Mariners May Mock 2.0

By Jared Stanger

(I started writing this mock with the intent to get it done before the M’s game started, but I only got through about 13 rounds before first pitch. So if it feels rushed…it kind of was.)

I’m not gonna get all flashy with the exposition. I kind of have no clue what Seattle is looking to do this year. I don’t love the prep players available at pick #24, so I tend towards the college players. On top of that; I feel like the better overall draft structure looks better if their first pick is a college pitcher. I think the group looks something like: Logan Reddemann, Tegan Kuhns, and Cade Townsend. These are all righthanded starters from blue-chip programs who are having overall strong years. I think my favorite is Reddemann, but he’s also the one I see lasting to pick #24 the least. Kuhns is my least favorite due to his kind of immature personality. I feel like I land most often on Cade Townsend.

#1.24 – RHP, Ole Miss, Cade Townsend

Listed 6’1″/185lbs, Townsend is a young 21 y/o having just had his birthday May 5th. He’s got a deep pitch repertoire and for the year he’s rocking a 1.119 WHIP, 12.4 SO/9, and 2.6 BB/9. Seattle has had great early returns on the last starting pitcher named Kade they drafted out of the SEC last year; so why not run it back?

#2.65 – SS, Kansas State, Dee Kennedy

Seattle has frequently backed up their first round college pitcher with a prep pitcher. I’ve decided not to do that this time. I’ve actually found in my simulations that I like going college heavy in the top of the draft, and then targeting some overslot prep players with picks in the middle of the draft. Seattle hasn’t used this strategy in a minute, but I’m liking it this year.

Kennedy is currently the starting shortstop for the Wildcats, but he has also played significant innings as their starting 3B last year, as well as playing 50 games at 2B for Texas back in 2024.

Kennedy has a smaller frame at 5’11″/180lbs, but on the year he has a .359/.463/1.205 slash with 20 HR and 21 SB in 54 games. I love the combo of power and speed.

#3.101 – RHP, Ole Miss, Taylor Rabe

Rabe has been one of the biggest draft risers in recent weeks as he has struck out 27 batters in his two most-recent starts where he has pitched a combined 12.0 innings. He has walked only one over that time. For the season he has 81 SO to 8 BB. And he has that kind of control while also touching 99mph with his fastball. And at 6’5″/200lbs, Rabe looks very much like the kind of pitcher Seattle targeted in the years that saw them find Logan Gilbert, George Kirby, and Emerson Hancock.

At one point, I was drafting Rabe in the 5th round. Now, I’m just hoping a late third is early enough to get him.

#4.129 – RHP, Georgia, Dylan Vigue

Sometimes a given draft year starts taking on a vibe similar to a previous draft. The M’s have had a few draft classes that went heavy on pitching in the earlier rounds. They did it most recently in 2024 when they drafted Jurrangelo Cjintje, then Ryan Sloan, and then a bunch of big velo reliever types. They did it in 2019 when they opened with five consecutive pitchers, and eight of the first nine.

I kind of just like the structure of this class going heavy on pitchers in the top ten rounds, and then filling in some bats in the second half.

Vigue is another SEC pitcher with good size at 6’3″/230lbs, and whose stuff looks better than his results. He’s got a 3.57 ERA, 1.264 WHIP, 11.2 SO/9, 4.9 BB/9 on the year. His velo isn’t overwhelming, but I like the way his fastball and slider interact with each other.

Vigue is already 22 y/o, so we may be able to get him slightly underslot.

#5.162 – OF, Pittsburgh, Lorenzo Carrier

Carrier might be my favorite pure hitter in this draft. His season line is: .396/.543/1.361 with 20 HR, 66 RBI in 53 games. He will be turning 23 y/o this Wednesday, so we should be able to get him for underslot money as long as he’s still on the board at this point.

#6.191 – 1B, Miami, Alex Sosa

I originally started liking Sosa because he was a lefty-hitting catcher, but as I kept doing more research I started to realize he’s mostly playing 1B this year for the Hurricanes. At that point I started moving off of him as a pick, but I just wasn’t liking the overall draft class as much without his bat in there. So I just won’t sweat what his defensive position is/will be. If we can get some catching innings out of him…great. If he’s a first baseman…great. If he’s a DH…bummer, but we’ll deal. He’s hitting .335/.448/1.118 with 16 HR, 64 RBI in 53 games.

