Seattle, WA
Dipoto on Kelenic: Mariners ‘couldn’t be more optimistic’ about changes
This spring coaching is one more the place former high Mariners prospect Jarred Kelenic is within the highlight.
Mariners’ Julio Rodríguez shares recommendation Ichiro gave him that ‘clicked’
In 2020 and 2021, it was all about when Kelenic would make his MLB debut. Final yr, it was if Kelenic might construct off a powerful closing month of the 2021 season to cap off an in any other case rocky rookie marketing campaign.
Now, Kelenic heads into 2023 with a brand new swing and in a unique state of affairs the place he’s prone to platoon in left subject with veteran outfielder AJ Pollock after he largely struggled in MLB motion in 2022.
Kelenic has actually turned heads up to now, blasting three residence runs in 11 spring coaching at-bats, together with going back-to-back with Julio Rodríguez on Wednesday in opposition to the Chicago Cubs.
Watch: Mariners’ Julio Rodríguez, Jarred Kelenic hit back-to-back HRs
Whereas Mariners followers could also be cautiously optimistic that Kelenic will lastly set up himself on the massive league stage this season, M’s president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto took that confidence stage a step additional throughout his weekly interview with Brock and Salk on Seattle Sports activities.
“Couldn’t be any extra optimistic concerning the adjustments that he’s made,” he mentioned throughout The Jerry Dipoto Present, which airs dwell each Thursday at 8:30 a.m. “And a few of this isn’t simply the outcomes that he’s reaching within the recreation, it’s not simply how good he’s appeared on the fields in apply from the second we received right here. It’s what we all know of his offseason and the issues that he’s completed to concentrate on what we’re seeing, which is a few stage of swing change, some stage of method change, some stage of simply adapting to main league pitching. It’s simply taking him a short time longer than it takes others.”
Brock Huard requested Dipoto if the swing change was to change into shorter or extra direct to the baseball, so Dipoto broke down Kelenic’s swing.
“He’s at all times had a fairly brief or direct swing. Jarred’s swing, when you had been to have a look at it from the second we acquired him, it’s a fairly flat swing, which isn’t unusual with good hitters who use the sphere to hit,” he mentioned. “By means of the years, you’d outline flat swings as when you checked out batting champs or the blokes which can be on the high of the batting common leaders, it’s quite common.”
JK CRUSHED 💪 pic.twitter.com/oSrlDFjbjC
— Seattle Mariners (@Mariners) February 26, 2023
Kelenic’s swing has “a little bit extra tilt” and is “shorter on the entrance finish,” Dipoto mentioned.
“On the entrance finish, there’s a little bit extra uptick as he comes by means of the zone, after which he’s shorter on the extension on the bottom, which I believe provides him extra barrel management by means of the strike zone,” he mentioned. “I’ll say this: I don’t suppose he’s hit a ball beneath 100 mph because the because the spring started. He’s roasting the league. It’s 105 to 113 mph exit velocity nearly each time he swings the bat, which is fairly good.”
Along with struggles on the sphere, rather a lot has been manufactured from Kelenic’s maturity all through the years.
As a prospect and early on in his MLB profession, Kelenic was seen at occasions as brash, and Mike Salk mentioned some probably noticed him as a “meathead” for his depth and quotes like “odor ya later” after hitting a house run.
Dipoto mentioned Kelenic’s maturation over the previous couple of years.
“The concept he was ever a meathead might be an assumption. He’s truly very good, he’s very ready, he’s an intense participant on the sphere and in the way in which he works off of the sphere,” Dipoto mentioned. “The truth that he was brash, significantly when he first arrived right here, that’s the place you possibly can learn a little bit of that into.”
From then to now, Kelenic has grown tremendously, Dipoto mentioned.
“In the event you observe him round this spring, there’s a particular maturation that has occurred over the course (of time), and I’d even return to midsummer of final yr,” he mentioned. “From midsummer final yr to the place we sit at this time, he has matured a lot. You’re by no means going to search out anybody who was extra intent with their work habits, who got here to the ballpark with a plan, who had objectives to what he needed to attain. Now he’s mixed that with he’s grown up fairly a bit. I believe he’s realized higher tips on how to take care of the ups and downs. Baseball, it’s an extended season, and when you get too down with the downs, it’s very arduous to get better. So he’s doing a terrific job.”
Take heed to the total interview with Dipoto at this hyperlink or within the participant under.
Drayer’s Mariners Observations: Three issues from a giant day vs. Cubs
Seattle, WA
Seattle Mariners Under the Radar Prospect ‘Expected to Get a Chance’ in Spring Training
After years of being pitching-heavy on the prospect front, the Seattle Mariners finally have a glut of position player prospects to be excited about.
Cole Young, Colt Emerson, Jonny Farmelo, Michael Arroyo and Laz Montes are all generating real buzz for the Mariners and could make up the next core of the organization.
However, there’s one under-the-radar prospect also generating buzz and that’s third baseman Ben Williamson.
And according to a recent story from the Seattle Times, Williamson could get an opportunity to make the team out of spring training.
