, he's pushing 20 (career) wins above replacement. He's playing his 28-year-old season, and he's gotten better with each passing year. I really could go on about it for a long time, but he deserves to be recognized with the best players in the game.' The reigning Most Valuable Players, Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees and Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers, have been predictably dominant this season. But what Raleigh is doing, especially at his position, has been similarly astounding. Raleigh was the first catcher in MLB history to reach 20 home runs before the end of May. Then he started June by homering again in Sunday's 2-1 victory over the Minnesota Twins. Before Raleigh, no catcher had pulled off all three of these performances in a single season: a two-homer game from the left side, a two-homer game from the right side and another game with a homer from both sides. 'I remember playing with Todd Hundley in New York the year that he hit the record number of homers for a catcher; he tied Roy Campanella with 41,' said Dipoto, a former Mets reliever, referring to a record now held by Salvador Perez. 'It was amazing, and when it was happening, we always referenced that Todd was an iron man because he caught all the time. Advertisement 'Mitch Garver has taken a number of reps as our backup catcher — it's not like he's invisible on the team — but Cal has played in every game, which is just a stunning thing, even for two months, for a modern-day major-league catcher. And he wants to. He's always wanted to. He thrives on being involved in it. Cal's desire to play, to contribute — he sees the game from every imaginable level.' Raleigh, a third-round draft pick from Florida State in 2018, has started 45 games behind the plate and 12 as the designated hitter. The one game he did not start, against the Athletics on May 6, he drove in the tying and go-ahead runs with a pinch hit in the ninth. It wasn't Raleigh's most famous ninth-inning, pinch-hit, game-winner against the A's. That was his walk-off homer on Sept. 30, 2022, which snapped Seattle's 21-year playoff drought. The Mariners went on to win their first-round playoff series in Toronto before losing their division series to the eventual champion Houston Astros. In 2023, when the better-funded Texas Rangers edged the Mariners for a playoff spot, Raleigh publicly questioned ownership's commitment, giving voice to widespread fan frustration. While Seattle has not splurged in free agency since then, Raleigh's six-year contract cemented his role as a franchise pillar. 'In our clubhouse over the years, Cal has been kind of a torch bearer for establishing a standard and demanding accountability,' Dipoto said. 'He's not a really loud guy at all. He is actually quite the opposite. He's kind of quiet, he observes and he's thoughtful. But when something needs to be said, he says it. He says it in the house, he says it outside the house, and he has really developed a good sense for how to be there as a leader for his teammates.' The Mariners have had transcendent players over the years — Edgar Martínez, Ken Griffey Jr., Randy Johnson, Ichiro Suzuki, Félix Hernández — and Raleigh, who should make his first All-Star appearance next month, is not yet in their class. But in franchise history, only Griffey has hit more homers in the first five seasons of his career than Raleigh, and only Alex Rodriguez got to 100 homers faster than Raleigh, who did it in his 482nd game. With 15 more home runs this season — a conservative estimate, given his start — Raleigh would become the 10th catcher to hit 130 through his age-28 season. The list demonstrates the company he's keeping: *minimum 75 percent of overall games as catcher Source: Stathead So that's five Hall of Famers, three World Series-winning stalwarts (Parrish, McCann, Perez)… and Gary Sanchez. Raleigh has a long way to go, but his approach this season is encouraging for his future. After coming into the season as a .197 career right-handed hitter, Raleigh is batting .296 from that side this year. He has been more disciplined at the plate, swinging at a career-low 27.9 percent on pitches outside the strike zone. (The league average is 31.2 percent.) Advertisement The Mariners are built around their pitcher-friendly home park; entering play on Monday, Seattle ranked third in the majors in OPS on the road and 24th in OPS at home. Overall, though, the offense has normalized, ranking 11th in runs per game (4.53) after finishing 21st last season, at 4.17. All of it, Dipoto said, has played a part in Raleigh's rise. 'He's swinging at better pitches more frequently, and he's passing the baton in a lineup that I think he knows is a little deeper than it has been in the past,' Dipoto said. 'It's amazing what can happen when you don't feel like you need to hit a homer for us to score and the guys behind you can pick it up — and all of a sudden, he actually is hitting more homers.' More, in fact, than anybody else in a year that could rank among the best at baseball's most punishing position. (Top photo of Cal Raleigh:)

