Tag: Everett AquaSox

  • AquaSox Go 3-3 at Tri-City and Head Home: Eike Hits His 6th Homer, Bryce Miller Is at Funko Field Wednesday

    AquaSox Go 3-3 at Tri-City and Head Home: Eike Hits His 6th Homer, Bryce Miller Is at Funko Field Wednesday

    Q: How did the AquaSox finish the Tri-City road series?
    A: Everett went 3-3 on the Tri-City road trip, dropping the series finale 7-4 on May 3 after Brandon Eike’s sixth homer tied it. The Frogs are back home at Funko Field starting Tuesday, May 5 for a six-game series vs. the Hillsboro Hops — with Bryce Miller’s rehab start scheduled for Wednesday, May 6.

    AquaSox Go 3-3 at Tri-City: Eike Hits His Sixth Homer, But the Frogs Drop the Series Finale 7-4

    The Everett AquaSox ended their six-game road trip at Gesa Stadium in Pasco the same way they started it — with some big moments and a result that didn’t go their way.

    Sunday’s series finale: Viñeros de Tri-City 7, AquaSox 4. The Frogs tied it up at 3-3 in the fifth inning on Brandon Eike’s sixth homer of the season (a leadoff shot to start the fifth) and a Felnin Celesten RBI single. Luis Suisbel even gave Everett a 4-3 lead in the sixth, scoring from second on a wild pitch. But Tri-City blew the game open in the bottom of the seventh — Caleb Bartolero doubled home the tying run, Anthony Scull ripped a go-ahead RBI double to left, and Matt Coutney crushed a two-run homer over the right-center fence to make it 7-4. The AquaSox bullpen held after that, but the deficit was too large.

    Series Summary: A Split on the Road

    The full Tri-City road trip shook out like this:

    Game 1 (April 28): AquaSox 8, Tri-City 3 — Luis Suisbel career-high-tie 5 RBIs (3-run HR + 2-run single), Eike’s 4th HR, Dollard solid on the mound.
    Game 2 (April 29): AquaSox 10, Tri-City 7 — Rally from 7-7 in the eighth, Celesten go-ahead RBI, Ellis 2-run HR in the 9th, Little save.
    Game 3 (April 30): Tri-City 6, AquaSox 4 — Eike hit his 5th HR but Tri-City got the run support Everett couldn’t match.
    Game 4 (May 1): Tri-City 7 (walk-off) — Randy de Jesus walked off the Frogs with a late hit.
    Game 5 (May 2): Tri-City 8, AquaSox 6 — Eike doubled to spark a late rally, Suisbel RBI single, but a five-run fifth inning by Tri-City was too much.
    Game 6 (May 3): Tri-City 7, AquaSox 4 — Eike HR #6, Celesten RBI single, Suisbel scored the go-ahead run on a wild pitch, but a four-run Tri-City seventh ended it.

    Final road trip line: 3-3. Not ideal, but not a disaster. The Frogs are 12-11 on the young season and heading home with legitimate momentum candidates in Eike and Celesten.

    Prospect Watch: Eike Is for Real

    Let’s talk about Brandon Eike, because his power has been the story of this road trip.

    Six home runs in the first 23 games of the 2026 season. Eike is a physical outfielder who generates lift and backspin, and he’s been driving the ball to all parts of the park. His leadoff homer in Sunday’s fifth inning — hit with the team trailing 3-0 and needing a spark — showed the kind of situational awareness a young power hitter needs. He’s not just a pull-or-nothing guy. He’s using the whole field.

    Keep an eye on Eike in the homestand. If he gets going at Funko Field, the box score is going to be fun to read.

    Felnin Celesten, for his part, continues to be the most complete hitter on this roster. The NWL Player of the Week from the previous series hasn’t cooled off. He got the tying RBI single in the fifth inning on Sunday, and his ability to put the barrel on the ball in crucial situations is what separates him from the other prospects on this club.

    Walter Ford Starts the Series Finale

    AquaSox starter Walter Ford made the start in the series finale — one of the younger arms in Everett’s 2026 rotation. He went 4.2 innings, allowing three earned runs (two earned) with some wild pitch issues that cost his catcher Josh Caron. Ford showed flashes: he was sharp in the first two innings before the wheels got wobbly in the third. Adam Smith relieved him and threw 1.1 scoreless innings in his first AquaSox appearance — a 14th-round Padres pick from 2021 who now has a clean line on his debut stat sheet.

    Coming Up: Hillsboro Hops at Funko Field, May 5-10

    The Frogs are home. Six games at Funko Field starting Tuesday, May 5 against the Hillsboro Hops (D-backs affiliate, Northwest League).

    Homestand schedule:
    Tuesday, May 5 (Cinco de Mayo): 7:05 PM
    Wednesday, May 6: 7:05 PM — Bryce Miller Mariners rehab start
    Thursday, May 7: 7:05 PM
    Friday, May 8: 12:05 PM (afternoon game — also Game 1 of Silvertips WHL Final that night)
    Saturday, May 9: 7:05 PM
    Sunday, May 10 (Mother’s Day): 1:05 PM

    Don’t Miss Wednesday: Bryce Miller Is Back at Funko Field

    If you’re only making one game this homestand, make it Wednesday May 6.

    Mariners right-hander Bryce Miller is scheduled for his third AquaSox rehab start at 7:05 PM on Wednesday night against Hillsboro. Miller’s previous Funko Field outing — April 24 against Spokane — was one of the best nights Funko has seen this season: 3 innings, 47 pitches, 6 strikeouts, zero runs, 98+ mph fastball, didn’t allow a baserunner until the third inning. That’s not a rehab guy going through the motions. That’s a Mariners starter getting sharp.

    His prior start at Tacoma on April 18 was more modest (1.2 IP), but his April 24 Everett outing showed the command and velocity that made him one of Seattle’s better starters in 2024 (12-8, 2.94 ERA, 180 innings). If this homestand goes as expected, Wednesday night in Everett could be Miller’s last minor league appearance before returning to Seattle.

    And just in case you need the full Everett sell: Friday May 8 has a 12:05 PM first pitch — so you can catch the afternoon game, grab dinner, and still get to Angel of the Winds Arena for the Silvertips WHL Championship Final Game 1 that evening. Double header of Everett sports on a Friday. Mark it down.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the AquaSox record after the Tri-City road trip?

    The AquaSox went 3-3 on the Tri-City road trip and are 12-11 on the 2026 Northwest League season.

    When do the AquaSox play next at Funko Field?

    The AquaSox host the Hillsboro Hops at Funko Field starting Tuesday, May 5 at 7:05 PM. The six-game homestand runs through Sunday, May 10.

    When is Bryce Miller’s next AquaSox rehab start?

    Bryce Miller is scheduled to start Wednesday, May 6 at Funko Field at 7:05 PM against the Hillsboro Hops. His previous AquaSox outing on April 24 featured 3 scoreless innings with 6 strikeouts and 98+ mph velocity.

    Who had the most notable performances in the Tri-City series?

    Brandon Eike hit his 5th and 6th home runs of the season during the road trip. Felnin Celesten delivered multiple RBIs. Luis Suisbel had a career-high-tie 5-RBI game in the opener. Zach Dollard was sharp in Game 1, and Adam Smith had a solid debut in Game 6.

    Who are the Hillsboro Hops?