#7.220 – C, Notre Dame, Mark Quatrani

Quatrani is a catcher I only found recently, and the more I dug into him; the more I started to like him. In 2026 he is hitting .373/.457/1.094 with 14 HR, and 64 RBI. Then I noticed that he hasn’t had a defensive error in two or three years. Then I noticed that he was a transfer player this year, and before Notre Dame he had played two years for Cornell…in the Ivy League. Feels like a future MLB manager.

#8.250 – RHP, VCU, Zach Peters

Peters is already 23 y/o, so we can get him for underslot money, but he’s also got some upside having pitched to a 1.62 ERA, 1.060 WHIP, 15.8 SO/9 in 44.1 innings out of the bullpen.

#9.280 – LHP, South Alabama, Jaxon Shineflew

Lefthanded pitchers always seem to get overdrafted every year, so it’s tough to find value in a LHP later in the draft. Shineflew might have some traits that the Seattle pitching lab can elevate.

#10.310 – RHP, Vermont Academy, Kaiden McCarthy

McCarthy is super young for the class having only recently reclassified from 2027 to 2026. Listed 6’0″/190lbs, but already showcasing a fastball touching 99mph. Seattle has had some luck finding prep players from unorthodox, northern states like Vermont where Kaiden is from. Nick Becker came out of New York, Ryan Sloan came out of Illinois, Colt Emerson came from Ohio, Cole Young came from Pennsylvania.

Obviously, Mccarthy will require a significant overslot bonus in order to sign him away from college, but I’ve accounted for that with, basically, all underslot deals outside of my first two picks. I could give him pretty close to $3mill to get him signed, but industry sources say he might sign for closer to $1.5mill. That would be great because we can still use surplus bonus pool money going into rounds 11-20, even though those picks are not slotted.

#11.340 – SS, Emani Ford

As I was experimenting with when and where to target prep players that would need to get seven-figure overslot deals; I really started liking the look of drafting those guys in the 9th, 10th, 11th round range. It also started to be clear to me that, if I didn’t draft prep players in the 2nd-4th round range like Seattle has typically done in recent years; I would have significant bonus surplus available after the 10th round.

So I started looking for prep players that had kind of 5th-7th round projection, with bonus expectations of around $1mill, and college commitments to underwhelming schools. I found Ford. Listed 6’1″/177lbs, Ford is a switch-hitter that plays primarily shortstop, but may have a future in the outfield. I just love the swing and the barrel rate from this guy.

#12.370 – RHP, Virginia, Tyler Kapa

Kapa is a 6’2″/195lb closer for Virginia who has a 1.27 ERA, 0.918 WHIP, 11.1 SO/9, and 11 saves in 23 appearances this year. His stuff just looks like a Seattle guy, to me.

#13.400 – 2B, Iowa, Gable Mitchell

If there’s one thing that I’m displeased with in my own mock draft; it is that it is sorely lacking in lefties. Both pitching and hitting. So when I found lefties that I like; I made sure to fit them in. Mitchell is a 5’9″/185lb infielder who played 47 games at shortstop for the Hawkeyes last year, 54 games at 2B for them in 2024, before moving back to primarily 2B this year. He also has six games in his career at 3B. This year he is hitting .375/.467/1.027 with 5 HR, 13 SB, and 30 BB to 18 SO. And the glove is very solid.

#14.430 – LHP, NC State, Cooper Consiglio

Consiglio may be a tough-sign as he is young for a Junior (won’t be 21 until November), and he could easily decide to stay in school another year, maybe make some transfer portal money, and then look to be a higher draftpick in 2027. He could also decide to stay in school to try to improve upon his performance this year: 5.73 ERA, 1.441 WHIP, 10.7 SO/9, 4.2 BB/9.

Seattle makes this kind of pick, who doesn’t sign, all the time. They did it last year with a guy named Griffin Stieg in the 18th round (and he’s been awful this year back at Virginia Tech). They did it with Brian Walters in the 19th round in 2024. They did it with Troy Taylor in the 20th round of 2021 draft (then turned around and drafted him in the 12th round in 2022).

#15.460 – 1B, Baylor, Tyce Armstrong

Armstrong was a difficult guy to place. He has had one of the best power seasons of anyone in the class, but he’s a 1B/DH only type who is going to be 23 in July. National baseball draft outlets aren’t giving him much respect even though he has hit .338/.448/1.217 this year with 24 HR, 64 RBI in 54 games. He also, famously, was the guy that hit three grand slams in the same game back in February. Seattle needs more righthanded power in the system, so I would be fine taking a guy like Armstrong as early as the 6th round (for underslot).

