1995 Seattle Mariners season

The 1995 Seattle Mariners season was the 19th in the history of the franchise. The team finished with a regular season record of 79–66 (.545) to win their first American League West title, after having been down by as many as 13 games in early August. They had tied the California Angels for first place, and in the one-game tiebreaker, the Mariners defeated the Angels 9–1 to make the postseason for the first time in franchise history.[1][2]

1995 Seattle Mariners
American League West Champions
LeagueAmerican League
DivisionWest
BallparkKingdome
CitySeattle, Washington
Record79–66 (.545)
Divisional place1st
OwnersNintendo of America
(represented by John Ellis)
General managersWoody Woodward
ManagersLou Piniella
TelevisionKIRO-TV 7
Prime Sports NW
RadioKIRO 710 AM
(Dave Niehaus, Rick Rizzs,
Chip Caray, Ron Fairly)
← 1994Seasons1996 →

In the postseason, the Mariners defeated the New York Yankees in the best-of-five American League Division Series after losing the first two games in New York, a series notable for Edgar Martínez' walk-off 11th-inning double in the fifth game. In the League Championship Series with the favored Cleveland Indians, Seattle won the opener at home and the third game on the road,[3] but fell in six games.[4]

Offseason

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Regular season

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  • Ken Griffey Jr. suffered a severe left wrist injury on May 26 while making a catch at the wall that sidelined him until mid-August.[9][10][11] The Mariners stayed afloat at around .500, and their historic late season comeback tied the California Angels.[12]
  • The Mariners honored the West Coast Negro Baseball League Seattle Steelheads when they wore 1946 Steelheads uniforms on September 9, 1995, at home against the Kansas City Royals. The Royals wore Kansas City Monarchs uniforms.[13] The Mariners beat the Royals 6 to 2 in front of 39,157 fans at the Kingdome.[14]
  • Randy Johnson won the Cy Young Award. The award came at the end of a banner year. Johnson (18-2, 2.48 ERA, 294 strikeouts) narrowly missed becoming the first AL Triple Crown pitcher (leading the league in wins, ERA, and strikeouts) since Detroit's Hal Newhouser accomplished the feat in 1945.[15] His .900 winning percentage broke Ron Guidry's 1978 record, and his strikeouts per nine innings ratio of 12.35 broke the record held by Nolan Ryan.[15]

Opening Day lineup

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Roster

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1995 Seattle Mariners
Roster
PitchersCatchers

Infielders

OutfieldersManager

Coaches

Notable transactions

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Draft picks

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Pennant chase

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On the morning of August 21, the Mariners (53–53 (.500)) were 12½ games behind the Angels (66–41 (.617)).[23] Two weeks later, the lead was down to 5½ games, as the Angels went 1–12 while the Mariners were 8–5. After another two weeks, the lead was down to three games, and the teams were even at 72–63 (.533) on the morning of September 21. Seattle led by as many as three games. On September 30 with 2 games left of season, the Mariners only needed one more win to clinch their first playoff spot in franchise history, but couldn't hold it, as they lost their final two games at Texas; the Angels won their final five games to tie the Mariners at 78–66 (.542), requiring a one-game playoff for the division title.[24] Also on a five-game winning streak, the Yankees secured the new wild card berth at 79–65 (.549).[25]

Season standings

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AL WestWLPct.GBHomeRoad
Seattle Mariners79660.54546–2733–39
California Angels78670.538139–3339–34
Texas Rangers74700.51441–3133–39
Oakland Athletics67770.46511½38–3429–43

Note: Teams played 144 games instead of the normal 162 as a consequence of the 1994 strike.
          Seattle and California each played 145 games due to the one-game tiebreaker.

