Seattle, WA
Bryce Miller shuts down Cubs as Seattle Mariners get 4-2 win
SEATTLE, WA – APRIL 12: Starter Bryce Miller #50 of the Seattle Mariners delivers a pitch during the first inning against the Chicago Cubs at T-Mobile Park on April 12, 2024 in Seattle, Washington. (Stephen Brashear / Getty Images)
SEATTLE – Julio Rodríguez delivered a pair of RBIs, Bryce Miller pitched into the seventh inning without allowing an earned run, and the Seattle Mariners beat the Chicago Cubs 4-2 on Friday night.
It’s the second straight start by Miller without allowing an earned run as he pitched seven scoreless innings against the Milwaukee Brewers last week. Miller allowed three hits and three walks with four strikeouts in his outing against the Cubs.
“Bryce Miller’s on a roll,” manager Scott Servais said. “The addition of the split-finger and some other things he’s added to his repertoire has really paid off and it’s been fun to watch.”
Last season, Miller relied almost entirely on the strength of his fastball. Miller used his four-seam fastball on nearly 60 percent of his pitches last season with a slider as he primary off-speed option. Miller added the splitter this offseason, and it has already become a go-to pitch for Miller.
“Last year if I was getting hit early, it’s like ‘I don’t really know where to go’ and right now I feel like I have options,” Miller said. “If they’re adjusting, I can adjust as well. So like I said it’s been big and it helps the confidence in getting the lineup through the third time and just knowing that more than likely I still have pitches that they haven’t seen yet and I can throw any pitch in any counts so they’re not just sitting heater.”
Miller now has a 1.96 ERA with 17 strikeouts in 18 ⅓ innings pitched this season for Seattle.
While Miller shined, the Mariners took advantage of control issues by Jordan Wicks as walks came back to burn the Chicago starter. Wicks allowed four runs on five hits and four walks along with a wild pitch. Wicks walked the bases loaded in the fourth inning before Rodríguez delivered the biggest hit of the night for Seattle.
“Big thing for me tonight is we took the walks,” Servais said. “Something we have not been doing. We got to get better at that and it paid off tonight.”
Mitch Haniger and Jorge Polanco each singled, and Mitch Garver walked to set the table for the bottom half of the lineup. But after a Cal Raleigh strikeout and Dylan Moore flyout, it took Luis Urías being hit by a pitch to ultimately drive across a run.
Raleigh ultimately struck out four times in the game for the Mariners.
Wicks then walked three batters in the fourth inning to provide the Mariners another prime opportunity to break the game open. And this time, Rodríguez obliged.
Rodríguez’s liner to center field dropped just in front of Cody Bellinger as Garver and Moore scored to give Seattle a 3-0 lead.
“I expect myself to come up to the plate and deliver in those situations for the team,” Rodríguez said. “That’s what I prepare for and I feel like every time that happens it’s something that I expect for myself.”
Ty France followed with a single to right field as J.P. Crawford scored for a four-run lead.
Miller left the game after walking Nico Hoerner on his 100th pitch of the night with one out in the seventh inning.
Hoerner advanced to second on an errant pick-off throw to first base by reliever Trent Thornton. That extra base then allowed Hoerner to score when Urías’ throw to first off a groundball to third base ran into the baseline with France dropping the ball as Yan Gomes clipped his glove. The ball got away and Hoerner sped home to get the Cubs on the board with an unearned run.
On a chilly and breezy night at T-Mobile Park, there were only two extra base hits by either team in the game both coming via Cubs first baseman Michael Busch. Busch had a two-out double into the right field corner in the top of the fourth inning that Miller kept off the board. Busch then homered off Ryne Stanek in the ninth inning for the line earned run of the night for Chicago in the loss.
Stanek picked up his second save of the season for Seattle.
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Seattle, WA
Seattle weather: Wet start to Tuesday with breezy winds
SEATTLE – A wet start to the day Tuesday with widespread showers and snow in the higher elevations. Snow levels will start low around 3000′ with a mix of rain and snow in the Cascade passes. Snow levels will start to rise to around 6000′ later in the day and evening.
