Randy Arozarena reached base in all seven Mariners games to start the 2026 season, and he kept the streak alive Tuesday when Max Fried hit him by pitch. It was not the loudest way to stay hot, but it counted the same.
Through seven games, Arozarena was 6-for-24 with a.250 batting average, five walks and three strikeouts in 30 plate appearances. His average exit velocity was 93.3 mph, well above his 90.7 mph career mark, and his 21.5 percent chase rate suggested he was not giving away many at-bats. The result was a 139 OPS+ and 0.5 bWAR, a pace that would project to 11.6 over a full season, right in the territory of the elite. Aaron Judge led Major League Baseball with a 9.7 bWAR last year.
That matters because Arozarena, now 31, still carries 30-30 upside and remains one of the few Mariners hitters with a track record that can change a series or a month. He owns single-season postseason records with 10 home runs and 64 total bases, and until Ernie Clement reached 30 postseason hits in 2025, Arozarena had held that mark too with 29. Seattle has not had much help around him so far: Cal Raleigh, Julio Rodríguez and Josh Naylor were a combined 7-for-78 through the first seven games, leaving the lineup leaning heavily on one bat to keep the offense from stalling.
Read Also: Yankees Vs Rays: Gil Returns As New York Opens Three-Game Set
The tension is that the early returns do not fully match the spring that preceded them. Arozarena had a mostly underwhelming spring, and Mariners fans entered the season uneasy about what to expect after Handshakegate with Raleigh and that uneven preparation. The first week has made him look more agreeable than ever, though perhaps for the simplest possible reason: he is playing for his future, in salary drive mode, and every trip to the plate is working like a sales pitch.
For the Mariners, that is both the good news and the warning. Arozarena has looked the part of a player ready to cash in, but if Seattle cannot get more from the rest of the order, his on-base streak may end up as the early sign of a bigger problem rather than the cure for it.