Record vs. opponents

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Sources: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]
TeamBALBOSCALCWSCLEDETKCMILMINNYYOAKSEATEXTOR
Baltimore4–99–46–12–108–54–57–53–66–75–76–74–17–6
Boston9–411–35–36–78–53–28–45–45–88–47–53–48–5
California4–93–1110–23–26–25–75–28–57–56–77–66–78–2
Chicago1–63–52–105–88–48–56–710–33–2–17–54–95–76–5
Cleveland10–27–62–38–510–311–19–49–46–67–05–46–310–3
Detroit5–85–82–64–83–103–48–57–55–82–35–54–87–6
Kansas City5–42–37–55–81–114–310–26–73–75–87–58–67–5
Milwaukee5–74–82–57–64–95–82–109–45–67–23–25–77–5
Minnesota6–34–55–83–104–95–77–64–93–45–74–85–81–4
New York7–68–55–72–3–16–68–57–36–54–34–94–96–312–1
Oakland7–54–87–65–70–73–28–52–77–59–47–65–83–7
Seattle7–65–76–79–44–55–55–72–38–49–46–710–33–4
Texas1–44–37–67–53–68–46–87–58–53–68–53–109–3
Toronto6–75–82–85–63–106–75–75–74–11–127–34–33–9


Game log

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Regular season

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1995 game log: 79–66 (Home: 46–27; Away: 33–39)
April: 3–1 (Home: 3–1; Away: 0–0)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordStreak
1April 27Tigers3–0Johnson (1–0)Bergman (0–1)Ayala (1)34,6561–0W1
2April 28Tigers9–2Bosio (1–0)Doherty (0–1)19,3362–0W2
3April 29Tigers11–1Fleming (1–0)D. Wells (0–1)Converse (1)27,2643–0W3
4April 30Tigers1–10Moore (2–0)B. Wells (0–1)19,7433–1L1
May: 16–12 (Home: 9–3; Away: 7–9)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordStreak
5May 1@ Rangers4–1Davis (1–0)Rogers (0–2)Ayala (2)19,1044–1W1
6May 2@ Rangers15–3Nelson (1–0)Heredia (0–1)17,9835–1W2
7May 3@ Rangers5–1Bosio (2–0)Pavlik (0–1)17,3756–1W3
8May 5@ Angels0–10Patterson (1–0)Fleming (1–1)30,2306–2L1
9May 6@ Angels5–7Williams (1–1)Wells (0–2)L. Smith (4)21,8826–3L2
10May 7@ Angels3–2Johnson (2–0)Finley (0–3)Ayala (3)24,8687–3W1
11May 9@ Athletics5–7Wengert (1–1)Converse (0–1)8,1257–4L1
12May 10@ Athletics4–7Ontiveros (2–1)Fleming (1–2)Eckersley (4)8,4957–5L2
13May 11@ Athletics1–3Harkey (1–1)Villone (0–1)Eckersley (5)9,4447–6L3
14May 12White Sox6–4Johnson (3–0)Alvarez (1–2)Risley (1)18,1668–6W1
15May 13White Sox6–5Davis (2–0)Fernandez (1–2)Ayala (4)40,6539–6W2
16May 14White Sox2–10Abbott (2–1)Converse (0–2)19,4759–7L1
17May 16@ Royals2–4 (5)Haney (1–0)Fleming (1–3)12,3309–8L2
18May 17@ Royals4–0Wells (1–2)Gubicza (1–3)12,02010–8W1
19May 18@ Royals2–3 (14)Brewer (1–1)Converse (0–3)14,79310–9L1
20May 19@ Twins6–8Radke (2–1)Davis (2–1)Aguilera (6)14,63910–10L2
21May 20@ Twins10–6Belcher (1–0)Erickson (1–4)13,76211–10W1
22May 21@ Twins5–2Johnson (4–0)Tapani (2–2)Ayala (5)12,91812–10W2
23May 22@ Tigers8–10Boever (3–0)Carmona (0–1)Henneman (4)9,16712–11L1
24May 23Red Sox4–5 (10)Belinda (3–0)Frey (0–2)Ryan (3)11,86812–12L2
25May 24Red Sox15–6Carmona (1–1)Pierce (0–3)Nelson (1)10,04113–12W1
26May 25Red Sox4–3Belcher (2–0)Z. Smith (0–1)Ayala (6)12,19414–12W2
