Seattle, WA
Why Seattle Mariners' Andrés Muñoz takes his cat on the road
Not including spring training, the Seattle Mariners’ players and coaching staff spend nearly 90 days on the road each season.
Five key questions the Mariners face down the stretch
Many bring items from home to make life on the road more comfortable. For some, it’s a pillow. Others bring noise machines to help sleep. Many travel with video games, and there has been a guitar that has accumulated miles as well. But the most unique item comes with All-Star closer Andrés Muñoz.
“Oh, my cat,” he answered when asked about the little something extra he brings from home.
Yes, Andrés Muñoz travels with his cat.
“The name of my cat is Matilda,” he continued. “She has traveled with me almost all the time. Every time my wife is coming on the road trips, we bring our cat. We don’t like to leave her with somebody else.”
(Photo provided by the Muñoz family)
Wives of players often fly separately to meet the team in the cities they travel to. In the case of Muñoz’s wife Wendy, she has company with Matilda making the trips as well in her carry-on cat carrier.
With the ordeals Matilda has already faced, it is perhaps understandable that Andrés and Wendy would not want to leave her behind. Matilda is a rescue cat whose life, if not for the Muñoz family, would be grim. The cat lived near Andrés’ brother but had been left behind when her owners separated. A friend was supposed to take care of her but did little more than throw her food for the better part of two years.
“They didn’t take care of anything,” Muñoz said. “They were just throwing her food. She was dirty. She was in a really bad condition.”
The more Munoz heard about the cat, the more he knew he needed to do something. Having grown up surrounded by many animals in the farming community of Los Mochis, Mexico, he has strong feelings about how they should be treated. He made the decision they were going to rescue Matilda.
“We don’t like to see cats or dogs or whatever animal suffering. If you buy or if you rescue a cat, you have to take care of it,” he said. “And that was the most important thing for for me, just to take care of that cat.”
After being taken from the situation she was in, Matilda spent a month in veterinary care.
“One month later she was with us,” he said. “Now she’s here, travels to a lot of places, and now she have a lot of food. And now she has the most important thing that is love. I think that was good to see her happy. Sometimes I say she’s mad because she travels a lot but we know that it is about having a lot better life than she used to have.”
While saying he likes all animals, dogs included, it is clear Muñoz is a cat person.
“I know a lot of people think that they are on on their own, but most of the time they try to be with you all the time,” he said. “If she doesn’t see me for 10 days or whatever, I come back and she’s so friendly, so affectionate. So it’s really good to see of that kind of response from the cat that she’s living a good life.”
Thanks to Andrés and Wendy Muñoz, Matilda is living a big league life.
Listen to the Shannon Drayer’s conversation with Andrés Muñoz from the Mariners Radio Network pregame show in the podcast at this link or in the player near the top of this post.
More on the Seattle Mariners
• Mariners Notebook: Justin Turner doesn’t miss time after HBP
• The ‘animated’ Víctor Robles has been Mariners’ biggest pickup
• The impact Justin Turner can provide Mariners goes beyond his bat
• Seattle’s No. 1 prospect has landed with the Everett AquaSox
• Seattle Mariners Insider: Adjustments pay off for Mitch Haniger
Seattle, WA
Seattle mayor grilled over public safety, affordability, CCTV
Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson answered pressing questions about the city’s most pressing issues, including the steps she’s taking to protect residents’ public safety and affordability, while also touching on activating CCTV cameras across the city.
Seattle, WA
New Ben & Jerry’s location opening at Seattle waterfront’s Pier 54
Anyone waiting for the ferry, taking a stroll along the revamped Seattle waterfront or visiting the Seattle Aquarium just got a new option for finding a sweet treat: Ben & Jerry’s is coming to Pier 54.
A lease announcement last week shared that the new shop will be operated by local franchise owners Lance and Moria Blair, owners of the Green Lake and Gig Harbor Ben & Jerry’s locations. They pair is also opening another Seattle location in Northgate soon.
The permanent shop announcement comes after Ben & Jerry’s operated a pop-up at the waterfront location last simmer.