    The Hillsboro Hops are the Arizona Diamondbacks’ High-A affiliate in the Northwest League, based in Hillsboro, Oregon. They’re one of Everett’s NWL divisional rivals.

    More on the AquaSox: AquaSox Wrap Tri-City Road Trip This Weekend, Then Bryce Miller Comes to Funko Field Wednesday | AquaSox Rally to Beat Tri-City 10-7 | Bryce Miller’s Second AquaSox Rehab Start Is Wednesday May 6 at Funko Field

  • For Visitors Flying Into Paine Field From Portland: A 2026 Everett Weekend Guide for the New June 10 Nonstop

    For Visitors Flying Into Paine Field From Portland: A 2026 Everett Weekend Guide for the New June 10 Nonstop

    If you live in the Portland metro and have been wondering whether Everett, Washington is worth a weekend, June 10, 2026 changes the answer. That’s the day Alaska Airlines resumes daily nonstop service between Portland International (PDX) and Paine Field (PAE) — landing you 25 minutes north of downtown Everett at a small, walk-to-the-gate terminal that bypasses SeaTac entirely. This guide is the Everett itinerary the new route makes practical for the first time.

    Why Paine Field is the right airport for an Everett trip

    Most Pacific Northwest visitors arrive into SeaTac and immediately face a decision: drive 90 minutes north against I-5 traffic, or skip everything north of Seattle entirely. Paine Field changes that calculation. It is a small commercial terminal in Snohomish County that opened in March 2019, operated by Propeller Airports. There is no remote parking shuttle. There is no terminal-to-terminal monorail. You walk from the gate to the curb in roughly the time it takes to clear a single TSA line.

    From the curb, a rideshare to downtown Everett is roughly 25 minutes. To the waterfront — about 30. To the AquaSox stadium at Funko Field — under 30.

    The weekend itinerary the new nonstop makes possible

    Friday evening — Land, drop, and walk to dinner. Land at Paine Field by early evening on Alaska’s daily PDX-PAE nonstop. Drop bags at a downtown Everett hotel, then walk to Hewitt Avenue. The dining stretch on Hewitt has rebuilt itself in 2026 — R Harn Thai opened earlier this year and is the right call for a first-night meal. Order the khao soi.

    Saturday morning — Waterfront and Jetty Island. Drive 10 minutes to the Port of Everett’s Waterfront Place — the redeveloped working waterfront with restaurant row, marina access, and the seasonal Jetty Island ferry. Jetty Island is a free 20-minute walk-on ferry to a two-mile sand spit in Possession Sound. Bring a windbreaker even in June.

    Saturday afternoon — Funko HQ and downtown. Funko’s Everett headquarters sits in a converted historic downtown building and is open to visitors. The retail experience is unlike any other corporate flagship in the Pacific Northwest. Combine with a walk through the surrounding gallery district — the Everett Art Walk runs the third Thursday of each month if your trip aligns.

    Saturday evening — AquaSox or Silvertips, in season. The Everett AquaSox play at Funko Field downtown (Mariners High-A affiliate, summer schedule) and the Everett Silvertips play at Angel of the Winds Arena (WHL major junior hockey, fall through spring playoffs). Either is a low-cost, high-energy minor-league experience you cannot reproduce in Portland.

    Sunday — Boeing Future of Flight or a North Cascades day trip. The Boeing Future of Flight aviation museum sits adjacent to Paine Field — convenient to a Sunday departure. For a longer day, Everett is the gateway to Mukilteo, Whidbey Island via the Mukilteo-Clinton ferry, and the western foothills of the North Cascades. None of these are easy out of SeaTac.

    Why this works as a weekend the previous schedule didn’t allow

    Without a PAE-PDX nonstop, the Portland visitor’s only option for an Everett weekend has been to fly into SeaTac and drive 90+ minutes north. The drive eats Friday evening and most of Sunday morning. With the new daily Alaska nonstop, you can land in Everett by 6 PM on Friday and depart by mid-day on Sunday and not lose either bookend to airport time.

    The June 10 launch lands during AquaSox season, before the worst summer Mukilteo ferry queues, and during the most active stretch of the Port of Everett’s outdoor programming.

    Practical details for Portland-area visitors

    • Airport: Seattle Paine Field International Airport (PAE), Everett, WA. Operated by Propeller Airports.
    • Tickets: alaskaair.com
    • Service start: June 10, 2026, daily.
    • Rideshare to downtown Everett: ~25 minutes.
    • Hotels: Downtown Everett options cluster around the Hewitt Avenue corridor and the waterfront.

    Frequently asked questions for visitors

    Is Paine Field a real commercial airport?

    Yes. Seattle Paine Field International Airport (PAE) opened its commercial terminal in March 2019. It is operated by Propeller Airports and serves Alaska Airlines and Avelo Airlines. After the June 10, 2026 Portland launch it will run 13 daily commercial departures across nine nonstop destinations.

    How far is Paine Field from downtown Everett?

    Roughly 25 minutes by rideshare. The terminal sits on the southwest edge of Everett near Mukilteo.

    What is there to actually do in Everett for a weekend?

    Waterfront Place at the Port of Everett, Jetty Island (seasonal ferry), Funko HQ in downtown, AquaSox baseball at Funko Field (summer) or Silvertips hockey at Angel of the Winds Arena (fall through spring), the Everett Art Walk on third Thursdays, and Boeing Future of Flight adjacent to Paine Field for a Sunday departure-day stop.

    Do I need a rental car?

    For a Friday-to-Sunday Everett-only itinerary, rideshare is enough. If you want to add Mukilteo, Whidbey Island via ferry, or any North Cascades day trip, rent a car at the airport.

    What’s the closest hotel to Paine Field?

    The airport area itself has limited lodging. Most visitors stay downtown Everett or near the waterfront — both are roughly 25-30 minutes from the terminal.

    Related Exploring Everett coverage for visitors

  • AquaSox Wrap Tri-City Road Trip This Weekend, Then Bryce Miller Comes to Funko Field Wednesday

    AquaSox Wrap Tri-City Road Trip This Weekend, Then Bryce Miller Comes to Funko Field Wednesday

    Q: Where are the Everett AquaSox playing this weekend, May 2-3, 2026?
    The AquaSox are wrapping up a six-game road series at the Tri-City Dust Devils at Gesa Stadium in Pasco, WA. Games 5 and 6 are Saturday, May 2 (7:05 PM) and Sunday, May 3 (typically a 1:05 or 1:35 PM start). The Frogs went into Friday’s game leading the series 2-1 after winning the opener 8-3 (Tuesday) and the Wednesday game 10-7, then dropping Thursday 6-4. Friday’s result was in progress when this story published; check MiLB.com/everett for the final.

    Frogs Close Out the Pasco Road Trip — and What’s Coming Home Next Week

    The AquaSox have already given Pasco their money’s worth this week. Three games in, the Frogs had won two — and both of those wins told you something about what this 2026 roster can actually be when the bats and the bullpen show up the same night.

    Tuesday’s series opener at Gesa Stadium was the Luis Suisbel show: the AquaSox infielder cracked a three-run homer (his first of the year) and added a two-run single for a career-high-tying five RBIs in the 8-3 win. Logan Dollard went four innings and gave up just one earned run. The bullpen got it home. Easy night.

