Sports
Seattle Mariners end 24 year drought as Cal Raleigh belts No 60 to clinch AL West crown
The Mariners stormed past the Astros with 16 wins in 17 games as Cal Raleigh’s 60th home run sealed Seattle’s first AL West title since 2001.
Ichiro Suzuki turned 51 this year, his once-jet-black hair now streaked with gray. For Seattle Mariners fans, his presence in the front office as “special assistant to the chairman” is a living reminder of just how long the franchise has waited to taste division glory again.
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Back in 2001, Ichiro was a rookie sensation, winning both American League MVP and Rookie of the Year while powering the Mariners to 116 wins and their last AL West crown. Two decades later, that magical season had begun to feel like a relic. Until now.
On Wednesday night, September 24, Seattle finally exhaled. With a 9-2 demolition of the Colorado Rockies at T-Mobile Park, the Mariners clinched their first AL West title in 24 years — riding the thunderous bat of catcher Cal Raleigh.
Raleigh’s historic blasts
Nicknamed “The Big Dumper” by fans, Raleigh has carried the Mariners all season. Against Colorado, he launched a first-inning upper-deck homer to ignite the crowd and then crushed another in the eighth for his 60th of the year. That milestone set a major league record: the most home runs ever by a primary catcher or switch-hitter.
Raleigh may not have Ichiro’s speed or 3,000-hit credentials, but his combination of power at the plate and leadership behind it has made him the heartbeat of this team.

A lineup reborn
Seattle’s surge hasn’t been about Raleigh alone. Julio Rodríguez, the electrifying center fielder, has rediscovered his form with 32 homers and 28 stolen bases, reminding fans why he’s considered one of baseball’s brightest young stars.
Meanwhile, shortstop J.P. Crawford has provided steady offense, and a bold trade-deadline move by president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto added firepower. Josh Naylor, acquired in July, has delivered an .820 OPS and valuable lineup depth. Even if veteran Eugenio Suárez has struggled, the pieces finally fit together.
Toppling the Astros dynasty
The Mariners’ charge to the top was as dramatic as it was decisive. They ripped through September with 16 wins in 17 games, erasing the Houston Astros’ stranglehold on the division. Houston had claimed seven straight full-season AL West titles, but Seattle’s late surge proved unstoppable.
The Mariners now sit at 89-69, with a real shot at locking down the American League’s second-best record and securing a first-round playoff bye. For fans who endured years of near misses and rebuilds, the sight of the AL West flag returning to Seattle is nothing short of cathartic.
A city celebrates
Seattle’s only playoff appearance in the past 25 years came in 2022, when they stunned Toronto Blue Jays in a wild-card series before falling to the Astros. This time feels different. With momentum on their side, a balanced roster, and a home crowd that has waited far too long, the Mariners are dreaming bigger.
From Ichiro’s rookie season to Cal Raleigh’s record-shattering campaign, the Mariners’ journey has come full circle. And now, after nearly a quarter-century of waiting, Seattle can finally say it again: the Mariners are champions of the AL West.
Sports
Warriors vs. Clippers Odds, Prediction, Spread: 2026 NBA Picks for Monday, March 2
The Los Angeles Clippers and Golden State Warriors meet in a pivotal NBA Pacific Division clash on Monday, March 2, 2026. Tipoff is scheduled for 10 p.m. ET at the Chase Center in San Francisco. This matchup is crucial for both teams as they jockey for playoff positioning in a tightly contested Western Conference.
The Clippers (28-31) come off a dominant 137-117 victory over the New Orleans Pelicans on Sunday. They are 13-18 on the road and 18-18 against conference opponents. Newly acquired guard Darius Garland, who joined Los Angeles from the Cleveland Cavaliers, is set to make his Clippers debut in this contest.
Meanwhile, the Warriors (31-29) are reeling from a 129-101 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers on Saturday. Golden State will be without Stephen Curry (knee), Will Richard (ankle), and Kristaps Porzingis (illness).
The all-time series favors the Warriors at 139-103, but this season the teams have split two games. Currently, the Clippers are 1.5-point favorites at DraftKings Sportsbook, with an over/under of 215.5 points. Moneyline odds list Los Angeles at -121 and Golden State at +102.

