This isn't just a slump anymore—this is a nightmare. Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh is 0-for-his-last-32, and his batting average has cratered to .161 on the year. We're talking about a player who was a breakout star last season, and now he can't buy a hit.
Let me put this in perspective: Raleigh is closing in on Craig Counsell's single-season hitless streak record of 0-45. If he keeps this up, he could challenge Chris Davis's all-time mark of 0-54, which spanned the 2018-2019 seasons. That's the kind of history you don't want to be chasing.
What happened to this guy? Last year, he looked like a cornerstone piece for the Mariners—power, defense, leadership behind the plate. Now? Every at-bat feels like torture. You can see it in his body language, the way he's pressing, trying too hard to end the streak instead of just letting it come naturally.
And here's the cruel part: the more he presses, the worse it gets. Slumps like this are mental prisons. You start doubting your swing, doubting your approach, doubting whether you even belong in the big leagues. It's brutal to watch.
So how does he break out of it? Honestly, I don't know. Sometimes it's a bloop single, sometimes it's a day off to clear your head, sometimes it's just time. But what I do know is this: the Mariners need Raleigh to figure it out, because they can't afford to have a black hole in the lineup.
That's what sports is all about, folks—watching talented players go through hell, wondering if they'll ever find their way back. And right now, Cal Raleigh is in the deepest part of that hell.