A wet start to the day Tuesday with widespread showers and snow in the higher elevations.
Wind Advisory
There is a Wind Advisory for the coast and the north interior on Tuesday for gusts between 40-50 mph. Winds will remain strong along the coast, continuing the advisory through Wednesday afternoon.
There is a Wind Advisory for the coast and the north interior Tuesday for gusts between 40-50 mph.
Winds will be gusty for all of western Washington Tuesday with the Puget Sound seeing gusts up to 40 mph as well.
Winds will be gusty for all of Western Washington Tuesday with the Puget Sound seeing gusts up to 40 mph as well.
Highs Tuesday will be a few degrees below seasonal average, only reaching the low to mid 50s.
Highs Tuesday will be a few degrees below seasonal average, only reaching the low to mid 50s.
What’s next:
Showers will linger Wednesday with highs only in the upper 40s, then we will dry out for Thursday with milder temperatures. The Mariners home opener Thursday is looking dry with mostly sunny skies in the afternoon. This could mean the roof is OPEN! Showers will be gone by Friday into the weekend for a more spring-like forecast.
Showers will linger Wednesday with highs only in the upper 40s. (FOX 13 Seattle)
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The Source: Information in this story came from the FOX 13 Seattle Weather Team and the National Weather Service.
Seattle, WA
Why the potential return of the Sonics to Seattle has never felt closer
SEATTLE — October 25, 2006. April 18, 2008. May 15, 2013.
March 25, 2026?
Those dates on the calendar — three in the past, one still yet to come — represent four seminal moments in the history of NBA franchise stability as it relates to Seattle.
The first three are dates fans of the green and gold would rather forget.
The first was the day Clay Bennett’s purchase of the SuperSonics was approved by NBA owners. The second, the day his relocation request to move the franchise from Seattle to Oklahoma City was given the OK, prior to the lawsuit and subsequent settlement that finally allowed the organization to bolt.
And the last was the day Chris Hansen’s efforts to purchase and relocate the Sacramento Kings were thwarted and voted down by the league.
Three moments that went to define the opinion of the NBA in the minds of many sports fans in the Pacific Northwest.
But that last date — Wednesday — might end up being a date that gets circled and remembered in a different light. The NBA Board of Governors will wrap up two days of meetings in New York on Wednesday with the expectation that the league’s owners will give the green light to start conversations with interested ownership groups who want to bring expansion franchises to Seattle and Las Vegas.
After years of posturing, and fits and starts, the return of the NBA to Seattle has never felt closer. But there are significant questions that remain. Here’s a look at a few of them with Wednesday’s meeting on the horizon.
Is this real or just another tease?
It sure seems real.
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver set the stage for what seems likely to happen next when he unexpectedly announced at the NBA Cup that expansion was going to be addressed sometime in 2026.
What comes from the meetings Tuesday and Wednesday is expected to be a vote of approval from the league’s owners allowing Silver to start holding substantive talks with potential ownership groups in Seattle and Las Vegas that could lead to a vote for expansion approval later this year. For the initial vote and for the final approval, 23 of the league’s 30 owners must vote in favor for approval.
Industry sources have told the Seattle Times that the buzz during All-Star weekend in Los Angeles last month was momentum quickly growing behind the thought that expansion was going to take place. With word emerging earlier this week of the pending vote, it would seem highly unlikely for that kind of information to leak without an expectation that a vote of approval is coming and would allow Silver to start the real conversations.
Assuming that approval comes, the next few months will be filled with conversations and negotiations, and ultimately a final decision on whether to formally expand or not. The vote for that could come as soon as the NBA Summer League owners’ meeting that’s held in Las Vegas in July. If there are delays or hiccups in the talks, the vote on formal expansion could be pushed to the annual BOG meeting held in September. Either way, as long as the vote is sometime this year and the league gives the thumbs up, the expansion franchise should be able to start in time for the 2028-29 season.
Is this going to become a bidding war?