    Wednesday, it didn’t look easy at all. Tri-City clawed back to a 7-7 tie heading into the eighth, and the Frogs had to find another gear. Felnin Celesten — the Mariners’ top middle-infield prospect and recent NWL Player of the Week (.471 over the Spokane series) — delivered the go-ahead RBI in the eighth. Brock Ellis ended any doubt with a two-run homer in the ninth, and the Frogs walked off Pasco 10-7. Two-game lead in the series.

    Thursday belonged to Tri-City. Brandon Eike got a hold of one — his fifth homer of 2026, a fourth-inning two-run shot that pushed his RBI total to 12 — but the Dust Devils’ Capri Ortiz answered with a bases-clearing triple and another RBI single, and the Frogs lost 6-4. Series lead trimmed to 2-1.

    Friday Night: Game in Progress at Run Time

    Friday’s Game 4 was first-pitched at 7:05 PT at Gesa Stadium. As of this story going to publish, the game was still being played — so we’re not going to fabricate a final score, an inning-by-inning, or a winning pitcher. (You’ll get the recap in tomorrow night’s run when we have a verified box score from MiLB.com.)

    What we do know: the Frogs entered the night in good shape — winning two of the first three on the road, with their two best prospect bats (Celesten and Eike) heating up at the right time, and a starting rotation that has handled the Dust Devils’ lineup pretty well so far.

    What to Watch the Rest of the Series

    Saturday, May 2 at 7:05 PT: Game 5 of the series at Gesa Stadium. The Frogs need either a Saturday or Sunday win to clinch the series; two more wins gets them home with their first road sweep of 2026.

    Sunday, May 3: Series finale, with a daytime first pitch (Tri-City’s standard Sunday Funday window is the 1:05 PT range — confirm at MiLB.com/everett).

    For Mariners-prospect watchers, the names to track over the weekend are familiar by now:

    • Felnin Celesten — coming off NWL Player of the Week. Top middle-infield prospect in the system. Riding a hot stretch.
    • Brandon Eike — five home runs already, 12 RBIs, looks comfortable in the box.
    • Luis Suisbel — went off in the opener. Power upside is real.
    • Brock Ellis — the ninth-inning two-run homer Wednesday is the kind of swing that tells you about a player’s swing decisions in big spots.
    • Logan Dollard — Tuesday’s start was the kind of outing you build a rotation slot around.

    Then Comes Home — and the Big One

    Once the Tri-City series ends Sunday, the Frogs come back to Funko Field for a six-game homestand against the Hillsboro Hops (D-backs affiliate). And the headliner of that homestand — the night that’s going to draw the curiosity crowd as much as the baseball crowd — is Wednesday, May 6 at 7:05 PM, when Mariners right-hander Bryce Miller makes his second AquaSox rehab start of the spring.

    Miller’s first AquaSox outing on April 24 was the kind of rehab start that ends rehab assignments: 3 IP, 47 pitches, 6 strikeouts, no runs, fastball touching 98+ mph. Mariners GM Jerry Hollander confirmed Wednesday is likely Miller’s last stop before he heads back up to T-Mobile Park. If you want to see a big-league arm at Funko this year, this is the night.

    (That game also closes a multi-step rehab — 1.2 IP at Tacoma April 18 → 3 IP at Everett April 24 → another Tacoma stop earlier this week → Wednesday at Funko. The Mariners are stretching him to give him a real start’s worth of pitches before activation.)

    The Bigger Picture

    The AquaSox went into this Tri-City series at 8-8 and have already made it a winning trip with three games to play. That matters for an obvious reason — early wins build momentum, and prospects build confidence on the road — but also for a less obvious one: the High-A Northwest League season runs through mid-September, and a 17-or-18-game start with a winning record means none of these prospects are pressing yet. That’s the version of an AquaSox team you want feeding into Bryce Miller’s rehab night next Wednesday — loose, confident, and pretty fun to watch.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What time do the AquaSox play Saturday, May 2 against Tri-City?

    7:05 PM PT first pitch at Gesa Stadium in Pasco, WA. The Frogs lead the six-game series 2-1 entering Friday.

    Is Bryce Miller pitching at Funko Field this week?

    Yes. Miller’s second AquaSox rehab start of the spring is Wednesday, May 6 at 7:05 PM at Funko Field vs. the Hillsboro Hops. It’s expected to be his final rehab stop before returning to the Mariners.

    Who’s the AquaSox’ hottest hitter right now?

    Felnin Celesten, the Mariners’ top middle-infield prospect, was named NWL Player of the Week on April 28 after going 11-for-17 (.471) with five runs over the Spokane series. He delivered the go-ahead RBI in Wednesday’s 10-7 win at Tri-City.

    Who has the AquaSox’ team home run lead?

    As of Thursday’s game, Brandon Eike with five home runs and 12 RBIs.

    When does the next AquaSox homestand start?

    The Frogs return to Funko Field on Tuesday, May 5 to begin a six-game homestand against the Hillsboro Hops.

    Where can I check the live AquaSox box score?

    MiLB.com/everett has the live Gameday feed, schedule, and confirmed final box scores.

  • Bryce Miller’s Second AquaSox Rehab Start Is Wednesday May 6 at Funko Field — Likely His Last Stop Before Seattle

    Bryce Miller’s Second AquaSox Rehab Start Is Wednesday May 6 at Funko Field — Likely His Last Stop Before Seattle

    Bryce Miller Is Back at Funko Field on Wednesday, May 6 — His Second AquaSox Rehab Start Could Be His Last Stop Before Seattle

    The Mariners made it official on May 1: right-hander Bryce Miller will make his second rehab start with the Everett AquaSox on Wednesday, May 6, with first pitch scheduled for 7:05 p.m. at Everett Memorial Stadium.

    This is the start a lot of Funko Field regulars have been waiting on. Miller’s first rehab outing in Everett — back on April 24 against the Spokane Indians — was the kind of outing where everyone in the ballpark left going yeah, he’s back. Three innings, six strikeouts (five swinging, one looking), one hit, one walk, no runs. He went through the first two frames clean and worked out of a jam in the third by punching out Fitzer on four pitches with the bases threatening. The radar gun showed 98+ mph. His pitches looked like Bryce Miller pitches again.

    So Wednesday is the next step on a rehab calendar that, if it stays clean, almost certainly ends with Miller back in the Mariners’ rotation by mid-May.

    Where Miller Is in the Rehab Timeline

    By the time he takes the mound May 6, Miller will be making his fourth rehab start of 2026. The breakdown so far, per Mariners EVP and GM Justin Hollander:

    • **Triple-A Tacoma — April 18.** 1.2 IP, 33 pitches, 4 H, 3 R, 1 BB, 2 K. Velocity was building, command wasn’t there yet.
    • **Triple-A Tacoma — second outing.** Not his sharpest, but progress.
    • **High-A Everett (AquaSox) — April 24.** 3 IP, 47 pitches (35 strikes), 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 6 K. Best outing of the rehab.
    • **High-A Everett — May 6.** Wednesday. Likely 4-5 IP / 60-75 pitches if everything’s healthy.

    Across his three outings to date, Miller has put up 8.2 innings of 3.12 ERA work with 12 punchouts. The fastball has peaked north of 98 mph — an encouraging sign as he comes back from the oblique strain that landed him on the injured list in spring training.

    In MLB rehab math, you typically build a starter back to 75-80 pitches before you call him up. Miller threw 47 last time. A jump to ~70 on Wednesday would put him in striking distance of one more rehab start (or none) before he rejoins Seattle’s rotation.

