SEATTLE — The confetti had barely settled inside the Superdome when the narrative shifted from celebration to something bigger, something louder, something that feels almost cinematic. Eleven years after the New England Patriots crushed Seattle’s dynasty dreams in one of the most agonizing endings in Super Bowl history, the Seahawks stormed back and dominated the Patriots in Super Bowl 60, rewriting their legacy in bold ink. And at the center of it all stood Sam Darnold — once discarded, doubted, labeled a cautionary tale — now hoisting the Lombardi Trophy as the ultimate redemption figure in a city that suddenly feels like the capital of second chances.
“This team can keep winning these,” one league analyst said moments after the final whistle, as Seattle’s sideline erupted and a generation of fans exhaled at once. It wasn’t just a championship. It was closure. It was revenge. It was resurrection.

And if the energy coursing through the Pacific Northwest right now feels different, that’s because it is. Redemption is no longer just a football storyline — it’s becoming Seattle’s defining sports identity for 2026.
Here’s where things get truly seismic.
Even before the Seahawks’ victory parade route was mapped out, a report surfaced that could shake the city’s foundations in the best possible way. Brad Townsend of the Dallas Morning News reported that the NBA Board of Governors is expected to vote this summer on expanding by two teams — and Seattle, alongside Las Vegas, is favored.
Let that sink in.
Eighteen years after the SuperSonics were ripped away and reborn in Oklahoma City, Seattle might finally be on the verge of reclaiming its basketball soul. The irony is almost poetic. Just one year removed from the “Zombie Sonics” — the Thunder — winning their first championship since leaving the Emerald City, the NBA may be preparing to right one of the most painful relocations in modern sports history.
Add in last week’s meeting between Washington’s governor and the NBA commissioner, and suddenly this isn’t just wishful thinking whispered in coffee shops. It’s real. It’s procedural. It’s possible.
If it happens, it won’t just be expansion. It will be redemption, Part II.

But wait — there’s more. Because the biggest redemption story of all might still be unfolding on the diamond.
The Seattle Mariners, the only MLB franchise never to reach the World Series, came closer in 2025 than ever before. They pushed to their first Game 7 in franchise history in the American League Championship Series, only to watch their dreams shatter on a late, backbreaking home run against the Toronto Blue Jays. It was cruel. It was haunting. It felt eerily familiar to longtime Seattle fans conditioned by heartbreak.
And yet, history may be whispering something different this time.
The Mariners didn’t retreat this offseason. They re-signed first baseman Josh Naylor. They pulled off a bold three-team trade to acquire All-Star utility weapon Brendan Donovan. The roster looks deeper. Sharper. Hungrier. Fangraphs now gives Seattle the best odds in the American League to win the 2026 World Series at 7.8%. Not hype — math.
There’s even a karmic blueprint to follow. In 2003, the Boston Red Sox lost Game 7 of the ALCS on a crushing home run. In 2004, they came back and ended one of the longest title droughts in sports history — the same year the New England Patriots won the Super Bowl. The last time an NFL and MLB team from the same city won championships in the same year? Boston, 2004.
Now fast-forward. The Seahawks have done their part. The Mariners lost a devastating Game 7 just last October.
You see where this is going.

Seattle suddenly feels like it’s standing at the edge of something historic — not just one championship, but a cascading wave of them. The Seahawks’ victory no longer feels like an isolated triumph. It feels like the opening act.
Could the Mariners be next? Could T-Mobile Park host the final out of a World Series that erases five decades of frustration? Could the NBA return, restoring the green-and-gold heartbeat of a city that never stopped chanting “Save Our Sonics”?
It sounds almost too perfect. Too cinematic. Too scripted.
But sports, as Seattle just proved, loves a redemption arc.
Sam Darnold was left for dead in the national conversation. Now he’s a champion. The Seahawks were once defined by a one-yard-line nightmare. Now they’ve buried it. The Mariners were one swing away from heartbreak. Now they’re statistical favorites. The Sonics were history. Now they’re possibility.
Seattle isn’t just chasing titles in 2026. It’s chasing vindication. Closure. Destiny.
And if the dominoes keep falling the way they have this week, we may be witnessing the greatest and happiest year in Seattle sports history — one that transforms the Emerald City from passionate underdog into the undeniable center of the sports universe.
The redemption tour has already begun.
The only question left is how far it goes.