27May 26Orioles8–3Johnson (5–0)McDonald (0–2)15,25615–12W3
28May 27Orioles4–11Mills (3–0)Wells (1–3)20,79715–13L1
29May 28Orioles5–2Bosio (3–0)Brown (4–2)Ayala (7)16,78516–13W1
30May 29Yankees8–7 (12)Ayala (1–0)Bankhead (1–1)18,94817–13W2
31May 30Yankees7–3Nelson (2–0)Perez (2–2)10,70918–13W3
32May 31Yankees11–9Wells (2–3)MacDonald (0–1)Ayala (8)13,03519–13W4
June: 11–17 (Home: 5–9; Away: 6–8)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordStreak
33June 2@ Red Sox5–6Belinda (4–0)Torres (0–2)33,47619–14L1
34June 3@ Red Sox8–10Cormier (2–0)Carmona (1–2)Ryan (6)27,30119–15L2
35June 4@ Red Sox1–2 (10)Wakefield (3–0)Ayala (1–1)28,51219–16L3
36June 5@ Orioles2–0Johnson (6–0)McDonald (1–3)36,73220–16W1
37June 6@ Orioles6–12Moyer (1–1)Fleming (1–4)33,55620–17L1
38June 7@ Orioles10–2Bosio (4–0)Brown (5–3)38,40721–17W1
39June 8@ Orioles2–8Mussina (5–3)Torres (0–3)40,73021–18L1
40June 9@ Yankees11–1Belcher (3–0)Perez (3–3)19,65022–18W1
41June 10@ Yankees3–2Nelson (3–0)Howe (1–2)Ayala (9)25,27923–18W2
42June 11@ Yankees7–10Howe (2–2)Frey (0–3)Wetteland (7)26,03723–19L1
43June 12Royals9–10Meacham (2–2)Villone (0–2)Montgomery (9)11,62823–20L2
44June 13Royals1–3Haney (3–1)Torres (0–4)Montgomery (10)10,22323–21L3
45June 14Royals1–2Appier (9–2)Belcher (3–1)Montgomery (11)12,58523–22L4
46June 16Twins1–10Radke (3–6)Johnson (6–1)20,76223–23L5
47June 17Twins6–4Bosio (5–0)Trombley (0–2)Ayala (10)16,75124–23W1
48June 18Twins2–1Risley (1–0)Tapani (4–6)24,70725–23W2
49June 19@ White Sox6–8McCaskill (3–2)Fleming (1–5)Hernandez (11)22,40625–24L1
50June 20@ White Sox9–5Johnson (7–1)Alvarez (1–2)25,86826–24W1
51June 21@ White Sox4–5 (10)McCaskill (4–2)Risley (1–1)21,22826–25L1
52June 22@ White Sox3–2Torres (1–4)Abbott (3–3)Ayala (11)20,83627–25W1
53June 23Angels4–14Langston (6–1)Belcher (3–2)14,28227–26L1
54June 24Angels3–2Johnson (8–1)Finley (5–6)31,27528–26W1
55June 25Angels5–7Boskie (6–1)Bosio (5–1)Smith (19)14,32528–27L1
56June 26Angels7–3Torres (2–4)Anderson (1–1)18,12629–27W1
57June 27Athletics4–6Harkey (4–4)Belcher (3–3)Eckersley (16)9,76729–28L1
58June 28Athletics5–7Van Poppel (1–1)Nelson (3–1)15,16529–29L2
59June 29Athletics5–2Bosio (6–1)Arce (1–2)Ayala (12)13,70130–29W1
60June 30Rangers2–10Gross (3–7)Torres (2–5)12,13730–30L1
July: 13–14 (Home: 8–7; Away: 5–7)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordStreak
61July 1Rangers2–0Belcher (4–3)Pavlik (4–4)Ayala (13)17,32331–30W1
62July 2Rangers4–3Ayala (2–1)Whiteside (2–2)19,40432–30W2
63July 3@ Tigers2–4D. Wells (7–3)Bosio (6–2)Henneman (15)23,78032–31L1
64July 4@ Tigers8–9Christopher (1–0)Ayala (2–2)20,18832–32L2
65July 5@ Tigers6–8Christopher (2–0)Carmona (1–3)Henneman (16)17,22432–33L3
66July 6@ Indians1–8Ogea (5–1)Belcher (4–4)41,66132–34L4
67July 7@ Indians5–3Johnson (9–1)Clark (4–3)41,74133–34W1
68July 8@ Indians3–7Nagy (7–4)Bosio (6–3)41,89333–35L1
