Major Domino Falls: Kraken and Ron Francis Part Ways as Franchise Seeks ‘New Direction’
Analysis Nick Lee Analysis Nick Lee

Major Domino Falls: Kraken and Ron Francis Part Ways as Franchise Seeks ‘New Direction’

Ron Francis will be stepping down as the Seattle Kraken’s president of hockey operations at the end of the 2025-26 regular season, which will conclude on April 16. The move was announced by the team on Wednesday, described as a mutual agreement between Francis and Kraken CEO Tod Leiweke.

It is not a firing, as both sides framed it as the right time for a “thoughtful transition” and a chance for the organization to “move in a new direction.”

Francis, 63, had been with the Kraken since July 2019 as the franchise’s very first general manager. He built the team from scratch, overseeing the expansion draft, hiring the first coach, setting up the AHL affiliate, and navigating the team launch amid the COVID era. He deserves credit for helping get this franchise off the ground.

Read More
Three Trade-Down Scenarios for Seahawks During 2026 NFL Draft
Analysis Nick Lee Analysis Nick Lee

Three Trade-Down Scenarios for Seahawks During 2026 NFL Draft

It’s well-documented that the Seahawks have just four draft picks in the upcoming 2026 draft. That could mean the Seahawks aren’t enthused about the depth of the talent pool in this class. Whatever it means, it’s because they shipped fourth and fifth round picks to New Orleans for Rashid Shaheed (worth it). Cleveland agreed to send their 2026 sixth rounder for Seattle to send them Nick Harris and a seventh rounder.

Roy Robertson-Harris went to the Seahawks from the Jaguars, to whom Seattle shipped a sixth round pick.

For that reason, Seattle has just four picks in the first, second, third, and sixth rounds.

As we know, John Schneider is one of the bigger wheeler-and-dealers on draft day. He’s as savvy as any general manager in the NFL when trading down in the draft. By virtue of the Seahawks winning the Super Bowl, they own the last pick of the first round.

Will Schneider opt to gain another pick or two and sacrifice his first-round pick in the process? It’s certainly possible.

Let’s explore three scenarios for the Seahawks trading down to recoup a pick or two later in the draft.

Read More
Sounders Stumble in Monterrey, Drop First Leg of Concacaf Quarterfinal vs. Tigres
News, Analysis Qasim Ali News, Analysis Qasim Ali

Sounders Stumble in Monterrey, Drop First Leg of Concacaf Quarterfinal vs. Tigres

The Seattle Sounders were looking for the sound of silence at Estadio Universitario in Monterrey, Mexico on Wednesday night. But in the 79th minute of their Concacaf Champions Cup quarterfinals first-leg duel with Liga MX side Tigres UANL, all they got was a deafening scene. Fans jumped in unison as their team had just scored a second goal to make it 2-0 and fought for a third, as the Sounders went on to suffer their first loss in any competition since February.

The Sounders will return to Lumen Field for the first time since Feb. 22 on April 15 to see out the second leg of the fixture, down 2-0 with a full week to lick its wounds.

Read More
Mariners Trajectory Rapidly Approaches Inflection Point with Fifth Straight Loss
News, Analysis Callaghan Bluechel News, Analysis Callaghan Bluechel

Mariners Trajectory Rapidly Approaches Inflection Point with Fifth Straight Loss

Despite an impressively bad two-decade playoff drought to begin the millennium, the Mariners haven’t been in the habit of fully burying themselves three weeks into the year, usually waiting until May to let everything fall apart in their down years, missing the mark in September during their good years, and crashing into the last wall like George Russell in Singapore in their great years.

But inexplicably yet unsurprisingly, the proverbial team bus looks like it’s being steered by a tumbleweed through a baker’s dozen games in 2026. The team’s stellar pitching has carried them to four wins, but a combination of atrocious defense and somehow worse hitting dropped their ninth game of the year (and fifth in a row) on Wednesday afternoon.

Seattle suffered their third (kind of fourth) shutout of the season, barely avoiding getting no-hit by MacKenzie Gore and co.

The Mariners offense, team-wide, has been having the kind of performance where 105 mile an hour groundouts to short are hopeful signs because the team is usually hitting 75 mile an hour groundouts to first.

Read More
Top-30/Local Visits Tracker: Who Have Seahawks Met With Leading Up to 2026 NFL Draft?
Analysis, Offseason Tracker Corbin Smith Analysis, Offseason Tracker Corbin Smith
Preview

Top-30/Local Visits Tracker: Who Have Seahawks Met With Leading Up to 2026 NFL Draft?