    Why a Funko Field Rehab Start Matters for Everett

    Bryce Miller in Everett uniform isn’t just a rehab assignment — it’s a homecoming. Miller pitched for the AquaSox in 2022, going 3-3 with a 3.24 ERA across 16 games (15 starts), striking out 99 and walking just 25. He held opposing hitters to a .194 average that season before getting the bump to Double-A Arkansas. He went from Everett to the Mariners’ rotation in roughly 14 months.

    For the AquaSox crowd, that 2022 season is part of why this Wednesday matters. Funko Field saw the version of Miller that became a 12-game winner with a 2.94 ERA across 180.1 innings in his 2024 breakout campaign with Seattle. Now they get to see him on his way back, working live against High-A hitters with a 98-mph fastball that’s already been doing damage in his rehab outings.

    It’s also one of the rare nights at Funko Field where the AquaSox aren’t the only story — the Mariners are. People drive in from Seattle for these starts. Walk-up ticket lines get long. The AquaSox front office is straight up about it: “Walk-up quantities may be limited as seats are expected to sell fast.”

    Tickets and Logistics for Wednesday

    • **First pitch:** 7:05 p.m., Wednesday, May 6
    • **Where:** Everett Memorial Stadium (Funko Field), 3802 Broadway
    • **Gates:** Season ticket holders 5:30 p.m., main gates 6:00 p.m.
    • **Tickets:** Online at AquaSox.com or by calling the front office at 425-258-3673
    • **Bonus:** It’s also Silver Sluggers Night (the second of 2026), Baseball Bingo from Tulalip Bingo & Slots, and $5 Wednesday — bring a Mechanics Bank coupon for a $5 Upper Reserved ticket.

    The AquaSox front office strongly recommends advance purchase. Funko Field can pack out for these starts, and Wednesday lines up with the kind of walk-up demand that empties the upper deck early.

    What to Watch For on Wednesday

    Three things the eye should be on if you’re at the ballpark:

    1. **Pitch count.** A jump from 47 to 65-75 pitches signals the rehab is on schedule. Anything below 60 might mean the Mariners want one more start in Everett before promoting him.

    2. **Fastball velocity in the third and fourth innings.** Anyone can sit 98 in the first. The question is whether Miller can hold velocity into the back half of his outing — the moment that tells the Mariners’ staff he’s stretched out enough.

    3. **The slider.** Miller’s secondary stuff was the difference between rotation Bryce and post-injury Bryce in 2024. If he’s confidently throwing his slider for strikes Wednesday, this rehab is over fast.

    What Comes After

    If Wednesday goes the way April 24 did, Miller’s rehab clock is nearly out. Major League rehab assignments are limited (30 days max for pitchers), and he’d be activated either before that window expires or moved between affiliates. The most likely scenario, assuming health: one more rehab start at the AquaSox or Tacoma level, then back to Seattle.

    For the Mariners, that timing matters. Bryce Miller-as-rotation-piece is a top-half-of-the-rotation arm. He’s the guy who went 12-8 with a 2.94 ERA over 180.1 innings in 2024. Getting him back into the major league rotation by mid-to-late May is one of the better things that could happen for Seattle’s playoff math.

    For Everett, this is the kind of moment that fits the city’s baseball identity perfectly: the future of the Mariners works through Funko Field. Always has.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When is Bryce Miller’s next rehab start with the AquaSox?

    Wednesday, May 6, 2026. First pitch is at 7:05 p.m. at Everett Memorial Stadium against the Hillsboro Hops.

    How did his last AquaSox rehab outing go?

    Miller threw 3 scoreless innings against the Spokane Indians on April 24 — 47 pitches, 35 strikes, 1 hit, 1 walk, 6 strikeouts, fastball peaking over 98 mph. The AquaSox walked off Spokane 2-1 that night.

    How much will Miller pitch on Wednesday?

    The Mariners haven’t given a specific pitch count, but rehab starters typically increase by 15-25 pitches per outing. A jump from 47 to roughly 65-75 pitches would be normal.

    How can I get tickets to see Miller pitch?

    Tickets are available at AquaSox.com or by calling the team’s front office at 425-258-3673. The team is recommending advance purchase — walk-up tickets may be limited.

    Why is Miller on rehab assignment?

    He’s coming back from an oblique strain suffered during spring training. He started his rehab with two outings at Triple-A Tacoma before stepping down to Everett.

    What’s Miller’s career record with the Mariners?

    24-21 with a 4.01 ERA across 74 starts and three big-league seasons. His best year was 2024: 12-8, 2.94 ERA, 180.1 IP, 171 K, 45 BB.

    Did Bryce Miller play for the AquaSox before?

    Yes. He pitched in Everett in 2022, going 3-3 with a 3.24 ERA across 15 starts and racking up 99 strikeouts. He was promoted to Double-A Arkansas later that season and made his MLB debut in 2023.

  • Brandon Eike Cracks Fifth Homer of 2026 in 6-4 Loss to Tri-City — Frogs Still Lead Series 2-1

    Brandon Eike Cracks Fifth Homer of 2026 in 6-4 Loss to Tri-City — Frogs Still Lead Series 2-1

    Brandon Eike Cracked His Fifth Homer of 2026, but the AquaSox Couldn’t Climb Out: Tri-City Wins 6-4

    The Everett AquaSox saw their three-game road winning streak end Thursday night at Gesa Stadium, falling to the Tri-City Dust Devils 6-4 on April 30 in the third game of a six-game series in Pasco. Brandon Eike kept the Frogs in it with a fourth-inning, two-run shot — his fifth long ball of the season — but the Dust Devils answered immediately with a bases-clearing triple from Capri Ortiz, and Tri-City’s bullpen held the line the rest of the way.

    The result drops Everett to 2-1 on the road trip and to a series lead of 2-1 with three games still to play. The Frogs sit just under .500 overall and head into Friday night’s 6:30 p.m. first pitch knowing they let one slip — but also knowing they’ve still won two of three on Tri-City’s turf, which is no small thing given how the Dust Devils have hit at home this year.

    How the Game Got Away

    Tri-City jumped Everett early. In the bottom of the first, Matt Coutney doubled, Ryan Nicholson doubled behind him to put runners at the corners, and Randy De Jesus drove in the first run with a double of his own. In the second, the Dust Devils added another when Jorge Ruiz scored on a fielding error after Gage Harrelson singled. 2-0 Tri-City through two.

    Everett answered in the top of the fourth. Matthew Ellis worked a walk, and Eike crushed his fifth bomb of 2026 — a two-run shot that pushed his RBI total to 12 on the season and tied the game at 2-2. That tie lasted exactly half an inning. Tri-City strung together hits in the bottom half, and Capri Ortiz cleared the bases with a triple to make it 5-2.

    The teams traded runs in the sixth: Axel Sanchez hit a sacrifice fly to bring Felnin Celesten home for Everett, and Ortiz answered with another RBI single off a Caleb Bartolero two-out triple to make it 6-3. The Frogs cut it back to 6-4 in the seventh — Curtis Washington Jr. and Carter Dorighi knocked back-to-back one-out singles, and Carlos Jimenez drove Washington in on a groundout — but Tri-City’s pen worked around the rest of the threat.

