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MLB 2026: Inside Mariners' Ichiro Suzuki statue design, reveal - ESPN

After months of work behind the scenes, the Seattle Mariners revealed a bronze statue honoring Hall of Famer Ichiro Suzuki last week — the newest sculpture in the collection around T-Mobile Park celebrating franchise legends such as Ken Griffey Jr. and Edgar Martinez.

Friday's event was designed for a small crowd of reporters and team greats, though it quickly caught the eye of social media when during the reveal, the bat standing vertically in Suzuki's iconic stance bent backward and spun. The moment brought a big laugh from attendees and Suzuki himself later joked about baseball players having to deal with broken bats.

Despite the live change in bat position, which was quickly fixed, the statue was the product of a monthslong collaboration between the Seattle Mariners, Suzuki and sculptor Lou Cella of Rotblatt Amrany Fine Art Studio in Chicago. The Mariners chose the iconic pose and the use of Suzuki's 2001 rookie year uniform as a lookback at his extensive career with the team. Suzuki worked directly with Cella and the team throughout the process to ensure the accuracy and detail preserved in bronze.

«I actually wore the 2001 jersey as a sample for him,» Suzuki said through an interpreter as he recalled the process. «I was happy that I was still able to fit in that uniform.»

Suzuki's impact on the Mariners was felt from the moment he first put that jersey in 2001, when he won both AL MVP and Rookie of the Year for a Seattle team that won an American League record 116 games. Though his Hall of Fame career included time with the Miami Marlins and New York Mets, Suzuki retired a Mariner in 2019 and ranks next to Griffey and Martinez among beloved franchise icons.

The opportunity to work on Suzuki's sculpture was

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