With the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine in the rearview mirror and free agency well underway, the Seattle Seahawks and all 32 NFL teams are in the midst of scheduling and conducting their pre-draft top-30 visits.

In this process, each NFL team can bring in up to 30 players to their respective facilities for interviews and meetings with coaches as well as medical examinations and physicals. In addition, teams can also bring in local players for official visits, which do not count as one of the top-30 visits. While these on-site meetings are only part of the evaluation process leading up to the three-day event, they can play a critical role in determining where each player ends up on draft weekend.

Which players have already met with the Seahawks or are scheduled to come to town for top-30 visits and local visits before the 2026 NFL Draft?

Read More
Which Players Have Seahawks Drafted After Official 30 Pre-Draft Visits?
Analysis Corbin Smith Analysis Corbin Smith
Preview

Which Players Have Seahawks Drafted After Official 30 Pre-Draft Visits?

With the 2026 NFL Draft less than three weeks away in Pittsburgh, the Seattle Seahawks and all 32 teams are tying up loose ends and finishing official visits with a variety of prospects. These on-site meetings allow players to meet with coaches and personnel staff as well as undergo medical examinations and physicals.

So far, the Seahawks have been linked to 15 prospects for official 30 visits, including multiple potential first-round targets such as Tennessee cornerback Colton Hood and Missouri defensive end Zion Young.

In terms of relevance, the majority of players who fly out to Seattle for these pre-draft visits won't be drafted by the team, as only 26 of their 137 draft choices since 2011 have been used on players reported to make those visits, or just 18.9%. However, recent history suggests at least one of their slated four picks in this year’s draft will be a player who visited the team facility this spring, while several others could be signed as priority undrafted free agents or brought in for a tryout at rookie minicamp. These visits offer plenty of significance for general manager John Schneider and the front office, and that trend continued even after the arrival of Mike Macdonald as Pete Carroll’s successor.

Looking back at their past 15 drafts, with 2021 being excluded due to most visits being done virtually because of COVID protocols, which players who reportedly attended official “30” visits at the VMAC wound up being drafted or signing with the team?

Read More
Familiar Culprits Waste Kirby Complete Game as M’s Drop Fourth Straight
News, Analysis Callaghan Bluechel News, Analysis Callaghan Bluechel

Familiar Culprits Waste Kirby Complete Game as M’s Drop Fourth Straight

The Mariners fielded their first full top-depth lineup of the 2026 season on Tuesday, but it didn’t lead to much production on the offensive side of the ball. The defense - this time, even standout defender Cole Young, though through positioning and not bad glovework per se - continued giving away runs to the Mariners’ opponents on the way to a one-run loss thanks to said baffled bats.

Kirby worked very efficiently early in the game, but yet more hibernating hitters and letdowns on defense gave him his first career loss to Texas.

Brendan Donovan hit a home run on the very first pitch of the game. Cal Raleigh had an excellent two-out piece of hitting against a top-edge fastball, driving it into center for an RBI single. That was the only hit with runners in scoring position, bringing the team’s RISP slash line down to .216/.327/.371. 

But with a guy on the mound with a career 1.04 ERA against the Texas Rangers, those two runs still gave them a shot.

Read More
Huskies Talented, Inexperienced Receivers Battle for Roles During Spring Ball
News, Analysis Aaron Coe News, Analysis Aaron Coe

Huskies Talented, Inexperienced Receivers Battle for Roles During Spring Ball

The Washington Huskies football game at Wisconsin last season served as the low point for many.

For receiver Rashid Williams, it was the lowest of the low.

After setting himself apart during 2025 spring and fall camps, Williams earned the starting “Z” receiver position and opened the season with four catches in a 38-21 win over Colorado State. A week later he caught a 27-yard pass on the offense’s first play against UC Davis that ultimately served as the beginning of the end when he broke his collarbone at the end of the play.

That was a low, but things would get lower. After two months of healing and rehab, Williams came back, ready to regain his place in the Huskies offense as the 6-2 team tried to get back into the College Football Playoff conversation. Williams never made it onto the field at Camp Randall, though. He suffered a second injury during practice when his hand got caught in a teammate’s facemask.

Season over.

Read More
Washington State Names Jon Harrlow as Permanent Athletic Director, Removes Interim Label
News Jacob Stevenson News Jacob Stevenson

Washington State Names Jon Harrlow as Permanent Athletic Director, Removes Interim Label

Washington State University athletics has officially named Jon Haarlow as its full-time athletic director, promoting him after he served in the interim role since November.

