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	<title>Essays.2001-Seattle-Mariners &#8211; Society for American Baseball Research</title>
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		<title>Introduction: Two Outs, So What!: The 2001 Seattle Mariners</title>
		<link>https://sabr.org/journal/article/introduction-two-outs-so-what-the-2001-seattle-mariners/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[wpadmin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 2026 23:24:14 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sabr.org/?post_type=journal_articles&#038;p=330309</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[The Seattle Mariners entered the American League as an expansion team in 1977. For nearly two decades the franchise gave its fans little to cheer about. It took the Mariners 15 seasons to post a winning record and 19 to reach the postseason. Between 1995 and 2000, Seattle boasted several superstars and reached the playoffs [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p class="p_sabr_p"><span class="run-in"><a href="https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060.jpg"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="alignright wp-image-329223" src="https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060.jpg" alt="" width="224" height="290" srcset="https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060.jpg 1650w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-232x300.jpg 232w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-796x1030.jpg 796w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-768x994.jpg 768w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-1187x1536.jpg 1187w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-1583x2048.jpg 1583w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-1159x1500.jpg 1159w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-545x705.jpg 545w" sizes="(max-width: 224px) 100vw, 224px" /></a></span><span class="run-in">The Seattle Mariners</span> entered the American League as an expansion team in 1977. For nearly two decades the franchise gave its fans little to cheer about. It took the Mariners 15 seasons to post a winning record and 19 to reach the postseason. Between 1995 and 2000, Seattle boasted several superstars and reached the playoffs three times, only to see the departures of future Hall of Famers Randy Johnson, Ken Griffey Jr., and Álex Rodríguez over a three-year period leading up to 2001. Entering 2001, the Mariners had produced a winning record in only six of 24 seasons and had never won more than 91 games. All of this made the 2001 Mariners’ 116-win season nearly incomprehensible.</p>
<div id="calibre_link-3" class="calibre1">
<p class="tx">Any successful team requires capable on-field leadership and an executive stewardship that fulfills the strategic direction to build a strong roster. The Mariners already had that field general in Lou Piniella. Pat Gillick, hired as general manager after the 1999 season, took on the responsibility of constructing a strong roster that balanced top-level talent with depth to be successful over the long season. He had proved this ability with the two-time World Series champion Toronto Blue Jays and followed that with a successful run in Baltimore.</p>
<p class="tx">The fiery Piniella had piloted the Mariners since 1993, including leading the team to its first postseason appearance in 1995. Edgar Martínez’s extra-inning, walk-off RBI double to defeat the New York Yankees in Game Five of the ’95 AL Division Series highlighted the Mariners’ inaugural playoff run. Although the magic ran out in the AL Championship Series against the Cleveland Indians, the Mariners’ newfound success captured the hearts of baseball fans in the Pacific Northwest and helped secure funding for construction of a new ballpark to replace the aging Kingdome. Safeco Field opened on July 15, 1999.</p>
<p class="tx">Soon after being hired as GM, Gillick orchestrated the trade of Ken Griffey Jr. to Cincinnati. This came less than two years after the Mariners had jettisoned another future Hall of Famer, Randy Johnson. The trades of two franchise icons stung but brought back several talented players who would contribute to the 2001 Mariners’ success. Johnson yielded a return of Freddy García, John Halama, and Carlos Guillén from the Houston Astros, and Griffey Jr. netted a package of players that included Mike Cameron and Brett Tomko from the Reds. Although the trades infused youth into the organization, the 2001 Mariners remained a veteran-laden club. The position-player group had an average age of 31.3, third oldest in the majors. Catchers Dan Wilson and Tom Lampkin, first baseman John Olerud, newly signed second baseman Bret Boone, outfielders Jay Buhner, Al Martin, and Stan Javier, and utilityman Mark McLemore were all 32 or older. Jamie Moyer, 38 years old, anchored a pitching staff with an average age of 30.8, sixth oldest in the majors. Starters Aaron Sele and Paul Abbott and the Mariners’ top four relievers – Jeff Nelson, Norm Charlton, Arthur Rhodes, and Kazuhiro Sasaki – were all over 30. Outside of Edgar Martínez, all of the regulars were either acquired via trade or signed as free agents. Homegrown talent was limited.</p>
<p class="tx">Seattle’s biggest unknown heading into the 2001 season was 27-year-old import Ichiro Suzuki, major-league baseball’s first Japanese-born position player. The slender outfielder, known simply by his first name, won seven consecutive batting titles and three MVP awards in Japan’s Pacific League. Yet some skeptics doubted whether a Japanese spray hitter of his size could achieve success in the majors. Ichiro’s otherworldly bat-to-ball skills, blazing speed, and rifle arm left no doubt in the mind of Mariners Pacific Rim scout Jim Colborn, who persuaded Gillick to pursue the Japanese star. After ownership signed off, the Mariners paid Nippon Professional Baseball’s Orix Blue Wave $13 million for negotiating rights and then signed Ichiro to a three-year, $14 million contract.</p>
<p class="tx">Having lost Rodríguez to the division rival Texas Rangers in free agency and with Ichiro being something of an unknown quantity, the Mariners were expected to take a step back after winning 91 games in 2000. The <em>Tacoma News Tribune</em>, <em>USA Today</em>, and <em>The Sporting News</em> all predicted that they would finish second behind Oakland. “No disrespect to Boone or Ichiro, but when the A’s add Johnny Damon and the Rangers get A-Rod, the Mariners need more than those two,” wrote the <em>News Tribune</em>.<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-80" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-74">1</a></span> In its preseason power rankings, <em>The Sporting News</em> rated Seattle 11th of the 30 teams. ESPN picked the Mariners to finish third in the AL West and rated Seattle’s lineup as 10th out of 14 AL teams.</p>
<p class="tx">In <span class="italic">Baseball Prospectus’</span>s 2001 preview, 11 of 13 experts picked the Mariners to finish third in the four-team AL West, and one picked Seattle to finish last. “The Mariners can’t replace Álex Rodríguez but should still come in around .500,” wrote Clay Davenport.<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-81" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-75">2</a></span> Keith Law predicted that the Mariners would win fewer than 85 games. Another writer, Derek Zumsteg, wrote, “Seattle’s numerous automatic outs make them easy prey, and Oakland will eat them both alive with the unbalanced schedule.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-82" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-76">3</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">Spring training started inauspiciously for the Mariners. In his first Cactus League at-bat, Buhner injured his left foot. He subsequently underwent surgery for plantar fasciitis and missed most of the season. The Mariners, whose $74.7 million payroll ranked 11th highest in baseball, posted a 13-19 spring record. The low-budget A’s, who inspired Michael Lewis’s book <em>Moneyball</em>, compiled a 22-10 mark. It appeared as though prognosticators might have been spot-on.</p>
<p class="tx">The tide turned once the games counted, however. On Opening Night, Seattle rallied from a four-run deficit to defeat Oakland in front of a record crowd at Safeco Field. Over the season’s first two weeks, the Mariners beat the heavily favored A’s five times in six meetings. In the Mariners’ victory at Oakland’s Network Associates Coliseum on April 11, Ichiro served notice to the league with a laser-beam throw from right field that nailed Terrence Long at third base. Announcer Dave Niehaus described the throw as “something out of <em>Star Wars</em>.”</p>
<p class="tx">By the end of April, Seattle owned a 20-5 record and a nine-game division lead. Then, instead of regressing, they kept winning. After another 20 victories in May, the Mariners’ record stood at 40-12, and they had extended their division lead to 14 games over the second-place A’s.</p>
<p class="tx">Although Seattle had a deep and talented roster, no player impacted Seattle’s hot start more than Ichiro. Besides showing off his incredible arm, the leadoff man jump-started the team’s offense and terrorized opposing teams on the bases. In May the Japanese phenom put together a 23-game hitting streak and earned Rookie of the Month honors for the second consecutive month. “He was supposed to come over and need some time to adjust,” said teammate McLemore. “I guess he got his adjustment period out of the way on the flight over.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-83" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-77">4</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners pitching also contributed to Seattle’s early success. During April and May, Sele and García combined for a 13-0 record, Sasaki converted 21 of 24 save opportunities, and setup men Rhodes and Nelson posted ERAs of 1.23 and 1.21 respectively.</p>
