April 21st, 2026 Episode Summary This episode of “The Forecast,” Seattle’s weekly women’s sports show on KVRU 105.7 FM, is recorded at Seattle Storm Media Day and weaves together updates and analysis across Seattle’s women’s sports landscape, from hockey and soccer to ultimate frisbee and the WNBA. It opens with the Seattle Torrent’s elimination from PWHL playoff contention and an explanation of the league’s “gold plan” draft system, under which teams earn draft-order points only after they are mathematically eliminated, incentivizing competitive play through the end of the season. The show highlights a dramatic 6–5 overtime loss to Vancouver, the seven-goal third period, and goaltender Carly Jackson’s emotional first start and gratitude toward Seattle fans. Host Maggie Mertens then surveys local results and schedules: OL Reign’s return from international break for a home match against the Utah Royals at Lumen Field, the Seattle Majestics’ narrow loss to Golden State Storm, and the Seattle Tempest’s record-setting 37–10 win over Utah Wild and strong position in the Western Ultimate League standings. Maggie recounts attending a cold, rainy U.S. Women’s National Team friendly against Japan at Lumen Field, where Emma Hayes experimented with a completely new starting XI in a 1–0 loss, yet Seattle still set a city record with 36,128 fans for a women’s sporting event. The following day’s She Believes Summit in Seattle is presented as a hub for national and local leaders to connect women’s sports to broader gender equity efforts, featuring conversations with Emma Hayes, Melinda French Gates, and hockey star Hilary Knight. Through on-site interviews, the episode spotlights emerging infrastructure for women’s sport. Former Reign midfielder Rosie White, now engagement lead for the Kang Women’s Institute, describes US Soccer’s new research platform focused on improving standards for girls and women from grassroots to elite levels, including projects on soccer-specific dropout and standardized menstrual-cycle tracking to inform performance decisions. She emphasizes translating research into practical education for coaches, scouts, and players, and notes Washington’s high rate of female soccer coaches and Seattle’s strong culture of celebrating women’s sports. Reign chief business officer Maya Mendoza-Exstrom explains how the club is leveraging US Soccer partnerships, World Cup momentum, and a major forthcoming World Cup Fan Fest with the RAVE Foundation and Sounders, alongside an ambitious mini-pitch program that has already reached 52 free-play fields and aims for 100 by 2031, with a focus on keeping middle-school girls in soccer. She also details the club’s successful Spokane activation as a strategic foothold in Eastern Washington, generating new fans and merchandise demand. The summit’s cross-sport lens is underscored by conversations with Seattle Storm chief social impact officer Sheridan Blanford and Seattle Sports Commission president and CEO Beth Knox. Blanford stresses that, amid national retrenchment around DEI, the Storm and WNBA are doubling down on caring for a diverse community, backed by a naturally diverse ownership, leadership, and coaching structure that reflects the team’s values and drives success. Knox frames Seattle as the only U.S. city with three major professional women’s teams and emphasizes storytelling, fan engagement, and grassroots connections as key to sustaining growth, arguing that fan power and lessons from women’s teams are influencing men’s franchises as well. The episode closes this segment by noting the Torrent’s full-team show of support for captain Hilary Knight at the summit, even after a late return from an elimination loss, and her stated goal of bringing a Walter Cup to Seattle. In the second half, the show shifts to Storm Media Day, where Mertens and producer Jeff Shaw interpret the 2026 Seattle Storm as a near-expansion-style rebuild under new head coach Sonia Raman. They describe a deliberate culture reset after past locker-room tensions, with an emphasis on joy, accountability, and a versatile, position-flexible roster that may deploy an unconventional approach to the point guard role. The hosts highlight returning guard Jade Melbourne’s growth in basketball IQ and self-awareness, the enthusiasm and happiness of veteran guard Lexie Brown, and the potential of additions like Natisha Hiedeman, while acknowledging early-season uncertainty due to multiple players returning from injury and delayed arrivals from overseas commitments. Player and coach audio deepens this portrait. Center Stephanie Dolson cites Seattle’s long-standing, loyal fan base and the franchise’s championship history as major draws, praises Jade Melbourne’s evolution from pure speed to better pacing and reads, and describes her own leadership style as a mix of “mama bear” and demanding competitiveness, balanced by an emphasis on joy. Guard Natisha Hiedeman emphasizes the team’s good people, high energy, youth, and her readiness to embrace whatever role is needed, noting that conversations with Raman and GM Talisa Rhea made her feel genuinely wanted in Seattle. Rookie Flau’jae Johnson recounts the surprise of her draft-night trade, contrasts Raman’s calm style with former college coach Kim Mulkey, and praises Seattle’s player-first environment, free-flowing, IQ-driven system, and the franchise’s storied history as motivation to help restore championship standards.She also shares a philosophy of visible confidence—“walk in the door like you’re supposed to be there”—as a tool for young athletes. Forward Jordan Horston reflects on returning from an ACL tear with deep gratitude, explaining how the injury forced her to rediscover her identity beyond basketball, study the game from a new vantage point, and build habits and body awareness she believes will benefit her long-term.She describes a collaborative leadership model in which every player, including rookies, has a voice in a new system that requires collective responsibility rather than a single dominant leader. Coach Sonia Raman outlines her vision of relationship-based, high-expectation coaching that centers players’ motivations and “superpowers,” combining positivity and growth mindset with hard coaching and accountability. She sees no fixed ceiling for this young group, instead focusing on daily growth toward a style built on controlled pace, ball movement, and defensive stops. The episode concludes by previewing the Storm’s rapid ramp-up: a preseason opener against the Golden State Valkyries, a home preseason game versus the expansion Portland Fire at Climate Pledge Arena, and a May 8 regular-season home opener against the Valkyries, all coming just days after the WNBA draft and the start of training camp. Across its segments, the show positions Seattle as a national leader in women’s sports, blending game coverage, structural analysis, and on-the-ground voices to illustrate how local teams, institutions, and fans are collectively building the future of women’s athletics. Episode Notes0:00 - Weekly Sports Recap 14:01 - Maggie at the SheBelieves Summit 15:04 - Interview with Rosie White - Kang Women’s Institute 20:01 - Interview with Maya Mendoza-Estrom - Seattle Reign 26:31 - Interview with Sheridan Blanford - Seattle Storm 29:31 - Interview with Beth Knox - Seattle Sports Commission 33:09 - Live from Seattle Storm Media Day 2026 ____________________________________________________________ The Forecast is a Production of : KVRU (https://www.kvru.org/shows/the-forecast/) & JEFFSCOTTSHAW _____________________________________________________________ Executive Producer + Host // Maggie Mertens // Maggie@KVRU.org Executive Producer // JEFFSCOTTSHAW // Jeff@KVRU.org Additional Production Support Provided By // Crystal Fincher & Shannon Cheng & Maurice Jones Jr.