SEATTLE — The Seahawks have already claimed the title of world champions. Now, a new and electrifying question is echoing across the Pacific Northwest: Could the Seattle Mariners be next?
After falling just one win short of their first World Series appearance last season, the Mariners enter 2026 with something they haven’t carried in decades — expectation. Not hope. Not hype. Expectation. And according to MLB Network insider Jon Morosi, that expectation is justified.
“I really think that in the American League there is not a single dominant team like the Dodgers,” Morosi said Tuesday on Seattle Sports’ Wyman and Bob. “So there is space for a team like the Mariners to step in.”

Then he delivered the line that is now ricocheting around the league.
“If someone were to say today that they are the least flawed of the good teams in the American League, I would actually agree with that.”
Least flawed.
In a conference crowded with power brands and postseason veterans, that’s not faint praise — that’s a warning.
Seattle returns a roster that tasted October intensity and nearly survived it. One swing. One pitch. One moment separated them from baseball’s biggest stage. Instead of tearing things down, the front office doubled down, refining rather than rebuilding. The result? A team that analysts increasingly view as balanced, dangerous, and mature beyond its years.
Morosi was blunt in his assessment of the competition. The Blue Jays? “I’m not sure that they are as good or better than they were when the season ended,” he said. The Tigers made noise by signing Framber Valdez and Justin Verlander, strengthening their rotation and perhaps improving on paper. But across the American League landscape, Morosi sees imperfections everywhere.

“These teams all have their flaws,” he emphasized.
Except, perhaps, Seattle.
That doesn’t mean there aren’t questions.
One of the biggest revolves around newly acquired All-Star Brendan Donovan, who is expected to open the season as the Mariners’ leadoff hitter and, intriguingly, their starting third baseman. Donovan’s versatility is well documented, but third base hasn’t been his primary home in recent seasons.
“I find it a little interesting the idea that he’s gonna start the year at least playing third base,” Morosi admitted. “But again, that’s why you have spring training.”
The upside? Donovan won’t be participating in the World Baseball Classic, meaning he’ll have uninterrupted time to acclimate, refine his defensive reps, and build chemistry with his new teammates. Seattle pursued him aggressively. They believe his bat-to-ball skills and postseason composure are exactly what this lineup needed.

Then there’s the bullpen — the pressure point exposed during last year’s playoff run. While dominant at times, Seattle’s relief corps lacked one more hammer in the highest-leverage moments. Enter left-hander Jose A. Ferrer, a hard-throwing addition the Mariners believe can stabilize late innings.
“But that is typically the thing that you can address as the season gets underway,” Morosi said confidently, pointing to president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto and general manager Justin Hollander’s track record of transforming unheralded arms into October-ready weapons.
It’s a fair point. Seattle’s front office has repeatedly turned overlooked pieces into vital contributors. They thrive on depth. On development. On finding value where others hesitate.
And perhaps that’s why Morosi’s “least flawed” label resonates so strongly.
The Mariners aren’t the loudest team in the league. They don’t dominate headlines with nine-figure contracts or blockbuster trades. Instead, they’ve constructed something quieter — a roster without glaring weaknesses. A rotation that competes. A lineup that grinds. A clubhouse that believes.
But no coronation comes without resistance.
For years, the AL West ran through Houston. The Astros captured seven of eight division titles before Seattle broke through last season. The Texas Rangers lifted a World Series trophy just three years ago. Those powers haven’t vanished.
And then there’s the wild card Morosi highlighted — the Athletics.

“They haven’t done a ton in terms of adding from the outside,” he said, “but they’re committing in a way they haven’t.”
He pointed to young talents like Nick Kurtz, Jacob Wilson, Lawrence Butler, and Shea Langeliers — players already producing at the major league level with room to grow. In a division that punishes complacency, that youth movement could disrupt projections quickly.
Morosi even floated the idea that the A’s could finish with a better record than Houston — a statement that underscores just how fluid the division may be.
Still, when scanning the American League hierarchy, he keeps circling back to Seattle.
Balance. Depth. Continuity. Momentum.
The Mariners aren’t flawless. No contender is. But in a conference without a juggernaut, sometimes being the most complete — rather than the most explosive — is enough.
Seattle knows what it feels like to be one win short. That sting lingers. It fuels offseason workouts. It sharpens spring intensity. It turns expectations into urgency.
The Seahawks showed the city what a championship parade looks like. Now, baseball might be preparing its own script.
Are the Mariners ready to finish what they started?
If Morosi is right — if they truly are the least flawed contender in a wide-open American League — then October in Seattle may no longer be a dream deferred.
It may be inevitable.
Stay tuned. The race is just beginning.