Imagine what impact J.A. Happ, a 20-game winner for Toronto, and Mark Trumbo, MLB’s leading home run hitter, might have had on the 2016 Mariners, whose trades of the pair made Seattle unique in MLB history.
Author: Steve Rudman
Put out a BOLO on the offense: The Seahawks have scored one touchdown in the first two games. What happens to such teams isn’t pretty.
The Mariners have surged close to the second wild card, but will probably have to play the final two weeks 12-4, which would be the best close in franchise history, to reach the post-season.
Seahawks QB Russell Wilson has orchestrated 19 game-winning drives, the most by any player in NFL history after the first 75 games of a career.
The Seahawks begin the 2016 season Sunday against Miami with 15 rookies. That’s a lot, but isn’t necessarily an impediment to reaching the Super Bowl.
On the final cutdown to 53, the Seahawks traded for two cornerbacks and cut 24 players, including DT Jordan Hill, G Jahri Evans, FB Will Tukuafu and CB Marcus Burley.
Entering his third season at Washington, football coach Chris Petersen finds himself in almost the same situation as Don James nearly 40 years ago.
The long hitting rehab that C Mike Zunino, Seattle’s first-round pick in 2012, underwent last season and this season at AAA Tacoma seems to have worked.
The Mariners looked like sellers when they sent Mike Montgomery to the Cubs in July, but GM Jerry Dipoto has shown since he’s intent on breaking a 15-year playoff drought.
After going hitless in his first three at-bats Sunday at Colorado, Miami’s Ichiro Suzuki ripped a seventh-inning triple off the right-field wall at Coors Field, writing his ticket to the Hall of Fame.