Amidst the first full day of Western Hemisphere-oriented World Baseball Classic games, spring training took the back seat, if not a full day off broadcasting. Despite no TV broadcast, Seattle was able to benefit from a handful of its young and less-seasoned players taking turns in the limelight. The 5-1 win for the Mariners featured three shutout innings from LHP Kade Anderson and a pair of home runs by 2B Cole Young, along with another strong day at the dish for Spring Training standout OF Brennen
Davis.
The main draw (for me, at least) in Friday afternoon’s tilt was another chance to hone in on Anderson. Seattle’s top pick a year ago looked sharp in his spring debut last Friday, and shone again this afternoon. Sometimes the box score lies, but between the broadcast, Gameday, and Kate sending video and feedback from the Surprise Stadium press box, Anderson looked and sounded sharp against a lineup full of big leaguers.
Facing Nimmo twice, and the rest of the lineup once, Anderson worked around a two-strike double from Ezequiel Duran to an otherwise tidy outing. Barrels were dodged like he was playing Donkey Kong, and Anderson said after the game it was a valuable experience to work through high-quality hitters when his stuff felt a step less potent than it had a week ago.
When you play at this level, there’s so many good hitters that you don’t even realize who’s up. It’s they’re all good. So when you really have that mindset, it really it helps you understand doesn’t matter who’s in the box, this is my plan.
Anderson’s command was, aside from the curve he’d have rather buried to Duran, solid. Our friends at Pitcher List have made the most of the universal Statcast data now broadcast out of every Spring Training park, showcasing Anderson’s efforts Friday afternoon. On a slider-heavy day, Anderson was highly effective and once again encouraging that his medley of options and strong command help him perform against top notch competition.
Though I think this undersells what Anderson was doing today, it’s an interesting visual for what does and does not make the southpaw effective. Namely, despite velocity and stuff that remains page-bound, hitters don’t seem to pick him up nor barrel him up often. With Bryce Miller still in a slightly hazy space in terms of his ramp-up time, Anderson will continue seeing chances against the first line of opposing batters.
Apres Kade, déluge non, a blessed mercy following Thursday’s slobberknocker. A solo shot to Evan Carter was the only thing of consequence yielded by Emerson Hancock, while he in recompense scoured the souls of four Rangers hitters, engaging his sweeper to great effect and looking as sharp as he’s been in three innings of his own.
The pitching staff as a whole was sharp, albeit with Casey Legumina, Cole Wilcox, and Robinson Ortiz all racking zeroes against the more zero-ish batch of Rangers substitutes they were matched against. 28 runs allowed over the last two days for the M’s pitching staff feels a little better than 27 over the previous one.
Speaking of runs a-loud, listen to these back-to-back:
Young’s power hasn’t been central to his appeal as a prospect, although the titanic blast he sent last year reminded what he’s capable of at full bore. These max effort swings do seem a bit more geared towards damage, but it’s worth noting his second big fly today would’ve been a nearer thing in Seattle than in the Arizona elevation and heat. Young denied that he’s making any specific emphasis towards power this spring beyond trying to match the barrel to the ball when asked postgame, but acknowledged he’ll use “different types of swings” situationally and depending on the count.
Young’s hotter performance is unsurprising, even as he chuckled about another slow start at the plate this spring to mirror some of his challenges in 2025 upon his call-up.
It’s nice to come into the spring and, you know, fail the last year, fail a lot the last year, and just, you know, work on those failures this offseason and come back this year. Just, you know, being aware of what I need to do.
Those failures may have been challenging for Young, but he’s attempting to use them as context for his efforts this spring, where he’s the frontrunner for the Opening Day second base role so long as he continues hitting like he’s done most of his career.
Davis, by contrast, has little guaranteed. Still, he would’ve needed to Polo Grounds or old Tiger Stadium to contain his blast. The scorched 117 mph tater went nearly 440 feet to left center, and he tacked on another hit that got him driven in by Patrick Wisdom in the 5th. He was one of several players noted by manager Dan Wilson postgame for strong plate appearances, as well as a shoutout to the ongoing strengths of Cole Wilcox on display in the bullpen. The route to the bigs is still challenging for Davis without injuries, but it’s hard to see more that the righty could do on the field in a spring environment to give the club something to consider.
The M’s will be back in action Saturday, with Logan Gilbert on the hill in Peoria, hosting the Chicago White Sox on video through Mariners.TV at 12:10 PM PT.









