December 21, 1994: Eric Anthony was released by the Mariners.
Regular season
Ken Griffey, Jr. suffered a severe left wrist injury on May 26 while making a catch at the wall that sidelined him until mid-August. The M's stayed afloat at around.500, and their historic late season comeback tied the California Angels.
Randy Johnson won the Cy Young Award. The award came at the end of a banner year. Johnson narrowly missed becoming the first AL Triple Crown pitcher since Detroit's Hal Newhouser accomplished the feat in 1945. His.900 winning percentage broke Ron Guidry's 1978 record, and his strikeouts per nine innings ratio of 12.35 broke the record held by Nolan Ryan.
August 15: The Mariners traded a player to be named later to the Kansas City Royals for Vince Coleman. The Mariners sent Jim Converse to the Royals on August 18.
*Shane Monahan was drafted by the Mariners in the second round, and signed on June 27, 1995.
*Juan Pierre was drafted by the Mariners in the thirtieth round, but did not sign.
Pennant chase
On the morning ofAugust 21, the Mariners were 12½ games behind the Angels. Two weeks later, the lead was down to 5½ games, as the Angels went 1–12 while the M's were 8–5. After another two weeks, the lead was down to three games, and the teams were even at on the morning of September 21. Seattle led by as many as three games, but couldn't hold it, dropping their final two games at Texas; the Angels won their final five games to tie the Mariners at, requiring a one-game playoff for the division title. Also on a five-game winning streak, the Yankees secured the new wild card berth at.
Season standings
Note: Teams played 144 games instead of the normal 162 as a consequence of the 1994 strike. Seattle and California each played 145 games due to the one-game tiebreaker.
Record vs. opponents
Game log
Regular season
Postseason
Player stats
Batting
Starters by position
Note: Pos = position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in
Pos
Player
G
AB
H
Avg.
HR
RBI
C
Dan Wilson
119
399
111
.278
9
51
1B
Tino Martinez
141
519
152
.293
31
111
2B
Joey Cora
120
427
127
.297
3
39
3B
Mike Blowers
134
439
113
.257
23
96
SS
Luis Sojo
102
339
98
.289
7
39
LF
Vince Coleman
40
162
47
.290
1
9
CF
Ken Griffey, Jr.
72
260
67
.258
17
42
RF
Jay Buhner
126
470
123
.262
40
121
DH
Edgar MartĂnez
145
511
182
.356
29
113
Other batters
Pitching
Starting pitchers
Note: GS = Games Started; IP = Innings Pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned Run Average; SO = Strike Outs
Player
GS
IP
W
L
ERA
SO
Randy Johnson
30
214.1
18
2
2.48
294
Tim Belcher
28
179.1
10
12
4.52
96
Chris Bosio
31
170.0
10
8
4.92
85
SalomĂłn Torres
13
72.0
3
8
6.00
45
Andy Benes
12
63.0
7
2
4.52
45
Relief pitchers
ALDS
ALCS
Awards and honors
Randy Johnson, American League Cy Young Award winner, American League leader, strikeouts
Edgar MartĂnez, American League Leader, batting average
The Mariners' ALDS run is the subject of the song, My Oh My, by Seattle-based rapper, Macklemore. Chicago-based band Coping has a song titled "'95 Mariners." In July 2019, the MLB Network released MLB Network Presents: The 1995 Mariners, Saving Baseball in Seattle