Haarlow stepped in as interim AD following the dismissal of former athletic director Anne McCoy. Prior to that, he had been serving as the university’s senior associate athletic director and chief financial officer since 2021, where he built a reputation for strong financial leadership and strategic planning.

Read More
Storm Core Ezi Magbegor, Extend Reserved Qualifying Offers to 2 Others
News, Analysis Connor Benintendi News, Analysis Connor Benintendi

Storm Core Ezi Magbegor, Extend Reserved Qualifying Offers to 2 Others

The Seattle Storm made a trio of qualifying offers on Tuesday as they attempt to retain Ezi Magbegor, Mackenzie Holmes and Zia Cooke, per the WNBA’s transaction wire.

Seattle extended a core qualifying offer to Magbegor, which is a one-year, fully guaranteed deal valued at the new supermax figure of $1.4 million. It does not guarantee Magbegor will sign for that amount, but it does give Seattle exclusive negotiating rights.

Read More
Meza, McCammon Shine For Reign as Products of Texas Youth Club Solar SC
Features Qasim Ali Features Qasim Ali

Meza, McCammon Shine For Reign as Products of Texas Youth Club Solar SC

Sam Meza and Ainsley McCammon have become a staple in the Seattle Reign's midfield this season. The duo has started three of four games for the upstart Reign (3-1-1), who have notched nine or more points over their first four games for the third time in club history (per OptaJack) in 2026.

Meza, 24, and McCammon, 18, however, are at very different points in their career. For one, Meza had a decorated four-year collegiate career at North Carolina, reaching as far as the NCAA tournament's quarterfinals in her All-American career. McCammon, on the other hand, decided to go pro at just 16 years old, passing on a collegiate career with the University of Virginia.

But the duo, as different as their paths and current situations have been, both joined the Reign in 2024, and both have become integral pieces to the future of a young organization. Through five games in 2026, the Reign are hitting their stride going into the current three-week international break, with Meza and McCammon bringing stability to a team dealing with injuries to stars like defender Jordyn Bugg.

Beyond joining Seattle at the same time, they share a background in both being from the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area and both spending time with the youth organization of Solar Soccer Club.

Read More
Analysis: Identifying Best Safety Fits for Seahawks’ 2026 Draft Picks
Analysis Corbin Smith Analysis Corbin Smith

Analysis: Identifying Best Safety Fits for Seahawks’ 2026 Draft Picks

Despite watching Coby Bryant flee the nest to sign a big money contract with the Chicago Bears, the Seattle Seahawks should still be in fine shape at the safety spot both in terms of talent and depth rolling into the 2026 season.

Even without Bryant, the Seahawks have former Pro Bowler Julian Love returning under contract for two more years as well as budding star Nick Emmanwori, who emerged as a key catalyst in Mike Macdonald’s defense playing everywhere from the slot to defensive end. In addition, Ty Okada performed admirably in 11 starts subbing in for Love and Bryant, earning himself an opportunity to play significant snaps moving forward as the team’s third safety. In free agency, the team further bolstered depth by signing former Colts starter Rodney Thomas and bringing back veteran D’Anthony Bell.

Still, given Macdonald’s propensity for deploying nickel and dime packages with five or more defensive backs and often utilizing three or more safeties on the field at the same time, Seattle may be inclined to look for additional reinforcements with the 2026 NFL Draft featuring a rock solid class at the position. This includes in the first round, where as many as three or four safeties could hear their names called on April 23 in Pittsburgh.

Looking at this year’s latest crop of safeties, which players stand out as the best potential fits to succeed Bryant and further reinforce the Seahawks’ secondary for 2026 and beyond with each of their four selections?

Read More
Gonzaga’s Depth Takes Big Hit as Braeden Smith, Steele Venters Enter Transfer Portal
News, Analysis Howard Woodard News, Analysis Howard Woodard

Gonzaga’s Depth Takes Big Hit as Braeden Smith, Steele Venters Enter Transfer Portal

With the NCAA transfer portal officially opening on Tuesday, two more names from Gonzaga’s 2025-26 roster have thrown their names into the hat. Both falling out of the rotation’s favor by season’s end, Braeden Smith and Steele Venters are both headed to the portal, becoming the third and fourth Zags to do so at this point in the offseason.

Smith began the year as GU’s starting point guard before getting lapped by freshman Mario Saint-Supéry midway through the season, as the Spaniard brought more to the floor offensively and defensively. The 6-0 redshirt junior continued to get into each game, but his minutes both dwindled and became inconsistent.

