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Mariners move quickly to sign first-round pick
LSU Tigers starting pitcher Kade Anderson pitches against the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers during the ninth inning at Charles Schwab Field. Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

Mariners move quickly to sign first-round pick

Holding the third-overall pick in the 2025 Draft, there was plenty of reason for the Seattle Mariners to be optimistic about adding a top-tier talent to their system. 

Most of the prominent mock drafts leading up to Sunday's first round connected the club to the top collegiate arms available, but many expected Kade Anderson to be one of the first two selections in the draft. 

Anderson "falling" to pick No. 3 was a major win for the Mariners. 

Mariners vice president of amateur scouting Scott Hunter even told MLB.com's Daniel Kramer, "to say this worked out as a best-case scenario would be an understatement, since Kade was ranked pretty much No. 1 on our board."

Seattle wasted little time in locking up its new talent, too. Reports began to circulate before the first round of the draft even concluded that the team had reached an agreement with Anderson on an $8.8M signing bonus. 

The figure is notable as it is $700K below the slot value of the No. 3 pick, which will give the team more flexibility in signing its other selections. Seattle already has the second-largest bonus pool for this year's draft (behind only Baltimore).

For the 21-year-old Anderson, getting drafted and signing so quickly is the culmination of what was truly a phenomenal season. The 6-foot-2 left-hander anchored the LSU Tigers rotation, posting a 3.18 ERA while leading the NCAA with 180 strikeouts over 119 innings of work. Anderson then allowed just one run over 16 innings in the College World Series, helping the Tigers win the national championship and taking home the tournament's Most Outstanding Player Award. 

There's little reason to think Anderson — who already boasts four quality pitches and good command, per MLB Pipeline's scouting report — won't continue to develop in a Mariners system that has seen success developing pitchers in recent years (Logan Gilbert, George Kirby, Bryan Woo and others).

Aaron Somers

Aaron Somers has more than a decade of experience writing about sports and has been published in numerous outlets, but baseball is and has always been his biggest passion. You can follow him on BlueSky, @AaronJSomers.

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