The Mariners didn’t expect to call up Colt Emerson, but they had no choice.
Emerson made his big league debut Sunday in the Mariners’ 8-3 loss to the Padres. It wasn’t a particularly eventful day in the box score. He flied out to right field in his first at-bat, drew a walk in his second, and flied out to right field again in his third. But at just 20 years old, he became the youngest Mariner to reach the majors since Félix Hernández in 2005.
General manager Justin Hollander told reporters that calling up Emerson wasn’t a move he anticipated making when he woke up that morning. However, Emerson was next on the depth chart, and once it became clear that Brendan Donovan needed time on the injured list, Hollander felt it was the only choice to make.
“We want to do the right thing for Colt. We also want to do the right thing for the Mariners. We think he’s the best option. This period will give him some runway. This is not a 15-at-bat or a 20-at-bat tryout to see if he’s capable of taking the job and running with it for the rest of the year.”
Seattle’s top pick in the 2023 draft, Emerson moved quickly through the system and came to represent the team’s next development wave, headlining the group that would hopefully extend the team’s competitive window to the latter days of Julio Rodríguez and Cal Raleigh.
Emerson was the best prospect in the Mariners system when Brendan Gawlowski reviewed it in January. He also ranked 11th on our preseason Top 100 Prospects list. Gawlowski wrote that Emerson “offers one of the best blends of tools and skills in all of the minor leagues,” with a good understanding of the strike zone, reasonable power, and plenty of athleticism to stick at short. He gets the thumbs up from both scouts and analysts alike, and his intangibles got good reviews from the team.
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The Mariners felt strong enough about Emerson that they gave him a $95 million extension in April to keep him in Seattle through most of his prime. At the time, he’d played just six games above Double-A, making it an historic deal for a player with no big league experience. Still, the team declined to put him on the Opening Day roster, raising questions about his readiness.
Did he answer those questions over the last six weeks? Well, no. Emerson posted a mere .364 wOBA (105 wRC+) in 169 Triple-A plate appearances in the hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League while striking out 27.2% of the time. The peripherals were less flattering. He chased a lot, whiffed a lot, and hit a lot of grounders. It’s a small sample — made smaller by a wrist injury that kept him out for a week — and it’s not concerning for a 20-year-old to struggle against much older competition. But it’s clear that the timing of this debut was less about his readiness and more about state of the 2026 Mariners.
I touched on this Friday when Raleigh landed on the injured list. The Mariners were a game under .500 at the time and had yet to settle into the new season. They were playing a bit better than implied by their record and were trending generally up. More had gone right than wrong, I wrote. Then the Mariners got swept over the weekend and fell to four games under .500. Emerson only batted three times in his debut because the lineup picked up only one hit. The sense of urgency is suddenly palpable, with frustrations boiling over to a rare ejection for manager Dan Wilson on Saturday.
Things only became more urgent when Donovan was placed on the IL on Sunday morning. He was Plan A for the Mariners at third base this year, after they got him from the Cardinals in February for Jurrangelo Cijntje. He’s been excellent at the plate with a 146 wRC+. But he’s been awful in the field with -5 OAA, playing a position he had little experience at coming into the year.
He also hasn’t been on the field a lot. Donovan missed about three weeks at the end of April with a groin strain, and he’s been in and out of the lineup ever since. The issue got worse Thursday after legging out multiple extra-base hits, and he’s now expected to sit again for at least three weeks with the same injury. He got sports hernia surgery in October, which is known to come with long, lingering recovery times.
Before Sunday, the Mariners had given Leo Rivas the job at third base when Donovan was out. But Rivas is down to a 41 wRC+ in 120 plate appearances, and it become obvious that a change was needed. The plan going forward is for Emerson to be the full-time third baseman, and Donovan will assume the superutility role once healthy.
Emerson’s position is eventually meant to be shortstop. Right now, though, he’s stuck at the hot corner while the longest-tenured Mariner, J.P. Crawford, finishes the final year of his contract. It’s been a bit of an awkward transition, because even though Crawford has hit well, he’s been one of the worst fielders in the majors at any position (a problem only made worse playing next to Donovan). There are some who feel Emerson should take over at short immediately, with the 31-year-old Crawford moving to DH, second, or third. But Crawford doesn’t have the arm for third, nor does anyone else on the Mariners roster, which is full of lefty hitters who are limited defensively, further complicating the timing of Emerson’s debut.
Of course, in a sign of how it’s going for the Mariners right now, Crawford took a fastball off the right tricep on Sunday and came out of the game with a contusion. Rivas took his place at short, with Emerson remaining at third. Crawford isn’t expected to miss much time, if any, but it’ll be interesting to see whether Emerson gets time at short on days when Crawford needs to sit. Regardless, Emerson is expected to play every day, even against lefty pitchers, who have carved up Seattle’s lopsided lineup this year.
That’s all to say, it was a debut of circumstance. My expectations for Emerson over the next few weeks are fairly modest. He’s very young, and he’s had barely more than 1,000 professional at-bats. It wouldn’t be surprising to see him back in Triple-A at some point. Still, the Mariners can no longer afford to dawdle. Emerson was clearly the next-best infielder in the organization, and it’s time to see where he’s at. Maybe he’ll provide a spark, or maybe he’ll simply hold is own. Regardless, it’s the start of something new, and sometimes that’s enough.