The countdown to cactus sunsets and crackling bats has officially begun in the Pacific Northwest — and this time, the Seattle Mariners are throwing fans something they rarely get in modern sports: free baseball. In a sweeping announcement that signals a bold new broadcasting era, the club revealed it will stream 16 Spring Training games at no cost on Mariners.TV in 2026, giving supporters unprecedented digital access as anticipation builds toward Opening Day. For a fan base starving for October glory, this is more than a streaming update — it’s a statement.

The move arrives as Seattle prepares to debut its revamped Mariners.TV broadcast model, a platform the organization hopes will redefine how fans connect with the team. Rather than hiding behind paywalls from day one, the Mariners are offering a preview — a 16-game window into the future. All fans need is an MLB account login. No cable package. No subscription fee. Just sign in and watch.
“Building on last year’s success of our Spring Training webcasts, we’re excited to give Mariners fans the opportunity to watch 16 games this spring,” said Ben Mertens, the club’s Vice President of Creative and Content Services. His message was clear: this is a soft launch with big ambitions. “Through a combination of live streams and traditional telecasts, this is a great opportunity for fans to get familiar with the new Mariners.TV platform before Opening Day, when we’ll roll out the full production experience.”
The strategy is both generous and calculated. Of the 16 free Cactus League matchups, 11 will be produced as Mariners Live Streams presented by Muckleshoot Casino Resort, signaling enhanced production value rather than bare-bones webcasts. These games will also air on Mariners.com, expanding accessibility across devices. For fans wanting the crackle of radio nostalgia, every single one of the 30 Spring Training games will air on Seattle Sports (710 AM) and across the Mariners Radio Network, ensuring no inning goes unheard.

The exhibition slate opens Feb. 20 against the San Diego Padres at Peoria Stadium, with first pitch scheduled for 12:10 p.m. PT. Veteran voices Rick Rizzs and Gary Hill Jr. will be on the call, setting the tone for a spring filled with roster battles and breakout auditions. From there, Seattle faces a packed schedule of familiar Cactus League foes, including the San Francisco Giants, Chicago White Sox, Cleveland Guardians, Arizona Diamondbacks, Texas Rangers, Los Angeles Angels, Milwaukee Brewers and Chicago Cubs. Several games will feature alternate broadcast feeds, but each remains freely accessible through Mariners.TV when designated.
The broader business implications are impossible to ignore. Mariners.TV will transition into a subscription model once the regular season begins, with full-season access priced at $99.99 annually. Monthly plans are set to launch March 23. That subscription covers all regular-season Mariners games, excluding nationally exclusive broadcasts. In essence, Spring Training becomes both fan service and marketing engine — a risk-free trial run designed to convert viewers before the games truly count.
Yet beyond the dollars and digital dashboards lies something deeper. For years, baseball fans have grappled with blackout restrictions, fragmented streaming rights and rising costs. Seattle’s decision to open nearly half its spring slate free of charge feels like a subtle counterpunch — an acknowledgment that loyalty deserves accessibility. It also reflects confidence. Teams do not invest in expanded production infrastructure unless they believe the product on the field will command attention.
And attention is exactly what Seattle hopes to capture when the regular season opens March 26 at T-Mobile Park against the Cleveland Guardians. A 7:10 p.m. PT first pitch will usher in another campaign defined by expectation and urgency. The Mariners have flirted with contention in recent seasons, building a young, dynamic core while chasing the consistency required to break through in the American League. This spring will offer the first glimpses of roster tweaks, bullpen hierarchies and lineup experiments that could shape that pursuit.
Spring Training often lives in the shadows — box scores scribbled in the margins, prospects quietly auditioning for roles. But in 2026, Seattle is dragging it into the spotlight. Sixteen free streams. Thirty days of radio coverage. A polished new platform. It’s a calculated gamble that fans will tune in early and stay invested long after the desert dust settles.
In an era where access often comes at a premium, the Mariners are betting that free baseball is the most powerful hook of all. And for a franchise hungry to energize its base before a single regular-season pitch is thrown, that hook might be exactly what pulls the Pacific Northwest back to the edge of its seat