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Mariners Have Found Their Most Intriguing Outfield Insurance
Seattle Mariners center fielder Brennen Davis (78) during spring training photo day in Peoria, AZ. Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

The easiest Brennen Davis conversation right now is the lazy one. He’s crushing spring training, so naturally some people want to jump straight to asking if he can force his way onto the Opening Day roster. That is the flashy debate. It’s also the wrong one.

The more interesting takeaway for the Mariners is that they may have stumbled into the exact kind of depth move smart teams spend all summer wishing they had.

Davis has been ridiculous this spring. He is tied for the MLB lead with four home runs, owns a .458/.536/1.125 slash line, and has piled up eight extra-base hits in just ten games. His average exit velocity has reportedly been 98.3 mph, with a max of 116.7 mph. That is a bat making people stop what they are doing and stare. 

And still, he probably is not making the roster. That is not an insult to the player. That’s just the way the roster will shake. 

Brennen Davis Gives Mariners a Rare Outfield Depth Advantage

Seattle already has too many moving parts in the outfield and DH mix to pretend there is a clean path. Even the case for Davis making it mostly depends on something going wrong elsewhere, and that is before you get into all the other names the Mariners are already trying to sort through. This is less about whether Davis has earned attention and more about whether Seattle actually has a practical place to put him right now. 

Justin Hollander basically said the quiet part out loud on Seattle Sports. There is no such thing as too many good players, and the Mariners know full well they are not getting through 2026 with only the 26 guys who break camp. He talked about needing far more contributors over the course of a season and made the point that real depth matters because injuries are not some weird exception anymore. They are part of the sport. Hollander also credited director of player personnel Brendan Domaracki for finding Davis on a minor league deal in the first place. 

Brennen Davis does not need to win an Opening Day job to matter. He just needs to be waiting in Tacoma looking like a real hitter.

And if he opens in Triple-A, that might actually be the best possible outcome for everybody. Davis has had a brutal development path, with years of injuries and interrupted momentum, and even the case against a roster spot right now comes with an important point: everyday at-bats could do a lot more for him than sporadic bench work in Seattle. Let him stay hot and force the issue the right way. 

Daivs looks like the kind of player who could be one phone call away from actually helping. An for a team that always seems to need outfield answers at some point, that is a pretty great problem to have.


This article first appeared on Seattle Mariners on SI and was syndicated with permission.

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