The St. Louis Cardinals may decide to trade their superstar infielder Nolan Arenado to the Seattle Mariners if the offer is right.
The Mariners have been known for their robust pitching development, including current big league rotation members Logan Gilbert, George Kirby and Bryce Miller. In a fun twist, when MLB Pipeline dropped its newest Top 100 prospects re-rank on Friday,
The initial plan for this analysis was to offer an update on potential moves or signings that the Mariners might make as the Feb. 12 report date for pitchers and catchers looms. But after hours spent checking the rosters of other teams for potential positional redundancies,
St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Nolan Arenado is coming off of one of his worst seasons as a big league player. Even Arenado at his worst is something a lot o
The Seattle Mariners are still looking to find solutions to their infield woes with two weeks left until pitchers and catchers report to Spring Training. The M
His widow Linda calls southwest Riverside County a place for the couple to “grow our kids and grow old together.”
Pitchers and catchers will report to Spring Training for the Seattle Mariners on Feb. 12. And the team recently announced the non-roster invitees that will join the 40-man roster at the Peoria Sports Complex in Peoria,
Munenori Kawasaki, who competed for the Seattle Mariners in 2012, will be representing Japan in the international competition.
There just isn't enough room to fit all the worthy talents on MLB Pipeline's Top 100 Prospects list. We unveiled our latest rankings last Friday, and now we're going to spotlight the best prospect in each farm system who couldn't quite make the cut.
Count former Toronto Blue Jays outfielder Tesocar Hernandez among those who are surprised that Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hasn't signed a contract extension with the
Law's annual farm system rankings has the Mariners up top, followed by the Red Sox and Dodgers. The Astros and Angels are at the bottom.