    The Eike Watch Is Real

    Eike’s fifth homer of 2026 puts him on a quiet but serious early-season pace. The fan-voice take: this kid is starting to look like a name to remember.

    His long ball Thursday was the type that doesn’t show up in highlight clips on national feeds — solo-ball-ish-with-a-runner-on, in a road park, with the team trailing by two — but it’s the second time this homestand he’s put a charge into one when the Frogs needed it. He’s now homered in two of the last six games, his slugging line is among the better marks on the team in this still-young season, and he’s quietly become the AquaSox’s most dependable power threat behind Luis Suisbel, who lit up Tri-City for 5 RBIs on Tuesday.

    For Mariners fans tracking the High-A pipeline: Eike is a 2024 draftee out of Cal who was assigned to Everett to start 2026. He’s older for the level relative to international signees like Felnin Celesten, but he’s also showing he can do damage right now, and that matters in a system that’s been hungry for left-handed power.

    The Top of the Order Is Working

    Even in a loss, the AquaSox table-setters did their jobs. Felnin Celesten singled and scored in the sixth. Curtis Washington Jr. and Carter Dorighi put back-to-back hits together in the seventh to spark the late rally. Matthew Ellis worked the walk that set up Eike’s homer.

    That trio — Celesten, Washington Jr., and Dorighi — is doing exactly what you want from your young High-A guys: getting on, making contact, putting pressure on opposing infields. The Frogs are 3-for-3 in road series wins so far when those guys go a combined 5-for-something on the night, and the team’s third game of this Tri-City series broke that pattern only because Capri Ortiz hit a baseball harder than anyone the AquaSox put on the mound could survive.

    What Friday Looks Like

    The series continues Friday, May 1 at 6:30 p.m. at Gesa Stadium. Tri-City is celebrating Cinco de Mayo Weekend by playing as the Vineros de Tri-City — a copa designed to honor the migrant workers behind the region’s wine industry — Friday through Sunday.

    After Friday and Saturday’s road games, Everett returns to Funko Field for a six-game homestand against the Hillsboro Hops May 5-10. That homestand is loaded: Silver Sluggers Night, Star Wars Night with postgame fireworks, the Mother’s Day Pre-Game Picnic, and — biggest of all from a Mariners-fan standpoint — Bryce Miller’s second AquaSox rehab start on Wednesday, May 6.

    What This Game Tells Us

    Three takes from a team that’s still figuring out who it is six weeks in:

    1. **The bullpen had a rough night.** Tri-City got 6 runs on the way to its first win of the week. The Frogs need length from the rotation back home next week — fortunately, Bryce Miller is up Wednesday.

    2. **Eike is real.** Five homers in April is no fluke for a High-A bat, especially one slugging at this level on the road.

    3. **Two of three in Pasco is fine.** The road trip isn’t a disaster. Friday and Saturday are the games that decide whether this turns into a statement series or a split.

    The Frogs are still in good shape. They’re still winning more series than they’re losing. And they’ve got a homecoming homestand and a Mariners rehab start on the calendar. Everett baseball is in a good place — Thursday night just wasn’t a good night.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What was the final score of the AquaSox vs. Tri-City game on April 30, 2026?

    The Tri-City Dust Devils beat the Everett AquaSox 6-4 on Thursday night at Gesa Stadium in Pasco. It was the third game of a six-game series.

    Who hit the home run for the AquaSox?

    Brandon Eike hit a two-run home run in the top of the fourth inning — his fifth long ball of the 2026 season. The homer pushed his RBI total to 12 on the year.

    What’s the next AquaSox game?

    Friday, May 1 at 6:30 p.m. at Gesa Stadium against the Tri-City Dust Devils, who are playing as the Vineros de Tri-City for Cinco de Mayo weekend.

    When do the AquaSox come back home?

    Tuesday, May 5 at 7:05 p.m. at Funko Field for the start of a six-game homestand against the Hillsboro Hops, the Arizona Diamondbacks’ High-A affiliate.

    When is Bryce Miller’s next rehab start?

    Wednesday, May 6 at 7:05 p.m. at Funko Field against the Hillsboro Hops. It will be Miller’s fourth rehab start overall and his second with Everett.

    What’s the AquaSox record so far in 2026?

    The AquaSox are 2-1 on the current Tri-City road trip and just under .500 overall heading into the back half of the series.

  • AquaSox Rally From a 7-7 Tie to Beat Tri-City 10-7 — Celesten, Farmelo, and Ellis Deliver

    AquaSox Rally From a 7-7 Tie to Beat Tri-City 10-7 — Celesten, Farmelo, and Ellis Deliver

    The Everett AquaSox needed every one of their 13 base hits Wednesday night at Gesa Stadium in Pasco, and when the final out was recorded it was right-hander Christian Little slamming the door on a 10-7 win over the Tri-City Dust Devils.

    This was not a clean victory. This was a baseball game — the chaotic, swinging-momentum kind that reminds you why Minor League Baseball at a small stadium is one of the best things in American sports. The AquaSox once again showed they know how to win one of those.

    How It Went: The Short Version

    Everett jumped on Tri-City early, built a 4-1 lead through three innings, watched it erode to 4-3 by the sixth, then scored three in the top of the seventh to go up 7-4. What happened next was genuinely stressful: Tri-City erupted for three runs in the bottom of the seventh, capped by Capri Ortiz lining a two-run single to center field to tie it 7-7.

    Then the Frogs dug deep.

    Felnin Celesten — the guy who just won Northwest League Player of the Week — came through with an RBI single in the top of the eighth to reclaim the lead. Matthew Ellis put the exclamation point on it with a two-run home run in the ninth. Christian Little came on for a scoreless ninth with two strikeouts to lock it down and earn his second save of the season.

    Final: AquaSox 10, Dust Devils 7. Series: Everett leads 2-0.

    The Stars of the Night

    Felnin Celesten continues to be the most interesting player on this roster. Coming in as NWL Player of the Week — batting .471 with 11 hits in five games against Spokane — he picked up right where he left off. He scored in the third inning on a balk while Stevenson was at bat, then delivered the go-ahead RBI single in the eighth when it mattered most.

    Jonny Farmelo was the offensive engine. The outfielder hit two doubles — one in the third that set up Celesten’s RBI, another in the seventh that sparked the three-run frame. He did the dirty work all game.

    Luke Stevenson drove in runs in the first and seventh innings. His two-run single in the seventh felt like the dagger — before Tri-City made things interesting again.

    Matthew Ellis opened the scoring with an RBI double in the first and closed it with a two-run home run in the ninth. A three-run cushion in the final inning is the kind of hit a whole clubhouse exhales over.

    Christian Little did what closers do: two strikeouts in the ninth, Save No. 2 on the books.

    The Road Trip Is Off to a Great Start

    Coming into this six-game road series against Tri-City, the AquaSox were riding strong momentum from the Spokane homestand and the energy of Bryce Miller’s rehab start at Funko Field. Tuesday night they rolled 8-3 behind Luis Suisbel’s five RBIs. Wednesday night they survived a 7-7 gut punch and came out the other side. Two games in, two wins.

    After Tri-City, Everett returns to Everett Memorial Stadium for a homestand against Hillsboro. Promotions include Coors Light Throwback Thursday, Star Wars Night, Sunday Fun Day, and the AquaSox Mother’s Day Picnic.

    Prospect Watch: Who’s Helping Their Case

    Every at-bat on this road trip is an organizational evaluation. Right now, a few names are doing themselves no harm.

