Goodbye, Mariners, but come back soon. With Ichiro.

Manager Eric Wedge is sharp enough to look beyond the pointless disparaging of the team's all-time hit leader.

Goodbye, Mariners, but come back soon. With Ichiro.
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by

Mike Henderson

Manager Eric Wedge is sharp enough to look beyond the pointless disparaging of the team's all-time hit leader.

On Sept. 12, I overheard a Seattle Mariners game announcer stating in the  press box that he still believed Ichiro Suzuki would total 200 or more  hits this season.

With the final evening of the season at hand, the above  prediction proves inaccurate, as Ich would need 16 hits against Oakland  Wednesday (Sept. 28): possible but only if the game went into several  dozen extra innings.

With “just” 184 and counting, Number 51 already has been  dismissed by some scribes and fans as a has-been at best, an abject  failure at worst. Knowing this I’d like to submit a humble contextual  rendering of what some believe is Suzuki-san’s lost season.

Granted, his hit total will be about a score below his previous  low of 206 (in 2005). But 184 is more in one season than totals amassed  by all but five among the hundreds to have worn Mariner blue. The  quintet: Alex Rodriguez  (215 and 213), Bret Boone (206) Phil Bradley  (192) Ken Griffey Jr. (185) and . . . uh, Ichiro Suzuki.

True, his other offensive numbers are down, though not  disproportionately to what one would expect of a man soon to turn 38.

Indeed, disparaging Ich for his waning production numbers reminds me of a classic (possibly apocryphal) Ty Cobb anecdote.  Long-retired, he was attending an all-star game when a reporter asked  the career .367 hitter what he’d average against modern pitchers.

The crotchety Cobb supposedly proffered: “Oh, probably about .300.”

That all, the writer asked, at which point Cobb snarled: “Well, what d’ya expect, I’m 70 years old!”

But back to Ichiro. He also has 40 stolen bases this year, two  more than his career average. His offensive numbers, while scarcely  sparkling, probably are well above the arc of the bell curve for great  players his age. He won’t win his typical Gold Glove award but his mere  four errors equal what he’s had each of the recent four seasons.

In short, he seems to be the least of field boss Eric Wedge’s  worries going into the 2012 season: Suzuki’s final contract year.

Many have suggested that Ich, in effect, is depriving the team of  placing a power-hitter in right field. Wedge has taken a more  enlightened view. Earlier this year he told reporters that, if a club  isn’t getting power from a traditional position (outfield and first and  third base), then the long-balls and doubles have to come from middle  infielders and catchers.

In fact, the team home-run leader is catcher Miguel Olivo.  Dustin Ackley, presumed to be a fixture for years at second base, is  expected to become a perennial 20-plus home-run guy, with a lot of  doubles. Mike Carp’s 12 dingers in 286 at-bats would project to 28 next  season if he played as often as Ichiro.

One hopes Carp and others amid the apparent wealth of young  talent actually reach their potential here rather than at trade  destinations.

As for Ichiro, arguing about the efficacy of keeping him seems  academic given that it’s obvious to those who speak for him that he  intends to play in Seattle next year and wouldn’t consent to a trade.

And there’s always the possibility, of course, that he’ll put up  stunning numbers in 2012. Think of Ted Williams, in several ways the Ty  Cobb of his era. He hit .388 at age 39, possibly amid criticism from  certain Red Sox partisans grousing because he “only” had 163 hits and  “just” 38 home runs.