Should a football coach — or any coach — publicly humiliate his players, as Washington State coach Mike Leach did Saturday in Salt Lake City? Vote here.
Author: Steve Rudman
Football coaches have always been a paranoid crew, but the intrusion of Twitter has sent a few over the edge, including Washington State’s Mike Leach. Note to Leach: Lighten up.
By blasting on national TV Ricardo Salazar, Sigi Schmid took a one-game hit, but it will be worth it if he rids the Sounders of the referee for the playoffs.
The Washington Huskies start the second half of the season Saturday night at Arizona, a team the Huskies handled last year in Seattle, 42-31. At 3-3, the record is probably what most reasonably expected, and maybe a little more, given that Washington defeated one team nationally ranked Stanford that it didnt figure to
AL West champion Oakland used 19 rookies during the 2012 season, including 15 on the season-ending roster, while the Mariners trotted out 12 first-year players.
Seattle had a great chance for a “Most Miserable Sports City” four-peat, but couldn’t counter Atlanta’s loss of its hockey team to Winnipeg. Vote here on why Seattle sports are so wretched.
Even if Ichiro has an uptick from his .272 (BA) season in 2011, his first without 200 hits, it’s clear than we are watching a long-time star in the process of winking out.
When we attempt to poach the Sacramento Kings (or any other NBA franchise), we want to do it with a lot more deftness than Clay Bennett exhibited when he made off with the Sonics.
In two years, ex-Seahawks Walter Jones and Shaun Alexander become Hall of Fame eligible. Jones is first-ballot worthy. Is Alexander worthy at all?
Jon Kitna, a Tacoma kid (Lincoln High) who played college football at Central Washington, had one of the more remarkable NFL careers in local sports history.