    Felnin Celesten — league-wide recognition last week, two more productive games in Tri-City. Scouts are paying attention if they weren’t already.

    Jonny Farmelo — two doubles, runs driven in, consistently reliable in this lineup all season.

    Matthew Ellis — the home run in the ninth was not cheap. Keep watching.

    Game 3 of this road series is Thursday, April 30 at Gesa Stadium with first pitch at 6:30 PM.

    Related: Luis Suisbel Goes Off: AquaSox Pound Tri-City 8-3 in Road Series Opener | AquaSox Hit the Road to Tri-City: Celesten Is NWL Player of the Week

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What was the final score of the AquaSox vs. Tri-City game on April 29, 2026?
    The Everett AquaSox defeated the Tri-City Dust Devils 10-7 at Gesa Stadium in Pasco, Washington on Wednesday, April 29, 2026.

    Who were the top performers for the AquaSox in the 10-7 win?
    Felnin Celesten drove in the go-ahead run in the eighth inning. Matthew Ellis hit a two-run home run in the ninth. Jonny Farmelo hit two doubles. Luke Stevenson drove in runs in the first and seventh innings. Christian Little earned his second save of the season.

    What is the AquaSox record in the Tri-City road series after two games?
    The AquaSox lead the six-game road series 2-0 after wins of 8-3 on April 28 and 10-7 on April 29.

    Who is Felnin Celesten?
    Celesten is the AquaSox shortstop and current Northwest League Player of the Week. He batted .471 with 11 hits in five games against Spokane and continues to produce in Tri-City.

    When do the AquaSox return home after this road trip?
    After completing the six-game series at Tri-City, the AquaSox return to Everett Memorial Stadium for a homestand against the Hillsboro Hops.

  • Luis Suisbel Goes Off: AquaSox Pound Tri-City 8-3 in Road Series Opener

    Luis Suisbel Goes Off: AquaSox Pound Tri-City 8-3 in Road Series Opener

    What was the score of the AquaSox vs. Tri-City game on April 28, 2026? The Everett AquaSox defeated the Tri-City Dust Devils 8-3 in the series opener at Gesa Stadium in Pasco, WA. Third baseman Luis Suisbel drove in five runs, including a three-run home run — his first of the 2026 season — in the second inning.

    PASCO, Wash. — If you needed a sign that the Everett AquaSox are starting to figure some things out, Tuesday night at Gesa Stadium gave you plenty to work with.

    Third baseman Luis Suisbel did what no one in a Frogs uniform had done yet this season: he launched a home run. Then he kept hitting. By the time it was over, Suisbel had collected five RBIs in an 8-3 AquaSox win over the Tri-City Dust Devils — the perfect way to open a six-game road series in Pasco.

    The Big Inning: Four Runs Before You Could Blink

    The AquaSox got to work fast in the top of the second inning, stacking a four-run frame that put Tuesday night’s result mostly out of reach before the Dust Devils could breathe.

    Josh Caron singled and Carlos Jimenez worked a walk. That brought up Suisbel with runners on first and second, and he turned on a pitch and drove it to right field — his first home run of the 2026 season, a three-run shot that put Everett up 3-0 just like that.

    Brandon Eike wasn’t done adding to the damage. Two batters later, he crushed a solo home run — his fourth of the year, and his second in consecutive games — to make it 4-0 before Tri-City had even posted a run.

    Tri-City got one back in the bottom of the second. Ryan Nicholson doubled, Anthony Scull singled, and Randy De Jesus hit a sacrifice fly to cut the deficit to 4-1. It felt like a momentum moment for the Dust Devils. It wasn’t.

    Suisbel Piles On

    If you thought five RBIs in a single game was done after that second inning, Suisbel had more to say. With the bases loaded and two out in the top of the third, he punched a two-run single into right field to push the lead to 6-1.

    That’s five RBIs through three innings — tied for a career high, originally set back in August 2023. On the road. In a series opener. Against a Northwest League club that needed an answer and didn’t get one.

    Dollard Keeps It Clean

    Starting pitcher Taylor Dollard handled his business on the mound, working four innings and allowing just one earned run on five hits. He’s had his ups and downs this year, but Tuesday looked like the cleaner version of Dollard — attacking the strike zone, limiting damage, and handing the ball to the bullpen with a comfortable lead.

    Everett stretched the margin further in the top of the seventh. Anthony Donofrio came through with an RBI single, and Jimenez drew a bases-loaded walk to make it 8-2. Lucas Kelly closed things out, striking out Tri-City’s Jake Munroe to seal the 8-3 final.

    Why This Road Trip Matters

    The AquaSox arrived in Pasco for six games (April 28–May 3) after finishing their home series against the Spokane Indians. The Tri-City series is a genuine test — the Dust Devils were one of the hotter early-season clubs in the Northwest League, and Gesa Stadium has historically been tough on visitors.

    Tuesday’s win is a statement that Everett can generate offense on the road. Suisbel’s breakout night gives the lineup another bat to watch alongside the already-established threat of Felnin Celesten, who won NWL Player of the Week after hitting .471 with 11 hits in five games against Spokane. There are five more games left in this series — Wednesday through Sunday (6:30 PM starts weeknights, 1:30 PM on Sunday, May 3).

    Prospect Watch: Suisbel, Eike, and the Middle of the Order

    Luis Suisbel is a corner infield prospect in the Seattle Mariners organization, and nights like Tuesday are exactly what development staffs want to see: a guy finding his timing, trusting his approach, and delivering in run-scoring situations. Brandon Eike’s hot streak — four home runs on the year, multiple multi-hit efforts — has been one of the quiet stories of the early AquaSox season. With Celesten adding pop at the top, this is becoming a lineup that’s harder to manage from top to bottom.

    The Mariners have High-A affiliates for a reason: these are the guys who become major league contributors in three or four years. On nights like Tuesday, Gesa Stadium turns into a reminder that the pipeline is doing its job.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When do the AquaSox play next at Tri-City?

    The Everett AquaSox continue their six-game road series at Gesa Stadium in Pasco. Games run April 29–30 and May 1–3, with 6:30 PM starts Tuesday through Saturday and a 1:30 PM finale on Sunday, May 3.

    Who are the top AquaSox prospects to watch in 2026?

    Key names include Felnin Celesten (NWL Player of the Week, Week 3), Luis Suisbel (five RBIs Tuesday, first home run of the season), Brandon Eike (four home runs in 2026), Carlos Jimenez, and starter Taylor Dollard.

    What is Gesa Stadium?

    Gesa Stadium is the home of the Tri-City Dust Devils, the Colorado Rockies High-A affiliate, in Pasco, Washington — approximately a 2.5-hour drive from Everett across the Cascades.

    Source: Everett AquaSox official release via OurSports Central, MiLB.com gameday data.

  • What the Approved Stadium Design Means for AquaSox Fans and Everett Sports Visitors: A 2026 Guide

    What the Approved Stadium Design Means for AquaSox Fans and Everett Sports Visitors: A 2026 Guide

    For AquaSox fans and Everett sports visitors: City Council approved the design package April 29. The stadium is targeted for Fall or Winter 2027 — in time for the AquaSox 2027 season. What’s approved so far: 5,000 seats, ADA throughout, covered premium club, multi-use for baseball, USL soccer, concerts, and community events. What’s not yet decided: construction authorization and the $110M+ in financing needed to build it.