<p class="tx">After winning 15 straight between May 23 and June 8 – a franchise record and the longest win streak in the AL since 1991 – the Mariners owned a 47-12 record. Only the 1912 New York Giants (47-11-1) had a better record through 59 games. Through 62 contests, Seattle’s record stood at 49-13. At that point the team could have played .500 ball for over the final 100 games and still won 99 games. “Enjoy the ride,” proclaimed Niehaus. “You may never see anything like it again.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-84" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-78">5</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">Seattle boasted a 63-24 record and a 19-game division advantage at the All-Star break. Eight Mariners – Olerud, Boone, Cameron, Ichiro, Martínez, García, Sasaki, and Nelson – were named to the AL All-Star team. Ichiro, who had captured the attention of baseball fans from coast to coast, became the first rookie to receive the most votes by the public as an All-Star starter. Given the Mariners’ presence at the midsummer classic, it was appropriate that the Emerald City hosted the exhibition for the second time in franchise history.</p>
<p class="tx">One of the Mariners’ few blunders in 2001 came on August 5 at Jacobs Field in Cleveland. The Indians overcame deficits of 12-0 and 14-2 to defeat the Mariners 15-14 in extra innings, making it the biggest comeback in 76 years. The veteran club remained unfazed by the embarrassing defeat, however, winning seven of its next nine.</p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners set a franchise record with 92 wins on August 23 with 34 games to play. They clinched a playoff berth on September 3 and were on the precipice of clinching their third-ever AL West title when the September 11 terrorist attacks rocked the nation. The major leagues paused their season for a week as the nation mourned. Baseball played an important part in the healing process, particularly in the Pacific Northwest. On September 19 the Mariners sealed the division crown with a victory over the Anaheim Angels at Safeco Field. During a subdued postgame celebration, McLemore hoisted an American flag and the players knelt in prayer, one of the indelible images from the Mariners’ historic season.</p>
<p class="tx">On October 5 against the Rangers, the Mariners broke the AL record with their 115th win. A day later they registered their 116th triumph, tying the 1906 Chicago Cubs for the most wins in major-league history. Seattle led the AL West wire to wire. The Mariners were shut out only four times and did not lose more than two games a row until late September when they had already secured the division crown.</p>
<p class="tx">The 2001 Mariners excelled at every phase of the game. They led the majors in runs scored with 927 – an average of 5.72 per game – despite having only one player (Boone) with more than 25 home runs. Conversely, no team was better at run prevention. Seattle’s stingy pitching and impeccable defense yielded just 3.87 runs per game. The Mariners also led the majors in team ERA (3.54), on-base percentage (.360), and stolen bases (174) and tied the New York Mets for most shutouts (14). Defensively, the Mariners tied Arizona for the majors’ best fielding percentage (.986), produced the most dWAR (10.2), and committed the fewest errors (83). The team’s never-say-die mentality and penchant for scoring runs with two outs led the fans to embrace the catchphrase: “Two outs, So What!”</p>
<p class="tx">“I’ve never seen a baseball team where the sum of the team exceeded the individuals like the 2001 Mariners,” wrote David Schoenfield, a senior ESPN reporter and avid Mariners fan. “They were a team in perfect harmony.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-85" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-79">6</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">Baseball fans in the Pacific Northwest responded to the Mariners’ historic season by flooding the Safeco Field turnstiles. The team drew a major-league-high 3,507,325 fans – an average of 43,300 per game – and sold out 59 contests. The electricity in SoDo, the neighborhood south of downtown where Safeco Field was located, became known as “SoDo mojo.”</p>
<p class="tx">According to Baseball-Reference, 10 Mariners produced more than three wins above replacement (WAR), led by Bret Boone (8.8), Ichiro Suzuki (7.7), and Mike Cameron (5.9). Boone posted a .331/.372/.578 slash line and set an AL record for a second baseman with 37 home runs and 141 RBIs. Ichiro hit .350 to win the AL batting title, racked up 242 hits (the most since 1930), and stole 56 bases (third most in franchise history). With runners in scoring position, he maintained an incredible .445 average – tying Rogers Hornsby for third best all-time behind George Brett (1980) and Tony Gwynn (1997). Deservedly, Ichiro won the AL Rookie of the Year and the AL MVP, Gold Glove, and Silver Slugger Awards. Cameron, another Gold Glove winner, produced career highs in runs scored (99), RBIs (110), and OPS+ (123).</p>
<p class="tx">Several Mariners reached milestones during the 2001 campaign. On June 16 Olerud became the third player in franchise history to hit for the cycle. On August 8 against Toronto, Martínez reached the 1,000 career RBI mark. On August 19 Cameron tied a team record with eight RBIs in a rout of the Yankees. Moyer won 20 games for the first time, and his rotation mate, García, won the AL ERA title.</p>
<p class="tx">Unfortunately, the Mariners ran out of mojo in the postseason. They managed to eke out a series win against Cleveland Indians in a five-game Division Series despite being outscored 26-16 but then lost to the New York Yankees in the Championship Series. It would be another 21 years before the team returned to the postseason and 24 years before they played in another ALCS.</p>
<p class="tx">This book celebrates the 25th anniversary of the 2001 Mariners – a team that holds a special place in the hearts of a tortured fan base. Much like that team, putting this volume together was a true collaborative effort. Nearly 50 baseball-loving SABR members volunteered their time and energy to research and write the biographies, game stories, and essays within these pages. Veteran SABR author Bill Nowlin served as our co-editor. Other SABR members helped with fact-checking and copy-editing. We thank everyone for their efforts and hope you enjoy reading about a team worth celebrating.</p>
<p class="tx-space-no-indent"><em><strong><span class="c_sabr_c_author">STEVE FRIEDMAN</span></strong> has been a SABR member since 1990. Over the years, he has contributed articles for SABR publications and the BioProject. He resides in the Pacific Northwest and has been a season ticket holder of the Seattle Mariners since 1995. His youth was spent in the San Francisco Bay Area where he followed his beloved Giants. Steve retired after a career as an operator of cable television systems and currently consults with broadband and fiber optic companies.</em></p>
<p class="tx-space-no-indent"><em><strong><span class="c_sabr_c_author">ERIC VICKREY</span></strong> joined SABR in 2020 and has contributed numerous articles to the BioProject and Games Project. He is the author of three books: <span class="italic">Runnin’ Redbirds: The World Champion 1982 St. Louis Cardinals</span>, <span class="italic">Season of Shattered Dreams: Postwar Baseball, the Spokane Indians, and a Tragic Bus Crash That Changed Everything</span>, and <span class="italic">Before They Wore Dodger Blue: Tommy Lasorda and the Greatest Draft Class in Baseball History</span>. Eric lives in Washington state with his wife, Gina, and their two cats, Edgar and Ralphie.</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Read more: </strong><a href="https://sabr.org/e-books/sabr-digital-library-two-outs-so-what-the-2001-seattle-mariners/">Find biographies, game recaps, and essays from <em>Two Outs, So What!: The 2001 Seattle Mariners</em> in the SABR Research Collection</a>. </li>
<li><strong>E-book: </strong><a href="https://profile.sabr.org/store/ListProducts.aspx?catid=170084&amp;ftr=mariners">Click here to download the e-book version of <em>Two Outs, So What!: The 2001 Seattle Mariners</em> for FREE from the SABR Store</a>. Available in PDF, MOBI, EPUB/Kindle formats.</li>
<li><strong>Paperback:</strong> <a href="https://profile.sabr.org/store/viewproduct.aspx?id=27310866">Get a 50% discount on the <em>Two Outs, So What!: The 2001 Seattle Mariners</em> paperback edition from the SABR Store</a> ($19.95 includes shipping/tax; delivery via Amazon Kindle Direct can take up to 4-6 weeks.)</li>
</ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p class="end_header"><strong>NOTES</strong></p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-74" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-80">1</a></span> AL Preview 2001, <em><span class="italic">Tacoma News Tribune</span></em>, April 1, 2001: 68.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-75" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-81">2</a></span> “American League Predictions: Our Best Guess at 2001’s Winners and Losers,” <span class="italic">Baseball Prospectus</span>, March 31, 2001, <a class="calibre3" href="https://www.baseballprospectus.com/news/article/760/american-league-predictions-our-best-guess-at-2001s-winners-and-losers/">https://www.baseballprospectus.com/news/article/760/american-league-predictions-our-best-guess-at-2001s-winners-and-losers/</a>, accessed September 23, 2025.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-76" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-82">3</a></span> “American League Predictions: Our Best Guess at 2001’s Winners and Losers.”</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-77" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-83">4</a></span> Glenn Drosendahl, ed., <em><span class="italic">Mariners 2001: A Joy Ride into the Record Books</span></em> (Seattle: Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 2001), 38.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-78" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-84">5</a></span> Drosendahl, 11.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-79" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-85">6</a></span> David Schoenfield, “2001 Mariners: Best Team That Never Won,” ESPN, September 12, 2001, <a class="calibre3" href="https://www.espn.com/blog/sweetspot/post/_/id/16050/2001-mariners-best-team-that-never-won">https://www.espn.com/blog/sweetspot/post/_/id/16050/2001-mariners-best-team-that-never-won</a>, accessed October 23, 2025.</p>
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		<title>2001 Seattle Mariners: The American League Division Series</title>
		<link>https://sabr.org/journal/article/2001-seattle-mariners-the-american-league-division-series/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[wpadmin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 2026 23:18:43 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sabr.org/?post_type=journal_articles&#038;p=330307</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[After the September 11 terrorist attacks, the United States began the healing process with baseball leading the charge. In an American League Division Series, the Mariners faced the Cleveland Indians. The Mariners had reached the playoffs by winning the American League West title with a 116-46 record. The 116 wins tied the record of the [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p class="p_sabr_p"><span class="run-in"><a href="https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060.jpg"><img decoding="async" class="alignright  wp-image-329223" src="https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060.jpg" alt="" width="224" height="290" srcset="https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060.jpg 1650w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-232x300.jpg 232w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-796x1030.jpg 796w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-768x994.jpg 768w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-1187x1536.jpg 1187w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-1583x2048.jpg 1583w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-1159x1500.jpg 1159w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-545x705.jpg 545w" sizes="(max-width: 224px) 100vw, 224px" /></a></span><span class="run-in">After the September </span>11 terrorist attacks, the United States began the healing process with baseball leading the charge. In an American League Division Series, the Mariners faced the Cleveland Indians.</p>
<div id="calibre_link-68" class="calibre1">
<p class="tx">The Mariners had reached the playoffs by winning the American League West title with a 116-46 record. The 116 wins tied the record of the 1906 Chicago Cubs. Seattle had 57 wins and 24 losses at <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/park/safeco-field-2/">Safeco Field</a> and was slightly better on the road with a record of 59 wins and 22 losses. The Mariners had winning records against every team they played during the regular season.</p>
<p class="tx">Cleveland had reached the best-of-five first round of the playoffs by winning the American League Central Division title with a 91-71 record. It was the sixth time the Indians had reached the playoffs since 1995.</p>
<p class="subhead"><strong>Game One: October 9, 2001</strong><br />
<strong>Indians 5, Mariners 0</strong><br />
<strong>Safeco Field, Seattle</strong></p>
<p class="tx">To start the first game of the series, Seattle manager <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/lou-piniella/">Lou Piniella</a> selected right-hander <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/freddy-garcia-2/">Freddy García</a>. García finished the season with a record of 18-6 with a league-leading 3.05 earned-run average in 238⅔ innings pitched. On the mound for manager <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/charlie-manuel/">Charlie Manuel</a> and the Cleveland Indians was right-hander <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/bartolo-colon/">Bartolo Colón</a> (14-12, 4.09 ERA in 222⅓ innings). Mariners fans looked forward to the beginning of the series, as described in the <em>Tacoma News Tribune</em>: “Tuesday morning, the crowd gathered outside Safeco Field under a gray sky, moving towards the stadium in hopeful herds. Parking lot moguls lost no time in the push for postseason markups. Rates climbed to $40 per car at lots closest to the stadium.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4010" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-3993">1</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">For the first three innings, neither García nor Colón allowed a run. The crowd eagerly awaited anything they thought would produce a good outcome for the Mariners. “Once the game began the crowd waited and hoped through the first three innings, pouncing on every positive, urging the team forward,” wrote the <span class="italic">News Tribune.</span><span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4011" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-3994">2</a></span> García allowed a double to <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/ellis-burks/">Ellis Burks</a> in the second inning and a walk to <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/kenny-lofton/">Kenny Lofton</a> in the third, while Colón gave up a leadoff single to <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/ichiro-suzuki/">Ichiro Suzuki</a> in the first inning, a double to <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/stan-javier/">Stan Javier</a> in the second, and another single to Suzuki in the third.</p>
<p class="tx">In the top of the fourth, <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/roberto-alomar/">Roberto Alomar</a> led off with a double and scored on <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/juan-gonzalez/">Juan González</a>’s single for the game’s first run. A walk to <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/jim-thome/">Jim Thome</a> and an infield single by <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/ellis-burks/">Burks</a> loaded the bases with nobody out. Back-to-back singles by <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/travis-fryman/">Travis Fryman</a> and <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/marty-cordova/">Marty Cordova</a> gave Cleveland their second and third runs. García then stopped the Indians from putting the Mariners any further in the hole when he struck out <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/einar-diaz/">Einar Díaz</a> and Lofton and got <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/omar-vizquel/">Omar Vizquel</a> to fly out to left field.</p>
<p class="tx">The score remained 3-0 until the top of the sixth inning, when consecutive one-out singles by Fryman, Cordova, and Díaz gave the Indians another run and a lead of 4-0. After the run-scoring single by Díaz, Piniella took the ball from García and summoned <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/norm-charlton/">Norm Charlton</a>, who got the final two outs of the inning.</p>
<p class="tx">Charlton set the Indians down in order in the seventh inning. <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/jose-paniagua/">José Paniagua</a> came on in relief to start the eighth inning and gave up a home run to Burks to make the score 5-0.</p>
<p class="tx">Colón kept the Mariners off the scoreboard for the first eight innings, allowing six hits while walking two and striking out 10 before being relieved by <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/bob-wickman/">Bob Wickman</a>. Wickman preserved the win and the shutout by getting <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/edgar-martinez/">Edgar Martínez</a> to pop out to Vizquel at short and striking out <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/john-olerud/">John Olerud</a> and <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/mike-cameron/">Mike Cameron</a>. The <span class="italic">News Tribune</span> suggested that “Tuesday’s game was a sobering reminder of the uncertainty of the postseason.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4012" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-3995">3</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">“I don’t think they thought we had an aura of invincibility at all,” said the Mariners’ <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/mark-mclemore-2/">Mark McLemore</a>. They’ve beaten us. … So they know as well as we do, it does not matter about the season. The season is over with. It’s who’s the best today, right now.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4013" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-3996">4</a></span></p>
