SEATTLE — Earlier than the celebration, earlier than the fireworks, earlier than the Seattle Mariners doused a 21-year playoff drought with beer and champagne, John Stanton attended a funeral Friday. Because the Mariners chairman mentioned goodbye to a pal, individuals saved taking breaks from mourning to speak baseball.
Seattle, WA
Perspective | After 21 years of pain, Seattle baseball fans feel something new: Hope
Over the previous few months, because the Mariners grew from a 29-39 disappointment to the cusp of a breakthrough, Stanton’s obligations as principal proprietor modified with their fortunes. He didn’t must reply for the franchise’s aggressive sins anymore. He was now high-fiving strangers within the grocery retailer.
However the bursts of pleasure have been simply appetizer vibes in contrast with the enjoyment of Friday night time when, at 9:28 p.m. Pacific time, on the final day of September, the Mariners clinched a postseason berth that had eluded them for twenty years with movie-script drama.
Within the backside of the ninth inning, Cal Raleigh emerged from the dugout as a pinch hitter and blasted a walk-off house run to ship the euphoria, shaking off a thumb damage that had saved him out of the lineup lately and guaranteeing the Mariners would have an indelible second to go along with their long-anticipated unburdening.
“It was the craziest factor ever,” Raleigh mentioned. “I don’t suppose I’ll be capable to overlook that second.”
Stanton stood in a rowdy clubhouse afterward, his white hair moist and ruffled, and motioned towards Raleigh.
“It’s so particular, simply standing in his presence,” mentioned Stanton, a 67-year-old Pacific Northwest lifer. “It’s for each child that grew up in Seattle. That is so cool. Town deserves it.”
Sports activities are sometimes a painful obsession, constructed to ensure perpetual dissatisfaction. Yearly, there’s a single champion rising above a pissed off swarm. The expertise is stuffed with anguish, booing and fixed “what if?” musing. However the hope of a brand new season at all times brings us again, and typically the persistent get rewarded for persevering with the chase.
From 2002 to 2021, Seattle skilled 20 bleak Octobers. 3 times, the Mariners gained a minimum of 90 video games and missed the postseason. They gained a minimum of 85 video games 5 different instances, and it wasn’t adequate to finish the drought. Ten males managed a minimum of 50 video games in these twenty years. 4 executives tinkered with the roster. Three presidents shepherded the group. Stanton, a wi-fi business pioneer who had been a minority Mariners investor since 2000, took management six years in the past. However for all of the change — all of the rebuilding plans that began with promise and all of the trades and free agent acquisitions that prompted encouragement — the Mariners couldn’t escape a depressing label: the staff with the longest postseason absence in America’s 4 largest skilled sports activities leagues (MLB, NFL, NBA and NHL).
To the group, the outline could have felt like an arbitrary statistical creation to border the Mariners’ futility, however the ache beneath it was all too actual.
“I haven’t been in Seattle however a couple of years, however I really feel like I’m one of many followers that has waited for 21 years,” 25-year-old pitcher Logan Gilbert mentioned. “It was only a end result of a whole lot of ready.”
In 2000, Stanton joined the Mariners throughout the most effective time of their 46 seasons. They completed 91-71 that season. In 2001, they have been even higher, tying a serious league document with 116 victories. On Friday, the Mariners will enter the playoffs for under the fifth staff in staff historical past. The opposite 4 appearances got here in a seven-season cluster between 1995 and 2001. The start of Stanton’s run with the Mariners straddled the one time they’ve been to the postseason in back-to-back years.
“I assumed yearly we’d go to the playoffs, proper?” Stanton mentioned.
He laughs at his naivete now. He ought to’ve identified higher. Stanton was born on Queen Anne, the Seattle neighborhood that sits on a 470-foot hill. He went to highschool within the close by Bellevue college district. He was 14 when the Seattle Pilots grew to become the town’s first main league staff in 1969, however they have been bought and relocated to Milwaukee after only one season. He cried once they left.
“I received lower from my junior excessive baseball staff the identical week,” Stanton mentioned. “For me, that was the worst baseball week of my life. To see this, over 50 years later, is simply so particular and surreal. To see these guys which have come collectively as a staff, to see the place we have been in June to now, it’s simply wonderful.”