Mariners About To Call Up Big Minor-League Prospect
Mariners About To Call Up Big Minor-League Prospect

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Mariners About To Call Up Big Minor-League Prospect

Mariners About To Call Up Big Minor-League Prospect originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Seattle Mariners general manager Jerry Dipoto has been keeping his eyes on the team's No. 3 prospect, second baseman Cole Young. The Triple-A Tacoma star has been mashing the baseball all over the field, whether it's line drives or homers. Advertisement It's become so noticeable that Young is about to make that move from the minors to the majors. According to a report from the Mariners will bring Young up to the MLB squad. There's no news about another move that Seattle would have to make in order for a roster spot to be opened up. Still, Young has been lighting up Triple-A pitching in recent weeks. Look at these numbers from May that Young has put up. Cole Young has been smashing the ball consistently while at Triple-A Tacoma Heading into Friday's game, Young led all Triple-A players with 37 hits in May - featuring five homers, three triples and ten doubles. Young also had almost twice as many walks (15) as strikeouts (8), all while posting a .370 batting average in 118 plate appearances. Advertisement What does Dipoto think about this phenom smashing the ball? He's impressed. Really, really impressed. 'It just unleashed what I think has been like an all-time heater,' Dipoto said. 'He's hitting rockets. It's pole-to-pole. He's barreling everything. He's not striking out. He's taking his walks. And with each passing day, there's three hits, there's five hits. And when you're that hot, he's finding the cork or blooper. Everything is working. And that is a byproduct of self-confidence.' Look for Young to potentially get a pinch-hitting spot when he comes up and joins the Mariners. This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on May 31, 2025, where it first appeared.

Torpedo bats for the Mariners? This season already feels like a voyage to mediocrity
Torpedo bats for the Mariners? This season already feels like a voyage to mediocrity

Yahoo

time01-04-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Torpedo bats for the Mariners? This season already feels like a voyage to mediocrity