<p class="subhead"><strong>Game Two: October 11, 2001</strong><br />
<strong>Mariners 5, Indians 1</strong><br />
<strong>Safeco Field, Seattle</strong></p>
<p class="tx">In the second game of the ALDS, Lou Piniella sent <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/jamie-moyer/">Jamie Moyer</a> to the hill to face Cleveland’s <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/chuck-finley/">Chuck Finley</a>. Moyer had finished the regular season with a 20-6 record and a 3.43 ERA, while Finley posted an 8-7 record and a 5.54 ERA. After the game, the <em>New York Daily News</em> wrote, “Eight days separate the birthdays of Jamie Moyer and Chuck Finley. Light years separated their performances yesterday.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4014" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-3997">5</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">Moyer set the Indians down in order in the first inning, while Ichiro Suzuki walked to lead off the first for Seattle. Mike Cameron followed with a home run that gave the Mariners a 2-0 lead.</p>
<p class="tx">Seattle continued an early assault on Finley and went ahead 4-0 as <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/bret-boone/">Bret Boone</a> singled and Edgar Martínez followed with a home run. “On radio the home run by Martínez sailed into a sea of crackling static, and Mariners announcer <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/dave-niehaus/">Dave Niehaus</a> erupted in a fit of vocal apoplexy,” wrote the <span class="italic">News Tribune</span>. “Mariners up four-zip. Life was good.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4015" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-3998">6</a></span> Finley had thrown 14 pitches and had yet to record an out. He retired the next three in order and ended the first inning having thrown 26 pitches.</p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners held the 4-0 lead until the bottom of the fifth, which began with their third home run of the game, this one by <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/david-bell/">David Bell</a>. Bell’s solo home run accounted for Seattle’s final run. Of the Mariners’ six hits in the game, half were home runs. After giving up a single to Ichiro, Finley had thrown 66 pitches, and Manuel sent in <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/david-riske/">David Riske</a>, who struck out Cameron and Boone to end the inning.</p>
<p class="tx">Through six frames, Moyer had not allowed a run while scattering three singles and a walk. He yielded back-to-back singles to Ellis Burks and Jim Thome to open the seventh inning. Moyer had thrown 86 pitches and was lifted in favor of <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/jeff-nelson/">Jeff Nelson</a>, who walked Travis Fryman to load the bases. Marty Cordova grounded into a double play that scored Burks. The Mariners now led 5-1.</p>
<p class="tx">That proved to be all of the scoring in the game, and the Mariners evened the series with a 5-1 win. “I’ll tell you what,” said Piniella, “it was as close to a must win as you could want.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4016" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-3999">7</a></span></p>
<p class="subhead"><strong>Game Three: October 13, 2001</strong><br />
<strong>Indians 17, Mariners 2</strong><br />
<strong>Jacobs Field, Cleveland</strong></p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners and Indians flew to Cleveland for the third game of the series, on Saturday, October 13. In the first two games, the Indians had scored a total of six runs, while the Mariners had scored just the five runs in Game Two. Rain had been in the forecast, but the <em>Tacoma News Tribune</em> commented that rather than wet weather, it rained hits. “Though forecast, rain wasn’t what upset Saturday’s matchup between the Mariners and the Cleveland Indians. The Indians embarrassed the Mariners, 17-2.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4017" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4000">8</a></span> Said a fan at a Kitsap County tavern that afternoon: “Yeah, it’s raining out. It’s raining Cleveland hits.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4018" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4001">9</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">On the mound for the Indians was <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/cc-sabathia/">CC Sabathia</a>, and for the visiting Mariners it was <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/aaron-sele/">Aaron Sele</a>. The Mariners ended up scoring just two runs. In the top of the first inning, Ichiro Suzuki led off with a single and went to third base on a double by Mike Cameron. After Sabathia struck out Bret Boone, Edgar Martínez was intentionally walked to load the bases. Sabathia walked John Olerud to force in a run before inducing a pair of foul popouts off the bats of <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/jay-buhner/">Jay Buhner</a> and <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/dan-wilson/">Dan Wilson</a>.</p>
<p class="tx">In the top of the seventh inning, David Bell led off with a double against Sabathia. After <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/mark-mclemore/">Mark McLemore</a> walked, Ichiro singled to score Bell with the Mariners’ second run.</p>
<p class="tx">The Indians, on the other hand, scored early and often. They plated two in the first on a run-scoring double by Roberto Alomar and a run-scoring single by Juan González. They took a 4-1 lead in the bottom of the second inning on a two-run triple by Omar Vizquel. In the third inning, the lead increased to 8-1, highlighted by a leadoff home run by González. A home run by Kenny Lofton in the fifth inning made the score 9-1. In the sixth, a home run by Jim Thome, a run-scoring single by <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/jolbert-cabrera/">Jolbert Cabrera</a>, and a sacrifice fly by Lofton extended the Indians’ advantage to 12-1.</p>
<p class="tx">Cleveland added five runs in the eighth inning on a three-run double by Vizquel. Consecutive run-scoring doubles by Roberto Alomar and Juan González made the final score 17-2 with the Indians now holding a two-games-to-one lead in the best-of-five series.</p>
<p class="tx">“The Indians’ top five hitters – Lofton, Vizquel, Alomar, González and Thome – had produced only six hits and one RBI in 41 at-bats in the first two games in Seattle,” noted the <span class="italic">New York Daily News.</span><span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4019" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4002">10</a></span> In Game Three, the quintet combined for 14 hits and 15 RBIs. Eight of Cleveland’s runs were charged to Mariners reliever <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/paul-abbott/">Paul Abbott</a>, a starter during the regular season. As the <span class="italic">Daily News</span> noted, “Lofton broke an 0-10 start to the series with a homer off Abbott, giving Cleveland rookie starter CC Sabathia plenty of room to work with.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4020" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4003">11</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">Vizquel finished with four hits and six runs batted in. “No one wants to get embarrassed on national television like that,” Seattle outfielder Mike Cameron said afterward. “If you’ve got any type of pride about yourself – and I’m sure everyone in here has a lot of pride about themselves – it’s embarrassing. We need to get ourselves ready to play.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4021" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4004">12</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">In the regular season, Seattle paced the American League with a .288 batting average and 3.54 earned-run average while committing just 83 errors in 162 games. Through the first three games of the ALDS, Ichiro Suzuki and David Bell combined for 10 of the Mariners’ 19 hits. The rest of the team was 9-for-73, a paltry .123 batting average. The trio of John Olerud, Mark McLemore, and Bret Boone especially struggled, going 1-for-31 with 15 strikeouts. Seattle’s pitching, meanwhile, had ceded 21 earned runs in 26 innings for a 7.27 ERA, and its usually sure-handed defense had made four errors.</p>
<p class="subhead"><strong>Game Four: October 14, 2001</strong><br />
<strong>Mariners 6, Indians 2</strong><br />
<strong>Jacobs Field, Cleveland</strong></p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners, looking to even the series, sent Freddy García to the hill to oppose Bartolo Colón of the Indians. Holding the Mariners scoreless for the first six innings in this game, Colón had now shut them out for 14 straight innings, setting the record for scoreless frames in an American League Division Series. But Seattle wouldn’t exit the playoffs without a whimper.</p>
