PEORIA, Ariz. — The silence in the visiting clubhouse at Rogers Centre last October lingered long after the final out. For Luke Raley, it cut even deeper. As the Seattle Mariners processed the end of their postseason run in Toronto, Raley was left wrestling with a season that never truly began — and a realization that change was no longer optional.
“It was a bummer last year, especially in the postseason,” Raley admitted this week. “I didn’t really get to help the team in any way other than just being there and being supportive for the guys. But yeah, it’s tough. Going through injuries, it stinks.”
The 2025 campaign was supposed to build on momentum. Raley was coming off a breakout year in which he posted a career-high 3.2 bWAR and surged to a .895 OPS in the second half. He had carved out a reputation as a dangerous bat against right-handed pitching and was poised to see consistent at-bats across the outfield, designated hitter, and even first base.

Instead, it unraveled in batting practice.
A pull in his side in late April led to a diagnosis of a Grade 1 oblique strain — the kind of injury that sounds minor but destabilizes everything. Raley missed two months. When he returned, nothing felt normal. Three weeks later, standing in front of reporters in Sacramento, he was visibly frustrated after landing back on the injured list with back spasms he believed were connected to the original injury.
“When I came back from the oblique, it just never felt right. Didn’t feel like myself,” he said. “Especially when you’re hitting, like a millisecond makes a huge difference. Was my bat speed a little slower? What was going on? Could I not make the move I wanted to make?”
For a hitter, the oblique is unforgiving. It connects everything — rotation, torque, balance. “You tweak a hamstring or a quad and it doesn’t affect your swing,” Raley explained. “It’s the oblique. You can’t do anything. It affects your running. It affects your throwing, your swinging. It doesn’t matter. You use it in everything you do.”
He returned after a brief IL stint, but the numbers told the story. In 24 games down the stretch, Raley hit just .143/.234/.190 with no home runs. During a playoff push, there was little room for extended recalibration. The Mariners were chasing October. Raley was chasing his own body.
And that’s when the shift began — not publicly, not dramatically, but internally.

At 30, Raley confronted something many veterans resist: what worked at 25 doesn’t always work at 30. Strength had never been the issue. His physique makes that obvious. Few players his size can steal a base, beat out a bunt, track balls in center field, and launch tape-measure home runs. But the core injury exposed a blind spot — flexibility.
“I just think that was important and I hadn’t really dealt with an injury like that in the past,” he said. “You come to the realization that you’re getting a little older and you got to do some more things to make sure your body’s in the right shape to go out and play all the time.”
This winter, the overhaul began with restraint. Raley rested longer. He committed to physical therapy. Then came something entirely new: yoga.
“I rested for a little bit longer, made sure I was all healed up, did some physical therapy,” he said. “And then I just decided to do some yoga. It can’t hurt, get more flexible. I just thought that was going to be important for me. Do things to maintain my movement other than just put on strength. So now it is yoga first, lifting after.”
It is a subtle but significant philosophical shift — movement before muscle, mobility before mass.
The early returns have been impossible to ignore.
Raley led off and patrolled center field in Seattle’s Cactus League opener Friday, collecting hits in both plate appearances. Manager Dan Wilson noticed immediately.
“That was one of the highlights for me — seeing him come out of the shoot, hit a rocket, and get things going for him,” Wilson said. “All the stuff that he battled through last year, the injuries, a tough year from that standpoint. For him to put the work in that he did this offseason to get healthy and then come out there and do that is awesome.”
Wilson didn’t mince words about Raley’s importance. “This is a big impact bat. I’m excited to see all that confidence come back for him. We talk about completing the lineup. He can be a big part of that.”
In camp, Raley looks familiar — the same broad shoulders, the same athletic build — but he insists the difference is internal. More limber. Less restricted. Prepared.
“I see myself being the energy for the team and doing things the right way, playing hard,” he said. “It goes a long way. Other guys see it. They play off that. You take the extra base and the next guy gets a base hit and they get an RBI. It means something.”
Last October, he was mostly a spectator. This year, he believes, will be different.
“We know how good this team can be,” Raley said. “It’s not a feeling that you get all the time. The team we have this year has the potential to do something really special.”
For Luke Raley, the most challenging season of his career may have delivered its most valuable lesson: evolve, or fall behind. In Peoria, under the Arizona sun, the evolution is already underway.