    If you’ve been following the downtown Everett stadium story, the April 29 City Council vote is a real milestone — the design phase is now funded and moving forward. Here is what it means for the fan and visitor experience being planned, and what the realistic timeline looks like.

    What Kind of Venue Is Being Designed

    The Everett Outdoor Event Center is designed as a true multi-use sports and events venue — not a single-purpose ballpark. The design calls for 5,000 seats with ADA accessibility throughout the facility, including a premium club seating 200 fans with 400 additional standing capacity on a covered deck. Public park space is built into the site design.

    The primary tenant anchor is the Everett AquaSox — the Seattle Mariners’ Single-A affiliate that has played in Everett since 1984, currently at Funko Field (Everett Memorial Stadium). The AquaSox would move into the new downtown venue when it opens.

    Two Everett teams in the United Soccer League (USL) are also planned as tenants — part of the professional soccer league’s Pacific Northwest expansion. Everett would host both baseball and professional soccer in the same facility.

    Downtown Location vs. Current Funko Field

    The current Funko Field sits on Oakes Avenue in the Bayside neighborhood — accessible but not embedded in Everett’s downtown core. The new Everett Outdoor Event Center is planned for a downtown location, positioning it within walking distance of Everett Station, the waterfront district, and the Broadway corridor.

    That downtown location is what gives the stadium broader event potential: concerts, festivals, and community programming that can draw on foot traffic from the waterfront and transit connections from Everett Station. The Waterfront Place restaurant district and the transit network changes underway make the downtown location stronger over the next few years.

    What the 2027 Timeline Means in Practice

    The city has been targeting Fall or Winter 2027 for the stadium opening — timed to be ready before the AquaSox 2027 season. That timeline requires design completion (now funded), followed by construction authorization, financing commitment, and construction itself.

    The design is the prerequisite. Without a completed design package, you cannot break ground, you cannot get final construction bids, and you cannot secure project financing. Wednesday’s vote clears that gate. What comes next — the construction decision and how the remaining $110 million-plus gets financed — is the harder sequence.

    The AquaSox Question

    The AquaSox have played in Everett since 1984, making them one of the longest-running Minor League Baseball affiliates in the Pacific Northwest. The new stadium is explicitly designed to keep them in Everett — the city has publicly noted that without a new facility, the team’s continued presence is at risk. Funko Field, built decades ago, does not meet modern Minor League Baseball facility standards.

    The April 29 vote moves the ball forward on keeping the AquaSox in downtown Everett through the 2027 season and beyond.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How many seats will the new Everett stadium have?

    The Everett Outdoor Event Center design calls for 5,000 seats with full ADA accessibility throughout, plus a premium club with 200 seated and 400 standing capacity on a covered deck.

    When could the AquaSox move to the new stadium?

    The city is targeting a Fall or Winter 2027 opening timed for the AquaSox 2027 season. This depends on construction authorization and financing being secured after the design package is complete.

    Where will the new Everett stadium be located?

    The Everett Outdoor Event Center is planned for a downtown location, distinguishing it from the current Funko Field on Oakes Avenue in Bayside. The downtown site puts it near Everett Station and the waterfront district.

    What sports will be played at the new Everett stadium?

    Minor League Baseball (Everett AquaSox, Seattle Mariners Single-A affiliate) and professional soccer (two United Soccer League teams). The venue is also designed for concerts, festivals, and community events.

    Has construction been authorized?

    No. The April 29 vote funds completing the design. Construction authorization and the $110 million-plus in construction financing are separate decisions that have not been made.

  • Everett City Council Approved the $10.6M Stadium Package on April 29: The Complete Guide to What Was Actually Authorized

    Everett City Council Approved the $10.6M Stadium Package on April 29: The Complete Guide to What Was Actually Authorized

    What happened April 29: Everett City Council approved a $10.6 million package to complete the design of the Everett Outdoor Event Center — the planned downtown home of the AquaSox and two USL soccer teams. The vote authorizes finishing the blueprints. It does not authorize construction. The total project still exceeds $120 million and no construction funding has been committed.

    On Wednesday, April 29, 2026, Everett City Council voted to approve $10.6 million in design funding for the Everett Outdoor Event Center. The vote moves the project from preliminary design to completed design — a necessary step before the city can make any decision about whether and how to build the facility. Here is the complete guide to what was actually authorized, what it costs, and what has not been decided.

    The Two Components of the $10.6 Million

    The April 29 package had two distinct parts, both approved at the council meeting at 3002 Wetmore Ave.:

    $4.8 million in contract amendments with four design contractors already engaged on the project. These amendments authorize the additional design work needed to complete the full design package for the Everett Outdoor Event Center — covering architectural drawings, engineering, site planning, environmental review, and the technical documentation required before construction can begin.

    $7.4 million state grant from the Washington State Department of Commerce, directed to the stadium design budget. This grant offsets a significant portion of the expanded design costs.

    The $4.8 million in contractor amendments is funded through an interfund loan from the city’s general fund balance — a borrowing mechanism from city reserves that must be repaid. The $7.4 million is grant funding that does not need to be repaid.

    What Design Funding Actually Means

    The distinction between design funding and construction funding matters. Design covers the complete package of documents — architectural drawings, structural engineering, utility coordination, environmental review, and permit-ready specifications — that defines exactly what will be built and what it will cost to build it. You cannot break ground without this package.

    Wednesday’s vote pays for finishing that package. The council is not yet deciding whether to build the stadium. That is a separate decision that comes after design is complete.

    Why $10.6 Million More Was Needed

    The original design contract did not include the full scope required to get the project to a build-ready state. As the design process progressed, scope expanded — particularly around the complexity of the downtown site, utility infrastructure, and the multi-use programming requirements of a venue serving baseball, soccer, and community events. The city applied for and received the $7.4 million Commerce grant specifically to offset these expanded costs.

    What the Stadium Is Designed to Be

    The Everett Outdoor Event Center is designed as a multi-use downtown venue with 5,000 seats and full ADA accessibility throughout. A premium club can seat 200 fans with 400 standing on a covered deck. The facility would serve as the home ballpark for the Everett AquaSox — the Seattle Mariners’ Single-A affiliate that has played at Funko Field (Everett Memorial Stadium) since 1984. The venue is also designed to host two new Everett teams in the United Soccer League, a professional league expanding across the Pacific Northwest.

    Public park amenities are part of the design, positioning the site as a community asset on non-game days. The city has been targeting a Fall or Winter 2027 completion — timed to open before the AquaSox 2027 season.

    The Budget Context

    The total estimated project cost exceeds $120 million. Wednesday’s $10.6 million brings additional design funding into the project but leaves the bulk of capital financing — more than $100 million — still to be determined. The city has received $17 million in team commitments from the AquaSox and USL partners, but the major construction funding sources have not been publicly committed.

    The vote lands against the backdrop of Everett’s projected $14 million 2027 budget gap. The interfund loan structure means the $4.8 million in contractor amendments is borrowed from general fund reserves — money that must be returned. Council previously explained this mechanism in detail before Wednesday’s vote.

    What Has Not Been Decided

    Wednesday’s vote does not authorize construction. It does not determine how the remaining $110 million-plus in construction costs will be financed. It does not commit to a specific groundbreaking date. It does not resolve the debate over whether downtown Everett can absorb the long-term financial obligations of a $120 million public venue while simultaneously managing a $14 million structural budget gap.