That is one of the significant unknowns about how many parties are going to get involved in the bidding. To date, the only group locally to express their interest in pursuing expansion once the league gives the green light is the Kraken ownership group. They have decided advantages over any other group as a stakeholder in Climate Pledge Arena and the owner of the primary tenant that uses the facility. But questions remain about who all would be involved in any sort of investment group that would put forth a bid. To date, there have been behind-the-scenes conversations, but reserved public-facing campaigning by the Kraken group in jockeying for the lead position.
That has created a little bit of that uncertainty about whether another group could swoop in and get involved. The NBA likely wouldn’t mind that. The more groups, the more demand. The more demand, the more likely the expansion fee could be pushed upward.
Does the Seahawks sale factor into all of this?
Just like with the question about the bidding war, the fact the Super Bowl champions are for sale and in the same market adds a wrinkle to the situation around the NBA. The primary figures in each situation are likely committed to staying in their lanes — the folks who will be providing most of the money in the pursuit of each franchise likely should not change. But the money that comes in on the fringes could be a little in flux. Ultimately, it’s a small piece of the much larger pie.
The higher likelihood is whoever is committed at this point to being financially involved in either potential transaction isn’t changing.
What about the Sonics history?
Should this continue in the direction it seems to be heading, yes, the history of the SuperSonics would return to the expansion franchise. That was part of the settlement agreed to when the team moved to Oklahoma City in 2008 — when a team returned to the market, the 41 years of history that accompanied the Sonics time in Seattle would be reinstated and no longer claimed by the Thunder franchise.
Many of the stars of the past — Gary Payton, Shawn Kemp to name a pair — have stated they did not want their past accomplishments in Seattle recognized by the Thunder franchise.
What’s the Vegas angle to all this?
Nine months ago, the momentum behind Las Vegas wasn’t dead, but it certainly had quieted significantly. There was uncertainty about possible ownership groups, including whether LeBron James’ longstanding want to be involved with a Vegas expansion team was still there. There were major questions about the arena situation and if T-Mobile Arena — home of the NHL’s Golden Knights — would be the home of an NBA team as well or if a new building would be in the offering.
Clearly a couple of those questions have been answered. There appear to be at least two ownership groups positioned to be involved in the bidding, although the most prominent name linked to team ownership there seems to be out. The Athletic first reported and James later confirmed that he and his partners with Fenway Sports Group would not be involved in the bidding process for a Las Vegas franchise.
The other two groups, per reporting from the Las Vegas Review-Journal, are a group that includes Magic Johnson and another that includes Golden Knights owner Bill Foley.
The arena … well that remains perhaps the biggest unknown in Sin City. The NBA has indicated upgrades to T-Mobile Arena might be good enough to satisfy needs. But the building is already home to the Golden Knights, UFC and concerts, and there are valid concerns about congestion and potentially a viable path toward a new building. Whether a building could be ready in two years should the reported 2028-29 timeline be applied to both teams is unknown.
Seattle, WA
Seattle Weather: First Spring storm arrives on Tuesday
Seattle – The weekend brought a much-needed break from the rainy atmospheric river. We enjoyed a mainly sunny and dry sky. Monday will see a few more clouds around the area ahead of our next rainmaker, which is forecast to arrive on Tuesday.
After enjoying a dry an mainly sunny weekend, more clouds will move inland throughout the day Monday.
Grab an extra layer on Monday morning as morning lows will be chilly, near freezing in some spots. Partly cloudy and slightly cooler in the afternoon with highs near 50.
Afternoon highs remain cool to start the week.
After the latest atmospheric river sent snow levels up near 8000 and 9000 feet, much of the beneficial snow we picked up was melted. This next round of will lower snow levels back down, where a light dusting of snow is forecast to fall.
Cooler air will force snow levels to lower beginning on Tuesday with a light dusting of snow.
Winds will be gusty next week when the next system arrives on Tuesday. Some spots may see gusts nearing 45 mph.
Gusty winds picking up on Tuesday with speeds nearing 45 mph.
Hard to believe, but the new season of Mariners baseball starts this Thursday. The home open is looking good so far with an even nicer weekend ahead.
Lowland rain and mountain snow early in the week with a dry weekend ahead.
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