The SportsLine Projection Model, which simulates NBA games 10,000 times, projects a high-scoring affair. The Over on 215.5 points is favored, given the Clippers have gone over in four of their last five games, and the Warriors in six of their past seven. The model predicts a combined score of 228 points, with the Over hitting nearly 70% of simulations.
Star players will be in focus: Kawhi Leonard is projected to score 24.7 points for the Clippers, while De’Anthony Melton is expected to post 18.8 points for the Warriors. Both teams will have multiple scorers exceeding 10 points, highlighting a balanced offensive effort.
For betting enthusiasts, the SportsLine model indicates one side of the spread hits over 60% of the time. With injuries impacting Golden State and the Clippers’ momentum, Los Angeles may have the edge in both straight-up and spread bets. Fans and bettors can also stream the matchup via Peacock.
With playoff implications on the line, expect a high-intensity, fast-paced game where key performances from star players will decide the outcome.
Sports
Player Power, Ownership Shake-Ups, and the Breakout Moments Defining Sports in 2026
From superstar fallouts and franchise-shaking sales to a near-collapse of women’s basketball, these bold 2026 predictions hint at a sports world on the edge of transformation.
If the past few years have taught fans anything, it’s that modern sports no longer move in straight lines. Power shifts quickly. Heroes fall fast. Institutions once thought untouchable suddenly look fragile. As 2026 approaches, contributors across the sports world see fault lines forming — some subtle, others ready to snap.
Here are the bold predictions that could define the year ahead.
Luka Dončić and JJ Redick become the NBA’s loudest feud
The uneasy alliance between Luka Dončić and rookie head coach JJ Redick is expected to fracture publicly. Redick’s push for defensive accountability and conditioning clashes with Dončić’s ball-dominant style, creating tension inside the Los Angeles Lakers locker room.
With LeBron James nearing the end of his career, any chemistry issues will be magnified. League insiders already whisper that this could become the NBA’s modern version of Allen Iverson vs Larry Brown — only this time, the argument won’t be about practice, but defense.
The Auston Matthews era quietly ends in Toronto
Despite wearing the captain’s ‘C’, Auston Matthews may be nearing the end of his chapter with the Toronto Maple Leafs. Injuries, mounting pressure, and an increasingly impatient fan base have created a relationship that feels more strained than celebrated.
Toronto’s relentless media microscope hasn’t helped. While Matthews recently re-signed, 2026 could be the year both player and franchise accept that a fresh start elsewhere might be inevitable.

Audi Crooks becomes women’s basketball’s next crossover star
Few athletes are rising faster than Audi Crooks. The Iowa State Cyclones star is dominating Division I with historic scoring nights and an old-school low-post game rarely seen in today’s era.
But Crooks’ appeal goes beyond stats. Her humility, community work, and joy on the court have turned her into a symbol of women’s basketball’s next phase — mainstream, marketable, and powerful. By the end of 2026, her name may be as familiar as the game’s biggest icons.
Major colleges begin dropping sports altogether
The financial model of college athletics is cracking. NIL deals, transfer portal chaos, coast-to-coast travel, and direct athlete payments are pushing many institutions to the brink. In 2026, at least one major college is expected to either drop sports entirely or retreat to Division III.
Once that happens, others may follow. The arms race has become unsustainable, and the idea that “every school must compete at the top” is starting to collapse under its own weight.
The myth of infinite growth in sports finally breaks
For decades, sports thrived as recession-proof entertainment. But the streaming era may be where the growth curve flattens. As leagues scatter across Netflix, Apple, and subscription-heavy platforms, fans are being asked to pay more for less convenience.
The result? Fragmented audiences, slower fan regeneration, and advertisers losing interest. In 2026, sports leagues may be forced to reckon with a simple truth: attention is no longer guaranteed.
MLB avoids a lockout — barely
Despite ominous talk of a 2027 work stoppage, Major League Baseball is expected to play through the looming labor deadline. Owners pushing for a salary cap and players standing firm against it will come dangerously close to disaster.
But fresh momentum from a blockbuster World Series and the World Baseball Classic should keep both sides at the table. Too much money is flowing to shut it all down.
Public stadium funding faces its biggest backlash yet
The public financing of private stadiums may finally face organized resistance. Deals like the Kansas City Chiefs’ publicly backed mega-project have reignited anger among voters.
As political tides shift, 2026 could see grassroots campaigns turning stadium subsidies into electoral liabilities — especially as studies continue to show minimal economic return for taxpayers.

