Two years ago, the Mariners believed Eugenio Suárez’s best days were behind him. His strikeout totals were mounting, his average was slipping, and the front office quietly shipped him off to Arizona in what looked like a salary dump. No one expected much, especially not a second act. But baseball has a strange sense of timing. Suárez didn’t fade; he exploded.
By mid-2025, Suárez wasn’t just relevant again, he was ranking. The veteran third baseman was suddenly pacing the National League in home runs, lighting up the second half with the kind of production teams beg for in October. Meanwhile, Seattle, still talented, still incomplete, found itself missing something — bat, a presence, a spark. In a turn of events, the player they once dismissed emerged as someone they couldn’t overlook anymore.
So on Wednesday, the Mariners made the call. In a headline-grabbing deadline deal, Seattle reacquired Suárez from the Diamondbacks, sending first baseman Tyler Locklear, reliever Hunter Cranton, and righty Juan Burgos to Arizona. The Mariners beat out rival bids from the Cubs and Phillies, landing the hottest power bat on the market without touching a single top-five prospect.
Source: MLB.com
The Diamondbacks? They’re betting on projection over production. Locklear leads Triple-A in home runs since June 1, but even optimistic scouts label him a likely 1B/DH with limited ceiling. Cranton has intriguing velocity, and Burgos has seen big-league innings, but neither screams “centerpiece” in a deal for a player leading the league in bombs.
For Seattle, this isn’t about correcting a past mistake; it’s about seizing the now. Their rotation is built to win. Their bullpen is close. But their lineup needed thunder. Suárez brings it in buckets.
Arizona’s vision may still come to life years from now. But Seattle’s October push just got a lot louder and a lot more real.
Mariners make a power shift in the AL West.
The Seattle Mariners just drew a line in the sand. Hovering around .525 for most of the summer, they’ve finally made their move, and it could reshape the AL West. By acquiring Eugenio Suárez from the Diamondbacks, the M’s not only added a familiar face but also plugged a gaping hole at third base. It’s not just a reunion, it’s a message to Houston and Texas: Seattle is going for it.
Don’t let their 57–52 record fool you; this is a team heating up at the right time. Cal Raleigh has been on a historic tear, Randy Arozarena and Julio Rodríguez are both tracking 20–20 seasons, and Bryan Woo is quietly anchoring the rotation with ace-like poise. But the lineup needed stability, especially with Josh Rojas fading fast at third. Enter Suárez, a proven run producer with power and postseason grit, returning to a clubhouse that knows his fire.
The timing couldn’t be sharper. The Astros sit just five games ahead, the Rangers are neck and neck, and every win down the stretch matters. Suárez may not carry the same flash as some deadline stars, but his bat, glove, and leadership could tip the balance. With the AL West up for grabs and Seattle leaning into urgency, the power structure is shifting, and the Mariners are done waiting.
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