SEATTLE — Mariners switch-hitting catcher Cal Raleigh has used the same swing since he was 9 years old.
Raleigh’s tried and true stroke worked out quite well for him during the 2025 season, when he finished runner-up for American League MVP honors and set the single-season record for home runs by a catcher with 60. His magnificent season helped the Mariners come within one win of their first World Series berth and set sky-high expectations heading into 2026.
“I know the swing is good,” Raleigh said. “Really just trying to trust the approach, trust the plan, commit to it every single pitch.”
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Like many of his Mariners teammates, though, Raleigh hasn’t hit as well as he would like amid Seattle’s 10-15 start, which includes Tuesday night’s 5-2 loss to the Athletics. Even with a solo home run and a single in the Mariners’ latest defeat, Raleigh is hitting .177 with a .599 OPS, his lowest since his rookie season.
Twenty-five games into the 2026 season, the Mariners find themselves in fourth place in the AL West, slotted ahead of only the bottom-feeding Houston Astros, who are tied for the most losses in Major League Baseball at 9-16.
First baseman Josh Naylor, who broke out of his slump last week with two home runs, still has a batting average below the Mendoza line. Julio Rodríguez has heated up considerably the past few weeks but isn’t hitting for power in a fashion that the Mariners have grown accustomed to.
Seattle entered Tuesday’s game with 23 home runs as a team, good for 15th in the majors, yet only two teams have lower collective batting averages than their .218. The Mariners have taken their walks, but they aren’t driving runners in with clutch hits or home runs.
“I think we’re getting guys on base at a good rate for the most part. I see that,” Raleigh said. “But, I think I’m guilty of this too — you get in those big spots and those big moments and each guy wants to do it.”
Seattle won’t pull itself out of its season-opening quagmire with one win or one series. It learned that after sweeping the Astros before dropping six of its next eight games.
Even so, Raleigh doesn’t think he is putting too much pressure on himself after a banner year, nor is anybody else.
“We all know that we want to be doing better than we are,” Raleigh said. “But at the same time, it’s not going to help anybody in this room by trying to press and go out there and try to do more and try to be the guy. … I have faith in this group.”



















