The Mariners made their first in-season roster move today, placing RHP Carlos Vargas on the 15-day IL with a lat strain and recalling RHP Cole Wilcox from Tacoma.
In December 2020, the Padres acquired Blake Snell from the Rays in a high-profile trade that sent highly-ranked prospect Luis Patiño, catchers Francisco Mejia and Blake Hunt, and 2020 third-rounder righty Cole Wilcox to the Rays in exchange for Snell. The Mariners are now halfway to acquiring all of the players from that trade in some form (Hunt spent time with the organization in 2024 and 2025), acquiring Wilcox—who was the last remaining member of that trade in Tampa Bay’s organization—from the Rays this off-season for cash. For Wilcox, who never threw a professional pitch for San Diego, Tampa Bay was the only organization he’d ever known.
“I’d been with the Rays for so long that it kind of felt like home,” he said this spring. “But I’m always open to a change of scenery…It’s always intimidating, going to a new spot, but there’s a lot of good people here, very friendly, very welcoming. So that made the transition super easy.”
In coming to Seattle, Wilcox had the advantage of meeting a friendly face from day one: fellow pitcher Emerson Hancock, who was Wilcox’s teammate at the University of Georgia, twin 6’5” hurlers who anchored the Bulldogs’ rotation; Wilcox a year behind Hancock, the #2 to Hancock’s #1.
While both Wilcox and Hancock grew up in Georgia, they’re from opposite ends of the state: Hancock’s hometown of Cairo (pronounced “Karo,” like the syrup) is at the very southern edge of Georgia, flat terrain located 45 minutes from Tallahassee. Wilcox grew up in Ringgold, a small town in northeast Georgia nestled in the Appalachians about 20 minutes from Chattanooga (best known to me as where Dolly Parton married Carl Dean in 1966). You can hear the difference in geography in their two accents: Wilcox has the Appalachian accent, twangy with extra y’s and r’s; Hancock’s is a softer drawl.
“I’m from the mountains, he’s a farm boy,” quipped Wilcox, with the good-natured teasing of two people who have known each other for a long time.
Another thing that’s made the transition easier for Wilcox is that the Mariners run their operations very similar to the Rays. Wilcox said the Mariners haven’t asked him to do anything differently, pitching-wise, despite the common perception that the Mariners “overhaul” pitchers when they acquire them.
“It’s the same thing with the Rays,” he said. “Everybody’s like, oh, there’s a ‘magic formula’ or something. But really they just encourage you to compete, which is nice. It makes it simple, and the more you can simplify the game of baseball, just let talent take over and the work take over, it’s a lot easier to play well.”
One of the adjustments Wilcox has had to make is in transitioning to a reliever role, something he started with the Rays, who were hoping to see the stuff tick up after his recovery from TJ surgery in 2021-2022. It was a challenging recovery for Wilcox, whose calling card as a prospect had always been elite velocity.
“I threw pretty hard in college, but ever since the injury, getting that velocity back has been kind of tough. So last year was the first year it kind of came back.”
In the bullpen, the stuff did tick up – maybe more than Wilcox expected.
“I was kind of just like, pedal to the metal, let’s go, let’s do everything,“ he said. “Sometimes it got a little erratic on me…So making that transition, I think it was just getting a feel for that type of intensity. Trying to keep that same intensity, but dialed in, that was the goal this off-season.”
“I just think I was sat on that horse faster than I’m used to, so this off-season, it was good to know my role going into it, knowing what I wanted to do and have something to work towards.”
Even seated firmly on the horse labeled “reliever”, there’s still work to be accomplished on the command front. Wilcox started off the spring strong, but his command slipped a little later in the spring, especially in a game where he was asked to go multiple innings. Like a wild horse, Wilcox’s stuff is difficult to pin down, but majestic in full flight. He has two fastballs, both which come in at an easy 97: a heavy sinker he can use for weak contact and a fastball he’ll try to elevate for whiffs. He pairs that with two hard sliders, a traditional slider and a sweeper.
But rather than focus on refining the pitches individually, Wilcox is focused on big-picture goals, the same things we hear from any member of the Mariners pitching staff: controlling the controllables, getting ahead, getting to two strikes, and putting hitters away. There’s a time and a place for things like changing pitch grips or making mechanical adjustments, Wilcox says, but it’s important not to get lost in those and potentially lose sight of the mission when standing on the mound.
“The simplest cues are the ones that are going to translate the most. You don’t want to make it more complex than it is.”
Wilcox has already had a complex journey to the big leagues – starting with the cancellation of his college season in 2020, a truncated draft year, a trade, a major injury, and a role shift, all before he’s thrown more than one (1) professional inning. Thankfully, he has someone by his side who understands a complex big-league journey in Emerson Hancock, who went through the same early-career challenges of the COVID year, his own injury, and a similar transition to the bullpen. Hancock may have only been a year ahead of Wilcox at Georgia, but his admiration for his fellow pitcher is obvious.
“I know Emerson really well,” Wilcox said. “Since college, he hasn’t changed at all. Super hard worker, super good person, super good leader…for a lot of places around the league, he’s in the rotation, and he just happens to be probably in the best rotation in baseball. But he’s never, ever complained through the whole process. He’s always positive, never negative about anything he’s gone through, any adjustments that he’s made. [At Georgia] we called him The Mayor. He’s a guy you’re just drawn to, with his positive energy.”
Wilcox is once again one of Hancock’s constituents, the two sharing a big-league bullpen now rather than a collegiate dugout. Hopefully he’ll stick around long enough to earn a nickname of his own – maybe the Marshal to Hancock’s mayor, given his affinity for horse metaphors.
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