<p class="tx">The Indians scored first, when Juan González hit the second pitch of the second inning for a home run. The Indians held that slim lead until the top of the seventh inning. Dan Ruiz of the <span class="italic">News Tribune</span> described how the tide changed for the Mariners: “Nine outs away from what could have been a disappointing end to their season, the Mariners suddenly found themselves ahead of the Cleveland Indians, 3-1, in the middle of the seventh inning.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4022" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4005">13</a></span> Seattle’s John Olerud led off with a walk and took second on Stan Javier’s single. Colón had Olerud picked off second base, but his wild throw allowed Olerud to get to third base. A walk to Mike Cameron loaded the bases for <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/al-martin/">Al Martin</a>, pinch-hitting for Dan Wilson. Martin grounded into a force out at home plate, leaving the bases filled for David Bell. Bell drove in Javier with a sacrifice fly, and a single by Ichiro scored Cameron. Mark McLemore followed with another single to drive in Martin. <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/danys-baez/">Danys Báez</a> replaced Colón and got out of the inning with no more damage by retiring Edgar Martínez on a groundout.</p>
<p class="tx">García faced two batters in the bottom of the seventh, giving up a double to González before inducing a groundout from Jim Thome that advanced González to third base. Jeff Nelson replaced García and struck out Ellis Burks, but Burks reached first base on a passed ball. A groundball by Travis Fryman forced Burks at second base and scored González, making it 3-2, Seattle.</p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners added to their lead in the eighth inning on a double by Cameron that scored Javier, and “Edgar Martínez sealed the victory in the ninth with a two-out, two-run home run off <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/paul-shuey/">Paul Shuey</a>.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4023" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4006">14</a></span> The Indians and Mariners headed back to Safeco Field in Seattle for a deciding Game Five.</p>
<p class="subhead"><strong>Game Five: October 15, 2001</strong><br />
<strong>Seattle Mariners 3, Cleveland Indians 1</strong><br />
<strong>Safeco Field, Seattle</strong></p>
<p class="tx">The series came down to a deciding Game Five at Safeco Field. A <em>New York Daily News</em> correspondent wrote, “The Mariners hadn’t played games where their season depended on winning and they never had their character tested. The last two days changed all that, as the Cleveland Indians pushed them to the brink of elimination in their best-of-five AL Division Series.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4024" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4007">15</a></span> Piniella elected to start Moyer on three days’ rest.</p>
<p class="tx">Opening the second inning, Indians starter Chuck Finley walked Edgar Martínez and John Olerud. A hit batsman loaded the bases. Finley nearly escaped the jam by striking out Dan Wilson and David Bell, but a single by Mark McLemore scored Martínez and Olerud to give the Mariners a 2-0 lead.</p>
<p class="tx">Because the pitcher’s mound at Safeco Field is almost as close to the visitors dugout as it is to the home plate, Moyer could sense a shift in the mood of the Indians. “They weren’t very cheerful, they were pretty quiet,” he said.<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4025" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4008">16</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">But in the top of the third inning, he heard the Indians talking. Cleveland got a run back after Travis Fryman doubled, advanced to third base on a fly out by Marty Cordova, and scored on a single by Kenny Lofton. The Mariners now led 2-1.</p>
<p class="tx">For the next couple of innings, neither Moyer nor Finley allowed a run. Finley came out of the game in the bottom of the fifth after loading the bases with one out on singles by McLemore and Suzuki and a walk to Stan Javier. He was relieved by David Riske, who got out of the jam with a strikeout and groundout.</p>
<p class="tx">For six innings Moyer baffled Cleveland hitters with his pinpoint control and mix of speeds. In the postgame scrum, Omar Vizquel shook his head and paid him the highest of compliments: “The guy is like <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/greg-maddux/">Greg Maddux</a>. He’s a master. He throws 85 miles an hour, tops, but he plays with your mind. You know what he is going to throw, but you can’t hit it.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4026" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4009">17</a></span> Riske was replaced in the bottom of the sixth inning by <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/ricardo-rincon/">Ricardo Rincón</a>, who remained in the game until the bottom of the seventh inning, when he was replaced by Danys Báez. After Báez struck out Bret Boone, a Edgar Martínez singled to score Ichiro, who had led off with a single and gone to second on a sacrifice by Javier. The Mariners now led 3-1.</p>
<p class="tx">That ended the scoring as Jeff Nelson, <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/arthur-rhodes/">Arthur Rhodes</a>, and <a class="calibre3" href="https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/kazuhiro-sasaki/">Kazuhiro Sasaki</a> combined to hold the Indians off the scoreboard over the final three frames. This clinched the American League Division Series for the Mariners, who would now face the New York Yankees in the AL Championship Series.</p>
<p class="tx">The ALDS proved to be highly competitive. Although the 2001 Mariners made history, the Cleveland Indians, winners of the American League Central by six games over the Minnesota Twins, were no slouches. The series demonstrated that in a five-game set, any team is capable of defeating another. It also showed that Seattle – despite setting an AL record with 116 regular-season wins – could be beaten.</p>
<p class="tx-space-no-indent"><em>After an over 20-year career in law enforcement, <strong><span class="c_sabr_c_author">KEVIN LARKIN</span></strong> renewed his interest in baseball by researching and writing about it. He has published a number of books on the sport including <span class="italic">Baseball in the Bay State</span> and <span class="italic">Gehrig: Game by Game</span>, which chronicles the major-league career of Lou Gehrig, game by game. He has written a number of stories for SABR and also fact-checks for SABR, which he said was the best decision he ever made when he joined. He is working on two projects on the Civil War as well as a story on the sport of stock car racing in the area where he lives. He also has a radio show once a month on a local radio station where he talks about baseball.</em></p>
</div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>SOURCES</strong></p>
<div id="calibre_link-68" class="calibre1">
<p class="sources">In addition to the sources cited in the Notes, the author consulted <a class="calibre3" href="http://Baseball-Reference.com">Baseball-Reference.com</a> and <a class="calibre3" href="http://Retrosheet.org">Retrosheet.org</a>. the <em><span class="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</span></em>, and the <em><span class="italic">Seat</span><span class="italic">tle Times</span></em>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p class="end_header"><strong>NOTES</strong></p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-3993" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4010">1</a></span> Kim Eckart and Sean Robinson, “Fans Say Ya Gotta Have Faith,” <em><span class="italic">Tacoma</span></em> (Washington) <span class="italic"><em>News Tribune</em>,</span> October 10, 2001: A1.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-3994" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4011">2</a></span> Eckart and Robinson.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-3995" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4012">3</a></span> Eckart and Robinson.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-3996" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4013">4</a></span> Adam Rubin, “Tribe Shuts Out Record-Holders,” <em>New York Daily News,</em> October 11, 2001: 67.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-3997" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4014">5</a></span> Adam Rubin, “Moyer Helps Mariners Level Indians, Series,” <em>New York Daily News,</em> October 12, 2001: 102.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-3998" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4015">6</a></span> Sean Robinson and Kim Eckart, “Mariners Turn It Around,” <em>Tacoma News Tribune,</em> October 12, 2001: 1.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-3999" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4016">7</a></span> John McGrath, “Power and Finesse,” <em>Tacoma News Tribune,</em> October 12, 2001: 25.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-4000" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4017">8</a></span> Kim Eckart, “Raining Cleveland Hits,” <em>Tacoma News Tribune</em> October 14, 2001: 1.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-4001" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4018">9</a></span> Eckart, “Raining Cleveland Hits.”</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num1"><a id="calibre_link-4002" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4019">10</a></span> Adam Rubin, “Cleveland Shocks,” <em>New York Daily News,</em> October 14, 2001: 58.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num1"><a id="calibre_link-4003" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4020">11</a></span> Rubin, “Cleveland Shocks.”