South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

The drought is finally over

- By Tim Booth

SEATTLE — Because of one stat, pitcher Matthew Boyd has become the go-to player to ask about the Mariners’ situation.

Not the stats on the back of his baseball card, mind you. It’s the fact Boyd was born in Bellevue, Washington, on Feb. 2, 1991. That he grew up on nearby Mercer Island and was 10 years old the last time Seattle reached the postseason.

“I was really lucky to have really good baseball teams at a point in my life where it was kind of those transforma­tive years,” Boyd said. “I just wanted to watch the game on TV. I wanted to go to the Kingdome every day. That was really special. It was huge for me. I’m very lucky that was the case because baseball was fun.”

Baseball is fun again in the Pacific Northwest in a way that it hasn’t been in more than two decades. The longest postseason drought in the four major profession­al sports ended Friday night when the Mariners earned a long-coveted spot in the MLB playoffs.

And they did it in the most dramatic fashion possible. Cal Raleigh, sent to the minors because of struggles early in the season, stepped up as a pinch-hitter and launched a game-winning solo home run with two outs in the ninth inning on a 3-2 pitch to beat the Athletics 2-1.

It was storybook stuff, played out by kids in backyards for generation­s. And it joins a small list of singular, unforgetta­ble moments in Seattle’s sports history.

“It was the craziest thing ever. I don’t think I’ll be able to forget that moment,” Raleigh said.

The Mariners will play in the wild-card round, potentiall­y as the beneficiar­y of the postseason expansion that added a third wild-card team for each league. The Blue Jays and Rays have clinched the other two extra spots in the AL, and the playoff schedule has yet to be set.

But the path hardly matters to fans, who if they were born the last time the Mariners made the playoffs are now legally old enough to buy an alcoholic beverage to celebrate the return. That includes Boyd, who was acquired by his hometown team at the trade deadline.

“The thing about Seattle, Seattle loves baseball and really it’s a baseball city,” Boyd said. “Recently the focus has been on the Seahawks because of their great success, but when you have a winner it’s really cool to see the energy and the fans come out in droves.”

Seattle fans last saw their team play a postseason game on Oct. 22, 2001, when the Mariners lost to the Yankees in Game 5 of the AL Championsh­ip Series. So 7,656 days will have passed for them by next Friday, when the AL wild-card playoffs begin.

That drought has made the Mariners a woebegone franchise, the butt of jokes. The Mariners still remain the only team never to reach the World Series despite rosters with Ken Griffey Jr., Randy Johnson, Alex Rodriguez and Edgar Martinez.

Manager Scott Servais says this can be a team to end that piece of trivia, too.

“I know everyone is exhausted. ‘End the drought. End the drought.’ I’ve heard it for seven years,” Servais said. “Every day when I get up and drive to work that’s what’s been on my mind. The goal is to win a World Series, not just end the drought.”

 ?? STEPH CHAMBERS/GETTY ?? The Mariners celebrate in the clubhouse after clinching a postseason birth after beating the Athletics on Friday at T-Mobile Park in Seattle.
STEPH CHAMBERS/GETTY The Mariners celebrate in the clubhouse after clinching a postseason birth after beating the Athletics on Friday at T-Mobile Park in Seattle.

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