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As great as the "greatest park in baseball" is, it has created a huge problem for the Mariners, IMO.  I think I would go to your post and highlight, capitalize, bold and italicize and bigger font, etc. the section about "creating a fair environment".
You can't operate in a scenario where you can't bring in talent just because it doesn't fit your park.  The fact of the matter is your dealing with human beings.  They have egos.  They want to win, but they also want a legacy.  If I'm Ackley's agent, I say all the right things to the press while preparing him to bolt from Seattle at the earliest opportunity.  Why?  Because I doubt he grew up dreaming about this game playing in an environment where he is penalized because of the park he plays in.  And although on his own, he may not suffer the effect of the park specifically as much, my feel is that his numbers will suffer because of the players around him.  And the more the players around him are penalized by the park, the more he is.
Unless you can get four or five more of him, this "greatest park in baseball" is killing your chances.  Why in the world would a hitter of Fielder's caliber ever want to come to Seattle?  He may want to win and the Mariners may want to win, but if they don't, it's not a small hit to his legacy.  Why not just go to Texas or Anaheim, where the stadiums are more fair AND you can win.  We may discredit the idea, but if Fielder has a chance to hit 480 bombs or 600, the difference matters.
It's past the time to change the park.  Well past.

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