</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num1"><a id="calibre_link-4004" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4021">12</a></span> Rubin, “Cleveland Shocks.”</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num1"><a id="calibre_link-4005" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4022">13</a></span> Dan Ruiz, “Mariners Survive a Surreal, Scary Seventh,” <em>Tacoma News Tribune,</em> October 15, 2001: 18.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num1"><a id="calibre_link-4006" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4023">14</a></span> Adam Rubin, “Mariners Finally Get to Colon,” <em>New York Daily News,</em> October 15, 2001: 74.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num1"><a id="calibre_link-4007" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4024">15</a></span> Adam Rubin, “Battle Back from Brink,” <em>New York Daily News,</em> October 16, 2001: 84.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num1"><a id="calibre_link-4008" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4025">16</a></span> Craig Hill, “Moyer Remains Dominant against Indians,” <em>Tacoma News Tribune,</em> October 16, 2001: 20.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num1"><a id="calibre_link-4009" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4026">17</a></span> John Harper, “Lefty’s Junk Proves Very Valuable,” <em>New York Daily News,</em> October 16, 2001: 84.</p>
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		<title>2001 Seattle Mariners: The American League Championship Series</title>
		<link>https://sabr.org/journal/article/2001-seattle-mariners-the-american-league-championship-series/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[wpadmin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 2026 23:12:39 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sabr.org/?post_type=journal_articles&#038;p=330305</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Baseball is haunted by the ghosts of the past in October. They whisper from beyond the outfield fences. They beckon to each player who digs in at the plate. They flit and float through every pitcher’s windup and delivery. Every team in the postseason wants to join them. Every player yearns for their feats to [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p class="p_sabr_p"><span class="run-in"><a href="https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060.jpg"><img decoding="async" class="alignright  wp-image-329223" src="https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060.jpg" alt="" width="224" height="290" srcset="https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060.jpg 1650w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-232x300.jpg 232w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-796x1030.jpg 796w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-768x994.jpg 768w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-1187x1536.jpg 1187w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-1583x2048.jpg 1583w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-1159x1500.jpg 1159w, https://sabrweb.b-cdn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2001-mariners-book-000060-545x705.jpg 545w" sizes="(max-width: 224px) 100vw, 224px" /></a>Baseball is haunted</span> by the ghosts of the past in October. They whisper from beyond the outfield fences. They beckon to each player who digs in at the plate. They flit and float through every pitcher’s windup and delivery.</p>
<p class="tx">Every team in the postseason wants to join them. Every player yearns for their feats to echo in Octobers that follow. October baseball is the tension between the history that has already been made and the history that is brewing.</p>
<p class="tx">That tension was taut in the 2001 American League Championship Series, between an ongoing Yankees dynasty and the surprising Mariners, record-setting winners in the regular season. The teams had a playoff history with each other, meeting in the 1995 Division Series and the 2000 ALCS; the Mariners won the first, the Yankees the second.</p>
<p class="tx">The Yankees were in their 40th postseason as a franchise. They had 26 World Series trophies in their display case, representing over a quarter of the championships ever played. Two of those trophies were won in the two prior seasons, 1999 and 2000. They were imbued with the Yankee Mystique, a deep history that made Yankee Stadium in October a haunted house for their adversaries. Sportswriters and pundits gushed about how the Yankees became better, more formidable, nearly unbeatable in the postseason.</p>
<p class="tx">Mariners manager and former Yankees outfielder Lou Piniella agreed. The Yankee Mystique was “a big advantage. I know we felt that way when I played there.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4040" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4028">1</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">Piniella was now at the helm of the Mariners, who had completed a once-in-a-lifetime season and were playing in only their fourth postseason. Over the previous three years they had lost future Hall of Famers Randy Johnson and Ken Griffey Jr. and young superstar Álex Rodríguez. Instead of faltering at the bottom of the standings in 2001, they began winning and didn’t stop, tallying 116 wins. It was an American League record that bested the 1998 Yankees’ mark of 114 wins and tied the 1906 Chicago Cubs for the most regular-season wins.</p>
<p class="tx">The 1998 Yankees won the World Series. But losing their respective World Series, the 1906 Cubs and the 111-win 1954 Cleveland Indians were the spectral shiver in every mention of the Mariners’ journey through October.</p>
<p class="tx">Formidable as baseball history may have been under any circumstances for the Mariners that year, the real world was another undeniable element in the 2001 postseason. The September 11 terror attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon outside Washington, D.C. paused the major-league season for a week. Games began with patriotic songs and enhanced security measures, and baseball was tasked with helping heal the nation.</p>
<p class="tx">As the hometown playoff team for the city most affected, the Yankees became “America’s Team.” The Mariners found themselves staring down baseball history and the mystique that swirled perpetually around the Yankees, along with the grief that newly enveloped the entire country.</p>
<p class="h"><strong>Game One: Wednesday, October 17</strong><br />
<strong>Yankees 4, Mariners 2</strong><br />
<strong>Safeco Field, Seattle</strong></p>
<p class="tx">Of all the opponents – real and psychological – the Mariners battled in the 2001 playoffs, the most daunting may have been themselves.</p>
<p class="tx">They had come back to beat Cleveland in the Division Series, but the offense that led the major leagues during the regular season slashed only .247/.326/.373.<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4041" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4029">2</a></span> Most concerning was Bret Boone, who led the American League in RBIs during the regular season. He reached base only three times against Cleveland while striking out 11 times and driving in no runs.</p>
<p class="tx">The faltering offense was bad news for Aaron Sele, the Mariners’ Game One starter. Sele pitched well during the regular season, winning 15 games. However, he had a history of playoff losses, particularly against New York; three of his four losses came at the hands of the Yankees, including the series-ending loss in Game Six of the 2000 ALCS. His playoff struggles were largely the result of his teams failing to score runs in his starts. Going into the 2001 ALCS, he had never had more than two runs of support in a playoff game.</p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners hoped to spark their offense against Yankees starter Andy Pettitte. During the regular season, they scored 15 runs (11 earned) against him in his two starts against them.</p>
<p class="tx">The series began in Seattle, in a two-year-old ballpark, away from the baseball ghosts that haunted old Yankee Stadium. But it must have felt as though the ghosts traveled with the Yankees, as the game unfolded with a bounce here and an inch there in favor of the team from the Bronx.</p>
<p class="tx">In the top of the second inning, Chuck Knoblauch hit a sharp groundball off of David Bell’s lunging glove at third base, bouncing into foul territory. Bell tripped over his spikes chasing it down, too late to prevent Jorge Posada from scoring the first run of the series.</p>
<p class="tx">Yankee luck struck again in the fourth inning when Posada tested Ichiro Suzuki’s arm on his base hit to deep right field. The throw beat Posada, but umpire Gary Cederstrom ruled that shortstop Carlos Guillén failed to apply the tag. In the next at-bat, Sele left a sinker over the plate to Paul O’Neill, who crushed it for a home run and gave the Yankees a 3-0 lead.<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4042" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4030">3</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">The Yankees would score only once more, in the top of the ninth inning when catcher Dan Wilson called for a pitchout but couldn’t get a grip on the ball as Alfonso Soriano easily beat the throw to second base. David Justice drove him in.</p>
