Honestly, this is the way it should be.
The Seattle Mariners are going to a Game 7 for the first time in their franchise history, representing the final hurdle to determine if this team is going to be the one that erases the distinction of “only MLB franchise to never reach the World Series” from the record books.
Morosi: What stands out as Mariners head to Game 7 vs. Blue Jays
It looked like the Mariners’ path through the ALCS might be surprisingly easy.
After outlasting the Detroit Tigers in an epic, 15-inning Game 5 of the ALDS just a couple Fridays ago, the Mariners suddenly had a commanding 2-0 lead in the ALCS against the Blue Jays after stealing a pair of wins at Toronto’s Rogers Centre.
Two more wins to reach the Fall Classic? When they’re playing like that, piece of cake.
It seemed like that was the general feeling among fans – though to be fair it was paired with a side of “Can you believe this?” – before the Blue Jays served up a dose of October reality, winning back-to-back games in Seattle handily to knot the best-of-seven series up. But then the Mariners came through with one of the most incredible wins in their 49 seasons of baseball, with Cal Raleigh crushing a tying solo home run and Eugenio Suárez following four batters later with an instantly iconic go-ahead grand slam in the eighth inning of a Game 5 comeback victory.
So there were the Mariners in Toronto on Sunday, playing a game with direct World Series implications for themselves for the first time ever. And again, the Blue Jays sent an October reminder, beating the M’s 6-2 to set up the decisive Game 7 on Monday night.
It has to be this way. Because the Mariners, and Seattle sports teams in general, always do their best when their backs are against the wall. When they have a chip on their shoulder. When they’re fighting against critics, and time, and history.
This city doesn’t do cocky. But it loves playing the underdog.
Just like how the Mariners struggled after going up 2-0 in the ALCS, go back to the 1993-94 Seattle SuperSonics (the most painful childhood memory for Seattle sports fans of a certain age). The top seed in the Western Conference and owners of the best record in the NBA, the Sonics went up 2-0 in the first round, and then lost it. The Denver Nuggets became the first No. 8 seed to knock off a No. 1, and the Sonics became a laughingstock until they found their way to the NBA Finals a couple years later.
The Seattle Seahawks have their own examples of this. The 2003 team made the playoffs for just the second time since 1988, and after winning a coin toss going into overtime of a wild card playoff game in Green Bay, quarterback Matt Hasselbeck exclaimed, “We want the ball and we’re gonna score.”
And then he threw a season-ending pick-six. Seattle doesn’t do cocky.
But on the flip side, you have the 2013 Seahawks – who to be fair were pretty cocky, but in a very chip-on-their-shoulder kinda way. They of course won the franchise’s first championship by entering as underdogs against the Denver Broncos and leaving with the most lopsided victory by a team that wasn’t favored in Super Bowl history.
I won’t get too much into the following Super Bowl beyond first-and-goal and didn’t give the ball to Marshawn – let’s just leave it at that.
And then we have the Mariners, who embody this facet of the Seattle sports personality perhaps more than any other team could possible hope to.
No one saw the 1995 Mariners coming. Not when the franchise had two winning seasons out of 18 entering the year. Not when they were 11 1/2 games back in the AL West in late August. Not when they were down 2-0 in the best-of-five ALDS against the New York Yankees. Not when the threat of being moved clear across the country to Tampa was hanging over the franchise’s head.
That team showed everybody, stunning the Yankees with three straight wins capped off by a double by Edgar Martinez as it just continued.
But in 2001, the Mariners looked like they may be the best team that baseball had ever seen, tying the MLB record with 116 wins in the regular season. But they couldn’t live up to the weight of expectations in October, just barely getting past Cleveland in the ALDS and falling in only five games to the Yankees in the ALCS. It was the ’94 Sonics all over again. Shoulda, woulda, coulda… and didn’t even get to the final round.
This Mariners team is a lot more like the ’95 squad. After all, they came back from a 4 1/2-game deficit in early September, reeling off 16 wins in a 17-game stretch to finally surpass the Houston Astros and win their first AL West title in 24 years. They fought back from losing Game 1 of the ALDS at home. Then they won a Game 5 in 15 innings, and gave the fans the thrill of a lifetime in a second Game 5 in as many Fridays.
And then in Game 6 of the ALCS, a letdown.
It has to be this way. Their backs have to be against the wall. They have to be doubted.
Seattle has to be doubted.
The Mariners are still a win away from the World Series. That win might as well come in Game 7. Might as well come in another stadium, in another country, with 45,000 fans cheering for the other guys.
The Mariners might as well be the underdogs.
The Mariners might as well win it with all of North America expecting the opposite.
All of North America except Seattle.
More on the Seattle Mariners
• Radio: Hear both M’s ALCS Game 7 and Seahawks on Seattle Sports app
• Mariners-Blue Jays Game 7 pitching matchup not just about starters
• Wrong first: Seattle Mariners to play in Game 7 for first time
• Mariners have had the advantage when playing in Blue Jays’ park
• Despite slump, Seattle Mariners’ Game 5 hero Suárez never wavered