On June 19, after a 4-0 loss to the Los Angeles Angels, the Mariners have been 29-39. Since then, they’ve gained almost 64 p.c of their video games. Though they are often an eyesore on offense, their pitching and protection give them the profile of a probably harmful postseason staff. They’ve 4 top-end beginning pitchers: veterans Luis Castillo and Robbie Ray and rising stars George Kirby and Gilbert. Their bullpen, filled with energy arms and interchangeable components, is among the many greatest in baseball.
Whereas the Mariners lack offensive consistency, they’ve an attention-grabbing mixture of younger expertise, energy all through the lineup and a complete lot of charisma. Rookie heart fielder Julio Rodríguez is a 21-year-old budding celebrity who loves the highlight. First baseman Ty France made the all-star staff together with Rodríguez. Third baseman Eugenio Suárez is an emotional catalyst who performs effectively in large moments. The staff ranks within the high 10 in house runs. When the Mariners get runners on base, gamers are unselfish and prepared to do the little issues to maneuver them. They usually know how one can win tense, chaotic ballgames. They did so a 12 months in the past in ending 90-72 and narrowly lacking the playoffs. They adopted up on that success with an analogous components this season.
“They like when the sunshine shines on them,” mentioned Jerry Dipoto, the president of baseball operations.
Dipoto has been in command of the ballclub since late within the 2015 season. He employed Scott Servais because the supervisor earlier than the 2016 marketing campaign. Servais led the Mariners to an 86-76 document in his first season, and after a dropping 12 months the following season, they went 89-73 in 2018. They have been stable however getting older. These 89 wins nonetheless left them third within the American League West, eight video games behind Oakland for a wild-card spot.
Dipoto went to Stanton and the possession group with a technique to rebuild. He referred to it as a “step-back” plan. By some means, he was in a position to commerce Robinson Canó and the ultimate years of his large $240 million contract to the New York Mets. The entrance workplace saved making good selections to replenish the farm system. The staff endured a 68-94 season in 2019, which Servais described this fashion: “It was more durable than I assumed it was going to be. It’s simple to say [you’re rebuilding], nevertheless it’s tough to look at. You’re driving to the park, and also you’re pondering, ‘Okay, how are we going to win this factor?’ ”
The “step-back” phrase grew to become a straightforward goal for ridicule. Dipoto lived with it as he continued to make trades for extra youth and optionality. He didn’t stray from his imaginative and prescient. He realized to make enjoyable of himself.
“Should you had taken a ballot again then, there won’t have been a much less standard individual in Seattle,” he mentioned.
The Mariners had one other dropping season in 2020, a 27-33 mark throughout that unusual pandemic 12 months. However they caught hearth late in 2021 and almost made the playoffs. Then, at 10 video games below .500 this June, it appeared the plan had peaked and hope was about to collapse but once more.
“It was our lowest level — not solely this 12 months however of the entire mission,” Dipoto mentioned. “But when we hadn’t lived via that adversity, I don’t know if we’d be the identical staff.”
They’re a staff positioned for greater than random success. The purpose is to construct a sustainable winner, and the Mariners are two good seasons into that. As they return to the playoffs, they’ll put aside aid over lastly arriving and plan for an prolonged keep.
At that funeral, Stanton spoke with Daniel J. Evans, a former Washington governor and U.S. senator who’s now 96. For years, he has instructed Stanton that he expects Seattle to win the World Collection in his lifetime. Usually, Stanton nods and tells him the Mariners are engaged on it. On Friday, he was bolder.
“It’s going to occur,” Stanton vowed.
He didn’t promise it will be this 12 months. He didn’t decrease expectations, both.
The Mariners are giving him hope, too.
Seattle, WA
‘Hidden Yards Lost’ also hurt the Seahawks as much as turnovers
Occasionally, football coaches will talk about something called “Hidden Yards Lost.” These are the plays that did meaningfully affect the football game, but you won’t find them reflected anywhere because another event on the field made it so that play never existed.
In short, these are the big plays that get erased by a penalty.
I went through all 17 games from the Seattle Seahawks this season and tracked the yards that were lost because of penalties.
Below are the results. If you’d like to know the greatest offender, I can tell you it is…
at the conclusion of this post.