<p class="tx">The regular-season Mariners would have won this game easily. The postseason Mariners didn’t hit safely or score a run until the fifth inning, when Edgar Martínez scored on John Olerud’s groundout.</p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners mounted a comeback against Yankees closer Mariano Rivera in the bottom of the ninth inning. Ichiro smoked a one-out double. Then, in an uncharacteristic sequence from Rivera, Ichiro advanced to third on a wild pitch and scored on the very next pitch, also wild.</p>
<p class="tx">But that was all the Mariners got, and the Yankees captured the first game.</p>
<p class="h"><strong>Game Two: Thursday, October 18</strong><br />
<strong>Yankees 3, Mariners 2</strong><br />
<strong>Safeco Field, Seattle</strong></p>
<p class="tx">A ghost from the Mariners’ past came to haunt them in the flesh. Mike Mussina won two games and destroyed their postseason dreams in the 1997 Division Series with Baltimore. He started for the Yankees in Game Two and shut the Mariners down again.</p>
<p class="tx">The only Mariners runs in the game scored when Stan Javier launched a two-run home run in the bottom of the fourth inning. The Mariners were shut down for the rest of the game, unable to create a single scoring threat.</p>
<p class="tx">The Yankees, likewise, mounted few scoring threats. Their only runs scored in the top of the second inning. Mariners ace Freddy García, starting on three days’ rest for the third time in his career, yielded a leadoff single to Tino Martinez and then walked Posada. Scott Brosius took advantage of the opportunity, driving in both runners with a double. He scored when Knoblauch knocked a line-drive single to center field. Center fielder Mike Cameron thought he made a shoestring catch for the third out and did not throw home. However, the umpire – confirmed by replay – ruled that it hit the ground first.</p>
<p class="tx">Cameron redeemed himself in the top of the third, robbing Bernie Williams of a home run and saving two runs. But the bounces had gone New York’s way, and the Yankees again won a game the regular-season Mariners would have taken easily.</p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners were now down in the series 0-2 and heading to New York, the heart of the Yankee Mystique and the terror attacks.</p>
<p class="tx">Lou Piniella wasn’t about to entertain the idea that his team was falling apart, that they would crumble in the atmosphere at Yankee Stadium. He certainly wasn’t going to calmly field questions from reporters about being down 0-2.</p>
<p class="tx">He opened his postgame remarks snapping, “I want you all to hear this: We’re going to be back here to play Game Six. You don’t have to ask any questions. Just print it.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4043" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4031">4</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">It was a bold statement. No team had ever come back to win a league championship series after losing the first two games at home. Piniella didn’t care.</p>
<p class="tx">“We’ve gone to New York and beaten this team five out of six, and we’re going to do it again.” He said he wasn’t impressed by the Yankees so far. “I haven’t seen anything so dominating over there. They’re a team ready to get beat if someone goes out and beats them. We have to start hitting the damn ball, and we’re fully capable of doing it.</p>
<p class="tx">“I’ve got confidence in my club.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4044" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4032">5</a></span></p>
<p class="h"><strong>Game Three: Saturday, October 20</strong><br />
<strong>Mariners 14, Yankees 3</strong><br />
<strong>Yankee Stadium, New York</strong></p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners landed in New York at 6 A.M. the day after Game Two, catching their first glimpse of the transformed New York skyline without the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center.</p>
<p class="tx">Edgar Martínez arrived at his hotel room an hour later and found himself – possibly – in the middle of one of the post-9/11 subplots, the anthrax attacks through letters sent to news organizations and politicians. When he opened his hotel door, he found a letter. “It looked to me like the handwriting was similar to what they showed on TV on the anthrax letters,” Martínez wrote in his autobiography. “It had my name on it, which was odd, because I always use an alias when I check into a hotel on the road.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4045" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4033">6</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">He called an MLB security agent, and the agent retrieved the letter, but Martínez never heard anything else about it. It was likely an ill-thought-out joke, but the incident underscored the fear and uncertainty everyone was feeling.</p>
<p class="tx">The first day in New York was an offday, and a handful of Mariners players went to look at the site of the World Trade Center attacks, Ground Zero. Dan Wilson and backup catcher Tom Lampkin went together. “To see the devastation, the barrenness of it, where the towers used to stand, is just … incredible,” Lampkin wrote of the visit in his postseason column for the <span class="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</span>. “Looking at the devastation, we felt a little bit of everything.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4046" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4034">7</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">Meanwhile, the New York press was making hay out of Piniella’s promise that the series would return to Seattle. Headlines in newspapers across the country carried his guarantee, and many inches of newsprint contained mockery and analysis of the likelihood that the Mariners could rally from their deficit. Piniella would say later that his comments “got blown up here in I don’t know what type of proportion. If you say it in New York, it’s OK, but if you say it in other parts of the country they take it a little differently.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4047" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4035">8</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">Piniella’s guarantee seemed prescient in Game Three. Under the spotlight of Yankee Stadium, it looked as though new baseball ghosts were soon to join the old stalwarts as the Mariners bats found their spark.</p>
<p class="tx">It began innocently enough. With the Yankees leading 2-0 on Bernie Williams’s first-inning home run, Lampkin hit a one-out single in the top of the fifth inning. Then, with two outs, Orlando Hernández loaded the bases with two walks and Bret Boone came to the plate. He’d had minor success in the series. After going 2-for-21 in the Division Series, he’d been 2-for-7 in the ALCS. That night, he broke out and made it count, driving in two runs with a single to left field.</p>
<p class="tx">Leading off the sixth inning with a home run, Olerud kept the offense going. Javier singled and stole second base while Cameron worked a walk. The night was over for Hernández. It was the worst postseason start of his career. The Yankees bullpen tried to shut down the suddenly potent Mariners offense. But Wilson reached on an error and Ichiro was intentionally walked for Mark McLemore, who promptly tripled. Boone capped the inning with a two-run home run, and the score stood 9-2, Mariners.</p>
<p class="tx">The Yankees scored one additional run off Mariners pitching. In the first two games of the series it would have been enough; that night it was not.</p>
<p class="tx">When the dust settled, the Mariners had demolished the Yankees, 14-3.</p>
<p class="h"><strong>Game Four: Sunday, October 21</strong><br />
<strong>Yankees 3, Mariners 1</strong><br />
<strong>Yankee Stadium, New York</strong></p>
<p class="tx">Before coming to New York, Piniella said the team would not make an official visit to Ground Zero.<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4048" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4036">9</a></span> Confronting baseball ghosts was one thing, but seeing the devastation that had upended everything was another matter. However, on a visit to a Manhattan fire station before Game Three, he was asked to bring the team behind the scenes and agreed. Piniella was still popular in New York and felt he owed it to first responders to boost their spirits.</p>
<p class="tx">A group of about 30 players, families, coaches, and front-office personnel rode in police vans inside the secured perimeter and saw the part of Ground Zero that was unavailable to the public. It was a somber experience, but Piniella said later that he was glad they went. “We just went there basically to pay our respects and say thanks,” he said.<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4049" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4037">10</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners left Ground Zero for Yankee Stadium, and as the game unfolded, it seemed the team had a hard time shaking off the intensely emotional experience and focusing on the game.</p>
<p class="tx">Paul Abbott took the mound for the Mariners. His last start was nearly three weeks earlier, on October 2. In what can only be described as a weird game, he walked eight batters, and half the pitches he threw were balls. He also allowed no runs and left the game after the fifth inning with a no-hitter. He was wild, but he was effective.</p>
