PEORIA, Ariz. — For years, the Seattle Mariners were baseball’s intriguing subplot. The drought-breakers. The feel-good story. The franchise chasing history. In 2022, they snapped a 21-year postseason absence and played with house money. In 2025, they flirted with destiny, pushing all the way to Game 7 of the American League Championship Series while chasing the first World Series appearance in club history.
But as spring training unfolds in 2026, something has shifted. The curiosity is gone. The innocence is gone. And according to franchise cornerstone Cal Raleigh, that’s exactly the point.
“I think that’s what we wanted,” Raleigh said when asked about carrying real expectations this season. “That’s what we wanted to build.”
It wasn’t said with bravado. It was said with certainty.

Inside the Mariners’ clubhouse, there is no longer talk about whether they belong. The conversation has evolved. They expect to win. They expect to contend. They expect to be judged not by potential — but by results.
Raleigh pointed to a comment made earlier this spring by All-Star right-hander Bryan Woo that perfectly captured the new tone.
“This isn’t a fun, cute story anymore,” Woo said. “This is who we want to be.”
That message echoes through camp.
There is more media. More cameras. More buzz circling the complex in Peoria. ESPN’s Buster Olney recently admitted he’s never had expectations for Seattle like he does entering 2026. The spotlight, once distant, now feels blinding.
And the Mariners? They’re leaning into it.
“We’ve noticed there’s been a little more people around,” Raleigh acknowledged. “There’s more buzz. But to me, it’s about going out and executing every day. We’re not focused on the hope factor anymore. We know we’re good enough. We know we have the talent.”
That sentence — we know we’re good enough — is the transformation.

The confidence isn’t accidental. It was reinforced by an aggressive offseason. Seattle wasted no time re-signing first baseman Josh Naylor to a long-term deal, locking in one of the lineup’s most relentless competitors. They then traded for All-Star utility standout Brendan Donovan, adding another grinder known for punishing at-bats and two-strike resilience.
To Raleigh, those moves weren’t cosmetic. They were cultural.
“Guys have started taking ownership,” Raleigh said. “We’re not pointing fingers. We’re not looking outside for something else. And our front office has done a great job.”
He emphasized Naylor’s immediate impact — not just statistically, but emotionally. A player who competes on every pitch. A presence who lifts others. Donovan, meanwhile, brings versatility and the kind of disciplined approach that can lengthen a lineup in October.
“They complement us in a way maybe we haven’t had in the past,” Raleigh said. “Those two-strike at-bats. The toughness. Things you can’t really quantify.”
Championship teams often reveal themselves not through highlight reels, but through daily standards. And that’s where Raleigh believes Seattle has evolved the most.
The Mariners are now player-led.
Yes, manager Dan Wilson provides steady guidance. But Raleigh insists the tone comes from within the clubhouse.
“Dan lets us go do our thing,” Raleigh explained. “He understands it has to come from us.”
It’s no longer one dominant voice setting the hierarchy. It’s a collective. Veterans. Young stars. Pitchers and hitters. The standards are shared. The accountability mutual.

And there’s proof behind the belief.
The rotation remains one of baseball’s deepest. The lineup blends power and patience. The bullpen has quietly been reinforced. Younger players who gained postseason scars in 2025 now carry that experience forward. Falling one win short of the World Series left a bruise — but it also left clarity.
The Mariners aren’t chasing validation anymore. They’re chasing dominance.
That doesn’t mean pressure disappears. In fact, it intensifies. Every slump will be magnified. Every series dissected. The AL West will not be forgiving.
But Raleigh’s words suggest a team that welcomes that burden.
“If you want to get here and you want to do this,” he said, “you have to have those expectations and standards throughout your organization.”
In previous seasons, Seattle was the team everyone wanted to root for. In 2026, they may be the team everyone is trying to dethrone.
And inside that clubhouse, that’s not intimidating. It’s confirmation.
The Mariners believe they have become what they set out to build — not a storyline, not a surprise, but a standard.
Now comes the hardest part: proving it over 162 games and beyond.
If they do, the narrative won’t be about droughts or near-misses anymore.
It will be about fulfillment.