69July 9@ Indians9–3Torres (3–5)Hershiser (5–4)41,89734–35W1
-July 1166th All-Star Game in Arlington, TX
70July 13Blue Jays1–4Cone (8–5)Belcher (4–5)Castillo (4)18,61634–36L1
71July 14Blue Jays1–5Guzman (3–5)Bosio (6–4)14,85034–37L2
72July 15Blue Jays3–0Johnson (10–1)Hentgen (6–7)36,03735–37W1
73July 16Blue Jays3–9Hurtado (1–0)Carmona (1–4)17,63235–38L1
74July 17Tigers10–6 (10)Ayala (3–2)Groom (1–3)14,35836–38W1
75July 18Tigers10–6Belcher (5–5)Lima (0–1)14,66737–38W2
76July 19@ Brewers6–7 (12)Wegman (3–3)Ayala (3–3)14,17537–39L1
77July 20@ Brewers4–2 (13)Krueger (1–0)McAndrew (0–1)21,21138–39W1
78July 21@ Blue Jays3–4Hurtado (2–0)Torres (3–6)Castillo (6)36,49038–40L1
79July 22@ Blue Jays7–2Belcher (6–5)Leiter (6–6)43,48339–40W1
80July 23@ Blue Jays6–4B. Wells (3–3)Cone (9–6)Ayala (14)39,16340–40W2
81July 24Brewers4–6Bones (6–7)Bosio (6–5)Fetters (13)10,49140–41L1
82July 25Brewers8–6Johnson (11–1)Karl (1–1)Ayala (15)13,42741–41W1
83July 26Brewers3–4Givens (2–2)Torres (3–7)Fetters (14)11,31541–42L1
84July 27Indians11–5Belcher (7–5)Ogea (5–3)20,12142–42W1
85July 28Indians5–6Plunk (5–1)Frey (0–4)Mesa (28)17,60942–43L1
86July 29Indians5–3Bosio (7–5)Embree (2–1)Ayala (16)43,87443–43W1
87July 30Indians2–5Hershiser (8–5)Torres (3–8)Mesa (29)24,08943–44L1
August: 16–13 (Home: 8–5; Away: 8–8)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordStreak
88August 1@ Angels2–7Anderson (6–2)Johnson (11–2)22,07443–45L2
89August 2@ Angels4–5Harkey (6–6)Belcher (7–6)Smith (25)23,25343–46L3
90August 3@ Angels10–7Benes (5–7)Abbott (7–5)Charlton (1)34,67444–46W1
91August 4@ Athletics8–9Eckersley (3–4)Ayala (3–4)11,79444–47L1
92August 5@ Athletics15–9Wells (4–3)Briscoe (0–1)20,78745–47W1
93August 6@ Athletics15–8Krueger (2–0)Stottlemyre (9–4)20,36846–47W2
94August 7White Sox6–4Belcher (8–6)Alvarez (4–7)Charlton (2)18,85247–47W3
95August 8White Sox10–9Ayala (4–4)Hernandez (2–5)16,87548–47W4
96August 9White Sox11–8Bosio (8–5)Keyser (3–5)Ayala (17)16,40149–47W5
97August 11@ Royals2–1Johnson (12–2)Gubicza (8–10)Ayala (18)19,95550–47W6
98August 12@ Royals2–7Appier (12–7)Belcher (8–7)Meacham (1)20,57250–48L1
99August 13@ Royals3–6Gordon (8–7)Krueger (2–1)Montgomery (20)19,48950–49L2
100August 14@ Twins6–2Benes (6–7)Trombley (2–7)Nelson (2)16,63751–49W1
101August 15@ Twins6–7Munoz (1–0)Ayala (4–5)12,59551–50L1
102August 16@ Twins6–4Risley (2–1)Stevens (3–2)Ayala (19)13,42652–50W1
103August 17@ Athletics2–3Honeycutt (5–1)Charlton (2–6)10,19152–51L1
104August 18Red Sox9–3Wolcott (1–0)Wakefield (14–2)27,25653–51W1
105August 19Red Sox3–4Hanson (12–4)Benes (6–8)Aguilera (21)36,00753–52L1
106August 20Red Sox6–7Cormier (6–3)Bosio (8–6)Aguilera (22)21,81353–53L2
107August 21Orioles6–0Nelson (4–1)Benitez (1–5)32,52554–53W1
108August 22Orioles1–2Mussina (14–7)Belcher (8–8)Jones (20)13,63154–54L1
109August 23Orioles1–7Krivda (2–2)Wolcott (1–1)Benitez (2)14,93754–55L2
