Vancouver Sun

Mariners’ year- long chase of slugger Cruz reaches an end

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SEATTLE — Had things come together last season, Nelson Cruz’s introducti­on with the Seattle Mariners would have taken place a year ago.

Seattle pursued Cruz last year but when it didn’t work out, he went on to lead the majors in home runs playing on a oneyear deal in Baltimore. The Mariners were quick to try to find a deal that would work for both sides as soon as this offseason arrived.

“We were open and honest as we could possibly be and say, ‘ This is the guy that we want,”’ Seattle general manager Jack Zduriencik said Thursday. “He was the guy we wanted to bring into this organizati­on and it just came together.”

Seattle landed the righthande­d power bat that was a priority this off- season by signing Cruz to a four- year contract Thursday. The deal is reportedly worth $ 58 million after Cruz played last season on an $ 8 million deal with Baltimore.

Cruz parlayed that one- year contract into a long deal with the Mariners after hitting 40 homers and driving in 108 runs for the Orioles. Zduriencik said adding a fourth year to the contract — which will take Cruz to age 38 — was critical to getting the deal done.

“With Nelson, the fact that because he’s such a power guy, and in our game today it’s so difficult to find,” Zduriencik said. “In our league he can be a DH which will preserve him somewhat, he’s in great shape, he’s a really good worker. He may age very well. We had to do that to get him here and we did it.”

Cruz served a 50- game suspension in 2013 for violations of the major league drug agreement in relation to the sport’s Biogenesis investigat­ion. He again referred Thursday to making a mistake taking banned substances and said he’s moved on from the suspension.

He’ll likely hit behind fellow Dominican star Robinson Cano, who will be starting the second season of a $ 240 million, 10- year contract, and will also reunite with Dominican teammate Fernando Rodney, the Mariners’ closer.

“We’ve been pretty close,” Cruz said of Cano. “He’s also one of the reasons why I’m here. I think he was pulling for me the whole time. I was pulling for this right here, to be part of this.”

The Mariners have among the top pitching staffs in the AL but missed the post- season by one game last season due to offensive shortcomin­gs.

Cruz fits the need, even if he’s never posted big numbers at Safeco Field. Cruz has hit at least 22 homers in every season since 2009 and has been an All- Star three times. Cruz’s .271 batting average and .525 slugging percentage last season with Baltimore was his highest since 2010 with Texas.

Cruz has hit .240 with nine homers and 19 RBIs in 52 games in Seattle — better than his .185 career average in Oakland and .218 in Anaheim. “I just believe great players make players around them better and I think having Nelson in the middle of our lineup is not only going to give ( Cano) a lot more pitches to hit, but whoever is hitting behind him will have an opportunit­y to drive in runs as well,” Seattle manager Lloyd McClendon said.

The middle of Seattle’s order is no longer filled with questions. With Cano, Cruz and All- Star Kyle Seager, the Mariners have a legitimate 3- 4- 5 to build around. McClendon said Cruz would be primarily a designated hitter but also would be used in the outfield.

 ?? TED S. WARREN/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nelson Cruz tries on his Seattle Mariners hat after agreeing to a four- year, $ 58- million contract with the team on Thursday.
TED S. WARREN/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Nelson Cruz tries on his Seattle Mariners hat after agreeing to a four- year, $ 58- million contract with the team on Thursday.

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