It started with silence. A long, quiet winter. No rush of offers. No bidding war. Just patience — and then one unexpected phone call that changed everything. Now, Mitch Garver is back in camp with the Seattle Mariners, and the path to his reunion might be one of the most quietly dramatic stories of the spring.
Garver arrived in Arizona not as a headline signing, but as a reminder that sometimes, baseball moves fast once it finally moves at all. After an offseason that lacked momentum, it was Mariners star catcher Cal Raleigh who nudged the process forward.
“Cal reached out and said, maybe you should try calling the Mariners,” Garver revealed Friday morning. “We called Justin and within 24 hours we were able to work something out.”
That “Justin” is Justin Hollander, Seattle’s general manager, and the speed of the agreement underscores how quickly interest can crystallize when both sides see opportunity. Within a single day, a minor league deal was in place — one that will pay Garver $2.5 million if he’s added to the major league roster.

For Garver, retirement was never part of the equation.
“It’s always been my intent to play,” he said plainly, dismissing any notion that the quiet market signaled the end. Instead, he treated the lull as part of the business — a waiting game that ultimately required one trusted voice to break the stalemate.
The circumstances around Seattle’s roster make the reunion particularly intriguing. Raleigh is set to represent Team USA in the World Baseball Classic, potentially opening spring opportunities for Garver to showcase himself extensively. At minimum, that exposure could position him for a role either in Seattle or elsewhere should injuries or roster shifts create demand.
But if Garver does carve out a spot with the Mariners, it will not mirror last season’s usage. In 2025, 113 of his 290 plate appearances came as a designated hitter. This year, that lane is crowded. Seattle’s projected right field/DH rotation features a four-player mix, with Raleigh also sliding into DH duties on days he rests behind the plate. The backup catcher role, by contrast, is expected to be exactly that — a true secondary option, not a hybrid job.
For some veterans, that narrowing of responsibility might feel like a demotion. For Garver, it feels like evolution.

“I love that role,” he said. “Older guy in the clubhouse. I can still play a couple of times a week, give some versatility off the bench. Being that role model and helping the young guys is something I enjoy doing. I can still play. I think my role started changing a little bit last year and I started appreciating it a little more.”
That shift in mindset is significant. Garver, once viewed primarily as an offensive-minded catcher with power upside, has leaned into the intangible side of his value. Leadership. Preparation. Stability. In a clubhouse increasingly shaped by youth and athleticism, the presence of a veteran who embraces mentorship can matter as much as a timely home run.
His partnership with Raleigh last season laid the groundwork. The two developed a rhythm, both on the field and in the dugout, balancing workloads and sharing insight. Raleigh’s endorsement this winter was not a casual suggestion — it was an affirmation of fit.
“I enjoyed it,” Garver said of their collaboration. “Giving him that breathing room to help him be his best, whatever he needs that day. I don’t know what the season is going to look like obviously, but he’s a good friend of mine, a good player and great person. It was nice advice.”
In a league obsessed with velocity readings and exit metrics, it was a simple conversation between teammates that reignited Garver’s path. No dramatic bidding war. No headline-grabbing contract. Just a nudge, a call, and mutual interest aligning at the right time.

For Seattle, the move carries minimal financial risk and potential upside. A minor league deal offers flexibility. If Garver proves sharp in camp, the club gains depth at a premium defensive position. If roster math tightens, the organization still benefits from his presence during a crucial stretch of spring preparation.
And for Garver, the reunion feels less like a fallback and more like unfinished collaboration.
The Mariners enter the season chasing consistency in a competitive division. Every marginal gain matters. Every layer of depth counts. Whether Garver ultimately breaks camp on the major league roster or positions himself for opportunity elsewhere, his return underscores a simple truth about baseball’s ecosystem: relationships matter.
A quiet winter nearly closed one chapter. Instead, a teammate’s suggestion reopened it.
Now, with the desert sun beating down on spring workouts and roster battles just beginning, Garver is back where familiarity meets opportunity — ready to prove that sometimes the most important move of the offseason starts not with a front office strategy session, but with a text message from a friend.