SEATTLE -- When Bryce Miller was relegated to watching Seattle Mariners games on television from the team's spring training complex as he rehabbed a left oblique injury, the right-hander was left with frustrating viewing.
The Mariners spent most of April and May mired in mediocrity, twice falling five games below .500 less than a year removed from being eliminated by the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 7 of the American League Championship Series.
Seattle's top talent entered the 2026 season hungry for the first World Series appearance in franchise history. But simply qualifying for the postseason when the Mariners owned a 10-15 record in late April seemed unlikely.
"The first however many games, [we] never really played to our potential, I don't think," Miller said. "We knew even the games that we won, either we wouldn't pitch that well or we wouldn't hit that well."
After their sixth straight win, a 3-2 walk-off victory against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Sunday, it has become clear that the Mariners are finding their groove. Over its longest win streak of the season, Seattle has yielded just 12 runs, allowing more than two in a game only once -- in a 7-6 win Friday night.
Simultaneously, the Mariners -- who had the third-most home runs as a team last season (238) -- are leaning more into their power stroke despite the continued absence of last year's AL MVP runner-up Cal Raleigh, who is still sidelined with a right oblique strain. All-Star utilityman Brendan Donovan has been out, too, since May 15 with a left groin muscle strain.
The Mariners finished May with 42 home runs, tied with the Chicago White Sox for the most in the major leagues. Center fielder Julio Rodríguez, notorious for his slow starts, chipped in 10 of those on his own.
"I just really feel like things now are trending [up] for us," Rodríguez said. "The hits are falling. The guys who can hit home runs are hitting the home runs. And I feel like everything's coming together now."
As is often the case with the more successful teams in franchise history, though, Seattle has been buoyed by its rotation, one that currently features six starters. Manager Dan Wilson has elected to use six starting pitchers rather than a traditional five-man rotation because no individual has pitched his way out of a role. The manager has instead "piggybacked" veteran right-hander Luis Castillo in relief of Miller.
Castillo, currently the highest paid player on the Mariners' roster, has accepted the assignment. He considers himself proud to be part of a rotation that has the seventh-lowest ERA (3.72) in the majors.
"I know that any one of us, if we're all needed [in] the bullpen," Castillo said through team interpreter Freddy Llanos, "I think we're all willing to do it."
From Miller's vantage point, it was inevitable that the Mariners -- who following their latest win have a 31-29 record and own a 2½-game lead in the AL West -- would eventually hit their stride. As deep in the 2025 season as July 27, Seattle was 56-50 before it fired on all cylinders to finish the year, going 36-20 en route to clinching a division crown.
Unlike much of the first two months, when consistency was hard to come by for the Mariners, Wilson has seen oodles of it from Seattle over the past week. Whether that sample proves to be an aberration or an indication that more winning baseball looms near remains to be seen.
But Wilson & Co. have been pleased with Seattle's all-around play of late nonetheless -- a sentiment rarely shared by Mariners fans during much of the spring.
"Swinging the bat really well, and what we've seen on the mound has been so consistent," Wilson said. "You do both of those things and you play good defense, good things happen consistently. And I think we feel like we're in a much better spot that way."
