Seattle, WA
Can Sam Darnold silence the doubters in Seattle?
Yahoo Sports’ Jason Fitz, senior NFL writer Frank Schwab and guest host Mike Golic Jr. discuss the new Seahawks quarterback’s outlook for the upcoming season and why the memory of his late season struggles with the Vikings in 2024 could carry over to this season. Hear the full conversation on “Inside Coverage” – and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever you listen.
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Video Transcript
What about Sam Darnold?
You guys have mentioned him a couple of times.
He goes to Seattle now where he replaces Geno Smith.
If he goes to Seattle and has another good year, like we have to take the training wheels off that takes on Sam Darnold at that point, don’t we?
Yeah, like, listen, I think he did the bulk of his career renaissance washing last year.
Obviously, the last couple of games, he’s talked about it and been open about the fact that that undid a lot of the goodwill and for so many people it was saying.
Old Sam after that.
So, yes, going in and doing it outside of the context of an offense that most of us look at as bumper bowling for quarterbacks, yeah, I, I think would go a long way in people maybe absolving him in the last couple of games.
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I’ve never really seen a story like Sam Darnold, as far as he was awesome for 16 games.
Like he really was, like, he got, he got an MVP ballots.
He was, I think, 7th in the MVP voting, uh.
He was legitimately that good, where you could talk about him in the conversation of an MVP and then like you said, he has two bad games and everybody’s like, yep, he stinks.
Like it’s, it’s stunning to me how we have just erased the first, you know, 90% of last season because he played poorly in two games.
I will say if I if I could give them more favorable read, it would be a reminder that trust is gained in drops and lost in buckets.
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And now all of a sudden when you put a few here and then kick them over because right wrong or indifferent, like we always talk about this, we over.
Index on primetime games, on late games at the end of the season, on playoff games, because more people are watching those all at once than the rest of us skimming the red zone.
So they tend to more often and more fully inform our opinion just because there’s more casual eyeballs on that situation.
So it doesn’t make it any better.
I’m sure there is still some confirmation bias in there, but it’s also like, uh, this is like we talked about, uh, uh, before with Daniel Jones too, there’s a full body of Work already under the hood for some of these guys.
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It’s not like guys that started a couple of games and got their chance a year late.
These are multi-year starters in the NFL where we do have some body of work on who you’ve been.
I like Sam Darnold.
I think Sam Darnold is going to do pretty well in Seattle.
I think Sam Darnold’s a lot better than people are giving him credit for.
That’s basically my only thing, but to the point of our exercise right now, if he goes out and he stinks again, like he did the last two games, we’re just gonna trash Sam Darnold, but we’re just gonna say, yep, that that was just a fluke, those first 17 games or 16 games of the 2024 season.
Seattle, WA
COUNTDOWN: Two days until West Seattle Fourth of July Kids’ Parade! Here’s the newest info
Just two days until hundreds of West Seattle’s youngest residents will parade through the streets of North Admiral with their families, as the Admiral Neighborhood Association again presents the West Seattle Fourth of July Kids’ Parade. We’ve checked in with parade coordinators for the newest info:
>Gina Topp (SPS School Board President, Admiral resident, and owner of Mission Cantina) will kick off the parade.
–Kavya Bhatkar (age 10), a School of Rock student, will sing the anthem.
-Title sponsors for the parade are: Neighborhood Naturopathic and Primary Care and Holy Rosary.
-Food available for purchase including:
Seattle Pops
West Seattle Grounds
Where Ya at Matt
Empanadas El Pachi
La La Lemonade
Seattle Sorbet
Hawk Dogs
Sugar & Spoon
The parade starts at 10 am Saturday from 45th SW and SW Sunset, heads west on Sunset for a bit, turns south and then east, ending at Hamilton Viewpoint Park for a post-parade celebration with sack races, activity booths, the aforementioned food/treat vendors, and if they’re not called away to an emergency, an SFD truck to see. No RSVP or registration required to be in the parade – just show up (non-motorized bikes, trikes, scooters, strollers, etc., welcome, or just walk).