#16.490 – SS, Nebraska, Dylan Carey

Any mock draft I do, I kinda want to find at least two catchers and at least two shortstops over the course of the 20-21 picks. Carey is a guy I found that I like, who is not getting much draft love. He’s hitting .347/.418/1.040 this year with 14 HR and 9 SB. He’s got just a really clean, line-drive stroke to him. There could be more here to unearth.

#17.520 – C, Cal Poly, Ryan Tayman

Tayman marks the second of my two catching draftpicks. He’s a little bit young for the class as a Junior that won’t turn 21 until August 26th (cutoff for draft eligible sophomores would be that they have to be 21 by August 1st). This year he’s hitting .351/.443/1.116 with 16 HR, 53 RBI in 54 games.

#18.550 – RHP, Oregon State, Wyatt Queen

Queen is a local product coming out of Lake Stevens High School before playing at Oregon State. Listed 6’2″/214lbs with a season line of 2.41 ERA, 1.122 WHIP, 15.1 SO/9, 4.0 BB/9 across 41 innings in 19 relief appearances. Those innings over that number of appearances mean he averaged over 2 innings of relief per game pitched. Feels very much like a Seattle middle relief guy.

#19.580 – RHP, Lamar, Chris Olivier

Olivier is just a guy that I spotted with some free and easy mechanics and some pitch shapes that look like a good starting point. If we can add some weight (listed only 150lbs) and then some velocity (topping out at 90mph right now); maybe we can build from there.

#20.610 – OF, Mercer, Chris Katz

Katz is a well-over-aged player (he will be 23.5 y/o by the time of the draft), but he’s working on a 20 HR season where he’s walked exactly twice as much as he has struck-out (48 BB to 24 SO), and that, to me, is the kind of profile I like to dig into. His slash line is .374/.496/1.245 with 71 RBI and 38 XBH over 56 games.

I realize this mock is atypical to the format the Mariners have followed in recent years, but the net outcome looks almost exactly like what their draft classes have looked like. I’d kinda like to see them give this a go. Considering how small their bonus pool is; this might be the way to work around that.

Mariner 2026 Mock Draft 1.0

By Jared Stanger

The 2026 MLB Draft will be following this year’s NFL Draft to Pennsylvania with this year’s baseball selection events hitting Philadelphia, after the NFL conducted theirs in Pittsburgh. We’re about nine weeks away from the July 11th to 13th draft days.

The Mariners, who traded away a second round competitive balance B pick as part of the Brendan Donovan trade, will go into the draft with picks: #1.24, #2.65, #3.101, #4.129, #5.162, #6.191, #7.220, #8.250, #9.280, #10.310, #11.340, #12.370, #13.400, #14.430, #15.460, #16.490, #17.520, #18.550, #19.580, #20.610.

The real draft will be 20 rounds, but I’ve done enough study to get us up to a 15 round draft today.

In another parallel to the 2026 NFL Draft; this year’s MLB Draft had huge expectations to be a great draft class immediately following the conclusion of the 2025 draft, but many of the projected elite players have gotten hurt or had gravely underwhelming seasons. The top of this class is now being back-filled with college players that have climbed into the first round only in these last three months. There isn’t any one particular strength of the four quadrants to baseball drafts: college pitcher, college hitter, prep pitcher, prep hitter.

The Mariners, after trading away pick #2.68, find themselves with one of the smallest draft bonus pools in the league (24th of 30 teams), and therefore they may not have much flexibility to draft prep players that they can give overslot money to. This may be a college-heavy draft for them. Their top pick at #1.24 is slotted for $3,818,700, with another $1,382,600 for pick #65. The Mariners typically do not save much money with their first two picks, and any overslot savings tend to come from any combination of picks in rounds 4-10.

Looking at the late first round…I tend to think Seattle will be presented with choosing from a handful of the best college players remaining. There are a couple of prep pitchers that currently rank near the 24th pick in LHP Brody Bumila (#22) and RHP Coleman Borthwick (#24). I kind of don’t see those at legitimate options as Seattle has typically avoided prep pitchers with their first pick. They have occasionally taken a prep pitcher with a lesser pick AFTER securing a more stable college player with their first pick. When I look at the MLB Pipeline big board; I tend to think Seattle may be choosing between two college outfielders, and two college righthand pitchers: RHP Logan Reddemann, RHP Cade Townsend, OF Caden Sorrell, OF Aiden Robbins. I would prefer one of the pitchers.

