MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Before the first pitch, a quiet reverence at T-Mobile Park

Oct 16, 2025, 1:39 PM

Before the gates swing open and the crowd pours in, there’s a certain stillness that settles outside T-Mobile Park.

The sidewalks are quiet. The crisp scent of autumn hangs in the air. And soon, every inch will overflow with fans draped in navy and teal — each carrying their own story of hope and belief, but also loss.

“To be a Mariners fan, you have to be comfortable with heartbreak,” longtime M’s fan Scott Kim explained.

Standing near the statues of the greats outside the stadium’s home plate entrance, Ken Griffey Jr. and Edgar Martinez, you can almost hear the echoes of seasons past — the cheers, that heartbreak, and the familiar refrain of “maybe next year.”

Lee Jones has been saying it for more than two decades.

“I actually had a World Series ticket years ago when they almost made it,” Jones explained.

To be a Mariners fan is to live in the echoes of the past and find meaning in the wait, and faith in the game. That’s what makes it matter more when it happens here in Seattle. When a team catches fire in October.

When players like Gilbert, Julio, Polanco, and the Big Dumper deliver moments, they aren’t just highlights on a jumbo screen. They remind us how to believe again, and they are woven into our city’s very fabric.

T-Mobile Park has long been called a cathedral by the tracks — a place where every clap carries a memory, and every cheer feels like a prayer.

And when the Mariners take the field again tonight for Game 4, that familiar hum will return – growing louder with every pitch.

Because here in Seattle, we don’t just watch baseball. We feel it. We live it. And we believe in it together.

Follow Luke Duecy on X. Read more of his stories here. Submit news tips here.

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Before the first pitch, a quiet reverence at T-Mobile Park