The voice that has narrated summer nights in the Pacific Northwest for decades is preparing to fade â and Seattle is not ready for the silence. In an emotional revelation that has shaken the fan base, legendary broadcaster Rick Rizzs confirmed that the 2026 season will be his last with the Seattle Mariners, as age and underlying health conditions gradually strip away the strength that once powered his unmistakable calls.
âI was born for my voice to echo with the Seattle Mariners,â Rizzs said, pausing as tears interrupted his rhythm. âBut age wonât give me that chance anymore.â
For generations of fans, Rizzs has not merely described Mariners baseball â he has defined it. From dramatic postseason pushes to rebuilding years filled with cautious hope, his cadence has been the emotional soundtrack of Seattle summers. His home-run calls have ricocheted across radios, through car speakers, into hospital rooms and family living rooms. He has been constant in a franchise that has often lived in transition.
Now, that constancy faces an unavoidable conclusion.

Rizzs revealed that ongoing health complications have increasingly affected his stamina and vocal endurance. Though he did not specify every medical detail, those close to the organization acknowledge that chronic illness and the natural wear of time have made the daily demands of broadcasting a grueling challenge. The grind of a 162-game season â travel, preparation, adrenaline â leaves little room for physical fragility.
âIâve been with the Mariners through so many seasons, and every year I told myself, âThis is home,ââ Rizzs said. âI donât want to retire. I still dream that Iâm in the booth with the Seattle Mariners, calling games with the guys. But this illness is taking a little piece at a time. I just wish I could stay longer, live forever with this team.â
The words felt heavier than any ninth-inning moment. Because this wasnât about one more contract or one more milestone broadcast. It was about identity. Rizzsâ connection to Seattle baseball runs deeper than employment. It is emotional architecture.
When the Mariners moved from the Kingdome to T-Mobile Park, Rizzsâ voice bridged the eras. When superstars arrived and departed, he remained. When playoff droughts tested patience, he kept belief alive in subtle ways â through tone, through storytelling, through unwavering enthusiasm even in losing stretches.

Inside the clubhouse, players have long acknowledged hearing his calls replayed on highlight reels and feeling a surge of pride. Younger athletes grew up listening to him before ever wearing a Mariners uniform. For many, sharing a season with Rizzs has felt like stepping into the living history of the franchise.
The announcement has triggered an outpouring of emotion across social media. Fans have shared recordings of iconic calls, recounting where they were when Rizzsâ voice soared over a walk-off hit or a postseason clincher. For some, his broadcasts are intertwined with childhood memories â fathers and sons keeping score together, late-night West Coast games crackling through radios long after bedtime.
What makes this farewell especially poignant is that it is not driven by scandal, conflict, or sudden dismissal. It is driven by time â the one opponent no broadcaster can outlast. Unlike players who fade statistically before retiring, Rizzsâ passion remains intact. His love for the Mariners is undiminished. But the body sets limits that even devotion cannot override.
Colleagues describe recent seasons as acts of determination. Even as fatigue set in, Rizzs reportedly insisted on preparing meticulously, studying rosters, perfecting pronunciation, ensuring that each broadcast carried the professionalism fans expect. If his voice cracked occasionally, listeners chalked it up to emotion. Few realized it was also a battle.
The Mariners organization has not yet detailed how it will honor him during his final season, but insiders suggest a tribute series may be planned. Whatever form it takes, it will attempt to encapsulate decades of loyalty â a nearly impossible task.
Because how do you summarize a voice?
How do you quantify the comfort of familiarity during rebuilding years?

How do you measure the way a broadcaster can steady a fan base through heartbreak?
Rizzsâ departure signals more than the end of a career. It marks the closing of a chapter in Seattle sports culture. Broadcasters are often the invisible glue of franchises. They frame narratives. They sustain continuity. They become trusted companions in moments of joy and despair.
As the 2026 season unfolds, each game will carry a subtle undercurrent. Fans will listen more closely, aware that every call edges closer to farewell. Each home run described by Rizzs will feel slightly more historic. Each sign-off a little more final.
âI just wish I could stay longer,â he said softly.
Seattle wishes the same.
But even when the booth eventually falls silent, the echo will remain. Rick Rizzsâ voice has already carved itself into the memory of a city. And long after he steps away from the microphone, Mariners baseball will still sound â in spirit â unmistakably like him.