At this point, Seattle Mariners fans don’t need another “here’s why Ketel Marte fits” refresher. We’ve all lived it this offseason. The dream has basically been running on fumes, vibes, and the occasional breadcrumb that riles up social media for six hours.
Well… Buster Olney just dropped the kind of update that usually shows up right before a rumor gets quietly buried in the desert.
Mariners fans may need to brace for a Ketel Marte letdown
In ESPN’s latest offseason intel, Olney notes Diamondbacks GM Mike Hazen has essentially reached the “alright, last call” phase: Arizona isn’t waiting much longer for a team to meet the price, and if they don’t like what comes in, they’re prepared to pull Marte off the trade market. The line that should make Mariners fans wince is Olney adding that after two months of conversations, the Diamondbacks “would be surprised if someone makes a push.”
That’s not “talks are heating up.” That’s “we’re tired, and we’re about to put the phone on silent.”
It lines up cleanly with what Hazen has said publicly — that he wants to put an end to this “shortly,” because the D-backs need to focus their offseason and can’t let Marte trade chatter linger forever.
From a Seattle perspective, this is the part where you can almost hear the sad trombone, because the central problem hasn’t changed for even one second: Arizona still wants MLB pitching, and the Mariners don’t want to trade MLB pitching. That’s the entire movie. No post-credit scene. No surprise twist. No resurrections.
We already saw the mixed signals phase (IG weirdness, the D-backs quotes that felt like bargaining through the media). And we already hit the “rude awakenings” portion where other teams can step in with the kind of arms Seattle refuses to put on the table.
So if this really is the last round of offers, it’s hard to picture the Mariners suddenly breaking their one hard rule just to keep the Marte fantasy alive.
Which is… fine. But it also means we should probably stop treating this like a slow-burn and start calling it what it is: a rumor that’s running out of runway.