110August 24Yankees9–7Nelson (5–1)Wetteland (1–4)17,59255–55W1
111August 25Yankees7–4Bosio (9–6)Pettitte (6–8)28,13056–55W2
112August 26Yankees7–0Johnson (13–2)Hitchcock (6–9)41,18257–55W3
113August 27Yankees2–5Kamieniecki (4–5)Belcher (8–9)Wetteland (23)24,91357–56L1
114August 29@ Red Sox6–4Benes (7–8)Wakefield (14–3)Charlton (3)31,32858–56W1
115August 30@ Red Sox6–7Maddux (4–1)Nelson (5–2)Aguilera (26)32,35658–57L1
116August 31@ Red Sox11–2Wolcott (2–1)Cormier (6–5)Guetterman (1)30,62759–57W1
September: 19–8 (Home: 12–2; Away: 7–6)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordStreak
117September 1@ Orioles4–3Belcher (9–9)Mussina (15–8)Charlton (4)43,44760–57W2
118September 2@ Orioles2–3Brown (7–8)Bosio (9–7)Jones (21)46,73160–58L1
119September 3@ Orioles9–6Carmona (2–4)Krivda (2–3)Charlton (5)46,26961–58W1
120September 4@ Yankees3–13Pettitte (8–8)Torres (3–9)24,85561–59L1
121September 5@ Yankees6–5Wolcott (3–1)Rivera (5–3)Charlton (6)15,34062–59W1
122September 6@ Yankees3–4McDowell (13–10)Belcher (9–10)15,42662–60L1
123September 7@ Indians1–4Nagy (13–5)Bosio (9–8)Mesa (39)41,45062–61L2
124September 8Royals4–1Johnson (14–2)Jacome (4–7)Charlton (7)19,35063–61W1
125September 9Royals6–2Benes (8–8)Gubicza (10–13)39,15764–61W2
126September 10Royals5–4Ayala (5–5)Olson (3–2)Charlton (8)18,06665–61W3
127September 11Twins10–12Mahomes (4–7)Nelson (5–3)Stevens (9)18,19365–62L1
128September 12Twins14–3Bosio (10–8)Rodriguez (5–6)Carmona (1)12,10266–62W1
129September 13Twins7–4Nelson (6–3)Mahomes (4–8)Charlton (9)16,46967–62W2
130September 15@ White Sox3–2Benes (9–8)Bere (7–13)Charlton (10)19,10068–62W3
131September 16@ White Sox5–3Belcher (10–10)Karchner (3–2)Charlton (11)26,07369–62W4
132September 17@ White Sox1–2McCaskill (5–4)Wolcott (3–2)Hernandez (30)21,91369–63L1
133September 18Rangers8–1Johnson (15–2)Witt (5–10)29,51570–63W1
134September 19Rangers5–4 (11)Charlton (3–6)McDowell (6–4)20,41071–63W2
135September 20Rangers11–3Benes (10–8)Tewksbury (8–7)26,52472–63W3
136September 22Athletics10–7Nelson (7–3)Corsi (2–4)Charlton (12)51,50073–63W4
137September 23Athletics7–0Johnson (16–2)Johns (5–2)54,58974–63W5
138September 24Athletics9–8Charlton (4–6)Eckersley (4–6)46,71475–63W6
139September 26Angels10–2Benes (11–8)Boskie (7–7)46,93576–63W7
140September 27Angels0–2Finley (14–12)Belcher (10–11)Smith (35)50,21276–64L1
141September 28@ Rangers6–2Johnson (17–2)Pavlik (10–10)Charlton (13)21,50277–64W1
142September 29@ Rangers4–3Ayala (6–5)Vosberg (5–5)Charlton (14)25,33678–64W2
143September 30@ Rangers2–9Gross (9–15)Benes (11–9)33,79278–65L1
October: 1–1 (Home: 1–0; Away: 0–1)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordStreak
144October 1@ Rangers3–9Rogers (17–7)Belcher (10–12)Whiteside (3)25,71478–66L2
145October 2Angels9–1Johnson (18–2)Langston (15–7)52,35679–66W1
Legend:        = Win        = Loss        = Postponement
Bold = Mariners team member

