I grew up a fan of two teams. My first team was the San
Francisco Giants. As a young child, the name Willie Mays stuck in my head, and
he became my boyhood idol. Living in Idaho,
my second team was the Minnesota Twins. With Harmon Killebrew as their big star,
it was a natural fit. I flirted for one season with the Seattle Pilots, because
I could listen to their games on the radio. That ended when the Pilots became
the *Milwaukee Brewers.
As is prone to happen, I lost interest in baseball (and
other sports) when I went to college. Ours was not a big athletic school (the
football program was disbanded while I was there), so there wasn’t a lot of
interest in collegiate sports. Between getting busy with studies, friends, and
relationships, plus the thoughts that I didn’t have time for such childish and
trivial things, baseball went by the wayside.
This changed in 1983. I went to a convention in Seattle
in early April. While there, someone suggested we go to a baseball game. Sure,
why not…I used to watch baseball, I’d never seen a major league game before,
and it was something to do.
I was mesmerized. Here was a chance to see a real major
league game. I couldn’t believe the size of the stadium, and we were watching
real major league baseball! I had a great time…hollering insults at the
Yankees, watching Todd Cruz hit two home runs to lead the Mariners to a 4-1
victory. I was reminded just how wonderful the game of baseball was.
I returned home a few days later. My six month old son was
already asleep, and as I checked on him, I remember thinking that I wanted to
teach my sons about baseball. While my father had taught me about fishing, I
wanted to pass baseball on to my sons.
That is how I became a Mariner fan.
What does it mean to be a fan of the Seattle Mariners? I
think the answer may surprise many of you. In one word…HISTORY. Scoffers may
wonder how an expansion team can be a historical team. Teams like the Yankees,
the Dodgers, the Giants, the Red Sox…now that’s history. Why, the Mariners have
only been in existence for 30 years.
That, my friends, is why I chose history. Many of us who are
Mariner fans can recall the entire history of the team. To fully appreciate the
modern day Mariners, you need to be able to remember what it was like way back
when.
1977 brought us the Seattle Mariners and the Toronto Blue
Jays. While 1992 saw the Blue Jays win their first of two consecutive World
Series Championships, it also saw the Mariners finish 64-98. The Mariners had
achieved only one winning season, that being in 1991 when they won a whopping
83 games.
Not that the early years didn’t have their moments. There
were memorable players like Mark Langston and Harold Reynolds. Randy Johnson
learned how to control his thunderbolt of an arm in those years. Ken Griffey Jr.
became a man in a Mariner uniform, and provided one of the “feel-good” stories
of 1990 when father and son hit back to back homers. Jay Buhner became a fan
favorite and provided some wallop in right field.
But for every great player, there were painful counterparts.
Watching Steve Trout enter a game provided a feeling of doom. When closer Bobby
Ayala came in to pitch the ninth, an entire ballpark would hold it’s breath,
wondering if it would be the good Bobby or the awful Bobby we’d see that night
(there was nothing in between). Left field seemed to be a place that careers came to die. The likes
of Kevin Mitchell, Jeffery Leonard,
Vince Coleman, Rickey Henderson, and many more made a brief stay in left field,
never reaching the brilliance they had achieved in other places. The Mariners,
god love ‘em, were nothing short of an awful team for 19 seasons.
But all that changed in 1995. Lou Pinella’s ballclub, 12 ½
games back of the Angels, came charging back. Led by Edgar Martinez, who
arguably should have been the MVP that year, the Mariners caught the Angels by
the end of the season. In a one-game playoff, they won their division and
reached the playoffs for the first time ever. The city was ecstatic! No longer
were they the inept stumblebums of baseball. Seattle
finally had a winner, by god! Not only did they reach the playoffs, but they
knocked out the mighty Yankees in the division series. It was a magical time to
be a Mariners fan, even if they were beaten in the League Championship series
by the Indians.
To prove that it wasn’t just a fluke, the Mariners went on
to reach the playoffs in 1997, 2000, and 2001. The 2001 season was one for the
ages. The Mariners set a major league record with an incredible 116 wins!
The length of a blog doesn’t allow me to talk about
everything it means to be a Mariner fan. But I would be remiss if I didn’t
mention Edgar Martinez. Edgar was the heart and soul of the Mariners during his
career. A third baseman turned designated hitter, Edgar was not only one of the
best right handed hitters ever, but was truly a gentleman and leader to his
ballclub. Plenty of big stars have played for the Mariners. But for every
mention of Griffey, Johnson, Buhner, Ichiro, and many more, the one face that
exemplifies the Mariners and their history is Edgar Martinez.
Two other things I’ll mention briefly. Being a Mariner fan
means you are treated to the best commercials in baseball! With the exception
of the year that they made “home shopping network” style commercials, the
Mariner commercials have always been very entertaining and often downright
hilarious. The other is the ballpark. Safeco Field, for those of you not
fortunate enough to visit the beautiful Pacific Northwest,
is a gem. It helps make the Mariners a regional team, inviting many of us to
drive 5 hours to see a game (sometimes even driving to and from the game in the
same day!)
It’s been a challenge to write this in the middle of a
Mariner slump that is likely going to keep them out of the playoffs this year.
But, the history of the Mariners always points to hope…hope that, like in 1995,
the Mariners can once again “Refuse to Lose” and once again have us on the edge
of our seats, cheering every pitch, every hit, every stolen base.
(Author’s note: I have deliberately not been reading the
entries since September 1, in order to attempt to avoid being influenced by
anyone’s writing style. My apologies for posting this a few hours early, but my
schedule tomorrow would keep me from posting until tomorrow is over for many of
you. I hope you enjoy, and I’m looking forward to reading everyone’s entries in
a day or two!)
Hello...I am an educator and musician living in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. Baseball and poker are my interests here...beyond that, about all I follow is Gonzaga Basketball and whatever tidbits I can pick up to avoid getting totally crushed in my football pool.