Let me start this off by saying that I have been more critical about the Seattle Seahawks this year than I have in probably well over a decade. These 2021 Seahawks have been a challenging team for me to root for in many respects.
I thought we were supposed to see a quick tempo offense that was going to lean into Russell Wilson’s strengths as a thrower.
I thought we were going to see Russ routinely deliver quick passes instead of chasing after deep ones on third and short plays.
I thought I was going to continue to see Jamal Adams used as a third down pass rush specialist, which I thought was the main reason why they traded two first round picks for him.
I thought I would see John Schneider make a trade for Stephon Gilmore, and/or possibly sign Richard Sherman to fix obvious holes at corner.
I thought I would see a healthier and more impactful Chris Carson.
I thought we would finally see tight ends more involved.
I thought this defense was going to be good.
I thought that they were going to be able to persuade Odell to join Russ, but instead he joined the fricking Rams, even though Seattle supposedly offered more money. I don’t think we can say any longer that Pete Carroll is some master recruiter for available free agents, and that kind of blows.
Yeah, this has been a tough watch for me as a Twelve as these many things unfolded. The only thing that has kept me watching every play of every game is my relentless love of this team, and the fact train wrecks are kind of enthralling watches sometimes.
But screw Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay F’ing Packers.
Seattle must go into a stadium that they haven’t won at since 1999 this Sunday, and they must throttle this team and quarterback. It goes well beyond football, and it’s the right thing to do.
Aaron Rodgers is rotting chode of a human being. He’s as big of a know-it-all prick as you will find, and the worst kind of know it all prick is the one who is a high profile quarterback.
Aaron Rodgers has been thinking that the sun shines out of his butt hole since the peewee coach pointed at him and said “you play quarterback.” I have absolutely no doubt about that.
And apparently that Cal Berkley education of his has made him smarter than all the doctors and scientists that work for the World Health Organization, the CDC, and the FDA when it comes to vaccinating in order to curb Covid. Good to know.
I am not going to go deep into all the reasons why it is important for every eligible person with no preventing health condition to vaccinate against Covid. All the experts that work for these organizations listed above have stated very plainly why this is so important, and if you care, you can read up on it yourself from the experts in the field, or listen to them talk about it.. and not listen to some podcasting know nothing on YouTube share their views.
But quickly in a nutshell, if you have read along this far; we want to vaccinate to protect those most vulnerable against a disease that can mutate into more dangerous variants if it finds large breeding grounds of unvaccinated people to thrive in and get smarter. We vaccinate to protect children under the age of 5, and we vaccinate to protect people with underlined health conditions. In the bigger picture, we vaccinate so that we can get beyond Covid, so that it will eventually die off to a safe enough extent, and thus we can eventually return to more normal living.
But a super smart guy like Aaron Rodgers doesn’t get that, or more likely, doesn’t fucking care.
Why should he? He doesn’t have any young kids of his own. And if this dude has shun his own mother in Northern California, why would he ever give a shit about your vulnerable older family members?
The answer is simple. Aaron Rodgers doesn’t care, and really, apparently neither do the Green Bay Packers. The real rub in all of this recent gaga about him lying about his vaccine status is that all parties knew it was wrong all along. That’s why he misled and why the organization buried their heads in the sand.
Rodgers had every opportunity to be open and honest about his position on the vaccine like Carson Wentz did, Kirk Cousins did, and Cam Newton also did, but he chose to mislead. My best guess as to why is probably, most likely, vanity.
He’s engaged to a Hollywood actress, and he had a stint as the Jeopardy host in the off-season. He might see working in “the Industry” as something in his future beyond football, and I’m going to guess that hosting Jeopardy and taking a horse de-wormer to protect against Covid probably isn’t a great look in the minds of Hollywood power players who, you know, follow the advice of the CDC experts. So, he chose to lie in front a camera when pressed about it.
What really impresses me in the way that he went about it was the condescending way he called out others in the league for choosing to stay unvaccinated (as if he was). That’s some Grade A manipulation stuff right there.
And let’s be clear on this, taking a de-worming pill does not make you vaccinated against Covid. Saying that you are “immunized” after taking the stupid thing means diddly swat to containing the virus and slowing the spread. That’s why the experts who are studying the disease are saying to vaccinate, and don’t take the fucking de-wormer.
