The most interesting thing about The Athletic's story isn't what Russ wanted Seattle to do, but what happened once Denver did what he wanted.
"Sports fans aren't sane or rational when their favorite teams are involved," said Clay Travis. I think the same dynamic is increasingly accurate in describing the nature of political opinions.
I made it four paragraphs into the latest what-if-he-turns-the-corner story about the Mariners outfielder before deciding I'm not wasting my spring doing that again.
Darren Rovell earns admission to the Online Clown Posse with an thoroughly ignorant description of Michael Jordan's recruitment to North Carolina.
More than half of the league's franchises have their games televised locally by cable networks who are experiencing clear financial issues.
From the Super Bowl to the superb owl that has the full and undivided attention of an entire city. Go Flaco!
I can understand why Russell Wilson would be defensive about the criticism of the Why Not You Foundation, but his response has become the biggest issue here.
All your questions about the USA Today investigation of Russell Wilson's foundation and its implications spelled out in one easy-to-read place.
I don't think Russell Wilson's foundation was a fraud or a scam, but he's not blameless, either, in what looks like a regrettably amateurish mess.
The idea that Geno Smith must be capable of leading Seattle to a Super Bowl to be worth a $30 million salary is silly. There's value in having an average starting QB in the NFL.
The biggest reason Pete Carroll does not get the credit he's due -- even after what just happened over the past 12 months -- is that he doesn't behave like people think a football coach should.
There's just one problem with the three standard explanations for why Pete Carroll has never been named the NFL's Coach of the Year: None of the are actually true.