PEORIA, Ariz. — It was supposed to be just another live batting practice session under the Arizona sun, a routine early-spring tune-up where established stars shake off rust and prospects quietly try to survive. Instead, it turned into the moment everyone at camp is still whispering about. Kade Anderson, the No. 3 overall pick in the 2025 MLB Draft and crown-jewel prospect of the Seattle Mariners, didn’t just hold his own against big-league hitters — he overpowered them, embarrassed them, and announced himself as something far more dangerous than “projectable.”
Witnesses described the sequence as almost surreal. Anderson, a poised left-hander with a fastball that jumps and a slider that disappears late, stepped onto the mound facing a lineup that looked more like Opening Day than a practice field. First up: All-Star catcher Cal Raleigh. Three pitches later, Raleigh walked away shaking his head, frozen by a back-foot slider that buckled his knees. Then came franchise superstar Julio Rodríguez, the face of the Mariners and one of baseball’s brightest young talents. Rodríguez battled, fouling off heat at the top of the zone, but Anderson elevated at 98 mph before snapping off a slider that dove out of reach. Strike three.

By the time veteran outfielder Rob Refsnyder stepped in, the buzz around the backfields at Peoria had grown noticeably louder. Coaches stopped their side conversations. Scouts leaned forward. Phones quietly came out. Refsnyder, known for his plate discipline, worked the count full. Anderson responded with a changeup that mirrored his fastball before fading just off the barrel. Another swing. Another miss.
And then came Mitch Garver, a seasoned power threat brought in to deepen Seattle’s lineup. Garver took a heavy hack at the first pitch and fouled it straight back. The second pitch painted the outer edge at 97. On 0-2, Anderson didn’t waste time. He unleashed a slider so tight and late that Garver’s bat cut through empty air. Four established major leaguers. Four strikeouts. Not soft contact. Not weak grounders. Pure, unapologetic dominance.
“It’s just live BP,” one Mariners staff member cautioned afterward, careful not to crown a 21-year-old in February. But even he couldn’t hide the grin. “That wasn’t normal.”
The Mariners drafted Anderson third overall in 2025 believing they were getting polish beyond his years — advanced command, elite spin metrics, and a competitive edge that scouts raved about. What they may have landed is something bigger: a future ace accelerating ahead of schedule. His fastball sat 96–98 mph during the session, touching 99 with late life up in the zone. The slider, already graded as plus-plus by evaluators last summer, looked unhittable against big-league bats. Most striking, however, was his composure. There was no overthrowing, no visible adrenaline spike. Anderson worked quickly, stared down hitters, and walked off the mound like this was expected.

Spring training is notorious for mirages. Veterans experiment. Hitters focus on timing, not results. Pitchers flash velocity that fades by April. But what happened in Peoria felt different. The swings were competitive. The reactions genuine. Rodríguez lingered afterward, talking quietly with coaches. Raleigh replayed one sequence on a tablet. Garver simply laughed and said, “If that’s what he’s got in February, good luck.”
Inside the organization, the excitement is real — and cautious. Seattle already boasts a rotation filled with talent, but the long-term question has always hovered: who becomes the unquestioned No. 1 when the window tightens and October demands a stopper? Anderson isn’t on the Opening Day roster conversation yet, and no one is suggesting he leapfrog established arms overnight. Still, the narrative has shifted. He is no longer just “the future.” He is a factor.
Social media clips from the session began circulating within hours. Mariners fans, starved for the next homegrown icon, quickly labeled him the “new face” of the rotation. Prospect analysts who were already bullish doubled down. “The stuff is real,” one American League scout texted. “But it’s the presence that stands out. He believes he belongs.”
Belief can be dangerous — for opponents.
There is a long road between a viral spring bullpen and sustained big-league dominance. Adjustments will come. Hitters will study video. The league always counters. Yet the first thunderclap of Mariners camp has already sounded, and it came from a left arm that looks startlingly ready.

For now, Anderson returns to routine drills, strength sessions, and incremental development plans. But make no mistake: the pecking order in Peoria shifted this week. In a camp filled with established stars, it was the youngest arm on the field who commanded the loudest silence.
And if this was merely a glimpse, the rest of the American League might want to start paying attention — because Seattle’s next ace may not be waiting years to arrive.