M’s notebook: Jackie Robinson tribute

NEW YORK — All players throughout Major League Baseball again wore No. 42 on Friday in the annual tribute to Jackie Robinson, who broke baseball’s color barrier on April 15, 1947, while playing for the Brooklyn Dodgers.

“I don’t think anyone in the game today could do what he did,” Seattle Mariners second baseman Robinson Cano said.

Major League Baseball retired Robinson’s number on April 15, 1997, which marked the 50th anniversary of his achievement. Players who were already wearing the number were permitted to continue doing so.

Outfielder Butch Huskey was the last Mariner to wear No. 42; he did so for 74 games in 1999. Ken Griffey Jr., then with the Mariners, received permission in 1997 to wear No. 42 to honor Robinson.

Griffey’s gesture soon turned into a tradition throughout the game.

Here’s the list of Mariners who wore No. 42 prior to its retirement:

Tom Brown (1978), Dave Henderson (1981-86), John Christensen (1987), Omar Vizquel (1989), Vance Lovelace (1990), Kerry Woodson (1992), Ted Power (1993), Roger Salkeld (1993), Jim Mecir (1995), Mike Jackson (1996), Griffey (1997, one game) and Huskey.

Four players (Miguel Batista, Adrian Beltre, Arthur Rhodes and Yuniesky Betancourt) and manager John McLaren wore No. 42 in 2008. The entire team has worn No. 42 on Jackie Robinson Day in each season since 2009.

Benoit available

Veteran reliever Joaquin Benoit says he’s ready to pitch after being sidelined for the last week because of tightness in his upper back and shoulder.

“It’s up to the trainers,” he said, “but in my mind I believe I’ll be up (Friday).”

Benoit initially experienced the tightness in spring training, and it returned after he worked one inning April 8 against Oakland. While Benoit was sidelined, the Mariners turned twice to Joel Peralta to protect one-run leads in the eight inning.

Each time, Peralta surrendered a leadoff homer.

Extending Cishek

Closer Steve Cishek worked two innings Wednesday in the Mariners’ 4-2 walk-off victory over Texas in 10 innings.

That figures to be an exception.

“It was a quick first inning,” manager Scott Servais said. “It didn’t seem like he extended himself. It was also where we were at — having an off-day the next day. There were a lot of things lined up where we could say, ‘Let’s run him out there.’

“I don’t see it happening a lot.”

Cishek pitched two innings in just seven of his 263 appearances from 2012-15.

“We needed it (Wednesday),” Cishek said. “Our bullpen had been used quite a bit in that series. When (Servais) came over to me, I wasn’t surprised. I was ready to go.

“Get us on and off the field as quick as possible. That’s something I read that Mariano Rivera always thought about: Get the job done as quickly as you can. It worked out the first inning, which gave me an opportunity to pitch the second inning.”

Special recognition

Dae-Ho Lee’s walk-off homer in the 10th inning of Wednesday’s 4-2 victory over Texas was immediately honored by the Topps Company through a short-time offer of a special collectable baseball card.

The card was part of the company’s Topps Now series and displayed Lee approaching the plate with a big smile and his arms spread.

About that homer

Lee’s pinch walk-off homer was the first in major-league history by an Asian-born player, according to research by SABR’s David Vincent.

And this from the Elias Sports Bureau: At 33, Lee is the oldest rookie to hit a walk-off homer since Luke Easter did it for the Cleveland Indians in 1950 at age 35.

Minor details

Double-A Jackson right-hander Edwin Diaz ranked fourth on the first Prospect Hot Sheet, a weekly ranking by Baseball America of how the top prospects are performing.

Diaz, 22, gave up two runs and six hits over 11 innings in his first two starts while striking out 16 and walking one. He entered the season ranked No. 5 on the TNT Top 10 list of the Mariners’ prospects.

Looking back

It was seven years ago Saturday — April 16, 2009 — that Ichiro Suzuki became the all-time hits leader for a Japanese-born player when he went 1-for-4 in the Mariners’ 5-1 loss to Anaheim at Safeco Field.

Suzuki’s ground-ball single in the fourth inning was the 3,086th hit of his career: 1,280 in Japan and 1,806 with the Mariners. He passed Isao Harimoto, who had 3,085 hits in a 22-year career from 1959-1982 in the Japanese leagues.

Harimoto is an ethnic Korean who was born in Japan. He was in Hiroshima when that city was targeted for the atomic bomb in 1945. Now 75, he continues to work as a TV commentator in Japan.

Suzuki, 42, is currently a member of the Miami Marlins and, entering the weekend, had 4,217 career hits, including 2,937 in 16 big-league seasons.

On tap

The Mariners and Yankees continue their three-game series at 10:05 a.m. Pacific time Saturday at Yankee Stadium. Right-hander Felix Hernandez (0-1, 0.69 ERA) will oppose New York lefty C.C. Sabathia (1-0, 4.50).

The game can be seen on Root Sports Northwest and heard on 710 ESPN.

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