“As a Seattle native, the waterfront holds a special place in my heart,” Lance Blair said in a news release. “I could not be more excited to be a part of bringing Ben & Jerry’s to Pier 54 and continue building connections with the local community while serving visitors from around the world.”
The new location comes as local ice cream chains Molly Moon’s and Salt & Straw have also expanded into the downtown area in the past year.
Where is the new Ben & Jerry’s location?
The new Ben & Jerry’s is located at Pier 54 on the Seattle Waterfront: 1001 Alaskan Way, Seattle, WA 98104.
The shop will be open Monday through Friday from 11:30 a.m. – 8:30 p.m.
Where are the other Ben & Jerry’s locations in Seattle?
The ice cream chain operates four other locations in the Seattle area:
- Alki Beach: 2742 Alki Ave SW, Seattle, WA 98116
- Bellevue: 166 Bellevue Way NE Bellevue, WA 98004
- Green Lake: 7900 E Green Lake Drive N Suite 104, Seattle, WA 98103
- Kirkland: 176 Lake Street South, Kirkland, WA 98033
How many locations does Ben & Jerry’s have in Washington?
Ben & Jerry’s has ten locations across Washington, including two in Issaquah and three in the Spokane area. See the full list of locations at benjerry.com/ice-cream-near-me.
Zachary Fletcher is a trending news reporter with USA TODAY Network’s Washington state team. Keep up with him on X (@zdfletch), BlueSky (@zfletcher.bsky.social) or reach him at zfletcher@usatodayco.com.
Seattle, WA
VIDEO: Mayor Wilson proposes renewing, expanding Seattle Transit Measure by doubling the sales-tax percentage that funds it.
Through the end of this year, 0.15% of the sales tax you pay funds the voter-approved Seattle Transit Measure. That would double to 0.30% if the City Council and Seattle voters approve the renewal/expansion that Mayor Katie Wilson officially introduced this afternoon. She said it’ll make living in Seattle more affordable by enabling more people to “live car-free or car-light.” She acknowledged that raising the sales tax isn’t ideal but noted that it’s one of the few revenue-raising tools available under state law. Besides paying for more transit – 280,000 additional Metro bus trips a year, 100,000 more than the current measure funds – it also would pay for 22,000 free ORCA transit passes, more than double what the city provides now, said acting SDOT director Angela Brady during the announcement event at City Hall. The passes are now available to Seattle Promise scholars, low-income Seattle Preschool Program families, and Seattle Housing Authority residents. The measure’s renewal/expansion would also make those passes available to Housing Choice Voucher participants.
The mayor’s announcement says the Transit Measure isn’t just about buses: It also would “support the design and delivery of Sound Transit’s West Seattle Link Extension, Ballard Link Extension, and Graham Street Station.” The 0.30% sales tax would generate an estimated $138 million average per year for the 10 years of this measure, which is proposed to go to voters in November. Council review starts this Thursday and will be led by District 1 City Councilmember Rob Saka, who chairs the council committee that oversees transportation. We’ll add the specific text of the proposal when we get it; the slide deck for Thursday’s council meeting is now available, and we’ll add some highlights from that soon.
-
Wyoming2 minutes agoWyoming reports first rabies case of season in Sheridan County
-
Crypto7 minutes agoVietnam Gov’t seeks Bybit’s support in developing cryptocurrency market – TNGlobal
-
Finance14 minutes agoHow Applied Materials Is Driving Transformation of the Finance Function with SAP Taulia
-
Fitness17 minutes agoPhysical fitness is linked to brain health in young adults, but the effects differ by sex
-
Movie Reviews29 minutes agoMovie Review: Travolta’s “Propeller: One-Way Night Coach” is One for the Ages — All Ages
-
World37 minutes ago
A new kind of date makes personal to-do lists a reason to get together with friends
-
Lifestyle1 hour agoHow having zero points in tennis — or ‘love’ — came to sound so sweet
-
Technology1 hour agoAmazon develops a warehouse robot workers can speak to