And let’s be clear on another thing. The league is not forcing players to be vaccinated, they are just making the unvaccinated persons go through extra hoops to make sure that everything is as safe as it can possibly be. Rodgers just didn’t want to go through those extra hoops. Instead, he is choosing to act like a Grade A Karen about it all to anyone who will listen.
Listening to him go from condescending and ultra defensive egotistical prick in interviews last week to some woe-is-me victim this week after Terry Bradshaw called out his bullshit on a NFL FOX broadcast is some serious Karen-esque privileged bullshit we’ve been seeing unfold in real time. There is no way for him to walk that stuff back now.
So, fuck Aaron Rodgers.
I hope he plays on Sunday and I hope Darrell Taylor hits him so hard on a pass rush that he shits himself right in the middle of Lambeau Field. Afterwards, I hope he pisses blood for a week, and I hope the Packers get their asses kicked at home in front of a sold out crowd by a Seahawks team that hasn’t been very good this year.
This isn’t about me being a part of cancel culture or the woke mafia, either. I’m about as much of a bleeding heart as Slayer is elevator music. There is nothing woke about following the urging of world renowned scientists. It’s the most practical thing to do.
But because some certain high profile dumb ass narcissistic political leader in a high office chose to create a pissing contest with these scientists, we unfortunately live in a society where doing the most practical thing against this disease is, in fact, fully politicized. That fucking sucks, and now Aaron Rodgers has kicked that whole hornets nest again.
Listening to him going on a media tour defending his actions is a total joke that, unfortunately, way too many listeners are going to buy into. Now science has to deal with Rodgers being a major miss-information spreader. Fantastic.
“Why should I follow the leagues rules when I don’t agree with them” is not a functional defense no matter how much of a condescending wise ass you come across saying it.
The Green Bay Packers should beat the Seattle Seahawks this Sunday if Aaron Rodgers plays and Russell Wilson plays. They are the better team, and they have a dominant home field advantage. Russell Wilson as always struggled there, even when healthy, and with better Seahawk teams around him. Before the season started, this is the game that I looked at, and thought it would probably be a pretty ugly one for Seattle. I wouldn’t be shocked if it proves true this Sunday.
But Good Christ in Heaven, the Seattle Seahawks absolutely must kick the holy living snot out of this team and quarterback this Sunday, if he’s playing. God yes. It’s the right thing to do.
I gotta confession to make. I’m a middle aged dork who still plays Madden.
I do other things that make me somewhat more cool. I drive a cherry red F-250. I sport a handsome pair of sideburns. I expose my preschooler to hip sounds of The Who, and The Flaming Lips. I listen to NPR, do yoga sometimes, and watch shows and films by Taika Waititi.
But I still play Madden, and apparently, I also use a lot of Star Wars analogies, as well.
Eight games into this 2021 season with the Seattle Seahawks has shown me why I still play this goofy game. It’s an okay game to burn a few hours on when you’re home by yourself, but it becomes considerably more enjoyable when the team you passionately root for sucks, and you have become exasperated to a point of wanting to just rip it all apart, and start new. That’s when off-season mode becomes intrinsically the most enjoyable part of the game.
I honestly wonder what the percentages are with all those Anti Pete Carroll types on Seahawks Twitter who also happen to be full blown Madden addicts? It wouldn’t shock if those numbers were actually fairly high (I see you people).
In my latest attempt on simulating through this 2021 season of Madden, I decided to go about it in Owner Mode. I, Curtis Eastwood, thus became owner of the Seattle Seahawks. How I got to become owner of the Seahawks is a backstory I hadn’t figured out. I just accepted it as true, kinda like how I just accepted that normally meager sized Mako sharks suddenly became gigantic (bigger than Jaws), in the cheesy 1990’s flick Deep Blue Sea. It just happened. But I digress.
Going back to Madden, the game reminded me of a few things true about the Seahawks as it pertains to the league. First and foremost, it reminded me that Russell Wilson is an incredibly talented quarterback. Secondly, it reminded me that, apart from a couple nice receivers, he isn’t surrounded by much premiere talent, particularly on the offensive and defensive lines, and at cornerback, and that all kinda blows.
