Monthly Archives: July 2015

A Second Chance At Marcell Ozuna? Mariners Should Take It.

Last year about this time, we here at Mission Mariner offered our take on who Jack Zduriencik and the Mariners should be targeting as the trade deadline neared.  That player was young Miami Marlins center fielder Marcell Ozuna.

At the time, Ozuna was slashing a .276/.323/.463, 15 homeruns, a 117 wRC+, and putting up solid defense with a DRS of 9.  With highly touted Jake Marisnick knocking on the centerfield door, it was a prime opportunity to nab someone whom we felt could be the next Carlos Gomez.

But instead, the Mariners dealt for the Tiger’s Austin Jackson and, well, we all know how that has worked out.  Not that Jackson has been horrible, but he has been far from the player that he was when he was with the Tigers.  And with Jackson set to leave as a free agent at the end of the year, and with no MLB-ready prospects in the pipeline to take over, the Mariners will soon find themselves in the exact situation they were in heading into the 2014 season.

Luckily, sometimes life gives you second chances.  And for the Mariners, they may have a second chance at Ozuna.

On July 5th, Ozuna was sent down to the Marlins Triple A affiliate after falling into a slump that saw him go from a .289/.362/.439 on May 11th, to just a .249/.301/.337 just 48 games later. (a .224/.260/.273 over that 48 game stretch).  And recent reports have now surfaced indicating the Marlins may be willing to deal Ozuna for young pitching.

Around this time last year, we suggested a package of Taijuan Walker and D.J. Peterson for Ozuna.  With Ozuna’s recent struggles, perhaps a straight Walker for Ozuna could get the deal done?

While Ozuna’s recent struggles may warrant some reasonable questioning, the fact is that all young players go through slumps.  For most, it’s a natural progression. Ozuna has already had success at the MLB level, and it should be expected that he will continue to do so.  Last year, we also advocated that the Mariners look into the young and talented – yet struggling – Aaron Hicks.  All Hicks has done this year is bounce back by providing solid defense and a .299/.364/.437 as the Twins’ center fielder.

There’s no reason not to believe Ozuna won’t get back to the 3.7 WAR player that he was last year.

The other day we suggested that the best trade deadline move for the Mariners was to do nothing.  But second chances don’t come around often.  As such, Zduriencik would be a fool not to grab this one while he can.

As Trade Deadline Looms, Best Move for Mariners Is To Fire Jack Zduriencik

How disappointing has the 2015 season been for the Seattle Mariners?  Think anticipation for the release of Star Wars Episode 1, The Phantom Menace.  Then think Jar Jar Binks.  Yes, that disappointing.

The Mariners currently sit with a 46-55 record, ten games behind the division leading Angels, and seven games behind the Twins for the second wild card.  Mathematically, the Mariners are still “in it.”  But by all reasonable measures, the season is over.

We all know what has proceeded to happen.  No one needs to recap what has taken place on the field by manager Lloyd McClendon’s boys of summer.  And, yes, there is blame to go all around, from Robinson Cano’s lackluster play both in the field and at the plate, to Fernando Rodney’s inability to record outs.  But despite the poor play by almost everyone not named Nelson Cruz, the wheels for what can only be described as ghastly baseball were put in motion by GM Jack Zduriencik during the offseason and shouldn’t be surprising.   

Once again, another lost season can primarily be traced back to one thing: Zduriencik’s inability to properly construct a major league roster highlighted by his failure to make contingency plans should, say, someone like Mike Zunino fails to improve upon his lackluster 2014 season or, worse yet, regresses even further.

And in the case of Zunino, when a viable catcher was acquired in the form of Welington Castillo (who could take over for the struggling Zunino) Zduriencik did the unthinkable by flipping Castillo to Arizona for Mark Trumbo, thereby doubling down on the type of player that was already plaguing the Mariners: a slow-footed power hitter, with high strike out and low on-base ratios, and whose best position is 1B/DH but would be logging the majority of innings in the outfield.

With the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline just two days away, the question lingers whether the Mariners should be sellers or buyers?  The Mariners have a few viable trade chips at their disposal should they choose to sell, namely Hisashi Iwakuma, JA Happ, and Austin Jackson.  They also have a handful of players that they could use to acquire immediate help this season and reload for next in the form of James Paxton, Taijuan Walker, Ketel Marte, D.J. Peterson, and Alex Jackson.

With the season virtually over, selling off assets would seem to make sense.  But with long-term deals given to Cruz, Cano, Seager and Hernandez in what has transformed into a “win now” game plan, there is an argument that acquiring players for a second half playoff push this season who can also be contributors for next season is the better move rather than acquiring B-level prospects who would not help in the foreseeable future.

Whichever road one believes is best to take, the bigger question to ask is whether Zduriencik can be trusted to execute a deal that would be to the Mariners benefit, whether for this season or for the future?  After seven years of botched trades, failing to develop a young core, and questionable free agent acquisitions, allowing Zduriencik another shot at “fixing” this team’s ailments very well could be the worst move of all.

Instead, a better move would be for the Mariners to stand pat, let the rest of the season play out, and then excuse Zduriencik from his GM duties at the conclusion of the season.  Then, to bring in someone with a high baseball pedigree to tweak this roster into a playoff contender.

After three lackluster prequels, even Disney was smart enough to remove George Lucas from the director’s chair and, instead, bring in the more capable and relevant JJ Abrams to lead the next cinematic installment of the Star Wars franchise.

After seven years of mostly disappointment, it’s well past time for the Mariners to do the same.