This year’s inductees into the National Baseball Hall of Fame have made their cap logo choices for their plaques. Or, more ...
Ichiro Suzuki will have a Seattle Mariners logo on the cap of his Hall of Fame plaque, CC Sabathia will take the New York Yankees logo and Billy Wagner will have the symbol of the Houston Astros.
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — (AP) — CC Sabathia will have a New York Yankees logo on the cap of his Hall of Fame plaque and Bill ...
Some promising news for the Mariners, though: Their farm system remains among the healthiest in the sport, a continuing trend reflected in Baseball America’s newest prospects rankings ...
Twenty, maybe 25 years from now, do you see a player entering the Baseball Hall of Fame with a Mariners cap on? If Félix Hernández, the former Cy Young winner who finished with just more than 20 ...
Ichiro made his debut with the Mariners in 2001, becoming the first Japanese position player to join Major League Baseball. That season he won both the American League MVP and Rookie of the Year ...
Ken Griffey Jr. welcomed his former Seattle Mariners teammate, Ichiro Suzuki, to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in an MLB Network video shared Tuesday by MLB's Twitter/X account. Griffey ...
Ichiro Suzuki received a special honor on Tuesday when he was elected into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Now, the team he spent most of his career with plans to honor him further. The ...
On the same day that Ichiro Suzuki learned that he'd been elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, the Seattle Mariners announced that they'll retire his No. 51 during the upcoming season ...
Ichiro’s iconic baseball career has formally reached its historic capstone. The Mariners’ all-time hits leader received the expected call Tuesday afternoon, officially welcoming him to the ...
Ichiro, the Mariners icon and all-time hit leader of professional baseball, will be enshrined in immortality. The Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA) elected the legendary leadoff ...
When he first arrived in Seattle in 2001, Ichiro wasn’t sure what kind of reception he would get from American baseball fans. Fair to say, the Mariners’ iconic right fielder didn’t expect ...