Third baseman Ben Williamson, 24, is expected to get a chance in spring training too after a solid season in Arkansas. In 95 games at Class AA this year, Williamson slashed .272/.365/.374 (.739 OPS) with three homers, two triples, 23 doubles and 15 steals.
A second-round pick in 2023, Williamson has earned a reputation as one of the best defensive third baseman in the minors.
The Mariners are said to be looking for two infielders this offseason. Should they fill first base and second base externally, they could look to third base internally. Dylan Moore is an option to assume that position, but the team could give Williamson a shot out of camp, or could bring him up early in the year if he starts well in the minors.
Williamson is currently ranked as the No. 15 prospect in the organization, per MLB.com. He was drafted in the second round out of William & Mary back in the 2023 draft.
Continue to follow our Inside the Mariners coverage on social media by liking us on Facebook and by following Teren Kowatsch and Brady Farkas on “X” @Teren_Kowatsch and @wdevradiobrady. You can subscribe to the “Refuse to Lose” podcast by clicking HERE.
Seattle, WA
WEST SEATTLE HOLIDAY GUIDE: Anything more to add to our NYE/NYD list?
(2021 reader photo by Claire)
On Tuesday night, some will stay home with a bottle of bubbly (inflatable or otherwise) to say goodbye to 2024. Others will head out. And if that’s your plan, all the better if you can celebrate right here on the peninsula. So we want to be sure our Holiday Guide‘s New Year’s list has all the options. If you know of something we’re missing – bar party? live music? late dinner with a midnight toast? organized run? or? – please send the info so we can add it to the list ASAP! westseattleblog@gmail.com – thank you.
Seattle, WA
Last call at Merchant’s Cafe & Saloon: Seattle’s oldest bar set to close
Seattle’s longest-running bar is set to close its doors at the end of the year. The historic site is known for its ghost stories, pressed-tin ceiling, and buckboard floors in the heart of Pioneer Square. There are murmurs the bar could reopen after a renovation in spring, but that’s still uncertain.
In the Merchant’s basement, daylight shines down through the small purple glass windows in the sidewalk above. The city’s oldest saloon sits at a main intersection of the city’s oldest neighborhood, forever tied to Seattle’s history.
First opened in 1890 before moving to its current spot in 1907, Merchant’s originally offered gambling and a brothel during Seattle’s early gritty days. Bartenders there say the current owners plan to close the bar next week.
“I had to let everyone go, it was pretty sudden,” says Anthony Powell, a supervisor and manager at Merchant’s. “I just told everyone: ‘work ‘til the end of the year and that’s it.’”
One bartender who got hired less than six months ago says he got almost no notice that Friday would be his last shift. That’s the nature of the business, he shrugged.
Powell says he got word from owner Darcy Hanson in early December that the bar would be closing. Hanson did not respond to KUOW’s requests for comment. There are rumors among the remaining staff that the owners want to renovate the interior and re-open the historic watering hole in the spring, but nothing’s been confirmed.
Few bars in Seattle carry the ambiance that Merchant’s offers. A giant, century-old wooden bar stretches along one side of the room. Hardwood floors worn smooth by over a hundred years of patrons and partiers. According to the bar’s website, nearly everything in the place is haunted, from the paintings on the wall to the wall of wine bottles.
After decades of serving Seattle, Merchant’s is starting to show its age. Powell says some parts of the saloon do need updating.
“I mean, it’s the oldest bar in Seattle,” Powell says looking over the barroom. “Our electrical is shot behind this bar completely, the coolers are over 35 years old. A lot of stuff doesn’t work.”
That’s the charm that comes with a place as old as the cobblestones out on Yesler Street. Merchant’s, a dive bar according to Powell, doesn’t feature fancy lighting or a new sound system like the nightclubs around the corner. In one smoky corner of Merchant’s, deep leather couches almost disappear in the shadows.
Stepping down the stairs to the bathroom is like stepping back in time. The exposed rock walls feel like a private cellar or speakeasy. Pioneer Square’s signature purple glass sidewalk windows can be seen clearly down here, a view you can usually only find during an underground tour.
Powell, who has worked at Merchant’s for a little over four years, says business has been pretty slow recently. Like a lot of neighborhoods in Seattle, Pioneer Square is struggling to attract more customers. The pandemic didn’t help a sleepy bar like Merchant’s.
Still, Powell says, the bar is a regular stop for sports fans heading to the nearby stadiums and tourists who want to experience a piece of Seattle history. A lot of people come in to raise a glass just to say they’ve had a drink at the spot, Powell says.
This month, the bar had its busiest weekends of the year thanks to the annual SantaCon pub crawl. Powell says he was hoping they would be open next year when SantaCon organizers want to extend the event to all four Saturdays of December – but it looks like that won’t happen.
Merchant’s is hosting a farewell party on Monday, December 30. Powell says he’ll be working with longtime bartender Michael Harris to pour the final drinks at the oldest place in town.
“It was a great experience, I loved it,” Powell says, “the people that come through are really great. You meet a lot of people around the world, because it’s a tourist bar, they love to come here. So I’m sad to see it go for sure.”
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