    Those are subsequent decisions. The council has approved finishing the design package. The harder decisions come after the blueprints are done.

    For the full pre-vote background on the interfund loan mechanism and how it works: The complete guide to Everett’s $10.6M stadium interfund loan.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What did Everett City Council approve on April 29, 2026?

    The council approved a $10.6 million package to complete the design of the Everett Outdoor Event Center. The package included $4.8 million in contract amendments with four design contractors (funded through an interfund loan from the general fund) and acceptance of a $7.4 million state Department of Commerce grant.

    Does the April 29 vote authorize building the stadium?

    No. The vote authorizes completing the design package — architectural drawings, engineering, environmental review, and permit-ready specifications. Construction authorization is a separate decision that has not been made. The total project cost exceeds $120 million and construction financing has not been committed.

    What is an interfund loan?

    An interfund loan is a borrowing from the city’s own general fund balance — its reserves — to cover a project cost. Unlike a bond, it does not involve outside borrowing, but it does reduce the general fund balance and must be repaid, reducing future flexibility.

    When is the Everett Outdoor Event Center expected to open?

    The city has been targeting Fall or Winter 2027, timed to open before the AquaSox 2027 season. That timeline depends on construction authorization and funding being secured after design is complete.

    What teams would play at the new stadium?

    The Everett AquaSox — the Seattle Mariners’ Single-A affiliate that has played in Everett since 1984 — and two new Everett teams in the United Soccer League (USL). The venue is also designed for concerts, festivals, and community events.

    How does the stadium vote connect to Everett’s budget gap?

    Everett faces a projected $14 million structural budget gap heading into 2027. The $4.8 million in contractor amendments is funded via an interfund loan from the general fund balance — reserve money that must be repaid. The city is managing both the stadium design costs and the broader fiscal challenge simultaneously.

    What happens next after the design is complete?

    Once the design package is finished, the council must decide whether to authorize construction, how to finance the $110 million-plus remaining cost, and on what timeline. That decision has not been made.

  • Everett City Council Approves $10.6M Stadium Design Package: What the April 29 Vote Actually Authorized

    Everett City Council Approves $10.6M Stadium Design Package: What the April 29 Vote Actually Authorized

    What did Everett City Council approve on April 29? The council approved a $10.6 million package to complete the design of the Everett Outdoor Event Center — the future home of the AquaSox and two USL soccer teams. The package includes $4.8 million in contract amendments with four design contractors and acceptance of a $7.4 million state Department of Commerce grant.

    What the Council Approved

    Everett’s City Council cleared the next major hurdle in the downtown stadium project on Wednesday, voting to approve $10.6 million in design funding for the Everett Outdoor Event Center — a vote that green-lights the final design phase but stops well short of breaking ground.

    The $10.6 million package had two components, both approved at the April 29 council meeting at 3002 Wetmore Ave.:

    $4.8 million in contract amendments with four design contractors already engaged in the project. These amendments authorize additional design work needed to complete the full design package for the Everett Outdoor Event Center.

    Acceptance of a $7.4 million state grant from the Washington State Department of Commerce directed toward the stadium project.

    Together, the two actions bring an additional $10.6 million into the stadium design budget. The $4.8 million in contractor amendments is funded through an interfund loan from the city’s general fund balance — a mechanism the council previously established and explained in detail before Wednesday’s vote.

    What “Design Funding” Actually Means

    The $10.6 million funds the completion of the design for the Everett Outdoor Event Center. Design work covers architectural drawings, engineering, site planning, environmental review, and the technical documentation required before construction can begin. It does not fund construction itself.

    The total estimated project cost exceeds $120 million. Wednesday’s vote moves the project from preliminary design to completed design — a necessary step before the city can make any further decision about whether and how to build.

    Think of it this way: the city is now paying to finish the blueprints. Whether to build what the blueprints describe is a separate decision that comes later.

    What the Stadium Is Supposed to Be

    The Everett Outdoor Event Center is planned as a multi-use sports and events venue in downtown Everett. It would serve as the home ballpark for the Everett AquaSox, the Seattle Mariners’ Single-A affiliate that has played at Funko Field (formerly Everett Memorial Stadium) since 1984.

    The facility is also designed to host two new Everett teams in the professional United Soccer League (USL), which has been expanding in the Pacific Northwest. Public park amenities are part of the design, positioning the site as a community asset beyond game days.

    Why $10.6 Million More Was Needed

    The original design contract did not include the full scope required to get the project to a build-ready state. As the design process progressed, the scope of work expanded — particularly around the complexity of the downtown site, utility considerations, and the multi-use programming requirements of a venue serving baseball, soccer, and community events.

    The city sought and received the $7.4 million state Commerce grant specifically to offset the expanded design costs. This is not unusual for large public construction projects, where design costs frequently increase as the project becomes more technically defined.

    The project has faced scrutiny over its cost trajectory. The total price tag of $120 million-plus is significantly above earlier estimates, and the city is simultaneously managing a projected $14 million budget gap heading into 2027. The interfund loan structure means the stadium design costs are borrowing from the general fund balance — money that will need to be repaid.

    What Hasn’t Been Decided Yet

    Wednesday’s vote authorizes completing the design. It does not authorize construction, determine how the remaining $110+ million in construction costs will be funded, or commit the city to building the stadium.

    The next major decision point comes when the completed design and a full project budget are presented to the council for a construction vote. That vote — substantially larger in scope — has not been scheduled.

    Mayor Franklin’s administration has argued that completing the design is a prerequisite to any serious conversation about how to fund and structure the full project. Without a completed design, there’s no firm cost basis and no project to bid.

    What AquaSox and USL Have at Stake

    City officials have stated publicly that without a new stadium, the AquaSox’s long-term future in Everett is uncertain. Minor League Baseball has been consolidating franchises and upgrading stadium standards nationally, and aging facilities have been a factor in franchise relocations in other markets.

    For USL, the new stadium would anchor professional soccer in a region that has seen significant growth in the sport. A purpose-built configuration — not a converted baseball park — is part of what makes the site viable for USL play.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Did the council vote to build the stadium? No. The April 29 vote authorized completing the design. A separate construction vote is required before any building begins.

    Where does the $4.8 million come from? It comes from the city’s general fund balance through an interfund loan — essentially, the city lending itself money from its reserves. The loan is expected to be repaid from future stadium-related revenues or other sources.

    What is the $7.4 million state grant for? The Washington State Department of Commerce grant is directed toward the stadium design project. Accepting it was part of the April 29 vote package.

    How much will the whole stadium cost? Total estimated project costs exceed $120 million. How that will be funded — through public bonds, grants, private contributions, or a combination — has not been finalized.

    When would the stadium open? No construction timeline has been established. That depends on when and how the construction funding is resolved and a construction vote passes.

    What to Do Next

    • Follow the project: Search “Outdoor Event Center” on everettwa.gov for updates as design progresses.
    • Attend council meetings: Regular council meetings are Wednesdays at 12:30 p.m. at 3002 Wetmore Ave. Meetings are streamed on the city’s YouTube channel.
    • Track the budget: The city’s 2026 budget page and future 2027 planning documents will reflect how the interfund loan is managed.
    • View the full agenda: All council meeting agendas are posted in advance at everettwa.gov/agendacenter.