Jack Zduriencik talks to reporters at a press conference in Seattle in January. The Seattle Mariners have fired general manager Jack Zduriencik after seven disappointing seasons during which the club failed to end its playoff drought. Team President Kevin Mather announced the decision to fire Zduriencik on Friday. Assistant general manager Jeff Kingston will take over on an interim basis. Ted S. Warren/The Associated Press

Jack Zduriencik talks to reporters at a press conference in Seattle in January. The Seattle Mariners have fired general manager Jack Zduriencik after seven disappointing seasons during which the club failed to end its playoff drought. Team President Kevin Mather announced the decision to fire Zduriencik on Friday. Assistant general manager Jeff Kingston will take over on an interim basis. Ted S. Warren/The Associated Press

Mariners fire general manager Jack Zduriencik

  • By Tim Booth The Associated Press
  • Saturday, August 29, 2015 12:01am
  • News

By Tim Booth

The Associated Press

SEATTLE — The Seattle Mariners fired general manager Jack Zduriencik on Friday after seven disappointing seasons during which the club failed to end its playoff drought.

Team President Kevin Mather announced the decision to fire Zduriencik, with assistant general manager Jeff Kingston taking over on an interim basis. Kingston joined the Mariners front office in 2009 after spending seven years as the director of baseball operations with San Diego.

“We have reached the point when change of leadership of our baseball operations is needed for the Seattle Mariners to reach our goal of winning championships,” Mather said in a statement. “We are very disappointed with the results this season, and are not satisfied with the current operation. The search for a permanent general manager will begin immediately, and while there is no deadline, we expect to have a new GM in place as soon as practical.”

Zduriencik came to Seattle before the 2009 season, arriving from Milwaukee as one of the top talent evaluators in baseball and with the task of rebuilding a thin farm system while putting a winning product on the field at the major league level.

But Seattle missed too often both in player development through the draft and in free agency under Zduriencik’s watch.

Only one player drafted during Zduriencik’s tenure has developed into an All-Star: third baseman Kyle Seager. Three times Seattle had top-five draft selections with Zdureincik in charge, but none of those players — Danny Hultzen, Dustin Ackley and Mike Zunino — developed into solid contributors in the majors.

Seattle did land Robinson Cano and Nelson Cruz in free agency the past two seasons, but Zduriencik’s misses with the likes of Chone Figgins, and trades that backfired — Cliff Lee and Milton Bradley among others — created even more discontent among fans.

Seattle had just two winning seasons during Zduriencik’s tenure. The Mariners entered this season expected to end a playoff drought that extends to 2001, but instead the club has floundered and began Friday 10 games under .500 and 12 games behind Houston in the AL West.

There was also a lack of continuity between Zduriencik and his managers. Zduriencik hired Don Wakamatsu as his first manager in 2009, but he was fired during the 2010 season. Eric Wedge was hired before the 2011 season, but chose not to return after the 2013 season in part because of issues with the front office.

“I want to thank Jack for his loyalty and hard work over the years, and for the quiet dignity with which he has carried himself,” Mariners CEO Howard Lincoln said in a statement.

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