Postseason

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1995 Postseason Game Log (5–6) (Home: 4–2; Away: 1–4)
American League Division Series: 3–2 (Home: 3–0; Away 0–2)
#DateOpponentStadiumScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1October 3@ YankeesYankee Stadium6–9Cone (1–0)Nelson (0–1)57,1780–1
2October 4@ YankeesYankee Stadium5–7 (15)Rivera (1–0)Belcher (0–1)57,1260–2
3October 6YankeesKingdome7–4Johnson (1–0)McDowell (0–1)Charlton (1)57,9441–2
4October 7YankeesKingdome11–8Charlton (1–0)Wetteland (0–1)Risley (1)57,1802–2
5October 8YankeesKingdome6–5 (11)Johnson (2–0)McDowell (0–2)57,4113–2
American League Championship Series: 2–4 (Home: 1–2; Away 1–2)
#DateOpponentStadiumScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1October 10IndiansKingdome3–2Wolcott (1–0)Martinez (0–1)Charlton (1)57,0651–0
2October 11IndiansKingdome2–5Hershiser (1–0)Belcher (0–1)58,1441–1
3October 13@ IndiansJacobs Field5–2 (11)Charlton (1–0)Tavarez (0–1)43,6432–1
4October 14@ IndiansJacobs Field0–7Hill (1–0)Benes (0–1)43,6862–2
5October 15@ IndiansJacobs Field2–3Hershiser (2–0)Bosio (0–1)Mesa (1)43,6072–3
6October 17IndiansKingdome0–4Martinez (1–1)Johnson (0–1)58,4892–4

Player stats

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= Indicates team leader

Batting

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Starters by position

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Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
CDan Wilson119399111.278951
1BTino Martinez141519152.29331111
2BJoey Cora120427127.297339
3BMike Blowers134439113.2572396
SSLuis Sojo10233998.289739
LFVince Coleman4016247.29019
CFKen Griffey Jr.7226067.2581742
RFJay Buhner126470123.26240121
DHEdgar Martínez145511182.35629113

Other batters

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Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
OFAlex Diaz10327067.248327
OFRich Amaral9023067.282219
SSFélix Fermín7320039.195015
3B/PHDoug Strange7415542.271221
OFDarren Bragg5214534.234312
SSAlex Rodriguez4814233.232519
LFMarc Newfield248516.188314
CChad Kreuter267517.22718
LFWarren Newson337221.29226
UTChris Widger23459.20012
OFGary Thurman13258.32003
1BGreg Pirkl10174.23500
2BArquimedez Pozo110.00000

Pitching

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Starting pitchers

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Note: GS = Games started; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGSIPWLERASO
Randy Johnson30214.11822.48294
Tim Belcher28179.110124.5296
Chris Bosio31170.01084.9285
Salomón Torres1372.0386.0045
Andy Benes1263.0724.5245
Bob Wolcott736.2324.4219
Tim Davis524.0216.3819

Other pitchers

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Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Bob Wells3076.2435.7538
Dave Fleming1648.0157.5026
Rafael Carmona1547.2245.6628
Bill Krueger620.0215.8510
Jim Converse611.0037.369

Relief pitchers

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Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts; SV = Saves

PlayerGIPWLERASOSV
Bobby Ayala6371.0654.447719
Jeff Nelson6278.2732.17962
Bill Risley4560.1213.13651
Norm Charlton3047.2211.515814
Lee Guetterman2317.0006.88111
Ron Villone1919.1027.91260
Steve Frey1311.1034.7670
John Cummings45.10011.8140
Scott Davison34.1006.2330
Jim Mecir24.2000.0030
Kevin King23.20012.2730
Tim Harikkala13.10016.2010

ALDS

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GameScoreDate
1Seattle 6, New York 9October 3, 1995
2Seattle 5, New York 7October 4, 1995
3New York 4, Seattle 7October 6, 1995
4New York 8, Seattle 11October 7, 1995
5New York 5, Seattle 6October 8, 1995

ALCS

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GameScoreDate
1Cleveland 2, Seattle 3October 10, 1995
2Cleveland 5, Seattle 2October 11, 1995
3Seattle 5, Cleveland 2October 13, 1995
4Seattle 0, Cleveland 7October 14, 1995
5Seattle 2, Cleveland 3October 15, 1995
6Cleveland 4, Seattle 0October 17, 1995

Awards and honors

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The Mariners' ALDS run is the subject of the song, My Oh My, by Seattle-based rapper, Macklemore.[26]

Chicago-based band Coping has a song titled "'95 Mariners."