Seattle has not typically drafted outfielders in the first round. Jonny Farmelo was pick #1.29, but this was Seattle’s Prospect Promotion Incentive bonus pick award (earned after Julio Rodriguez won Rookie of the Year), and after Seattle drafted SS Colt Emerson at #1.22 in the same class.

Also, as I sketched out my overall draft, I found that there was a natural gap in available pitching after the first round, whereas you can frequently find outfielders deeper into the draft.

So my hope for the Mariners becomes that they can snag either Logan Reddemann or Cade Townsend at 24. I think Reddemann has the better resume to go earlier, so my likeliest, wishful outcome becomes Townsend.

#1.24 – RHP, Ole Miss, Cade Townsend

Townsend kind of falls more in line with the Mariners more recent starter picks of Bryan Woo, Bryce Miller, Kade Anderson in that he’s not the biggest guy. Listed at 6’1″/185lbs; Townsend has an arsenal of 7 or 8 pitches, but the primaries are a fastball that has been up to 98mph and a plus slider. In 2026 he is carrying a 2.42 ERA, 0.962 WHIP, 12.6 SO/9, 2.3 BB/9. He did miss some time earlier this year with an undisclosed injury, but it was at worst two weeks until he returned.

I’m not planning to do anything special with the signing bonus for Townsend. He gets the full-slot money.

#2.65 – C, Texas, Carson Tinney

My mock drafts generally tend to more balance than what Seattle eventually ends up with, so I end up with fairly even numbers of hitters and pitchers. So I like a bat in the 2nd after a pitcher in the 1st. My shortlist included Texas A&M second baseman Gavin Grahovac, UCLA outfielder Will Gasparino, and Texas catcher Carson Tinney. I went with Tinney because of his prodigious righthanded power, and outstanding abilities as a defensive catcher.

Tinney is a huge backstop at 6’4″/240lbs and is hitting .323/.478/1.168 with 16 HR, 39 RBI, 5×6 SB in 44 games after transferring to Texas from Notre Dame this last offseason. He’s got some of the best exit velocities I’ve seen in the class. The Mariners need this kind of righty bat in the system.

Again, Tinney gets full-slot money.

#3.101 – LHP, West Virginia, Maxx Yehl

After many years of neglecting lefthanded pitching…the Mariners finally did some promising work drafting Kade Anderson in the 1st and Mason Peters in the 4th round in last year’s draft. Trying to continue that trend I put forth a concentrated effort to find quality LHP in this class. I didn’t find many. So, I’m putting a priority in drafting one early.

Yehl is a big southpaw at 6’6″/235lbs, and has posted a 2.20 ERA, 1.134 WHIP, 11.0 SO/9, and 2.7 BB/9 across eleven starts this year. His fastball maxes at 96mph, but more comfortably 93-95mph, with an armslot that is ideal for pairing a slider.

Full-slot money of $778,200 for Yehl.

#4.129 – SS, Orange Lutheran HS, CJ Weinstein

Weinstein feels very much in Seattle’s wheelhouse on the heels of Cole Young, Colt Emerson, Tai Peete as a lefty-hitting prep shortstop with plus hit tool.

Weinstein is a bit of an overaged high school prospect having just turned 19 this last March. So he may slide a bit in the draft, but because high school players always carry the threat of not signing to go to college; we will need to overslot him. Pick #129 starts at $591,700. I’m going to borrow another $408,300 from later picks to get him up to a cool $1million signing bonus.

#5.162 – RHP, Georgia, Dylan Vigue

For whatever reason, I feel more confident that Vigue is a Mariner type of pitcher than I do Yehl, and a bit more than I do Townsend. Listed 6’3″/230lbs, Vigue has a 2.35 ERA, 1.196 WHIP, 11.0 SO/9, and 4.9 BB/9 across 11 starts and one relief appearance this year for Georgia. The fastball isn’t super high-velo, but he throws with good run, and that plays off nicely with the slider that is moving away from RHB. I think the Seattle pitching lab could improve his velo and control.

It was difficult to find Vigue’s literal school class standing…he played two years at Michigan ’24-’25 before transferring to Georgia this year, so it feels like he may be a true Junior, but he is currently 22 years old and will be turning 23 in December. So age-wise, he looks like a Senior. With that in mind, I’m planning on going underslot on his bonus which is slotted at $429,100. If I can save $200k on him; I’d be in good shape for paying off the overslot money on Weinstein.