Venters entered the season healthy for the first time in three years after suffering a torn ACL and Achilles, respectively, before each of the two previous seasons kicked off. The 6-7 graduate student was meant to be a sniper from the outside, and even though he shot 36.7% from the outside – the second-highest mark on the team – it wasn’t enough to make up for his deficiencies defensively, even for a Bulldogs group that was devoid of three-point shooting.

Read More
Seattle U’s Offseason Begins with Trio of Redhawks Entering Transfer Portal
News Hayden Wysup News Hayden Wysup

Seattle U’s Offseason Begins with Trio of Redhawks Entering Transfer Portal

Since the Seattle Redhawks season ended two weeks ago at the hands of the Auburn Tigers in the NIT, the program has had three players enter the transfer portal looking for new teams for the 2026-27 season.

Senior guard John Christofilis became the first Redhawk to officially enter the portal Tuesday. Still with one year of eligibility remaining, he appeared in 35 games and averaged 6.5 points on 38% from three-point range in 16 minutes per game.  

This season, Christofilis saw a decrease in playing time from the previous two seasons. In both his sophomore and junior seasons, he started 25 games and played averaged over 25 minutes per game. While he served as a spark off the bench, scoring double digits in nine games, the senior lost opportunities to Jojo Murphy, who became the first guard off the bench for coach Chris Victor.

Read More
Bats Go from Quiet to Silent, Mariners Drop Third Straight to Open Texas Series
News, Analysis Callaghan Bluechel News, Analysis Callaghan Bluechel

Bats Go from Quiet to Silent, Mariners Drop Third Straight to Open Texas Series

Sometimes, when a good team is in a rut of bad performance, it only takes one good break to open the floodgates and turn things around.

But when the M’s put up eight against the Guardians, or walked off the Yankees, or stole a theretofore scoreless match in extras from the Angels - or when Cal Raleigh launched one halfway into the upper deck on Monday night in Arlington, Texas - it was less like the great floodgates opening and releasing an overpowering torrent and more like little droplets of water gathering on the collection surface of a solar desalination plant: the tiny pellet of hydration was followed by yet more aridity.

Cal Raleigh finally found his stroke in his first at-bat of the game, torching a middle-middle Jacob DeGrom fastball 418 feet to right field.

What’s that old saying about the darkest time of the night? Well, the sun only shone for one at-bat in the top of the first and then quickly went away again (what’s the inverse of an eclipse?), but at least Cal Raleigh got himself into the .500s in OPS (talk about scarce droplets of water!) by the end of the night.

Read More
Analysis: Could Seahawks Make a Run at Trading for Giants Star Dexter Lawrence?
Analysis Corbin Smith Analysis Corbin Smith

Analysis: Could Seahawks Make a Run at Trading for Giants Star Dexter Lawrence?

During the heat of the first round of the 2019 NFL Draft, with six picks until the team’s No. 21 overall selection, Seattle Seahawks general manager John Schneider, then-coach Pete Carroll, and every other staff member in attendance in the war room sat on pins and needles.

As if often the case during draft weekend, Schneider and company found themselves sweating things out with a coveted prospect still on the board in Clemson defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence, who they hoped would fall to them to become the cornerstone of a rebuilt ‘Hawks defensive line. In several instances, including with receiver Jaxon Smith-Nijgba under similar circumstances in 2023, the franchise has lucked out with the desired prospect remaining available once they were on the clock.

But on this April day in 2023, good fortune would not be on Seattle’s side. The New York Giants prevented Schneider from landing his top target, selecting Lawrence 17th overall to abruptly end the dream. Two picks later, Denver selected Iowa tight end Noah Fant, another player that Schneider had a high grade on who would have been in play with pick No. 21.

Eight years later, just as Schneider previously did acquiring Fant as part of the blockbuster Russell Wilson deal with the Broncos in 2022, the Seahawks may now have a chance to rectify that ill-fated turn of events. Per Adam Schefter of ESPN, Lawrence has requested a trade from the Giants and will not report to the team’s offseason program after multiple years of failed attempts to negotiate a new contract.

Read More
Emmanuel Innocenti Enters Transfer Portal, Leaves Gonzaga Devoid of Defense
News, Analysis Howard Woodard News, Analysis Howard Woodard

Emmanuel Innocenti Enters Transfer Portal, Leaves Gonzaga Devoid of Defense

With the Gonzaga Bulldogs leaning heavily into the defensive side of the ball entering the 2025-26 season, they had two impactful players in mind that were already on its roster. One was Jalen Warley, who transferred in from Virginia midway through the previous season and is now graduating after a stellar season as the team’s versatile chess piece.

