Robinson Cano has put up Hall of Fame numbers during his first nine major league seasons, all with the New York Yankees. / Drew McKenzie, Sportspress Northwest

Given the boobery of the Mariners “leadership” team (Howard Lincoln, Chuck Armstrong, Jack Zduriencik), as described by Geoff Baker of the Seattle Times in his excellent piece “Dysfunction At The Top: Eric Wedge, Others Point To Trouble In Mariners Front Office,” it might behoove Lloyd McClendon to ask out of his new contract and wait for a better opportunity, and for Robinson Cano to reconsider his decision to cast his lot in Seattle. Even for $240 million, 10 years is a long time in stir.

But assuming Cano is a go, what are the Mariners getting? World Series MVP David Ortiz of the Red Sox took a stab at answering that when he appeared on WEEI in Boston and expressed wonderment that the Yankees would permit their best player, the “face of the franchise,” as Ortiz described Cano, to bolt the Big Apple over a matter of a “mere” $70 million.

“This is great news for us,” said Ortiz. “This guy hurt us. He is a guy you’re never going to forget about because he puts up monster numbers.”

Asked about the staggering sum Cano will receive, tied for the third-most lucrative contract in baseball history, Ortiz told WEEI that such sums are to be expected.

“That’s what the players are getting,” Ortiz continued. “Young, talented players with the skills that he has, that’s what they’re getting. I couldn’t believe the Yankees let that guy walk away. He’s the face of that ballclub. He was backing up everybody. He makes the game look so easy. Now, we’re not going to see him that much, thank God.”

Desperate to become relevant after 12 years of no playoffs and self-inflicted public apathy, the Mariners are paying $240 million for a Hall of Famer in the making, gambling that Cano can revitalize one of baseball’s most turgid offenses. Should any doubt remain about Cano’s credentials, let’s get granular, starting with Cano’s career against his new team, one of 10 things to know about Cano.

1. Cano is a career .318 hitter vs. the Mariners, and a career .309 hitter at Safeco Field. In 74 games against Seattle, he delivered 88 hits, 33 runs, 25 doubles, one triple, seven home runs, 50 RBIs and .361, .491 and .852 on-base, slugging and OPS percentages. He is a .348 hitter vs. Felix Hernandez and a .333 batter vs. Hisashi Iwakuma.

Cano had four hits in a game four times against Seattle, including Sept. 4, 2007 (4-for-5, 3 RBIs in a 12-3 win), May 24, 2008 (4-for-4, run, one RBI in a 12-6 win), Sept. 19, 2009 (4-for-5 with 3 doubles and 2 runs in a 10-1 win), and May 11, 2012 (4-for-4, RBI in a 6-2 win).

2. With the 30-year-old Cano shown for comparison purposes, the following is a list of Hall of Fame second basemen, whose careers began after 1900, ranked by career OPS after their age-30 seasons. The list omits Jackie Robinson, after whom Cano is named, who did not break the color barrier until he was 28.

Player Seasons Games Hits BA OBP SLG OPS
Rogers Hornsby 1915-26 1534 2083 .359 .427 .570 .997
Tony Lazzeri 1926-34 1253 1391 .300 .383 .482 .865
Robinson Cano 2005-13 1374 1649 .309 .355 .504 .860
Charlie Gehringer 1924-33 1140 1413 .316 .383 .473 .856
Eddie Collins 1906-17 1479 1725 .329 .420 .427 .847
Joe Gordon 1938-48 1299 1060 .272 .358 .475 .833
Rod Carew 1967-76 1328 1658 .328 .384 .434 .818
Frankie Frisch 1919-28 1294 1674 .321 .370 .447 .817
Joe Morgan 1963-74 1346 1338 .273 .389 .422 .811
Bobby Doerr 1937-48 1471 1587 .285 .357 .452 .809
Roberto Alomar 1988-98 1563 1825 .302 .370 .438 .808
Ryne Sandberg 1981-90 3389 1583 .287 .342 .452 .795
Nellie Fox 1947-58 1454 1711 .297 .357 .377 .733
Bill Mazeroski 1956-67 1737 1692 .264 .301 .379 .680

3. Cano has three seasons with at least 25 home runs and 100 RBIs as a second baseman (2010-11, ’13), a mark bettered by only two others at the position – Jeff Kent (six seasons) and Rogers Hornsby (four).

4. Cano is the ninth second baseman to post at least three 100-RBI seasons and the fourth since 1951, joining Jeff Kent (8), Chase Utley (4) and Bret Boone (3). The second basemen to achieve the feat before 1951 — Charlie Gehringer (7), Bobby Doerr (6), Tony Lazzeri (5), Roger Hornsby (5) and Joe Gordon (4) — are all in the Hall of Fame.

5. For all players through their first nine seasons, Cano is one of three to hit at least 200 homers and at least 350 doubles. Albert Pujols had 366 homers and 387 doubles and Todd Helton 271 homers and 373 doubles.

6. Debuting as a 21-year-old in April 1967, Hall of Famer Rod Carew collected 150 hits (and the AL Rookie of the Year Award) in his first year, and by the end of 1976 (his age-30 season), had 1,658 hits. Cano just completed age-30 season with 1,649 hits.

7. Cano is the third second baseman to reach 200 home runs and bat .300 or higher over the course of a career, joining Roberto Alomar and Rogers Hornsby.

8. Cano has produced two seasons — 2009 and 2010 — with more than 200 hits and at least 25 home runs. He is the only second baseman not named Rogers Hornsby to have more than one such season in a career. Hornsby had five, Cano has two, and Chase Utley (2006), Alfonso Soriano (2002) and Bret Boone had one each. Boone’s came with the Mariners in 2001 (206 hits, 37 home runs).

9. Thirty-six second basemen have had 200 hits in a season, but only 11 had 200 more than once, including Cano.

10. Cano has five seasons with at least 35 doubles and 25 homers. The only Yankee with more such seasons is Lou Gehrig with eight. Cano has hit at least 25 home runs in each of the past five seasons, becoming the sixth Yankee to have a streak of five straight seasons with at least 25, joining Babe Ruth (14), Gehrig (12), Mickey Mantle (9), Alex Rodriguez (7) and Joe DiMaggio (6).

The Mariners are acquiring quite a player. Too bad Cano can’t crow about his new employers.

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4 Comments

  1. Cano HAD good numbers but here in the M’s Twilight Zone he’ll be lucky to be an average player.

    I kinda hope he “fails” his M’s physical and then goes to a legit franchise.

    • Perfect– They can’t change their spots. PERFECT AND TOTALLY PREDICTABLE FOR THESE CLOWNS– (See also accidental Varitek trade…):

      “By mid-day Friday, Seattle had heard that some team bid nine years and $225 million for Robinson Cano, so the Mariners upped their bid to $240 million and 10 years before apparently realizing the initial bid had come from themselves, too. ”

      THEY ARE SO, so, unbelievably incompetent– imagine the hysterically pleasing laughter Beane has been given over and over and over and over…

      Let’s hope this, too, makes the national news. They deserve every bad hit they can get.