Being weaker inside the trenches and on the perimeters of the defense generally is not considered good roster construction. This really needs to stop in Seattle starting in 2022, and it’s going to be a challenge to fix because Seattle, for the second year in a row, won’t have a first round pick to acquire top end draft talent for the trenches, and if they manage a second half turnaround, they likely will be picking later in round two before they finally select a player. Thus, the pickle of the situation.
However, when you consider that Seattle can roll it’s currently comfortable amount of cap space into 2022, another off-season strategy becomes more obvious.
If Seattle is to finally invest into their trenches and get back to winning games more at the line of scrimmage again, spending in free agency potentially becomes pretty enticing, especially considering the amount of younger defensive line talent that could emerge as free agents. If Seattle can just be willing to be a bit bigger buyers than they’ve shown in a while, their defensive line issues could quickly get turned around and fixed for the longer haul. That opens up the draft to address the offensive line, and maybe other positions.
It’s worth noting that Seattle should have a good amount of cap space available next year to be this sort of shopper, if they choose. By making a few roster moves to cut some older more expensive vets, they can easily create even more space.
That could help going a longer way to making Russ happy, but it likely won’t be nearly enough.
Time To Fully Commit To Russell Wilson
Russell Wilson has been pretty loud the last few years with what he wants. Let me remind you the ways.
He has been loud about wanting an aggressive up tempo offense for years now. He very likely feels most confident as a passer in hurry up mode, where defenses can’t as easily sub out. He has been asking for this for years, and even with play-caller Shane Waldron coming in from the Rams (a team well known for hurry up), we have yet to see this become a staple of the offense this year.
Personally, I think it probably flies in the face of what Pete Carroll wants in terms of ball control and keeping his defense more fresh, but facts remain facts. The star quarterback has been annually asking for this to be a thing for him.
In 2020, Russ stated at the pro bowl that what he wanted in Seattle was to be “surrounded by stars.” What Seattle chose to give him was a geriatric Greg Olsen at tight end. He then lobbied hard for them to bring in Antonio Brown, and they put forth a very light effort, for reasons probably fairly obvious. Think what you will about AB, but I don’t think Russ particularly enjoyed watching Tom Brady win that Super Bowl in Tampa passing to Brown. Just my hunch.
The lack of aggression from the front offense to surround Russ with as much star power as possible may annoy him even more than the lack of willingness from Carroll to coach an uptempo team.
Speaking of which, I love Pete Carroll. I think he’s a great head coach, and I will take his culture building strengths over clock management and modern day football analytics anytime. I won’t be shy about my feelings on that either.
I actually suspect Pete is going to have the Seahawks playing competitive ball during the second half of the season, and I can easily see the potential of a 9-8 finish, or better, if they get a healthy Russell Wilson back soon enough. I think they can make a decent run at that final playoff spot, and possibly even snag it. It would be remarkable if they did, and I think it would be a testament to Carroll’s coaching, and Russell Wilson’s rare abilities as a gritty play-making quarterback.
I also think that, even if they did make the playoffs and did a little damage there, it is highly unlikely Russell Wilson will want to return as the starting quarterback for the Seahawks in 2022, if Pete Carroll remains as head coach. I think that is especially true if he sees a more realistic window to get traded to a team like New Orleans who has a roster that’s ready built to win now, and has an offensive minded coach who would probably be pretty willing to adjust his scheme to fit what Russ does best. I can hope I am wrong on that, but I don’t think I am.
I think the only way Seattle can hang onto Russ longer term, and make him happy is if there is a total philosophical regime change at the top and it all starts with Carroll, who isn’t just the head coach, he’s also the vice president of the whole team. For Russell Wilson to want to remain in Seattle under Carroll, I think Carroll would have to completely abandon his philosophy in how to win games, and he might also have to give up more control to John Schneider make roster decisions.
He would have to be willing to have an uptempo wide open offense that would operate more out of spread formations.
He would have to be willing to give total autonomy of the offense to Russ and his play-caller.
He would have to be willing to accept that interceptions are an inherent part of that style of that style of offensive and not dial it back when a pick or two are thrown in a game.
He would have to be willing to accept that quick scoring will likely gas his defense and it’s going to be that much harder to have a statistically top ten defense.
He’s going to possibly have to stay out of way the general manager on draft day, if, in fact, it was him insisting that they take LJ Collier and Rashaan Penny with their first picks a few years ago.