The other was Emmanuel Innocenti, who transferred to the Zags after playing his freshman year with Tarleton State, and was limited to more of a reserve role with GU during the 2024-25 campaign. But after emerging as a key starter for the Bulldogs this past year, Innocenti’s agency, “THE·TEAM”, surprisingly told DraftExpress that the incoming senior intends to enter the transfer portal with one year of eligibility remaining, leaving a larger hole in Gonzaga’s defensive personnel.

The Zags have typically done an admirable job of retaining players year-over-year in this era of frequent player movement, but Innocenti will be headed elsewhere after an impactful season spearheading the Bulldogs’ stout defense, announcing his departure from Spokane four days after redshirt freshman Cade Orness did the same.

Read More
Kraken Need a Shake-Up to End Era of Passive Mediocrity
Analysis Nick Lee Analysis Nick Lee

Kraken Need a Shake-Up to End Era of Passive Mediocrity

The Seattle Kraken are in a tailspin. It seems their season is circling the drain, destined to sink to the bottom of the Pacific. At least metaphorically, as the Vancouver Canucks will finish in last place in the division.

MoneyPuck.com has the Kraken’s playoff chances, as of Sunday night, at 0.7%. They are all but eliminated. They had every opportunity to grab a spot in a historically bad Pacific Division and Western Conference. Yet they failed.

With the current Pacific Division leaders at 87 points with five games to play, this was a weak division. 87 points would be outside of a playoff spot altogether in the Eastern Conference. In short, the Kraken let a golden opportunity to make the Stanley Cup Playoffs for just the second time in the franchise’s first five years slip away.

So, what now? Who is to blame?

Read More
Mariners Waste Lucky Breaks that Angels Take, Drop Series with 8-7 Loss in Extras
News, Analysis Callaghan Bluechel News, Analysis Callaghan Bluechel

Mariners Waste Lucky Breaks that Angels Take, Drop Series with 8-7 Loss in Extras

There’s always a strange air around games between the Angels and Mariners. Any divisional rivalry series will have an edge to it, but for the Halos and M’s, it just feels a bit different.

It probably has something to do with this: the modern Perry Minasian Angels are a mirror of the Jack Zduriencik-era Mariners: both teams stuck in the doldrums of mediocrity, wasting the career of two generational players (one Japanese superstar each), but each doing it in the opposite way. 

Where the 2010s M’s caromed between 95-loss disasters and missing the playoffs by a game or two, the 2020s Angels hover around 70-75 wins year-in and year-out. The Zduriencik Mariners failed to shore up generational pitcher Felix Hernández, while the Minasian Angels have left future Hall of Fame center fielder Mike Trout out to dry. Ichiro was the first Japanese position player to light up the MLB (doing so with an old-school Wee Willie Keeler-style approach), but was nearing the last few years of his career by the time Zduriencik sent him to the Yankees. Shohei Ohtani, a much more homer-focused modern great (who, by the way, can also pitch) was a few years into his pro career before going to Anaheim. 

Read More
Sounders Steal One in H-Town, Rothrock Stars Again
Analysis, Game Day Qasim Ali Analysis, Game Day Qasim Ali

Sounders Steal One in H-Town, Rothrock Stars Again

The Seattle Sounders are rolling.

Even as a lightning delay derailed the beginning of the game and the Houston Dynamo gave Seattle's offense fits all night, the Sounders refused to stop rolling.

Paul Rothrock scored his fifth goal in all competitions to break a scoreless deadlock in the 83rd, turning a solid draw into a stolen 1-0 road win on Saturday night, as Seattle carries its road warrior persona through early April with a six-game unbeaten streak in all competitions.

"It's not easy to win on the road, it's not easy to even get points on the road, a draw. But we came out with a gritty performance because the guys just grinded it out," Seattle head coach Brian Schmetzer said.

Indeed, the Sounders earned the points despite the first leg of their Concacaf Champions Cup quarterfinals matchup with Mexican giant Tigres looming on Wednesday. As such, Schmetzer rotated and leaned on a roster that has well over 11 starters, by his account, to get it done on a soggy night in Houston.

Read More

ALL SEATTLE SPORTS, ALL THE TIME

Explore our latest Seattle sports content by clicking on your favorite team(s) below!

Emerald City Spectrum - Washington State Cougars