Opening Day is supposed to be the easy one. Mariners fans should be worrying about Logan Gilbert, and whether Seattle can start a season with the kind of urgency that matches the expectations around this team. Instead, fans are still being asked to decode where exactly the game will be available and what they may need to pay for to watch it. Pretty absurd.Â
The practical answer, at least right now, is that the Mariners open the 2026 season against the Guardians on Thursday, March 26 at 7:10 p.m. Pacific at T-Mobile Park. The most clearly identified viewing option is Mariners.TV, which MLB has been pushing as the new in-market streaming home for Mariners games. The club’s probable pitchers page also lists Thursday’s opener as airing on Mariners.TV, with Cleveland’s side carried on Guardians.TV.Â
Mariners’ Opening Day Watch Guide Quietly Exposes a Shameless Problem
And that would all be fine if the league and its partners had just laid the whole thing out like normal people. But that’s not what happened. The official Opening Day FAQ and related Mariners coverage have been spending the final hours before the opener rolling out pieces of the answer instead of just giving fans a clean, complete roadmap well ahead of time.
That is also why this feels bigger than simple confusion. Providers know exactly what Opening Day does to fans. They know urgency leads to panic buys. So when the details stay fuzzy until the last minute, it doesn’t come off like harmless disorganization. It feels like the usual squeeze: make the viewing experience just inconvenient enough that people stop asking questions and start paying for whichever option looks fastest. Rather than being customer-friendly, they’re resorting to pressure tactics.
They are not just asking fans for more money. They are doing it while antagonizing them. They are taking one of the most anticipated games on the calendar and wrapping it in the same exhausting maze of streaming uncertainty that has already burned out sports fans everywhere. It’s next-level nonsense to grab for every possible dollar while making the customer feel like they are the problem for wanting a straight answer.
The cleanest guidance for Mariners fans, then, is this: If you are in the Mariners’ market, Mariners.TV appears to be the main answer for Thursday night. If you are outside the local market, MLB.TV is typically the path, subject to the usual location rules and blackout structure. As for local cable options, those details still have not been clearly laid out, which is ridiculous this close to first pitch. And if you want to skip the TV mess entirely, radio remains the least annoying option in sports.
So, there is a way to watch the Mariners tomorrow. But the bigger story is that fans should not have had to work this hard to figure it out on the eve of Opening Day in the first place.