Here are the rules and initial guidelines:
Rules and Guidelines for Invisible Yards Lost
- This seeks to measure the difference between what a play would have gained, against where the ball ultimately ended up because of lost yards due to penalty. For example, a 10 yard gain negated by an offensive holding penalty would be a total of 20 “Hidden Yards Lost”
- A false start, a defensive hold, an offsides, and other infractions that either kill the play or simply result in X yards plus new set of downs are not the objective in Hidden Yards Lost
- This will overwhelmingly appear to be the fault of the offense. Reason being, a defensive penalty adds yards in the same direction as the ball is headed, while offensive (and certain special teams) penalties are what move the ball against where it was originally headed.
- Of those, the primary offender are perimeter holding calls. Again, makes sense, as those are often isolated engagements in full view of an official.
- There were some surprises.
At this point in the season, it appears as if Anthony Bradford might be the worst player in football. I remain shocked that he was given so much time to sow chaos among his brethren linemen before finally a fresh face entered the mix.
Leonard Williams makes an appearance as the first defensive player to join the fray. That play was so bonkers the entire Seattle beat had to look it up and write about it all evening. Even though there was a false start, the play bizarrely continued just long enough for Big Cat to facemask a dude. As we learned – twice(!) this season, a personal fall supersedes a lesser penalty. Therefore, instead of five yards backwards it was 15 yards forward for the San Francisco 49ers.
Kenneth Walker…woof.
Derick Hall was having so much fun.
Two roughing the passer penalties destroyed negative plays on the offense, while Devon Witherspoon cancelled out a big sack, and Jerrick Reed threw his hat in for the big special teams field position cancellation.
Not to be outdone, Mike Jerrell lost an entire football field in two plays.
Week 10 had nothing, followed by the bye week.
We resume:
Week 18 had nothing to report
Results
Here are the biggest yard-subtractors, in order:
- Mike Jerrell: 98
- DK Metcalf: 72 and a TD
- AJ Barner: 64 and a TD
- Pharaoh Brown: 58
- Kenneth Walker: a 57-yard TD
Notes –
- Leonard Williams will get the nod for most defensive yards lost at 49, which surprised me because of how well he played this season. It was the result of three very unfortunately-timed plays.
- Anthony Bradford: at just 40 yards and a safety didn’t even finish the season in the top five. There were even a couple other players in the fifties.
- I’m not going to conclude the same thing about DK Metcalf that I some people will. For starters, the offensive pass interference calls are for him blocking while another receiver got the ball. I have long been a proponent that Metcalf receives a disproportionate amount of physical calls against him because of his size and aura, especially weighed against the physical calls that are not called in his favor. The dude is big and easy to see. I will admit the volume of those is alarming, and if somebody insists on continuing to try screen plays in the future, they’ve got to figure out how to help Metcalf out here.
ONE FINAL NUMBER
In total, the Seahawks lost 802 yards and three touchdowns in the 2024 season that will never show up on the stat sheet. Erased from time, almost like the picture of Marty McFly’s family in Back to the Future.
Seattle, WA
Seattle’s Little Free Libraries Offer a Catalog of Collections and Connections
Spooning buttercream into a pastry bag, Kim Holloway is close to opening time. She pipes rosettes of frosting on trays of vanilla cupcakes—some plain vanilla frosting, some cookies and cream.
With the aid of Holloway’s “partner in crime,” Kathleen Dickenson, they prop the lid of an old-fashioned school desk in Holloway’s front yard and fill it with cupcakes. Holloway adds edible pearls and glitter. Shortly after 3 p.m., the Little Free Bakery Phinneywood is open for business—the business of sharing.
“I love to bake, and many people have told me, ‘Oh, you should open a bakery.’ And I just think, ‘No, no, no, no. It would take the joy out of it for me,” Holloway says.
“To me, the seed library is part of food security. It’s like having money in the bank, but it’s seeds in the library.”
Like hundreds of other Little Free hosts in the region, she’s found joy instead in giving.
And, like so many good ideas, this one started with a book.
In 2009, a Wisconsin man named Todd Bol built a Little Free Library in his front yard, encouraging passersby to take a free book or drop off extras. The idea and the format—a wooden box set on a post, usually with a latched door—seeded a movement, with more than 150,000 registered worldwide.
“Seeded” got literal fast: The Little Free book idea spread to other sharing opportunities, including a rampant crop of Little Free Seed Libraries, where people swap extra packets of cilantro and Sungolds.
