OF Dustin Ackley has been one of the many disappointments for the underperforming Mariners. / Drew McKenzie, Sportspress Northwest 

If the Mariners have any hope of a second-half surge to put them back in the American League playoff race, they must start winning at an unprecedented clip.

After Thursday’s 7-2 victory over the Angels, the Mariners are a pedestrian 40-46, treading water since a disastrous 2-9 homestand from May 28-June 7 put them seven games under .500.

An optimist looks at the standings July 10 and sees the Mariners six games out of the second AL wild card. A pessimist looks at the standings and sees the Mariners have the second-worst record of 15 AL teams, ahead of only the Athletics (39-49).

Three weeks from the trade deadline, a realist sees long odds of Seattle making the playoffs.

To win 90 games, the Mariners must go 50-26 to finish the season. To win 88 games, the number needed last year to qualify for a play-in for the second AL wild card, the Mariners must go 48-28. They need to pass eight(!) teams.

That might be manageable if this team has a two-week hot streak or, say, win five games in row a few times. But that appears a Herculean task — the club’s longest winning streak is four.

The most likely scenario is they end up somewhere in the middle. Yes, they’ve underperformed. But the anemic hitting with runners in scoring position, if the sabermetric crowd is right, should even out as the season progresses.

Frankly, it’s hard to go 0-for-14 with runners in scoring position (see Wednesday’s 5-4 loss to the Tigers) more than a few times per season — no matter how many times outfielder Dustin Ackley fails in a high-leverage situations (see Wednesday’s 5-4 loss to the Tigers).

Remember when the Mariners were getting major publicity? Remember when Sports Illustrated picked them to make the American League Championship Series? Remember when The Washington Post picked them to beat the Nationals in the World Series?

The thought was the off-season additions of reigning home-run king Nelson Cruz, Justin Ruggiano, Seth Smith and Rickie Weeks would take the offense from bad to average, while the pitching would continue to dominate as it did in 2014.

Of course, the 2015 offense is last in the AL in almost every category that matters. Last month, they fired hitting coach Howard Johnson and replaced him with franchise icon Edgar Martinez.

As of Thursday night, the Mariners were a 50-1 shot to win the World Series and a 25-1 shot to win the ALCS, according to Bovada.

Yes, Seattle pounded out a season-high 19 hits Thursday, most since May 2012, but problems still exist up and down the lineup.

Former No. 3 overall pick C Mike Zunino, expected to make a positive jump in his second full big-league season, is worse, flailing at a historic clip with a .167  batting average. Ruggiano is in Tacoma. Weeks was DFA’d. Cano, despite a recent surge, still has acid reflux. And Ackley, a former No. 2 pick, flickers but never flames.

The bullpen, with Brandon Maurer, Yoervis Medina and Dominic Leone traded and the struggles of Fernando Rodney, Tom Wilhelmsen, Tyler Olson and Danny Farquhar — and now with Charlie Furbush on the 15-day DL — isn’t the shutdown force it was last season. Rodney lost his closer’s job and the rest have been demoted at least once or dispatched.

The re-acquisition of Mark Lowe and Joe Biemel and the development of Carson Smith have helped avert disaster in the pen.

Starting pitching continues to keep the Mariners in games when they have no business being in games. Since LHP Mike Montgomery was recalled from Triple-A Tacoma to replace James Paxton (injured middle finger) in the starting rotation, he is 4-2 with a 1.62 ERA in seven starts, including back-to-back shutouts against the Royals and Padres in late June.

Ace Felix Hernandez, a winner Thursday, was named to the American League All-Star team for the sixth time despite an uncharacteristic June (2-3, 5.51 ERA in six starts). RHP Taijuan Walker (7-6, 4.53 ERA), outside of Tuesday’s five-run hiccup against Detroit, pitched like an All-Star the past few months by rededicating himself to a fastball that regularly reaches the upper 90s.

But questions remain. Can veteran southpaw J.A. Happ, sent Thursday to High-A Bakersfield for temp work during the All-Star break, continue to eat up innings? Will veteran right-hander Hisashi Iwakuma return to All-Star form?

In his first start Monday after missing most of the first half of the season with a strained right lat, the 34-year-old allowed four solo homers in a 12-5 loss to the Tigers.