<p class="tx">In fact, pitchers on both sides were wild; the Mariners and Yankees combined for 15 walks, tying a League Championship Series record for walks in a single game.<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4050" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4038">11</a></span></p>
<p class="tx">Yankees starter Roger Clemens also left after the fifth inning; his excuse was a sore hamstring. The easy offense the Mariners had the day before was missing in action. Clemens allowed one hit through his five innings. The sole Mariners run that day came on Bret Boone’s solo home run in the eighth inning. In the top of the ninth, the lifeless Mariners offense made nary an attempt against Mariano Rivera; he needed only three pitches to get through the middle of the order.</p>
<p class="tx">The Yankees tied the game in the bottom of the eighth, when Bernie Williams answered with a solo home run off Arthur Rhodes. After the game Rhodes shook his head. “It’s a popup in most ballparks.”<span class="sup"><a id="calibre_link-4051" class="calibre4" href="#calibre_link-4039">12</a></span> Whether it was carried out by the wind or the gossamer mystique in the late October air, it struck again in the bottom of the ninth inning. With one out and one on, Alfonso Soriano sent a pitch from Mariners closer Kazuhiro Sasaki – making his first appearance of the series – out of Yankee Stadium for a walk-off win.</p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners were one game away from elimination for the second time in the 2001 postseason.</p>
<p class="h"><strong>Game Five: Monday October 22</strong><br />
<strong>Yankees 12, Mariners 3</strong><br />
<strong>Yankee Stadium, New York</strong></p>
<p class="tx">The final game of the series was a Game One rematch – Sele versus Pettitte. It began quietly enough, initially looking as though it might be a pitchers’ duel. But the Yankees cracked Sele in the bottom of the third inning. With two on, Derek Jeter hit a sacrifice fly. Justice followed with a double to right field to score another run, and Williams capped it with a two-run home run. And just like that, the Yankees had all the runs they needed.</p>
<p class="tx">That didn’t stop them from continuing to score, though. All night the Westminster chimes echoed in the Yankee Stadium air as Yankee spikes trod unremittingly across home plate. O’Neill launched a solo home run in the fourth inning. In the sixth, against Joel Piñeiro, the Yankees put four more runs on the board via five singles, two walks, and a wild pitch.</p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners finally crossed home plate and chased Pettitte – the series MVP – in the seventh inning when Bell and Ichiro drove in three runs with singles of their own. But they never threatened the Yankees’ lead. In a series that often felt as if a bounce here and a step there could have turned the series around for the Mariners, the Yankees broke Piniella’s promise to return to Seattle with a barrage of offense.</p>
<p class="tx">The capstone was a three-run home run in the bottom of the eighth inning. It was hit by former Mariner Tino Martinez, a piece of the Mariners’ past come back to haunt them.</p>
<p class="tx">And that was how Seattle’s magical 2001 season ended. Not with a whimper, but with a blitz of Westminster chimes.</p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners joined the 1906 Cubs and the 1954 Indians in the club of nearly unbeatable regular-season teams that were beaten in the postseason. They became another ghost in baseball history that served as a warning, rather than inspiration.</p>
<p class="tx">Though all the ghosts, the good and the bad, loomed large in October, October baseball was only a small part of the baseball season.</p>
<p class="tx">In the halcyon summer of 2001, the Mariners made history. They gave us all a magical summer.</p>
<p class="tx">Maybe the September 11 terrorist attacks ruined their momentum. Maybe the chill of autumn cooled their bats. Maybe the pressure and the sudden, intense national spotlight was simply too much for a team no one expected to win when the season began. Maybe it’s simply that the sprint of a postseason series is no match for the long and winding pace of the regular season.</p>
<p class="tx">The Mariners still made history. They still had a magical summer.</p>
<p class="tx">That dark night at Yankee Stadium in 2001 was the last postseason game the Mariners played for 21 years. In 2025 they earned another round in the ALCS, taking the Toronto Blue Jays to seven games. Through those seven games the ghosts of the 2001 Mariners flitted and floated. They echoed as a cautionary tale that even the best of seasons can meet a heartbreaking end, and they reverberated as a promise—a poignant reminder—that even in October gloom, the warm ghosts of a magical season cannot be extinguished.</p>
<p class="tx-space-no-indent"><em><strong><span class="c_sabr_c_author">AMANDA LANE CUMMING</span>’s</strong> first act of rebellion was choosing to be a Mariners fan, despite her Boston-native father advocating for the Red Sox. Rather than dwell on whether this was a good choice, she began writing about the Mariners and local baseball history. A former staff writer for “Lookout Landing” and a 2021 SABR Analytics Conference Research Award finalist, she currently writes “NW Baseball History” (<a class="calibre3" href="http://www.nwbaseballhistory.com">www.nwbaseballhistory.com</a>), a newsletter devoted to baseball history in the Pacific Northwest.</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p class="end_header"><strong>SOURCES</strong></p>
<p class="sources">In addition to the sources cited in the Notes, the author consulted <a class="calibre3" href="http://Baseball-Reference.com">Baseball-Reference.com</a>, the <em><span class="italic">New York Times</span></em> and the <em><span class="italic">New York Daily News</span></em>, and watched all five of the games on <a class="calibre3" href="http://YouTube.com">YouTube.com</a>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p class="end_header"><strong>NOTES</strong></p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-4028" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4040">1</a></span> Les Carpenter, “The Play That Saved the Game for Yankees,” <span class="italic"><em>Seattle Times</em>,</span> October 19, 2001: D7.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-4029" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4041">2</a></span> The Mariners also led the major leagues in ERA but posted a 4.70 ERA in the ALDS. They were outscored 26-16 in the Division Series.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-4030" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4042">3</a></span> Bob Finnigan, “Yanked Back to Reality – Pettitte, N.Y. Serve Notice to M’s with Game 1 Win,” <span class="italic"><em>Seattle Times</em>,</span> October 18, 2001: D1.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-4031" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4043">4</a></span> Mike Vaccaro, “Mariners Comeback? Only in Lou’s Dreams,” <span class="italic"><em>Seattle Post-Intelligencer</em>,</span> October 19, 2001: D5.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-4032" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4044">5</a></span> Larry Stone, “Smoldering Piniella Hopes His Words Fire Up M’s,” <span class="italic"><em>Seattle Times</em>,</span> October 19, 2001: D8.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-4033" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4045">6</a></span> Edgar Martinez and Larry Stone, <em><span class="italic">Edgar: An Autobiography</span></em> (Chicago: Triumph Books LLC, 2019), 273.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-4034" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4046">7</a></span> Tom Lampkin, “Sobering Visit to Ground Zero,” <span class="italic"><em>Seattle Post-Intelligencer</em>,</span> October 20, 2001: C4.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-4035" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4047">8</a></span> Michael Morrissey, “In End, M’s a Bunch of Lou-Sers,” <em><span class="italic">New York Post</span></em>, October 23, 2001: 87.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num"><a id="calibre_link-4036" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4048">9</a></span> Craig Hill, “Ground Zero Holds No Allure for Piniella – After Spending 14 Years in Pinstripes, M’s Manager Says He Has No Desire to See Site of Terrorist’s Destruction,” <em><span class="italic">News Tribune</span></em>, October 19, 2001: C3.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num1"><a id="calibre_link-4037" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4049">10</a></span> Art Thiel, “Piniella, Mariners Visit Ground Zero – Fire-Station Tour Leads to Moving Experience at Site of Devastation,” <em><span class="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</span></em>, October 22, 2001: D2.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num1"><a id="calibre_link-4038" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4050">11</a></span> David Andriesen, “Wild, but Good – Abbott Pitched Five Hitless Innings, but Walked Eight,” <em><span class="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</span></em>, October 22, 2001: D3.</p>
<p class="endnotes"><span class="f_num1"><a id="calibre_link-4039" class="calibre3" href="#calibre_link-4051">12</a></span> John Hickey, “Devastation – Yankees Stun Mariners with Late Home Runs.” <em><span class="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</span></em>, October 22, 2001: D1.</p>
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