Hisashi Iwakuma, who missed 10 weeks last season with a strained right lat, pitched two spotless innings in his first spring outing as the Seattle Mariners defeated the Texas Rangers 7-3 Sunday.
Robinson Cano hit a two-run homer and Franklin Gutierrez connected for a solo shot in the Seattle Mariners' 9-7 spring loss to the Los Angeles Angels on Saturday.
Mike Baxter hit a two-run homer in off the batter's eye screen behind center field during the Seattle Mariners' 5-2 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers on Friday.
Pete Rose's application for reinstatement to baseball was rejected Monday by Commissioner Rob Manfred, who concluded the career hits leader continued to gamble even while trying to end his lifetime ban and would be a risk to the sport's integrity if allowed back in the game.
The Mariners have fired general manager Jack Zduriencik, bringing to an end a tenure that began with promise but is now closing in on its seventh season without a playoff appearance.
Mariners third baseman Kyle Seager is quickly establishing himself as a fan favorite here in Seattle. And a sweet letter he recently got from a kid in Houston shows he's making plenty of fans across the country.
Is Alex Rodriguez staring at a lifetime ban from baseball? There's word he could be kicked out of the game for his use of performance-enhancing drugs, and the commissioner is looking at a unique way of doing it.
Former Seattle Mariner and current New York Yankee Alex Rodriguez is now in the crosshairs of Major League Baseball's most serious steroid investigation ever.
Former Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Milton Bradley was sentenced Tuesday to more than 2 1/2 years in jail for abusing and threatening his estranged wife.
So much for all the talk of free-agent outfielder Torii Hunter possibly joining the Mariners. The nine time Gold Glove winner has reached agreement on a two-year, $26 million deal with the Detroit Tigers pending a physical exam, a baseball source told ESPN’s Jerry Crasnick Wednesday. Hunter, 37, is a .277 hitter with 297 home […]
During the World Series, former Seattle Mariner and current Detroit Tigers pitcher Doug Fister took a line drive to the head. Amazingly, Fister stayed in the game. But it's shots like that which prompt Major League Baseball to consider a new piece of safety equipment for pitchers.