If Iwakuma or Happ falter, the Mariners have Cuban southpaw Roenis Elias waiting in Tacoma. He was solid before Montgomery’s out-of-nowhere emergence essentially forced him out of the rotation.

Paxton, once the most promising of the “Big Three” pitching prospects, is throwing from 75 feet and will be back later this season if he doesn’t have another setback. A healthy Paxton would be better than a trade deadline deal for rotation depth.

Pitching is a moot point if this team doesn’t hit.

The Mariners in the last week called up OF Franklin Gutierrez and DH/1B Jesus Montero from Tacoma in a desperate attempt for production. Both hit well in the PCL, but are limited in the field.

For all the free agent money spent to improve a team that won 87 games a year ago, the Mariners nearing the All-Star break have regressed. And they still don’t have a backup catcher with more than one hit.

It is tiresome to continue writing it. It’s awful for fans to continue watching it.

But the Mariners must find a way to generate a major-league average offense if there’s any hope of ending their 14-year playoff drought.

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19 Comments

  1. So it’s the 6th inning & the M’s are being slaughtered……. unsurprisingly, as they won yesterday which means they can’t possibly win today. Looks like Magic Mike Montgomery has been figured out. I think on the Sandmeyer show today, they were talking about the possibility of getting back into the race with a sweep of the Angels……. AHAHAHAHA don’t make me laugh, these guys can barely win ONE game, yet alone 3/4 straight against one team. If anybody gets swept by this Seattle trainwreck, they should immediately be transferred to the Class A California League. Seattle M’s = Clownshow.

  2. I’m starting to switch over from Mariners games to old war movies. That’s not a good sign. But at least I know we won WWII. Good thing the Mariners weren’t there…

  3. The Mariners were last in the AL West on this date in 1995 with a 34-35 record, five games back from division leading Texas. They have 75 games remaining in the season and are seven games back currently. More than enough time to make something happen. They’re heading into the break on a 5-5 record in their last 10 games, a far cry better than having a losing record. The Astros seem to be slowly faltering, 4-6 in their last 10. The Rangers have the same record as do the A’s. At some point the loss of Hamilton will catch up with the Angels. The All Star break is coming at a good time for the M’s. Hopefully they’ll come back ready for the second half.

    • The 1995 M’s were loaded with HOF’ers, should be HOF’ers & All Stars. This team is filled with average to below average players. There will be no comeback.

      • You can say that now about the ’95 team but at the time at best they had Randy and Junior. Edgar and Tino each had been to the game once up until then. The current roster has five players who’ve played in the mid-summer classic.

        • This team does not have Griffey, Edgar, Tino, Buhner, Wilson, Johnson, etc…. those were REAL players, not this garbage with Zunino, Ackley, Miller, Morrison, Jackson, BUMbo, Mr single Cano, Sucre, Iwakuma, etc….. all these guys are let downs, never will be’s & has been’s. 2015 M’s = laughing stock & AL West basement.

    • A franchise gets one preposterous seasonal rally in its lifespan. The Mariners have used theirs.

  4. The team was built on longshots, players expected to develop, players coming back from injury, players who had a hot month or two the prior year and that was expected to be the norm this year. When you bet on the ‘come’ so much you wind up with a team that’s not whole, not sustainable. Kyle’s a great player. But he’s not a .300 hitter. LoMo’s never going to play 150 games and hit .290. Doesn’t look like Ackley can hit .260 or Zunino .230. Paxson’s a great prospect but…what made people think he was going to pitch 180 innings when he had never done that? Same with Walker. We’ll see. The entire team is built on rosy player projections that, outside of Felix and the Big Three, don’t have past histories that would suggest such bright predictions. “What’s past is prologue”.

    • The majority of regulars on this team established in ’14 they were competent MLBers. Several have regressed so far. That’s the killer.

      • Yep. With no depth they can’t afford regressions. Although if the majority were competent last year, as you say, how did they wind up last or next to last in runs scored? They avoided critical injuries last year and that definitely helped them get 87 wins. This year is closer to normal in the injury department. But no depth. So it hurts.

  5. We are mathematically in the race for a play off spot. Have the M’s the math skill set to win in for this season?