Seattle, WA
Commentary: Reforms are needed with his foundation, but Russell Wilson deserves benefit of doubt
Social media continues to be undefeated in taking part in the position of choose and jury. Such was the case once more this week, when USA Right now’s story about Russell Wilson’s “Why Not You Basis” went viral, citing its federal tax kinds.
Based on these paperwork, solely about 40 cents of each greenback donated has been spent on charity. It’s dipped to simply 24 cents on the greenback the final two years. The place did the remainder of all that cash go? A lot of it to overhead, salaries and worker advantages, which totaled $1.1 million {dollars} in 2020 and 2021.
On the floor alone, it *seems to be* horrible. It’s one other case of dangerous optics for an athlete who spent monumental effort constructing his model and squeaky-clean picture in Seattle.
However I additionally imagine it is a scenario the place there must be a extra balanced and nuanced response.
Based on his basis, by means of partnerships with Safeway/Albertsons and Seattle Youngsters’s Hospital, it has delivered greater than $13 million to profit schooling, pediatric most cancers analysis and starvation prevention. That features cash that was straight delivered to charities in want, slightly than being funneled by means of the inspiration itself. It consists of cash raised at grocery shops, that had Russell’s likeness displayed all over the place, as a part of an annual marketing campaign.
Nonetheless, it doesn’t look good to pose with a examine for $2.7 million {dollars} donated, when tax data state that the direct donation from his basis was simply 78 thousand {dollars}.
Or when tax data present that his annual charity golf match has by no means generated optimistic revenue, with direct bills totaling greater than $860,000 in 2019.
Modifications clearly have to be made: From the way in which his basis raises cash and donates to charity, to the significance of bringing on impartial board members, to evaluating salaries, and ensuring there are not any workers working for each the inspiration and the household enterprise, which is prohibited by legislation.
However Russell’s influence on this group was nonetheless profound. He and his spouse Ciara helped set up a constitution college up right here. They visited sufferers at Seattle Youngsters’s on a weekly foundation, one thing that started greater than a decade in the past when nobody even knew Russell’s title.
Many people, together with myself, admittedly spent this season performing like petulant youngsters with bitter grapes. Loved his demise in Denver, particularly in a season when the Broncos’ failures straight improved the Seahawks’ place within the first and second-round of this yr’s draft. And this story might give extra ammunition to pile on and name him a complete faux.
However Wilson shouldn’t be utterly “cancelled” by this week’s report. For all of the L’s he can take right here, there have additionally been a ton of wins.
Make the modifications that have to be made together with your basis, Russell. However by no means cease working to assist the higher good.
Seattle, WA
Seattle road collapses after water main break; repairs ongoing
Seattle Public Utilities (SPU) and Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) worked to repair a road and the surrounding area after a water service line broke and caused a collapse, according to a news release.
The incident occurred at Airport Way South and South Lander Street intersection on Tuesday, January 16.
Video of the water main break and road collapse were provided by safetyvid.org.
Seattle Police notified SPU about the situation around 10:45 a.m., prompting an immediate investigation by SPU crews.
The broken water pipe resulted in water pooling in the roadway.
Despite the significant break, no SPU water customers experienced a service disruption.
City crews and inspectors will continue to investigate the cause of the incident.
Seattle, WA
An insider's take on Seattle Seahawks OC candidate Byron Leftwich
Former nine-year NFL quarterback and Tampa Bay Buccaneers offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich is the latest name to emerge in the Seattle Seahawks’ OC search.
Report: Another Seahawks OC candidate gets 2nd interview
NFL on CBS insider Jonathan Jones reported on social media Friday morning that Leftwich has interviewed for the Seattle job, making him the fifth reported candidate to do so.
Leftwich, 45, spent four seasons as Tampa Bay’s OC from 2019 to 2022. During that time, he directed some of the league’s highest-scoring offenses. With Jameis Winston at quarterback in 2019, the Bucs finished fourth in the league in scoring. Then after Tom Brady took over at QB, Tampa Bay ranked third in scoring during its Super Bowl-winning 2020 season and second in scoring in 2021.
