Paul Mullen could literally feel that it was time to retire.
It was as if his body was telling him to step down as Redmond High’s head wrestling coach after 22 years.
Paul Mullen could literally feel that it was time to retire.
It was as if his body was telling him to step down as Redmond High’s head wrestling coach after 22 years.
A semi-truck crossed the center line, rolled onto its side and slid into a guardrail in the 12400 block of West Snoqualmie Valley Road off Northeast Novelty Hill Road at about 2 p.m. on Thursday.
Hopelink unveiled its first-ever impact report last week to a roomful of its partners, local public officials and community leaders who all have a hand in supporting the Redmond-based community action agency.
Manager Ben Floyd and his associates couldn’t wait until 4 p.m. They were thrilled to unveil their new Haggen supermarket with customers, so they opened the doors a few minutes early on Tuesday.
Nine beers a-flowing and a load of smiles and congratulatory pats on the back.
That was the scene at the Feb. 27 grand-opening gathering for the Postdoc Brewing Company in Redmond, which featured a large crowd spilling into the brewery and tap room and Mayor John Marchione cracking a cask.
Whenever friends needed him, Mike Ey was reliable and always there for them.
“If you made plans, he would never flake. You could always call him and depend on him to be there for you at any time, for any reason,” said Philippe Johnson. “He really put his friends before anything. He was inspiring and I always try and be more like him in that way. He was an amazing friend.”
One driver died and another was injured in a two-car collision at the intersection of Avondale Road and Northeast Union Hill Road early Saturday morning.
One clap at a time, The Overlake School head coach Justin Prohn drew his players into the post-practice celebration on Tuesday.
Behind the tears, there were smiles. A little laughter even trickled forth.
Redmond High’s boys basketball players knew they had achieved something special and their emotions perfectly told the story.
The Mustangs keep rolling.
Redmond won its third loser-out game in a row by edging Skyline, 58-56, last night in the boys basketball 4A KingCo Tournament.
Emma Anson and Elly Yochum joked with each other as they stretched during a gymnastics workout on Tuesday afternoon.
The 12 flags are still flying and people are still sporting their Seahawks apparel.
It was a tough Super Bowl loss to deal with and fans are probably still shaking their heads about what could have been.
Two girls, two boys and a whole lot of soccer talent.
Redmond High seniors Kennedy Kieneker, Veronica Chung, Pablo Gallo and Joey Parish took center stage at Wednesday’s letter-of-intent signing day in the school’s career center.
Several employees at Nintendo of America Inc. felt it.
Jim Gibons, senior buyer at the company located at 4600 150th Ave. N.E. in Redmond, said the employees noted that their computer monitors shook at approximately 9:37 a.m. this morning during a 2.8-magnitude earthquake that struck north to northwest of the city, according to the United States Geological Survey website.
As the yellow Robinson R44 helicopter came into view through the thin fog and light rain high above the land near Chrysalis High School in Woodinville, students cheered and waited for the arrival of their classmate Robert Clarke.
Jason Medeiros knows exactly how he’s performing in the weight room. He lists the numbers off as quickly as it takes him to snap the ball to the quarterback and deliver a block on an opponent: he can bench 235 pounds, squat 295 pounds and power clean 165 pounds.
Members of the Redmond Ridge community are reaching out to support Himitsu Teriyaki owner Sue Lee and her family in the form of cash donations and encouragement following an accident at their eatery last week.
After driving out of a Chevron gas station/car wash, witnesses said a 70-year-old woman lost control of her car, striking a post indicator valve in the parking lot and ramming into the front of a Redmond Ridge restaurant at 22350 Northeast Marketplace Drive on Thursday morning.
Redmond High swimmers call it a “brotherhood,” a special bond that exists in and out of the pool.
The Mustangs are friends and teammates who support each other during practices and meets. Their familial-like ties also come alive at team meals (loads of pasta), on bus rides (Taylor Swift sing-a-longs) and wherever else the swimmers roam.
With a major project in the works, light rail will soon inch closer and closer to Redmond.
Last week, the U.S. Department of Transportation rolled into action by announcing a $1.33 billion loan to Central Puget Sound Regional Transit Authority (Sound Transit) for construction of the 14.5-mile East Link Light Rail Extension Project from Seattle to Redmond.