
The Seattle Mariners lost to the Texas Rangers 4-0, marking their record at 4-9 for the season. This continues a trend of slow starts for the Mariners, who have struggled in the early games of recent seasons.
Apr 8, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers catcher Danny Jansen (9) scores on a fielders choice as Seattle Mariners catcher Mitch Garver (18) is unable to come up with the catch during the fifth inning at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images | Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images
If the first dozen games of this Mariners season have felt derivative to you, that wouldnât be misplaced. Dating back to 2023, Seattle has stumbled out of the gate, starting each season with a record of 4-8. Thankfully, in all previous three years, the Mâs have bounced back, staunching the bleeding to win their next game (and more often than not the few following ones). But hasnât that script gotten old? The trips to the callback well surely wore thin in 2025. Whatâs next, a clip show episode? A main character has a baby?
Youâd do well to know that a new path has been chosen.
Todayâs morning contest got off to a promising start, with Rob Refsnyder battling back from an 0-2 count (and missing his first hit of the season by about two feet when he hammered a line drive down the third-base line foul) to work a leadoff walk against new Rangers lefty MacKenzie Gore. Cal Raleighâs slow start to the year continued on a strikeout, but Julio RodrĂguez drew a second walk on a 3-1 pitch that probably would have been challenged in a higher-leverage spot. Although Randy Arozarena and Brendan Donovan both went down on strikes, Seattle pushed Goreâs pitch count up to 26 to open the game; always an encouraging early sign.
By contrast, Bryan Woo stepped out of the gate as his usual self; breezy pace, bevy of fastballs, brisk at-bats. He needed eight fewer pitches to get through two frames than Gore used for one, and aside from a true jammed bleeder from Brandon Nimmo to lead off the first allowed no baserunners. Mitch Garver contributed with a keen ABS challenge in the second against Evan Carter, flipping a 1-1 count to 0-2 before Carter harmlessly flew out to Julio a few pitches later. Despite the efficiency, though, there were some scary contact moments, most notably a shot to left field off the bat of Jake Burger that Randy caught right at the wall and would have been out in seventeen big league ballparks. Those worries continued when Josh H. Smith led off the third by turning on a first-pitch four-seam up in the zone, sending it deep to right field. Refsnyder, filling in for the freshly injured VĂctor Robles, had quite the amount of ground to cover, somehow getting a bead on the ball. He leapt, andâŠ
Jo Adell, eat your heart out. Woo had to work a bit more through his next two frames, picking up a pair of strikeouts from Ezequiel DurĂĄn and Wyatt Langford that sandwiched a double over Julioâs head from Nimmo. Corey Seager led off the fourth with a walk, but was erased on a double play from Burger.
Meanwhile, Gore settled in, facing the minimum through his next three frames, including striking out the side in order in the third. Any chances for a no-hitter were put to rest in the fifth, though, when Mitch Garver led off the fifth with a solidly stroked base hit into center field for his first knock of the season. After having a possible double taken away by a diving stop by DurĂĄn in the third, it was a nice treat to see the Garv man get on the board. Any hopes of a big inning were dashed by a one-out double play from newest Mariner Connor Joe â on the second hardest-hit ball of the game. Tough scenes.
The bottom of the frame is where Woo began to wobble, despite getting a seven-pitch flyout from Carter for the first out. Danny Jansen grinded out another seven-pitch at-bat before hitting a bounding ball to third that Donovan cleanly fielded, but got off a weak throw due to his feet being improperly set, allowing the not-fleet-footed Jansen to reach. Smith and DurĂĄn followed with a pair of much more legitimate singles, loading the bases for just the guy we all wanted to see in this spot: Brandon Nimmo. Woo got the count to 1-1, and got Nimmo jammed on an inside fastball, dribbling the ball up the third base line. Joe, giving Josh Naylor the day off at first, charged, fielded, and threw well offline to home plate, allowing a pair of runs to cross on a ball that went maybe seventy feet.
Kyleâs brother tacked on the third and final run of the game with a routine sacrifice fly, and the rest of the game passed by in a blurry blink. While the Mâs got Gore out of the game through five on the back of that hefty first inning, the Rangers relievers were suffocating, allowing just one baserunner (a soft line drive into right field from Cole Young leading off the ninth. Hell yeah, Cole) over the last four frames in economical fashion. JosĂ© A. Ferrer, Eduard Bazardo, and Gabe Speier all stitched together three scoreless innings, facing the minimum thanks to a caught stealing by Garver and a double play from DurĂĄn. If youâre looking for a crumb of good news, Speier particularly looked sharp, picking up a pair of strikeouts in the eighth inning to get some work in.
The Mariners fell today to 4-9 for the first time in the Dipoto era. If nothing else, this year has gotten off to a different start. An off day tomorrow feels like a gift for fans and players alike before they head back home, kicking off the homestand with a weird, wrap-around Friday-to-Monday series with the Astros â who have just been swept by the Rockies. Weâll see how that turns out when we get there, but for now, I am prescribing reading a book, playing a video game, going for a walk (itâs a perfect spring day in Seattle if youâre so inclined), or any other activity is not paying a disastrous road trip any mind. Youâve earned that.
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The final score was 4-0 in favor of the Texas Rangers.
The Mariners are currently 4-9, which is consistent with their previous three seasons where they also started with a record of 4-8.
Rob Refsnyder and Julio RodrĂguez were notable players, with Refsnyder drawing a leadoff walk and RodrĂguez also getting on base with a walk.
The Mariners have historically struggled in the early part of the season, starting with a 4-8 record in each of the last three years before recovering in subsequent games.


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