Miriam Adelson sells the Dallas Mavericks
After the stunning Luka Dončić trade fallout, Miriam Adelson may decide that owning the Dallas Mavericks isn’t worth the reputational damage. Fans already forced out former executive Nico Harrison, but the deeper wound remains.
A sale wouldn’t heal everything — but it could offer Dallas something rare in modern sports: moral closure.
The WNBA nearly collapses — then survives
The WNBA is heading toward its most dangerous standoff yet. Without a finalized CBA and expansion plans hanging in limbo, 2026 may begin with real fears of a lost season.
Players, empowered by alternatives like Unrivaled, now believe they have leverage. That belief alone could reshape negotiations. The season will happen — but only after a bruising confrontation that permanently shifts power toward players.
Sports
The Balance of Power Is Breaking How 2026 Could Redefine Sports Forever
From superstar fallouts and franchise-shaking sales to a near-collapse of women’s basketball, these bold 2026 predictions hint at a sports world on the edge of transformation.
If the past few years have taught fans anything, it’s that modern sports no longer move in straight lines. Power shifts quickly. Heroes fall fast. Institutions once thought untouchable suddenly look fragile. As 2026 approaches, contributors across the sports world see fault lines forming — some subtle, others ready to snap.
Here are the bold predictions that could define the year ahead.
Luka Dončić and JJ Redick become the NBA’s loudest feud
The uneasy alliance between Luka Dončić and rookie head coach JJ Redick is expected to fracture publicly. Redick’s push for defensive accountability and conditioning clashes with Dončić’s ball-dominant style, creating tension inside the Los Angeles Lakers locker room.
With LeBron James nearing the end of his career, any chemistry issues will be magnified. League insiders already whisper that this could become the NBA’s modern version of Allen Iverson vs Larry Brown — only this time, the argument won’t be about practice, but defense.
The Auston Matthews era quietly ends in Toronto
Despite wearing the captain’s ‘C’, Auston Matthews may be nearing the end of his chapter with the Toronto Maple Leafs. Injuries, mounting pressure, and an increasingly impatient fan base have created a relationship that feels more strained than celebrated.
Toronto’s relentless media microscope hasn’t helped. While Matthews recently re-signed, 2026 could be the year both player and franchise accept that a fresh start elsewhere might be inevitable.

Audi Crooks becomes women’s basketball’s next crossover star
Few athletes are rising faster than Audi Crooks. The Iowa State Cyclones star is dominating Division I with historic scoring nights and an old-school low-post game rarely seen in today’s era.
But Crooks’ appeal goes beyond stats. Her humility, community work, and joy on the court have turned her into a symbol of women’s basketball’s next phase — mainstream, marketable, and powerful. By the end of 2026, her name may be as familiar as the game’s biggest icons.
Major colleges begin dropping sports altogether
The financial model of college athletics is cracking. NIL deals, transfer portal chaos, coast-to-coast travel, and direct athlete payments are pushing many institutions to the brink. In 2026, at least one major college is expected to either drop sports entirely or retreat to Division III.
Once that happens, others may follow. The arms race has become unsustainable, and the idea that “every school must compete at the top” is starting to collapse under its own weight.
The myth of infinite growth in sports finally breaks
For decades, sports thrived as recession-proof entertainment. But the streaming era may be where the growth curve flattens. As leagues scatter across Netflix, Apple, and subscription-heavy platforms, fans are being asked to pay more for less convenience.
The result? Fragmented audiences, slower fan regeneration, and advertisers losing interest. In 2026, sports leagues may be forced to reckon with a simple truth: attention is no longer guaranteed.
MLB avoids a lockout — barely
Despite ominous talk of a 2027 work stoppage, Major League Baseball is expected to play through the looming labor deadline. Owners pushing for a salary cap and players standing firm against it will come dangerously close to disaster.
But fresh momentum from a blockbuster World Series and the World Baseball Classic should keep both sides at the table. Too much money is flowing to shut it all down.
Public stadium funding faces its biggest backlash yet
The public financing of private stadiums may finally face organized resistance. Deals like the Kansas City Chiefs’ publicly backed mega-project have reignited anger among voters.
As political tides shift, 2026 could see grassroots campaigns turning stadium subsidies into electoral liabilities — especially as studies continue to show minimal economic return for taxpayers.

Miriam Adelson sells the Dallas Mavericks
After the stunning Luka Dončić trade fallout, Miriam Adelson may decide that owning the Dallas Mavericks isn’t worth the reputational damage. Fans already forced out former executive Nico Harrison, but the deeper wound remains.
A sale wouldn’t heal everything — but it could offer Dallas something rare in modern sports: moral closure.
The WNBA nearly collapses — then survives
The WNBA is heading toward its most dangerous standoff yet. Without a finalized CBA and expansion plans hanging in limbo, 2026 may begin with real fears of a lost season.
Players, empowered by alternatives like Unrivaled, now believe they have leverage. That belief alone could reshape negotiations. The season will happen — but only after a bruising confrontation that permanently shifts power toward players.
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