Seattle’s density, temperate climate, walkable neighborhoods—and maybe our introvert culture?—make it easy for the little landmarks to thrive. They exploded during the COVID-19 pandemic, when locals thought outside the box by putting up a box, including what’s believed to be the nation’s first Little Free Bakery and first Little Free Art Library. Many built on the region’s existing affinity for hyperlocal giving—the global Buy Nothing phenomenon, for one example, was founded on Bainbridge Island.
“We just seem to do more of all these versions of sharing,” says “Little Library Guy,” the nom de plume of a longtime resident who showcases the phenomenon on his Instagram feed and a helpful map.
The nonprofit organization now overseeing global Little Free Libraries finds the nonbook knockoffs “fun and flattering,” communications director Margret Aldrich says in an email. (She also notes “Little Free Library” is a trademarked name, requiring permission if used for money or “in an organized way.”)
Some libraries stress fundamental needs: A recently established Little Free Failure of Capitalism in South Seattle provides feminine products, soap, chargers, even Narcan. A Columbia City Little Free Pantry established by personal chef Molly Harmon grew into a statewide network for neighbors supporting neighbors.
Others are about the little things: Yarn. Jigsaw puzzles and children’s toys. Keychains (one keychain library in Hillman City has a TikTok account delighting 8,000+ followers). A Little Free Nerd Library holds Rubik’s Cubes and comic books.
Regardless of where each library falls on Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, they stand on common ground. “There’s a line from [Khalil] Gibran: ‘Work is love made visible,’ ” Little Library Guy says in a phone call. “That’s what they’re doing. They’re showing that they love the community by doing something for them.”
Here’s a little free sample of what you might find around town:
Seeding a Movement
At the UW Farm, on 1.5 acres of intensively planted land at the Center for Urban Horticulture, students grow more than six tons of organic produce annually. They learn about agriculture and ecology while providing food for 90 families in a neighborhood CSA, for college dining halls and for food banks.
One chilly November day, students and volunteers on the self-sustaining farm worked with the small staff to inventory what seemed like countless seeds for next year’s plantings: Parade onions, Autumn Beauty sunflowers, Painted Mountain corn, Genovese basil. Packs with just a small number of remaining seeds were set aside for the Little Free Seed Library installed near rows of winter greens.
Farm manager Perry Acworth organized the little library during the pandemic, seeing the renaissance in home gardening coupled with a run on supplies. “Seeds were sold out … even if they had money, they couldn’t find them,” she says.
Acworth picked up a secondhand cabinet—one with a solid door, rather than the usual Little Free Library glass window, because seeds need to be protected from light. Althea Ericksen, a student at the time, designed it, painted it with a cheerful anthropomorphic beet, and installed it.
Seeds were packed inside jars to protect them from rodents and birds who otherwise would have a feast, and the Little Free Seed Library was born—shielded from rain and direct sun, convenient to pedestrians as well as cars.
On a recent day, seeds for radish, mizuna, red cabbage, and flashy troutback lettuce waited in lidded jars for their new winter homes.
On the side of the seed library, thank you notes sprout comments such as, “Thank you for sharing.” Enough harvests have gone by to see the library’s benefits, from flowering pollinators to harvests of food. A mere handful of seeds isn’t useful for the farm’s scale, Acworth notes, but for library guests, “If I have five sunflowers in my yard, five heads of lettuce, that’s great.”
It isn’t all sunflowers and appreciation. The library has been emptied more than once; the seeds were once dumped out and used to fuel a fire on the ground.
Seattle, WA
Video: Jordan Babineaux on the #Seahawks: “EVERYBODY'S on the Hot Seat” | Seattle Sports – Seattle Sports
Seahawks Legend Jordan Babineaux joins hosts Dave Wyman and Bob Stelton to discuss the future of the Seahawks. Babineaux shares his opinons on Geno Smith, DK Metcalf, John Schneider and more.
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0:00 Will Geno Smith be back?
5:01 Should Ryan Grubb have been fired?
7:24 Will DK Metcalf be back?
9:27 Fixing O-line issues
14:47 Ernest Jones re-sign?
17:10 Is John Schneider on the Hot Seat?
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Listen to The Wyman & Bob Show weekdays from 2 p.m. – 7 p.m. live on Seattle Sports 710 AM and the Seattle Sports App, or on-demand wherever you listen to podcasts.
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More info on The Wyman & Bob Show here:
https://sports.mynorthwest.com/category/wyman-and-bob/
More Seattle Seahawks coverage from SeattleSports.com:
https://sports.mynorthwest.com/category/seahawks/
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