How is Seattle going to find Russell Wilson's successor? Same way the Seahawks found him, judging by this weekend's draft.
You an argue with the effectiveness with which Seattle tried to build an offensive line, but that doesn't mean they haven't tried.
John Schneider doesn't always trade back in the first round, and I think his approach from 2010 to 2012 is much more indicative of what we'll see from the Seahawks in Thursday's first round.
Now everyone wants to be like the Rams, dealing first-round picks for stars, but general manager John Schneider was doing that before Matthew Stafford was even a twinkle in Les Snead's eye.
Pete Carroll's first words after the trade of Russell Wilson give us an idea of the stakes in this week's draft as Seattle fully turns the page on the personnel from its title-winning team.
I don't think I need to apologize for what I wrote about Russell Wilson earlier this week, but I don't feel good about it, either, and I'm going to figure out why that is.
Russell Wilson's real-estate transactions are the latest example of him being an attention hound, only now, I don't have to shrug that off as the tradeoff for having such a great player.
We're only a week into the season, and I'm already micromanaging at-bats and celebrating a two-run homer on a Thursday game in Chicago as if it's a long-awaited triumph. I need help. Soon.
Settling for a quarterback who's merely good is worse than drafting a bad one, and the Raiders are following the Vikings down a path the Seahawks should avoid at all costs.
Same ol' Mariners, finding a way to win those one-run games as Robbie Ray was really good, Logan Gilbert was great and Eugenio Suarez is going to drive me nuts. A wrap up of Weekend No. 1.
I don't think Pete Carroll deserves credit for supporting Colin Kaepernick or calling out NFL owners on hiring practices, but I find it exceptionally strange that he catches so much criticism for it.
We need to talk about why you shouldn't read too much into a recent report about D.K. Metcalf's availability before I take my best guess at what's going to happen.