Seattle, WA
FOURTH OF JULY 2026: Here’s where Seattle Parks will leave the lights on longer
(2024 reader photo of fireworks damage on Nino Cantu SW Athletic Complex turf)
Here’s the annual announcement from Seattle Parks – we’ve excised the non-local parks:
Seattle Parks and Recreation will turn on field lighting on ballfields throughout the city on the evening of Friday, July 3 and Saturday, July 4 to protect the surfaces. The ballfield lights will be turned on at approximately 9 PM.
The lights will be turned on to discourage the use of fireworks. Fireworks are illegal in the city of Seattle and will destroy the artificial turf on the fields or surrounding facilities. The approximate replacement cost for the synthetic surface based on per average full-size field (110,000 square feet) is $1.2 million. All the fields have been renovated in the past several years and benefit field users including soccer, football, baseball, ultimate frisbee and lacrosse.
The fields will be monitored from 9 PM to 3 AM
Lights at the following synthetic fields will be turned off at 3 AM on July 3 and 4:
Delridge Playfield, 4458 Delridge Way SW
Hiawatha Playfield, 2700 California Ave. SW
South Park Playfield, 8319 8th Ave S
Walt Hundley Playfield, 6920 34th Avenue SWLights will be turned off at the following grass fields at 11 PM on July 3 and 4:
West Seattle Stadium, 4432 35th Ave. SW
Comparing this to last year’s announcement, the lights will be on longer the night before the 4th, and the “monitoring” will be an hour later.
Seattle, WA
Residents and activists clash over plan to curb SEPA appeals at Seattle hearing
SEATTLE — Sharp divisions emerged Wednesday as Seattle residents, housing advocates and environmental activists sparred over a proposal that would dramatically reshape the city’s land-use appeals process.
At issue is legislation proposed by Seattle City Councilmember Eddie Lin. The bill would eliminate State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) appeals to the city’s Hearing Examiner for major legislative actions, including Comprehensive Plan amendments and development regulations.
It prompted impassioned testimony at a public hearing before the Seattle City Council’s Land Use Committee, which Lin chairs.
Lin said his bill would prevent costly delays that have slowed housing production and climate-focused planning. Opponents countered that it would strip residents of one of their few affordable avenues for holding city government accountable on environmental issues before projects move forward.
Lin said that concentrating new housing in dense, walkable neighborhoods near transit reduces suburban sprawl, preserves forests and farmland, lowers greenhouse gas emissions and limits pollution harmful to salmon and orcas.
Lin said Seattle can achieve both affordable housing and a healthy urban tree canopy through thoughtful planning. However, having projects repeatedly delayed by appeals that ultimately have little legal standing is something the city cannot afford, Lin said.
Over the past several years, Washington lawmakers have expanded exemptions within SEPA specifically to reduce red tape for housing production. But Seattle’s municipal code still allows administrative appeals on many actions that state law has already exempted.
Although those appeals are frequently dismissed because of state law, city officials said the process itself can significantly delay legislation.
Under Lin’s proposal, residents could no longer file administrative SEPA appeals before the Hearing Examiner for major legislative actions. Instead, challenges would have to be brought before the Washington Growth Management Hearings Board or King County Superior Court.
During the public hearing, opponents said such a change would effectively place environmental appeals beyond the reach of many residents because pursuing litigation requires attorneys and substantially higher costs.
Several speakers warned that raising the financial barrier to appeals would disproportionately silence neighborhoods and community groups with limited resources.
Environmental advocates also argued the legislation removes an important layer of independent oversight before major decisions become law. They said appeals have historically uncovered flaws in Environmental Impact Statements, revealed previously undisclosed information and prompted improvements before projects advance.
The debate is expected to intensify as Seattle prepares for the next phase of updating its Comprehensive Plan under Mayor Katie Wilson’s administration. The forthcoming environmental review of the plan, which includes proposals for taller and denser development across the city, is likely to make the question of who can challenge environmental reviews a central issue in the coming year.
No vote was taken following Wednesday’s public hearing. The legislation will return to the City Council for further consideration.
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