In July 2019, the MLB Network released MLB Network Presents: The 1995 Mariners, Saving Baseball in Seattle.[27]

The team's playoff run received a dedicated segment in the SB Nation docuseries The History of the Seattle Mariners, titled "The Battle for Seattle."[28]

See also

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Farm system

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LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAATacoma RainiersPacific Coast LeagueSteve Smith
AAPort City RoostersSouthern LeagueDave Myers
ARiverside PilotsCalifornia LeagueDave Brundage
AWisconsin Timber RattlersMidwest LeagueMike Goff
A-Short SeasonEverett AquaSoxNorthwest LeagueOrlando Gómez
RookieAZL MarinersArizona LeagueTom LeVasseur
Source[29]

References

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  1. ^ LaRue, Larry (October 3, 1995). "My, oh my, Mariners win!". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). (Tacoma News Tribune). p. 1B.
  2. ^ "Mariners Postseason Results". MLB.com. Retrieved August 10, 2011.
  3. ^ LaRue, Larry (October 14, 1995). "Bad to the Bone". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). McClatchy News Service. p. 1B.
  4. ^ LaRue, Larry (October 18, 1995). "Shipwrecked: Mariners lose 4-0". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). McClatchy News Service. p. 1B.
  5. ^ Alex Diaz at Baseball-Reference
  6. ^ Félix Fermín at Baseball-Reference
  7. ^ Jay Buhner at Baseball-Reference
  8. ^ Eric Anthony at Baseball-Reference
  9. ^ "M's win 8-3, but lose Griffey". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). Associated Press. May 27, 1995. p. 3B.
  10. ^ Street, Jim (August 15, 1995). "Griffey expected in lineup". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). (Seattle Post Intelligencer). p. C1.
  11. ^ "Junior to rejoin M's". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). wire services. August 15, 1995. p. 1B.
  12. ^ "The Ballplayers – Ken Griffey, Jr | baseballbiography.com". Retrieved January 12, 2012.
  13. ^ Anderson, Lenny (April 14, 1995). "Negro League Seattle Steelheads Gone, But Not Forgotten". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Archived from the original on May 28, 2009. Retrieved May 20, 2009.
  14. ^ "September 9, 1995 Kansas City Royals at Seattle Mariners Box Score and Play by Play". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved May 20, 2009.
  15. ^ a b "The Ballplayers – Randy Johnson | baseballbiography.com". Retrieved August 12, 2008.
  16. ^ Tim Belcher at Baseball-Reference
  17. ^ Norm Charlton at Baseball-Reference
  18. ^ Marc Newfield at Baseball-Reference
  19. ^ "M's acquire Coleman, send Rodriguez back to Tacoma". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). Associated Press. August 16, 1995. p. 3B.
  20. ^ Vince Coleman at Baseball-Reference
  21. ^ Shane Monahan at Baseball-Reference
  22. ^ Juan Pierre at Baseball-Reference
  23. ^ "Standings". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). August 21, 1995. p. 3B.
  24. ^ "M's, Angels go for broke". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). Associated Press. October 2, 1995. p. 1B.
  25. ^ "Standings". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). October 2, 1995. p. 3B.
  26. ^ "Thinking about Macklemore and Ryan Lewis' rap tribute to Dave Niehaus". The Seattle Times. January 4, 2011. Retrieved April 4, 2016.
  27. ^ "MLB Network to air documentary about 1995 Mariners, the team that 'saved' baseball in Seattle". CBSSports.com. July 3, 2019. Retrieved July 27, 2019.
  28. ^ Secret Base (April 9, 2020). The Battle for Seattle | Dorktown. Retrieved May 18, 2024 – via YouTube.
  29. ^ Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 2nd and 3rd editions. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 1997 and 2007
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