I'm hoping for one of two things to happen with the Mariners this season: 1) They're terrific, winning the AL West and advancing at least to the American League Championship Series, even toying with the idea of making it to the World Series for the first time in franchise history. 2) They're terrible, going 70-92 and finishing last in the division, finally forcing ownership to fire team president Jerry Dipoto and give in to the consensus that the organization needs to spend more money to improve the team. Unfortunately, the in-between scenario of flirting with the playoffs down the stretch or barely making it in before losing to a superior team is more likely. That's what we've seen of late - they're better than so-so but not good enough to stop the nonsense of being the only MLB team to have never been in a World Series. As you know, they did nothing in the offseason to think this year will somehow be spectacular. Raise your hand if you think Donovan Solano will be a difference-maker. Or that Jorge Polanco will win a Gold Glove at third base. Or that Rowdy Tellez becomes an oversized cult hero in Seattle. Can't you picture it? If the Mariners end up being that in-between team again, while we're watching other teams in the playoffs, Dipoto will hold a season-ending news conference, concocting another word salad explaining why he should remain for his 11th season. He'll say the Mariners are right on the cusp of greatness, particularly with highly touted prospects ready to play for the big league team in 2026. Ownership will buy his babble and ask for seconds, knowing that he's actually done pretty well considering the dollar-store budget they've given him to work with. So they'll give him one more chance, which means we'll get one more offseason filled with trash acquisitions who are either old, fat or both, but, man, if they can hit like they did in 2019, we'll really have something! Off to a 2-3 start featuring a lackluster offense in a predictable development, the Mariners have managed to turn otherwise upbeat fans into skeptical, cynical downers like me. I especially enjoy the comments section at the end of Mariners stories such as Tuesday's about the team getting torpedo bats to add some life to their offense. Torpedo bats have a longer and thicker barrel compared to a conventional bat while still meeting MLB specifications. The Yankees use them and clobbered nine home runs in one game over the weekend. Could these new revolutionary bats help the Mariners? Right on cue, the converted downers checked in at the end of Adam Jude's Seattle Times story with some wonderfully crafted replies. * The bat will only help if you make contact. It won't matter with all the strikeouts.' * Why don't they try to experiment with players who can hit the ball?' And my favorite… * Torpedoes won't help if your ship is already sunk.' This slow start with the regular old bats wasn't supposed to happen. We were led to believe by those in charge who think we're dummies who will buy anything they're selling that the offense was dramatically improved in the final 34 games of the 2024 season after Dan Wilson replaced Scott Servais as manager. I know they have statistical proof behind their claims. I still call B.S. on all of it, and in the courtroom of bad baseball, I'd like to present the first four games of the 2025 season. Before the hitters turn into who they really are, say in June sometime, you'd like to think this new hitting approach from Edgar Martinez would be evident early on, that there'd be a carry-over from 2024. On top of that, it's not like the season's first opponent, the A's, were throwing one Cy Young candidate after another at the Mariners. Yet the lineup outside of Polanco, who went 5-for-10, and Dylan Moore, who went 2-for-6, combined to go 11-for-97, a robust batting average of .113. Of their 20 hits, 16 were singles. They scored eight runs total in the series. They struck out 41 times, putting them on yet another pace for more than 1,600 in a season. Yes, they did show signs of breaking out of it Monday night in a 9-6 loss to the Tigers, but with their lineup, you're more apt to get feeble than fireworks. Again, with their rotation and moderate run support, the Mariners could reasonably win 90 to 95 games and turn into legitimate playoff contenders. But if that doesn't happen - even with torpedo bats - I'll root for a crash-and-burn season that will cause overdue changes to be made. Jim Moore has covered Washington's sports scene from every angle for multiple news outlets. He appears Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 a.m. on Jason Puckett's podcast at He writes a Substack blog at You can find him on X (formerly Twitter) @cougsgo.

Mariners fans rage at Jerry Dipoto's interviews. He's ‘gonna get roasted' for this one too
Mariners fans rage at Jerry Dipoto's interviews. He's ‘gonna get roasted' for this one too

New York Times

time06-03-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Mariners fans rage at Jerry Dipoto's interviews. He's ‘gonna get roasted' for this one too