Would Carroll be willing to do all this to accommodate Russel Wilson?
I have my doubts, but if I am Jody Allen, and I am looking at all the weirdness that went down with this team last off-season between Pete and Russ, and I’m also looking at how prices of game day tickets are suddenly in free fall with how this team started the season coupled with Russ’s injury, I am making a very easy decision in my mind. I’m telling Pete Carroll and John Schneider that they need to do everything they can to make Russ happy, and they won’t, I’m going to find another coach and GM team that will.
Part of me wonders if she has already given them this exact vibe.
Here’s how I made Russ happy as pie in Seattle in Madden
Going into Madden off-season mode in 2022, I asked Carroll to step aside, even though we finished as a playoff team.
I replaced him with an offensive minded coach from the Andy Reid tree because I believe that is very specifically the wide open style of offense Russell wants to see himself running during the second half of his career.
I also paired this coach with a defensive coordinator who embraces a more attacking 4-3 defense that puts emphasis on rushing with four defensive linemen. This is really getting back to what Carroll’s defenses were before Ken Norton Junior took over as DC. You rush four and drop back seven, and you rely on a deep defensive line rotation (maybe Seattle should simply bring back Gus Bradley or Kris Richard).
I traded Bobby Wagner to the Jets for a third round pick, I slid Jordyn Brooks to middle linebacker, and I made Jamal Adams the weak side linebacker in this new scheme with the idea Adams to function more as a blitzer and a third down rush specialist. Ideally, I would have looked to have dealt Adams, as well, but his salary was cost prohibitive to deal, and I needed as much money as possible hitting free agency.
I cut expensive older players such as Chris Carson, Carlos Dunlap, Kerry Hyder, and Benson Mayowa. I freed up space to bring in two young every down defensive tackles on multiple year deals to blend inside with Poona Ford to give me a young and rich defensive tackle rotation. I added another younger edge rusher to mix in with the promising talents of Darrell Taylor and Alton Robinson.
I spent extra cheddar to add a younger vet at corner, and kept Sidney Jones who proved to be cheaper than DJ Reed. With Tre Brown in the mix, I felt I could let Reed go, and I felt better about corner, but still considered it a target with the draft.
I signed younger mid level players with some upside on the offensive line for left tackle, right tackle, and center.
I bargain shopped for a couple somewhat proven veteran running backs.
The only veterans (outside of Sidney Jones) I re-signed off my 2021 Seahawk roster were Qunadre Diggs, Ryan Neil, Gerald Everett, and Will Dissly. I felt good about locking up safety and tight end.
With one pick in the second round and two third round picks, I drafted for offensive line, defensive line, taking a center, tackle, and adding one more young piece to my revamped defensive line. The rest of the way, I drafted for depth at running back, corner, and receiver, and more offensive line.
When I looked at this roster construction, the only position that I felt iffy about was left tackle by not bringing back Duane Brown, but I liked the general competition there with the mid level free agents mixed in with maybe some upside with Stone Foresythe.
Is it a risk not bringing back Brown and going with marginal talent at a critical position? Absolutely, but this is the real life game of Tetris that most GM’s have to play annually, especially with rosters such as Seattle’s where their appear to be so many holes.
I chose to attack the market and draft in the areas where the talent was best, instead of overpaying for marginal talent to fit needs and reaching in the draft to fit other needs. With a team that has so many holes, you can’t hit it out of the park with each free agent signing and draft pick, so I just went to for positions that appeared to be clear upgrades. Free agency showed me that there was better talent at defensive line, so I splurged there. Even though I signed a veteran free agent that I liked at center, I saw a player in the draft that I thought was better, and took him.
But how I mainly chose to make Russ happy was pairing him with a head coach who will devote building an offensive attack catered to all of Russ’s strengths, and adding to the defense a better pass rush to take advantage of teams throwing more in games to play catch up. This was my sole strategy.
This is probably what Seattle will have to do next off-season. It’s not just going to be about making a coaching philosophy change. It’s going to have to be adjusting philosophy in the front office. This could mean that Jody Allen might have to make a tough call on John Schneider as well if the current GM is tied to a risk adverse approach, and doesn’t want to budge off it.
