It will be nearly two more months before Brendan Donovan officially steps onto the field at T-Mobile Park wearing a Seattle Mariners uniform, but the verdict from the national spotlight is already in. And it’s loud. And it’s confident. And it’s turning heads across baseball.
Following the Mariners’ stunning three-team trade that landed All-Star and Gold Glove-winning utility man Brendan Donovan, ESPN host Michelle Smallmon delivered a message to Seattle fans that sounded less like analysis and more like a promise.
“I would say buckle up because you’re going to love this guy,” Smallmon said Thursday on Seattle Sports’ Bump and Stacy, cutting through Super Bowl chatter from Radio Row in the Bay Area. “I think you’re going to love him right away.”
That single sentence has done what box scores and scouting reports often fail to do — it has ignited expectation.
Smallmon isn’t a casual observer. A longtime St. Louis Cardinals fan and former 101 ESPN St. Louis radio host, she has watched Donovan closely throughout his four Major League seasons. Her reaction to the trade was conflicted: excitement for Seattle, heartbreak for St. Louis. That alone tells part of the story.

The Mariners didn’t acquire a flashy superstar. Donovan doesn’t lead highlight reels with towering home runs or jaw-dropping sprint speeds. What Seattle got instead, according to those who know him best, is something arguably more dangerous: a player who quietly makes teams better — and keeps them winning.
“When I think of Cardinals baseball, I think about guys like Brendan Donovan,” Smallmon explained. “People think about Albert Pujols, Yadier Molina, Adam Wainwright — the stars. But the reason the Cardinals were contenders for so long is because of guys like Brendan Donovan.”
That comparison matters. For decades, St. Louis built its reputation on players who were relentless, versatile, disciplined, and obsessed with doing the small things right. Donovan fits that mold perfectly. He plays multiple positions. He grinds through at-bats. He takes pitches. He studies his craft. And he shows up every day with the same intensity.
“He’s so gritty — I hate that word, but it really is who he is,” Smallmon said. “He’s the ultimate team player. And I’m so bummed out that the Cardinals moved on from him.”
For a Mariners team coming off a breakthrough run to the American League Championship Series in 2025, that description feels almost custom-built. Seattle didn’t just need talent. They needed stability. They needed versatility. They needed someone who could bridge the present and the future.
Donovan does exactly that.
![]()
He arrives in Seattle with a proven track record of getting on base and making consistent contact — two areas that often define postseason success. More importantly, he provides critical flexibility in an infield that remains unsettled. Donovan can handle both second base and third base, giving the Mariners freedom as top prospects Cole Young and Colt Emerson continue to push toward the Major Leagues.
That balance is key. Seattle can now break in its young talent without forcing the issue — and without sacrificing competitiveness. Donovan becomes both a safety net and a standard.
From Donovan’s perspective, the move may be equally timely. He leaves behind a Cardinals team that won just 78 games in 2025 and has clearly pivoted toward a rebuild. Seattle, by contrast, is in full contention mode, armed with elite pitching, a hungry core, and unfinished business after falling just short of the World Series.
Smallmon sees that fit clearly.
“I was cheering for the Mariners last year,” she admitted. “I love your team. I really wanted them to take it home. If he has to go somewhere, I’m glad he’s going to a place where he can contend.”
That sentiment underscores why this trade feels different. Donovan isn’t arriving as a question mark. He’s arriving with trust already built — from teammates, from analysts, and now from a fanbase eager to take the next step.

The countdown to Opening Day at T-Mobile Park is still ticking. Donovan hasn’t taken a swing in teal yet. He hasn’t made his first diving stop. He hasn’t walked to the plate with the crowd rising behind him.
But the message from ESPN is already clear.
Buckle up.
Seattle may not know it yet, but Brendan Donovan is coming — and the kind of player fans don’t just cheer for, but believe in.