PEORIA, Ariz. — Fifty-four percent. To most people, it's just a random figure. To a group of Seattle Mariners fans, it's a rallying cry, a reason for anger. To Jerry Dipoto? It's an example of good intentions gone wrong. It was Oct. 3, 2023, two days after the Mariners' season ended tantalizingly close to the playoffs. And Dipoto, Seattle's president of baseball operations, held an end-of-season press conference that won't soon be forgotten. 'If you go back, and you look in a decade, those teams that win 54 percent of the time always wind up in the postseason and they more often than not wind up in a World Series. … Nobody wants to hear 'the goal this year is we're going to win 54 percent of the time.' But over time that type of mindset gets you there.' Advertisement Dipoto now wavers between two competing thoughts. One is recognizing that he communicated his point poorly. The other? Maintaining that it's not his fault that the message wasn't fully understood. 'People obviously didn't understand it the way I expressed it,' Dipoto said, speaking with The Athletic in his spring training office earlier this spring. 'My guess is that 98 percent of people didn't actually listen to it. They just read it off a tweet. 'It's what it is. Maybe they wouldn't have understood it any better had they heard the whole thing. And that's on me for poorly communicating what I think is a simple idea.' The idea was simple: Great teams sustain success by winning at a 54 percent clip over a long period. Especially for a mid-market club like the Mariners that traditionally sits in the middle of the payroll pack, putting your organization in that position is ultimately the best chance to make the playoffs consistently and win a World Series. But it also spoke to an analytical and mathematical way of thinking that is routine and near-universal in front offices around the major leagues. This is the language of the modern baseball franchise. The difference? When most front office executives leave the bubble of their conference rooms and speak to the media or directly to fans, they usually distill their message into something simpler: We try to win every single game. Dipoto doesn't do it that way. For a long time, in a job that is so often defined by self-preservation, Dipoto has chosen to say the quiet part out loud — taking the front-office, numerical slant straight to the fans and media. 'I am who I am. I talk with passion. I talk with confidence,' he said. 'I'm not always as confident as my voice sounds. It's just the way I talk. It's who I am. I lean into it. I love our team. I love what we've been able to do with our franchise. I think there are a lot of organizations that look at us and say, 'They're doing it the right way.'' Advertisement Dipoto is entering his 10th season as the head baseball executive in Seattle. In that time, the former big league reliever has turned a downtrodden team into an organization that's annually competitive. It's also a club that has yet to win anything of substance, making only one playoff appearance under Dipoto. If his team won big — or had even been more aggressive in free agency — Dipoto's candor might be celebrated. Since they haven't, it makes him an easy target. The longer the Mariners stay mired in the middle, the more the transparency and accessibility once lauded by fans are seen differently. For a time, Dipoto stuck to his approach, then watched as his efforts to explain why the Mariners haven't broken through backfired on him nearly every time over the last two years. 'Is it a hard job? Yeah,' Dipoto said. 'It's a hard job. But most jobs are hard jobs. But in most jobs, they don't stick a microphone in front of your face.' Conscious of that, Dipoto has intentionally scaled back the number of times he speaks publicly. Seemingly every time there is a microphone in his face, he says something that rubs a disgruntled fan base the wrong way. 'Truly, I could say 'hello,'' Dipoto said, 'and it would turn into a thing right now.' It's not just the 54 percent comment for Dipoto. Just last month, he told local reporters that 'early projection systems feel like we're right in the mix.' He scolded the outsider view of the Seattle offense, which ranked 21st last year in runs scored, saying, 'I think there is the reality of our offense and then the perception of our offense,' before citing wRC+, which factors in their pitcher-friendly home park. This offseason, instead of simply saying the Mariners wouldn't trade from their starting rotation, he responded to the question with this: 'On the continuum of Plan A to Zero, that would be Plan Zero, times some denominator.' Advertisement There is validity to each of these comments and to the various others that have rankled the fan base. But as many GMs address these topics from a far more rudimentary point of view, Dipoto shows you his work. He takes his calculations to the masses. And often that leaves him having to pick up the pieces. 'In a decade filled with thousands and thousands of words, it's easy to pull out one or two in context, or out of context, that, if put side by side, irritates someone,' he said. 'That has become something of a sport. 'I accept the fact that in my position, the role that I play, and the amount of time I spend talking about what we do, it's going to be — I try not to take it personal. But sometimes I do. I try not to get defensive, but it's really hard sometimes.' Not everyone associated with the Mariners talks in Dipoto-ese. The starkest contrast to Dipoto's approach came from Cal Raleigh, the Mariners' franchise catcher. 'We've got to commit to winning, we have to commit to going and getting those players you see other teams going out (to get),' Raleigh said after his team's elimination two seasons ago. 