Seattle, WA
Salk: 2 caveats for a Seattle Seahawks first-round trade up
The NFL draft is less than three weeks away, and one of the things I keep hearing is people excited about the idea of the Seattle Seahawks trading up from pick No. 32 in the first round.
Stacy Rost: What we can learn from Seahawks’ NFL Draft history
I’m not necessarily opposed the idea of trading up, but I want to throw two big caveats in that. One, I’m not giving up any of the picks from next year, certainly not next year’s first round. Next year is supposed to be an incredible draft. This is supposed to be a mediocre draft where there are starters, not stars. If you got the opportunity to get stars next year, I want to take as many of those as possible, so please do not trade away certainly your first-round pick for next year.
But then Brock Huard has brought up this whole idea of trading up for Notre Dame’s Jeremiyah Love because he’s the best player in the draft. He might very well be right that he is. You know what I just can’t get myself to agree to? It’s trading up for a running back and certainly not trading next year’s first-round pick and this year’s first-round pick and probably more than that to get up into the top 10 for a running back, for a skill-position guy.
Should Seahawks consider trading up for NFL Draft’s top RB?
Look, you were just barely able to keep me on board with paying $225 million for wide receivers Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Rashid Shaheed knowing that you’re gonna be spending a whole bunch of money on cornerback Devon Witherspoon. I love all those players. I get nervous about spending that much money that far away from the line of scrimmage.
You wanna now go trade two first-round picks and try to get a running back? I’m sorry, that’s where you lose me. I just can’t go that far. I don’t care how good he is. I’m out.
This post is a transcript of the video at the top of the post. It is edited for clarity. Catch Mike Salk weekdays from 6-10 a.m. on Seattle Sports’ Brock and Salk.
Seattle Seahawks offseason coverage
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• What GM said about Seahawks making ‘Hard Knocks’ debut
• Why Daniel Jeremiah isn’t concerned about Seattle Seahawks’ FA losses
• Why Macdonald envisions Shaheed as bigger WR threat in ’26
• Stacy Rost: Who makes most sense to play Seahawks in NFL opener
Seattle, WA
Seattle gets a heat wave and rain storm in the same week? – Emerald City Weather Blog
I feel like the guy in the famous commercial attempting to settle the boisterous debate over whether their beverage is best because it “tastes great” or is “less filling” by shouting over their chants: “IT IS BOTH!”
Are you someone who declares Seattle weather’s great when skies are less filled with clouds? Are you instead someone who insists it’s Seattle’s fresh rainfall that tastes great?
It is rare that we can squeeze a heat wave AND rain streak into the same week forecast around here, but whether you’re a sun fan, or a rain fan, this budding forecast’s FOR YOU!*
(*YES, I know I’m mixing my brand slogans**.)
(**Also Gen Z: Ask your parents or nearest Gen X family member. It’ll slay for sure.***)
(*** That last comment was approved by my Gen Z daughter, though with an epic eyeroll.)
IT’S OK. THIS ANALOGY IS JUST PROBABLY NOT THE CHOICE OF THE NEW GENERATION….
Fair point, back to the weather: It’s another heat wave up first and Seattle will be set to ‘Do the Stew.’
In fact, this entire heat event looks like someone just stole the script from last week, only shoved it back a day. Sunday will jump in warmth and reach around the upper 70s to low 80s in Seattle with brief, if any morning clouds. Can’t ask for better weather for Father’s Day.
Our warm, easterly wind will start to energize on Monday which will end up being a warm-to-hot day across Western Washington. Highs should reach the 80s everywhere (even the coast) with upper 80s likely in the Seattle/Puget Sound area. If you want to “follow the script,” that would match the day Seattle hit 89 last week.
Tuesday is expected to be the hottest day of the week with highs reaching into the low 90s in the Puget Sound area (Seattle: 91 last week on peak day), and mid 90s south and east. The coast will start warm but cool off quick during the day.
A Heat Advisory is in effect for Monday and Tuesday for all of Western Washington except the coast where you won’t be hot enough to have heat concerns.
HI. I WANT MY SEATTLE SKIES WITH *MORE* FILLING….
Can do! We’ll begin the cooling process on Wednesday as the marine winds start to push their way into the I-5 corridor. Right now, it’s not a big push then, but it should be enough to get Seattle back into the 80s (FEELS LIKE WE’RE ALREADY IN THE 80s WITH THESE JOKES). It still looks very toasty for the next World Cup game at Lume…er…”Seattle Stadium.”
