Wouldn't Ichiro, M's benefit from a trade to a contender?

The slow start doesn't mean anything. He will still hit .300, but with a trade he could do it for a team where his skills might mean something even more glorious than what he has already done for Seattle.

Wouldn't Ichiro, M's benefit from a trade to a contender?
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by

Mike Henderson

The slow start doesn't mean anything. He will still hit .300, but with a  trade he could do it for a team where his skills might mean something  even more glorious than what he has already done for Seattle.

Trade Ichiro?

They're the two words I never thought I'd type.

Is it time? It might be.

Ichiro Suzuki has been Seattle’s best and most  pleasurable-to-watch  athlete of the past decade. His production has been  as consistent as it  is — not was but is – remarkable. There isn’t any  reason to  believe his performance level will drop off this season or  even next,  which is precisely why the timing might be perfect for a  swap ASAP.

Ichiro still has good (if not great) trade value. Yes, after an   0-for-5 matinee Wednesday (April 13) he’s hitting just .245. Yes, he’s  had slow  Aprils before. Yes, I’ll bet you my house that he hits .300 or  better  this season and I’ll toss in both of my dogs. And, yes, there  are clubs  that would put up impressive trade bait to get him at the  front of their  lineups.

What the Mariners presently need on offense isn’t  what Ich can  give them. He gets on base but nobody drives him in.  Heading to Kansas  City for four games before another home stand next  week, Ich had crossed  the plate just five times.

The M’s need power in the middle of the lineup, real power  rather  than the threat of an occasional home run. Managers understand  this.  Much has been made about the Justin Smoak acquisition as an  attempt to  put power into the middle. Maybe Smoak is a 30-home-run guy  but his  single dinger during the first 12 games projects to just 13 for  the  season and that’s if he plays every game.

Chone Figgins can be the lead-off guy for the time being. He’s   younger than Ichiro and accustomed to batting first. Any number of   others can play right field, especially if the Ichiro trade bait   includes a quality outfielder.

Ichiro isn’t nearly the draw he once was. Obviously he isn’t the   only reason for the M’s attendance level hitting bedrock during the   recent home stand. What the Wednesday “crowd” of 12,407 (Monday they   lured just 13,056) should be telling M’s execs is that they can’t count   on picking up a lot of interest anymore in a product that is only   technically major-league-level baseball.

This management group needs to start doing whatever  it takes to  see to it that the Seattle Mariners don’t lose their  death-race with the  Washington Nationals/Montreal Expos and become the  last of the modern  big-league teams to go to a World Series (if indeed  they ever do get  there).

Trading Ichiro obviously isn’t the sole component of putting   together a pennant contender. But all the patter from the management the   past few months about building a contender from the farm system no   doubt sounds to many of the remaining fans like something commonly found   on farms. If M’s execs are alarmed by sparse crowds now, wait until  the  presently 4-8 team is 10 games below .500 (that would be May 3 at  the  rate they're “playing”).

But there’s an even better reason to release Ich, preferably to a   pennant-contender. Think of what he’s given fans in this region: the   throw (or The Throw, as many refer to it), when he fired an elongated   strike from right field to nail Oakland’s Terrence Long at third base;   the infield hit off Randy Johnson in the 2001 all-star game at Safeco;   the all-time-best 262-hit season in 2004, etc.

Don’t we kind of collectively owe Ichiro the chance to get to  the  post-season and maybe even help win a World Series? Obviously it  isn’t  going to happen here anytime soon and even Ichiro Suzuki will have  to  retire someday (albeit, to look at the seldom-injured specimen,  maybe  not for another decade).

Five years after that happens he’ll enter the Hall of Fame as a   Seattle Mariner. Given the chance, though, he may yet find his greatest   glory playing for a much better team.