However, the Bucs tumbled to 25th in Brady’s final year in 2022. Leftwich was fired after that season and hasn’t coached in the NFL since.
Rick Stroud, who covers the Buccaneers for the Tampa Bay Times, joined Seattle Sports’ Bump and Stacy on Friday to share his insight on Leftwich. Stroud said it remains perplexing that Leftwich hasn’t gotten another NFL gig, especially after he was considered a front-runner for the Jacksonville Jaguars head coaching job prior to the 2022 season.
“The production (was) really remarkable in terms of the passing game,” Stroud said. “And then of course, once they got Tom Brady, the team really took off and won a Super Bowl. So I think it’s unfortunate for Byron. He didn’t get much credit for what was done here, but he was the game planner. He was the play caller. And he had some of the most prolific offenses in the National Football League.
“It’s really been kind of frustrating for him and mysterious that he hasn’t gotten that attention (from NFL teams),” Stroud added.
During the Jaguars’ 2022 head coaching search, there was a report that Leftwich turned down the job because he didn’t want to work with general manager Trent Baalke. Leftwich denied those claims, according to a recent article published in The Athletic.
“There were a lot of rumors and things that he doesn’t understand – one of them being that he wouldn’t want to work for Trent Balke,” Stroud said. “He told me, ‘Rick, I never had one discussion about the general manager in Jacksonville. I would have taken that job no questions asked about who was in the front office.’
“So in this day of agents and media – and sometime media sharing the same agents, quite frankly – guys push people that they have relations with. And Byron is not a campaigner. He’s the most affable guy I’ve ever worked with. I know the players love him. (He) never had a problem with a coaching staff member that I’m aware. So I think it’s just that, in an era of self-promotion, that’s the part that he may not have done very well. … But he’s ready to coach again.”
During his four-year run in Tampa Bay, Leftwich had one of the league’s top passing attacks. The Bucs ranked No. 1 in passing yardage in both 2019 and 2021, and No. 2 in passing yardage in 2020 and 2022. However, their ground attack was lagging, ranking in the bottom quarter of the league in rushing yardage all four years. In Leftwich’s final two seasons, Tampa Bay had the lowest run play rate in the league.
That run-pass imbalance would seem to be at odds with what Seattle head coach Mike Macdonald is looking for. Macdonald and the Seahawks moved on from offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb after one season, citing philosophical differences that appeared to be centered around Seattle’s inability to get the run game untracked. The Seahawks finished 28th in rushing yardage and had the fifth-lowest run rate in the league.
Stroud was asked whether he thinks Leftwich’s pass-heavy background in Tampa Bay would be an issue for Seattle.
“The offense that he ran is really an adaptation of what (former Arizona Cardinals and Tampa Bay head coach) Bruce Arians did for years and years,” Stroud said. “And it was good enough to win a Super Bowl with a 43-year-old quarterback who wasn’t the most mobile guy in the world. They started that Super Bowl season 7-5 and they made some changes. They shored up some protections and convinced Tom to take more shots down the field, and that’s when their offense really took off.
“And look, there’s a lot of ways to get things done. And a lot of times (with) the screen game, throws in the flat are just an extension of the running game. But I’ve never known Byron to be averse to running the football when you’re doing it successfully. So there’s definitely a philosophy. It was more of a pass-first offense – there’s no question about that. But they attacked people and they created a lot of problems for the defense.”
Listen to the full conversation with the Tampa Bay Times’ Rick Stroud at this link or in the audio player near the top of this story. Tune in to Bump and Stacy weekdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Seattle Sports.
More on the Seattle Seahawks
• Insider: Why Seattle Seahawks’ 28-year-old OC candidate is ‘fascinating’
• Report: Seahawks to hold 2nd interview with Klint Kubiak for OC job
• How would Klint Kubiak fit as Seattle Seahawks OC?
• Daniel Jeremiah: What Seattle Seahawks should look for in next OC
• Seattle Seahawks OC Search: Insiders weigh in on each candidate
Seattle, WA
Gus Williams, Seattle SuperSonics star and point guard ‘Wizard,’ dies at 71
Gus Williams, the beloved Seattle SuperSonics star who led the franchise to its only NBA championship in 1979, died Wednesday at age 71.
