Key Points
Event ticketholders can claim a Mariners X One Piece themed jersey during the game
Special tickets are currently sold out; more seats may become available
Based on recent Red Sox One Piece jersey sales on eBay, these could flip for $150 to $300+ after the event
Julio Rodriguez and the Seattle Mariners are proud to announce the second collaboration between the team and One Piece. Themed jerseys will be given away to attendees with a special event ticket, and these will resell for a lot more than the cost to attend. If free beer, free hot dogs, and free seats to watch a baseball game sounds appealing, this is the kind of opportunity you need to be on the hunt for.
One Piece Night at T-Mobile Park
The jersey itself features Luffy in a powerful manga-inspired design bursting through the front, with his iconic straw hat wearing the Mariners logo. The back has premium dye-sublimation printing that won’t fade, full button-down construction, and it’s made from breathable polyester mesh. These aren’t cheap giveaway shirts – they’re actual quality jerseys.
If you’ve been sleeping on the One Piece collectibles market, wake up. Their collaborative merch has been going absolutely nuts, especially in sports crossovers. One Piece fans have been chasing college basketball cards like crazy, with thousands of them reselling for hundreds of dollars after each game.
Resellers are working together to score hundreds of cards in one night, fans are getting ejected for trying to hustle cards from other attendees, and Rutgers was actually broken into and an undisclosed number of cards stolen.
The bottom line here is that One Piece fans take their hobby dead serious. This collaboration with the Seattle Mariners, historically one of the most anime-friendly teams in the league, is a chance for resellers to score huge profits while eating a hot dog and watching a game.
The Mariners have a massive Japanese fanbase thanks to Ichiro and their history with Japanese players. One Piece is huge in Japan and with anime fans globally. The timing couldn’t be better with One Piece sports cards absolutely exploding right now.
How to Get Tickets
Unfortunately, special event tickets for the Mariners’ One Piece night are now sold out. They didn’t last long at all, and it seems like fans were quick to jump on the chance.
More tickets might become available, so keep checking their official page. Teams sometimes release additional inventory closer to game day when they finalize production numbers or reallocate seats.
Local Seattle groups and forums are another angle. Fans who bought tickets might need to sell closer to the date if plans change. Facebook groups for Mariners fans, local anime communities, and reseller Discord servers could all have tickets pop up.
If you’re serious about this flip and you’re in Seattle, the secondary market premium might still be worth it. A $100 ticket that gets you a $250+ jersey is still a $150 profit.
Keep in mind that only attendees with the special event ticket are eligible to receive a jersey. Don’t show up to the game with a general admission stub and be confused when you don’t get a jersey.
What are Mariners One Piece Jerseys Worth?
Based on a similar promotion by the Red Sox in 2025, we can estimate these jerseys will resell for $150 to $250 on the low end, but with the current One Piece hype prices might run even higher. It can be hard to estimate the true value of these jerseys as the market is usually flooded with cheap knock-offs
Size matters. Medium and Large typically move fastest, but don’t sleep on Small and XL – collectors and international buyers often need these sizes. List the exact size in your title.

The big wildcard is how the One Piece card market behaves between now and March 31. If those basketball cards keep hitting five-figure sales, this jersey could absolutely blow past Red Sox prices. We’re talking potential $300-500 range if the hype stays this hot.
The fact that tickets sold out immediately actually reduces some risk while adding others. On the plus side, sellout demand suggests strong collector interest, which supports higher resale prices for the jerseys. The Red Sox comps showing $100-150 minimum were from an event that also sold out.
The main risk now is paying secondary market prices for tickets. If you’re buying a $100 resale ticket to get a jersey that ends up only flipping for $150, you’re looking at $50 profit minus eBay fees (13%), which brings you down to around $30-35 net. That’s still positive, but not the slam dunk it would’ve been at face value.
Bottom Line
The immediate sellout validates what we’ve been saying about One Piece crossover demand. When sports teams can’t keep these events in stock, that’s your signal that the secondary market is going to cook.
If you snagged an event ticket before they sold out, congratulations, you’ll actually be making a profit by attending this game. Make every effort to snag a jersey before they run out, and if you can’t make it the game make sure you get a good price for your ticket.