Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Manager Scott Servais gets multiyear extension

- By Tim Booth

SEATTLE — The Seattle Mariners will have some continuity in the managerial chair for a change.

Seattle signed Scott Servais to a multiyear contract extension Friday as the club opened the second half of the season in position to potentiall­y end the longest current playoff drought in the four major pro sports.

The extension was a reward after Servais led Seattle to a 58-39 record prior to the All-Star break and a hold on the second wildcard spot in the American League. Seattle hasn’t been to the postseason since 2001.

“I’m still learning and I look forward to learning,” Servais said. “It’s about our players and how we prepare and how do we beat the opponent. You constantly are trying to get better at this. I’d like to say I have it all figured out; far from it. And I don’t see myself ever being that way.”

Servais is 222-199 since arriving in Seattle in 2016, the first managerial job of his career. Seattle went 87-75 in Servais’ first season, before dipping to 78-84 last year as Seattle was mired in injury issues. Servais, 51, previously worked in the front offices of the Los Angeles Angels and Texas Rangers.

Servais’ extension was expected the moment general manager Jerry Dipoto signed an extension earlier this month. Both arrived in Seattle on three-year contracts prior to the 2016 season and their long-term future with the club was tied together.

“Probably the worst-kept secret in the game. If I got mine, he was going to get his,” Dipoto joked.

What’s notable about the Servais extension is the rare continuity it will create in Seattle. Assuming nothing

unexpected forces a change, Servais will be just the third manager in the club’s history to begin a fourth season in charge of the Mariners. Darrell Johnson, the team’s first-ever manager in 1977, was let go midway through his fourth season in 1980. Lou Piniella was Seattle’s manager from 1993-2002.

Servais has been more relaxed and at ease this season. He’s given up some control to his coaching staff this season, which he believes is part of why Seattle is in playoff position.

“I just took a different approach in spring training this year. I think a year or two of doing things you gain confidence, you have an understand­ing of what will work, what won’t work,” Servais said. “But at the end

of the day you have to go with your gut and I just wanted to be myself. I wanted my coaches to be themselves. I lean much more heavily on our coaches this year than I did the previous two years.”

Servais is a leading contender for AL manager of the year because of what Seattle has accomplish­ed. The Mariners have overcome a number of key injuries and the suspension of Robinson Cano for 80 games to get into position for a playoff berth.

“We’ve put ourselves in position. We’ve talked about bringing playoff baseball back to the Pacific Northwest and we’ve got a shot,” Servais said. “It’s not going to be easy, we talked about it with our group frequently, but the goal here for the remainder of this season is how good can we be? How good can the 2018 Mariners be? If we get to the point where I think we can we’ll be just fine in the playoff race.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States