A stronger marine push comes for Thursday which should end up pretty similar to this Saturday with the morning clouds then sun with highs back into the 70s — though clouds will increase late in the day because…
Rain returns to the forecast for the first time in a few weeks for the end of the week. Long range models are getting more sold on the idea of an area of low pressure developing off B.C.’s Haida Gwaii on Friday and pushing a front through our area that would bring periods of light rain and much cooler temperatures that would stay in the 60s.
That low is then pegged to drop down the B.C. coast and move right through Western Washington on Saturday, peppering us with scattered showers through the weekend (especially Saturday) as highs stay in the 60s.

There is a weak signal for some potential thunderstorms Saturday so we’ll keep an eye there.
Drier and warmer weather returns for the start of next week with what initially look like fairly comfortable temperatures as we near the start of July. No matter if you like rain or heat, that should give most folk a smile.
Seattle, WA
We can stop pretending that a suburban stadium would be better for soccer in Seattle
Social media is absolutely flooded with the images, video and words showing a vibrant city and region full of the joys of our soccer heritage. The supposedly dying city of Seattle put on an exceptional show for the world’s game and once again is convincing USMNT players to consider the Sounders for their next stop.
None of that happens with a suburban stadium in Renton. None of it.
The championship banners in Lumen? They’d be gone, reducing the symbols of local soccer excellence from the TV feed.
All those packed local bars with their Sounders scarves, posters and kits? Gone.
This isn’t a hypothetical. Plenty of MLS teams are in metro areas hosting the World Cup. The other US MLS teams aren’t getting this kind of love. LA hosted a bigger US win, but that match experience was not an advertisement for the Galaxy or LAFC.
When Santa Clara hosts the Round of 32 match you are not going to hear a word about the 50-year-old San Jose Earthquakes. If the US advances to the semis in Arlington you won’t hear a peep about FC Dallas. If they make the final in East Rutherford the Red Bulls will be a footnote.
But when the world’s game comes to Seattle the Sounders are the conversation, because this team is in the heart of a city and region that loves it.
Ripping the Sounders away from these types of moments for revenue control while eliminating the free marketing to players and fans is laughable. Renton’s Legacy Square is doing a wonderful job for thousands of visitors a week. It is not Seattle. Nor is Southcenter’s shows in Tukwila.
Moments like Friday, the future Women’s World Cup matches and maybe even a US Round of 16 with hundreds of thousands of people experiencing Seattle’s soccer culture are only possible while soccer is a major tenant in a downtown stadium.
It’s why Don Garber praises the Sounders, and hardly ever mentions the flood of owners who built tiny houses in the burbs. “MLS isn’t what it is without the Sounders.”
The Sounders aren’t what they are without Lumen Field in Seattle. Full stop.
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Catching up on Sounder at Heart
Here’s what you missed on the site this week.
World Cup
Next Seattle match: Wednesday, June 24 between Bosnia-Herzegovina and Qatar.
Sounders
Next match: July 16 hosting Portland Timbers during rivalry week.
Reign
Next match: July 4 at North Carolina
Defiance
Next match: June 21 vs Real Monarchs.
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Everything else you need to know
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NWSL and women’s soccer
Puget Sound and other stuff
Seattle, WA
Suarez’s no-hit try ends on Naylor double in seventh, but Boston still tops Seattle
Ranger Suarez carried a no-hitter into the seventh inning, and the Boston Red Sox beat the Seattle Mariners 6-2 on Friday night.
Suarez (3-3) struck out five and walked three in 6 2/3 innings. His no-hit bid ended with Josh Naylor’s one-out double in the seventh.
The 30-year-old lefty earned his first win since April 27 against Toronto.
Caleb Durbin put the Red Sox ahead with a second-inning solo homer, his fifth of the year. Durbin had his second three-hit game this season, with his first coming against Tampa Bay on June 10.
Ceddanne Rafaela scored on a wild pitch in the seventh, and Marcelo Mayer drove in two more runs with a bases-loaded single.
Carlos Narváez added a sacrifice fly before Seattle finally escaped the inning on a diving catch by Dominic Canzone in right field.
Suarez issued a two-out walk that loaded the bases in the seventh on his final pitch of the night, but Justin Slaten ended the threat by striking out pinch-hitter J.P. Crawford to preserve a 5-0 lead.
Mayer added one more insurance run with a ninth-inning RBI double. The Mariners got on the board thanks to Julio Rodríguez’s two-run homer in the ninth.
Seattle starter Bryce Miller (3-1) struck out seven in five innings. He allowed three hits and one run.
Luis Castillo, who has started in all but three of his 258 career appearances, gave up five runs in four innings of relief as the Mariners revived their “piggyback” rotation.
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