News

When Bryan Woo gets to the field every day, Ichiro Suzuki is already there. Taking batting practice. Shagging fly balls. Playing catch. He hangs around after too, offering any advice he can to the ...
There he was, in the flesh, at the Otesaga Resort Hotel on the eve of his induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame: ...
Mariners fans, gathering to watch Ichiro's Hall of Fame induction, came away happy to "see that side of his personality, and ...
Although Suzuki's plaque did not produce the same amount of outrage as the infamous Dwyane Wade statue, the public had strong ...
“Lou Piniella was very skeptical,” said Larry Stone, a Seattle Times baseball writer who has covered Ichiro’s career ...
The 10-time All-Star and 10-time Gold Glove winner captured a generation of Mariners fans, even throughout the franchise’s ...
This weekend, Mariners legend Ichiro Suzuki will become the first Asian player inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Ichiro will transition into a role deemed "Special Assistant to the Chairman," where he will work with the Mariners' major-league staff and front office. But his agent insists Ichiro is not retiring.
It was May 2003, and the Seattle Mariners were in Chicago playing the White Sox. The Mariners’ front office told Melvin that ...
Perhaps Ichiro's swan song will take place next March, when the Mariners open the season against the A's for two games in Japan. Otherwise, even if Ichiro doesn't want to admit it, this is a ...
But his standing as one of Seattle’s most accomplished players, and his “positive impact in enhancing the image of the Seattle Mariners and/or Major League Baseball” will make Ichiro the ...