Williams earned the nickname “The Wizard” thanks to his speed and athleticism as a dynamic scoring guard. He played six of his 12 NBA seasons with the SuperSonics, guiding the team to back-to-back NBA Finals appearances. Both of his two All-Star selections came during his time in Seattle.
A second-round draft pick out of USC, Williams started his pro career with the Golden State Warriors and finished second in NBA Rookie of the Year voting in 1976 behind Phoenix’s Alvan Adams. After two seasons with Golden State, Williams joined the Sonics in free agency and quickly became a star once coach Lenny Wilkens made him a permanent starter in the backcourt alongside Dennis Johnson. Williams finished the 1977-78 season averaging 18.1 points in 79 games and helped Seattle reach the NBA Finals, only to fall to the Washington Bullets in seven games.
The Sonics faced off against Washington in the Finals again the following season, this time beating the Bullets in five games. It remains the only championship for the franchise, which moved to Oklahoma City ahead of the 2008-09 season.
Williams finished the championship season as the SuperSonics’ leading scorer at 19.2 points per game. He saved his best for last, averaging 29.0 ppg against the Bullets in the NBA Finals. Despite his heroics, Williams was not named Finals MVP, with that honor instead going to his teammate Dennis Johnson. Four of the five starters on that championship squad and key reserve Paul Silas are now dead, with Jack Sikma, sixth man Fred Brown and Wilkens the only surviving pillars of the team.
Remembering Gus Williams (1953-2025) pic.twitter.com/UGBFH2mq7v
— NBA History (@NBAHistory) January 17, 2025
James Donaldson, one of Williams’ SuperSonics teammates beginning in 1980, started a GoFundMe account on behalf of Williams’ family to raise funds for his burial.
Williams lived in a care facility in Maryland and died five years after suffering a stroke in 2020. Donaldson wrote on GoFundMe that he remained in contact with Williams “throughout most of this terrible journey” that included Williams battling pneumonia and meningitis after his stroke.
“He has spent the last 5 years, flat on his back and bravely battling this terrible misfortune,” Donaldson wrote of Williams’ health. “He fought a good fight, but alas, it just became too much to overcome.”
Donaldson said Williams’ family asked him to set up the GoFundMe account to bring Williams’ body to his hometown of Mt. Vernon. N.Y., so he can be buried next to his brother Ray, also a former NBA player who died of prostate cancer in March 2013. Donaldson said the Williams brothers’ 100-year-old mother and other relatives would like to be able to visit their gravesites together.
“(Williams) was gregarious, funny, always upbeat and (very) charitable with his time and money. Plus, he was always friendly with the fans and they loved him in return,” Donaldson wrote of his former teammate. “Super fast and super quick on the court. Could stop on a dime and outrun everyone out there. With a deadly jump (shot) to boot. Gus was one of a kind!”
Williams’ one-of-a-kind style extended off the court, too. He refused to back down in a contract dispute with Sonics management ahead of the 1980-81 campaign, ultimately sitting out the entire season. He returned the following season and averaged a career-high 23.4 points in 80 games, earning his first All-Star selection, NBA Comeback Player of the Year and first-team All-NBA honors.
Williams’ time in Seattle ended in 1984 when the SuperSonics traded him to Washington. He spent two seasons with the Bullets, followed by one with the Atlanta Hawks before retiring in 1987.
We are deeply saddened by the passing of Washington Bullets alumni, Gus Williams.
Our thoughts are with his family and loved ones. pic.twitter.com/zhKV1lS5Pw
— Washington Wizards (@WashWizards) January 16, 2025
Williams finished his career with 14,093 points, 4,597 assists and 1,638 steals. He averaged 17.1 ppg in 825 regular-season contests and 19.5 ppg in 99 playoff appearances.
He was inducted into the USC Athletic Hall of Fame in 2009.
(Photo: Focus on Sport / Getty Images)
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