Mariners Secure Naylor: First Big Move in MLB Offseason

alofoke
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The 2025-26 MLB season is here! At Alofoke Deportes, we keep you informed of every important move. We thoroughly analyze each relevant signing and transfer this winter, offering you detailed ratings and perspectives. Whether it’s a free agent signing that changes the course of your team or an impactful trade, we provide you with key information on what it means for next season and beyond. Stay connected for the latest analyses as we head towards the start of spring training.

Sailors secure Naylor

The Seattle Mariners have begun the winter by securing the continuity of Josh Naylor. The agreement: 5 years, $92.5 million Rating: A- If there were an award for the most likely free agent prediction, Josh Naylor’s return to the Seattle Mariners would have been the top candidate. Therefore, it is not surprising that this is the first significant signing of the offseason, subject to medical examinations. As soon as the Mariners’ season ended with that painful loss in Game 7 of the American League Championship Series, the front office made it clear that re-signing Naylor was their top priority. Such public statements at that level are uncommon, and the Mariners backed them up with a five-year contract. It’s easy to understand why they wanted Naylor back. The Mariners have been looking for a long-term solution at first base for, well, almost 20 years, really since they traded John Olerud in 2004. Ty France gave them a couple of solid seasons in 2021 and 2022, but since 2005 only the Pirates’ first basemen have produced a lower OPS than Seattle’s.

Meanwhile, Naylor arrived at the trade deadline from Arizona and provided a great spark down the stretch, batting .299/.341/.490 with nine home runs and 33 RBIs in 54 games, representing 2.2 WAR. Including his time with the Diamondbacks, he finished with .295/.353/.462 with 20 home runs in 2025. Given the pitcher-friendly nature of T-Mobile Park, it’s not easy to attract free agent hitters to Seattle, but Naylor talked about how he loves to hit there. The numbers back it up: In 43 career games at T-Mobile, he has hit .304 and slugged .534.

Important for a Seattle lineup that relies heavily on strikeouts, Naylor is a high-contact hitter in the middle of the order; he finished with the seventeenth-best strikeout rate among qualified hitters in 2025. Naylor’s entire game is a bit contradictory. He ranks in the seventh percentile in chase rate, but still had a nearly league-average walk rate (46th percentile) with an excellent contact rate. He can’t run (third percentile!), but stole 30 bases in 32 attempts, including 19 of 19 after joining the Mariners. He doesn’t seem like he’s fast on the field, but his Statcast defensive metrics have been above average in each of the last four seasons. Not a star: 3.1 WAR in 2025 was his personal record, but he’s a safe and predictable player to rely on in the coming years. This deal extends to his age-33 season, so there may be some risk at the end of the contract, but for a team with World Series aspirations in 2026, the Mariners needed Naylor to return. The management will be happy with this signing and so will the Mariners fans.
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