#6.191 – OF/DH, Pittsburgh, Lorenzo Carrier

Carrier is for sure a senior sign target as a guy that will be turning 23 in two weeks, and has played two years for Pitt after playing three years for Miami. He’s listed 6’5″/215lbs and he’s hitting .388/.550/1.392 with 18 HR, 61 RBI, 6×6 SB in 45 games this year. I guess the reason he might fall this far is age, and maybe a bit because his future profile probably has him relegated to more of a DH role.

Similar to Tinney; I just would love to get this kind of righthanded bat into the system. I think we offer him $175,000 bonus, which gives us another $160,900 savings that goes back to Weinstein’s signing. We only need to save another $47,400 in rounds 7-10 to

#7.220 – CF, Georgia, Rylan Lujo

Lujo was an interesting find for me. He played exclusively 3B last year for Dayton, but has turned into a pretty serviceable centerfielder this year after tranferring to Georgia. He really kinda feels like righthanded Brendan Donovan, to me. Listed 6’2″/192lbs, he’s hitting .348/.440/1.029 with 7 HR, 29 RBI, 7×8 SB this year for the Bulldogs.

I think we can give Lujo full-slot at $266,100.

#8.250 – SS, Kansas, Tyson Leblanc

Whenever you draft a prep player; chances are good that the Mariners will be slow and cautious to develop him. Especially over the summer of his draft year. What this also means is that you need to draft a college counterpart to the prep player who can begin playing within weeks of the draft. Teams need new draft signees to backfill for player promotions and player releases that come towards the heart of the summer.

Leblanc is listed 6’0″/195lbs and has hit .333/.415/1.077 with 16 HR, 49 RBI, 9×10 SB in 2026 for the Jayhawks. From what I can discern he also plays a solid defensive shortstop, and he might have the clutch gene.

#9.280 – RHP, St Joseph’s, Christian Coppola

Coppola is a big, righthanded reliever who has pitched to a 2.10 ERA, 0.933 WHIP, 17.7 SO/9, and 2.7 BB/9 across 30.0 innings so far in 2026. He is a senior sign as a guy turning 23 in November, who has played two years at Rutgers, one at Arizona, and one at St Joseph’s. Slot is $202,700 and we can offer him $155,300 with no penalties after paying CJ Weinstein overslot money.

#10.310 – RHP,Texas A&M, Clayton Freshcorn

The Mariners have done well to add some high-octane late inning arms in the last few drafts: Brock Moore, Christian Little, Lucas Kelly to name a few. As part of the balance I’m looking for in my mocks; I continue to look to add fresh arms to the pile.

Listed 6’0″/180lbs, Freshcorn has made 20 relief appearances this year resulting in a 1.95 ERA, 1.052 WHIP, 10.6 SO/9, 1.1 BB/9 and 10 saves.

#11.340 – RHP, UNCW, Cooper Allen

Every once in a while, the Mariners get to draft a Seahawk. Allen is a 6’1″/200lb righty for the North Carolina-Wilmington Seahawks. In 12 (ahem) starts this year he has posted a 2.60 ERA, 0.952 WHIP, 9.7 SO/9, and 2.1 BB/9.

#12.370- 1B, VMI, Grayson Fitzwater

Fitzwater is a 6’1″/215lb first baseman from VMI hitting .338/.493/1.293 this year with 19 HR, 58 RBI, 11×13 SB in 46 games this year.

#13.400 – LHP, South Alabama, Jaxon Shineflew

Much like finding a lefthanded starter; it was tough to find some lefthanded relievers. Shineflew is 6’2″/175 lbs and has a 4.03 ERA, 1.097 WHIP, 10.5 SO/9 and 2.4 BB/9.

#14.430 – SS, Nebraska, Dylan Carey

It’s always good to get extra shortstops. Carey is 6’2″/210lbs and he’s hitting .356/.424/1.063 with 12 HR and 55 RBI. I love the swing and the launch angle.

#15.480 – RHP, Virginia, Tyler Kapa

The closer for Virginia; Kapa is listed 6’2″/195lbs and has a 1.42 ERA, 0.908 WHIP, 11.4 SO/9, and 11 saves this year. His fastball is up to 96mph with 20″ IVB. Honestly, I should have switched him with Shineflew in the 13th round, but I already added the video hyper links, etc.