PEORIA, Ariz. — Spring training is supposed to be about swings, velocity readings and stat lines that vanish by April. But inside the Seattle Mariners clubhouse this week, the loudest statement didn’t come from a home run or a radar gun. It came from a player who refused to leave the dugout.
Brendan Donovan, the 29-year-old All-Star utility man acquired from the St. Louis Cardinals earlier this month, is already making an impression in his first Cactus League action with Seattle. Yes, he’s penciled in as the Mariners’ new leadoff hitter and starting third baseman. Yes, he’s grinding through at-bats and adjusting to new pitching philosophies. But what’s turning heads isn’t just what he’s doing between the lines. It’s what he’s doing after he leaves them.
Last week, in his Cactus League debut, Donovan was lifted from the game as planned. For many veterans, that’s the cue to retreat — shower, reset, call it a day. Instead, Donovan stayed planted on the bench, studying every pitch, every swing, every reaction. He talked. He listened. He watched. In a camp where roster spots are earned in inches, he was investing in something less measurable but arguably more powerful: trust.

“I’m new here,” Donovan said afterward, explaining why he lingered long after his final at-bat. “I’m trying to see how people play, talk to and build relationships on a personal level. I believe in getting to know someone as a person too and then you get to know them as a player as well.”
It sounds simple. It isn’t.
Spring training clubhouses can feel like airports — players coming and going, prospects rotating through, veterans protecting routines. Donovan chose disruption. He chose engagement. And that decision has not gone unnoticed.
Former Mariners pitcher and current analyst Charlie Furbush has been at the team’s Arizona complex, watching closely. Having once arrived in Seattle himself via trade, Furbush understands the invisible pressure that comes with a new uniform. “It can be nerve-wracking,” he said. “You’re doing introductions, you don’t know where to go. But what you continue to see out of Donovan is that he is actually putting in the work to get to know his teammates. And that is a humongous add inside that clubhouse.”
Humongous is not a word analysts toss around lightly.
Seattle’s offseason focus was clear: recalibrate the lineup, add contact, stabilize the top of the order. Donovan checks those boxes on paper. But the Mariners are chasing more than incremental offensive gains. They’re chasing cohesion. They’re chasing the kind of chemistry that holds steady when slumps hit and expectations tighten.

Furbush believes Donovan’s approach signals something deeper. “Inside that locker room, guys leave it all out on the line,” he said. “But sometimes you’ve gotta pull a layer back and build trust with somebody so that you can rely on these teammates when you’re struggling. He’s done such a good job to become a great teammate.”
That word — teammate — echoes loudly in Seattle’s camp.
It was no secret during the offseason that Donovan was a trade target. The Mariners had been circling for weeks before a deal with St. Louis finally materialized. Rumors swirled. Timelines shifted. For Donovan, the speculation could have been distracting. Instead, it appears to have sharpened his focus. By the time the move became official, he was ready to sprint.
“He’s excited to be here,” Furbush said. “He mentioned how he thought he was going to come here, maybe the deal took a little bit longer, but he’s certainly been excited.”
Excitement is contagious. So is work ethic.
In early workouts, Donovan has attacked drills with visible urgency. Coaches have noted his attention to detail at third base, where footwork and angles are being refined. At the top of the lineup, he’s embracing the responsibility of setting the tone — seeing pitches, grinding counts, forcing starters into uncomfortable innings. But it’s the quieter moments — the dugout conversations, the extra reps, the lingering questions to staff — that may matter most.

Seattle’s roster is talented, but talent alone has not carried it deep into October. The Mariners have flirted with contention, teased breakthroughs, and felt the sting of near-misses. Donovan arrives at a moment when the margin between promise and payoff feels razor thin.
His presence suggests the front office wasn’t just shopping for versatility. They were shopping for voice.
Spring numbers will fade. Box scores will reset. But impressions forged in March often echo into September. Donovan’s early message is unmistakable: he’s not here to blend in. He’s here to embed himself — in the lineup, in the clubhouse, in the identity of a team that believes its window is open.
And if the Mariners take the next step this season, don’t be surprised if the origin story traces back not to a towering home run, but to a quiet decision in a spring training dugout — a new leadoff hitter choosing to stay, to watch, to learn, and to lead before anyone officially handed him the title.