'Going for it, getting big-time pitchers, getting big-time hitters. We have to do that to keep up.' There was something emotional and unbridled about what he said. Nothing about percentages or numbers. No front office speak. He talked like a fan. The only math required here was simple: Good players equals good team. That was, as some see it, an inflection point. The day the goodwill had worn out. When Mariners fans ceased appreciating their newfound competitiveness and became frustrated that it wasn't translating into something more. 'Yeah, maybe,' Dipoto said, when asked if Raleigh's comments initiated that divide. 'But that's his right. He has the right to say that. He has the right to point to what he thinks is truth and what needs to be said. To his credit, he had the courage to reach out and do it.' Advertisement But what Dipoto can do and what Raleigh and various Mariners fans want him to do are two very different things. For one, Dipoto's working within a restrictive budget set by the ownership group, which has generally run a mid-level payroll during Dipoto's tenure. But separately, Dipoto's overall philosophy is not defined by free-agent acquisitions. 'Very few, if any, of the great teams that were able to sustain,' Dipoto said. '… very few of them weren't built on a foundation of draft, sign, develop or trade. That's what we've communicated to our fans for a decade. 'We feel like we're closer to that goal than we've ever been. We're just not moving at a pace that is universally accepted. And I understand the frustration.' The issue, as Dipoto sees it, is that they did the good work of building a winning product. Their starting rotation of George Kirby, Logan Gilbert, Luis Castillo, Bryan Woo and Bryce Miller is the envy of the sport. But good has now become not good enough. Acquiring 37-year-old utility man Donovan Solano was the team's only offseason splash. They made no significant trades, despite being known as a trade-happy organization. Mariners fans, and even some rival executives, Dipoto said, are surprised that this window — for a franchise with just one postseason appearance since 2001 — could be wasted due to inaction. 'People want us to succeed,' he said. 'We want to succeed. (GM) Justin (Hollander) and I are accountable to every decision that we have made. We've taken responsibility for the bad ones. And frankly, early on, we got celebrated for the good ones. 'Now they generally get swept under the rug and forgotten. The negativity from the general population over this offseason has been palpable. You can't help but feel it.' The relationship between Dipoto and Raleigh, however, has recovered from that day. Dipoto texts with his catcher in the offseason as various things happen. Advertisement Speaking at Mariners camp earlier this spring, Raleigh didn't reiterate the sentiments expressed back in 2023. But he also didn't walk them back either. 'We care about the city, we care about the fans, we care about the organization … We understand the frustration,' he said. But he also knows whatever Dipoto does is outside his control. And in the vacuum of any big signings, he at least appreciates his boss's transparency. 'I think all you want is the full truth,' Raleigh said. 'Anytime you get that, it's good. But at the same time, we have a job to do, and that's on the field. We're players, and players play. And GMs GM.' Most Mariners fans who approach Dipoto are friendlier than the ones he sees online. But one such outlier came up to him in Peoria this spring to speak his mind. 'It appears you're not trying,' he told Dipoto. Dipoto responded firmly, 'I assure you, we are.' Dipoto said it's been years since he's allowed himself to actively seek out fans' responses to his comments. But whatever his means of avoidance, it's clearly not all-encompassing. The reason he's talking now, about all of this, is because he believes in his club. That, ultimately, the lack of big bat acquisitions will become moot as his team performs well. For Dipoto, it's challenging to square his own beliefs in his processes and methods with his keen awareness that the public, writ-large, doesn't share that sentiment. As much as he'd like to ignore the detractors, even he'll acknowledge just how hard that can be. 'Our story is a pretty good story,' he said. 'But it's been overrun right now by the general desire that we go do something more. The big move. The grand slam. The big free agent. And maybe that'll happen at some point. We just didn't think this was the right time, or the right group of players that fit for us. Advertisement 'I don't want to continue to constantly apologize to people for not winning the World Series in 1979, '89, '99. I understand the history of the Mariners. We can't erase 48 years. What we can focus on is our game tomorrow.' When it comes to winning a championship, Dipoto tries to look at it pragmatically. Of course, he wants a World Series ring. But he doesn't want to be singularly obsessed with that goal — rather, he focuses on the process that will put them in a position to win it all. Because, as he says, 'You can't control the final outcome.' The same could be said for how the fans, baseball pundits and even his own players view him and the work he's done. As much as he'd like for everyone to understand, accept and agree with his line of thinking, that will not be the case. At least not until the Mariners win something meaningful. That much, he knows. And it led to his blunt and matter-of-fact assessment of how people will receive everything he's said here: 'I'm gonna get roasted.'

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