Career Statistics:
Three-time World Series Champion
10-time AL/NL Championship Series entrant
Gillick will always be remembered as the man who put together the greatest example of Bill Simmons' "Ewing Theory."
Starting in 1998, in back-to-back-to-back years, the Mariners lost a Hall of Fame player. First, it was the Randy Johnson trade in 1998. Then, it was the Ken Griffey, Junior trade in 1999. Finally, Alex Rodriguez left via free agency following the 2000 season.
Gillick responded by bringing in the following players: Kazuhiro Sasaki, Mike Cameron, David Bell, John Olerud, Bret Boone, Jeff Nelson, Aaron Sele, Arthur Rhodes, and most importantly, Ichiro Suzuki.
The Mariners didn't just become better following the exit of these stars, they became the greatest regular season force baseball has ever seen.
The 2001 Mariners went an astonishing 116-46.
It wasn't just the number of wins.
Ichiro won AL MVP, AL Rookie of the Year, and the AL batting championship in his first season. Boone finished third in MVP voting and established all-time new records for home runs and RBI by a second baseman. The team sent eight All-Stars to the All-Star game held in...where else, Seattle.
Sadly, the be-all, end-all of the season was that the Mariners couldn't get it done in the playoffs against the Yankees and are still looking for their first World Series title.
Gillick guided the Mariners to two more 93 win seasons in 2002 and 2003.
Apart from fielding a team that averaged 98 wins from 2000-2003, Gillick showed that you don't always need superstars to win big in MLB.
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