The reality of making Russ happy in Seattle and staying a contender
Call me crazy, but I don’t think Russ cares much for risk adverse coaching or front office dealings. I think he’s a total ‘no risk it, no biscuit” guy.
He wants a front office to be aggressive in bringing in star talents like Drew Brees has had in New Orleans, and Brady now has in Tampa, and what Philly has so often done. He doesn’t want to see Schneider make bottom market deals on former first round pick flame outs to see if their is still something there to uncork that another coaching staff didn’t. That’s not going to cut it for him.
He obviously wants a better commitment to the offensive line, but he probably also wants to see a better pass rush, as well. I think most of us can relate.
There appear to be numerous younger defensive linemen set to hit free agency next off-season that Seattle could go more aggressive for. That would fix one major need, and lock it up for seasons down the road.
They could easily address offensive line holes in a combination of free agency and draft. Nothing wrong with a two headed approach.
In my opinion, they need to stop putting expensive resources into positions that don’t involve the line of scrimmage. They need to stop giving big money to running backs, and safeties, and middle linebackers.
The only way I can see justifying Jamal Adams on this roster is by making him a full time pass rusher because that is what is salary calls out for. I would not have him be a coverage safety. I would use him solely as a pass rushing linebacker, and maybe paired with Darrell Taylor on third downs on opposite ends. That could be enough for Seattle to become a top end pass rush team again.
But really, I think the biggest issue with Russ is devising an offense that will play to what he does best, and that is likely an up tempo attack who’s play caller is unafraid of scoring quickly and often. I’ve watched every single game Russell Wilson have played in Seattle. He is, without question, at his best in hurry up mode. Defenses can’t as easily key on him.
It doesn’t mean he has to throw it all over the place to be happy either. He can hand the ball off uptempo just like the Oregon Ducks did to great success under Chip Kelley some years back. He just likely wants to be the aggressor. He wants to be the hunter instead of being the hunted.
I would love for Pete Carroll to see that light and embrace it as a head coach. I think he has been the best head coach Seattle has ever seen as a sports town. I think this idea from some that he is washed up as a coach is ridiculous, too.
Watching Tennessee physically beat down the Rams on SNF by playing Pete Ball solidifies it in my mind that the league hasn’t completely passed over his preferred style of winning. Far from it.
With all the analytics that are out there, football will always be football. The teams that block better and tackle better will always be more built to win. Tennessee shows us that, even without their superstar running back. So, yeah. I’m still a Pete Carroll believer.
But I also have a really hard to seeing him willing to adjust his philosophy to fit the marquee quarterback in this town, and that’s the rub.
As much as I love Pete, if I have to choose between the franchise player and the head coach, I have to go with Russ. It’s taken me a long while to reach this conclusion, but having Russ out during this stretch of games is very likely the difference between Seattle being 3-5 (which they are), and being 5-3 and in firm control of being a playoff team.
Simply put, Russell Wilson is Seattle’s best asset in professional sports. You don’t typically trade off your best asset. You build around it.
This is how I would cook if I owned the Seahawks.
That said, if all I think is true between Russ and Pete like I think it is, and Seattle chooses to go in a different direction this off-season, and Pete remains, and Russ moves on, I won’t be too overly upset. If Pete still has the culture of this team riding high and has multiple first round picks to play with, I’d be intrigued to see what shakes out of that. I just have a harder time seeing it going down this way.
Of course, there does exist the possibly that I completely overestimated the tensions between Pete and Russ, and they find a way to work it out and stay together. This could happen, and it wouldn’t be the first time my intuitions have been off the mark, but then, again, it’s probably not going to make off-season mode in Madden nearly as fun.
And really, football should be about fun.. I think, anyways.
I’ve seen a lot of things with the Seahawks in my life.
I’ve seen a 2-14 Seattle Seahawks team have a top defense in the league in 1992 only to prove that defenses don’t win championships, much less three games in a sixteen game regular season.
I’ve seen a Seahawk quarterback throw five interceptions in a NFC Championship game, and still figure out a gutty way to win it in overtime, and get his team to a back to back Super Bowl.
I’ve seen another Seahawk quarterback say loudly into a mic during a playoff overtime coin toss “we want the ball and we are going to score” and then proceed to throw a game losing pick six once he gets the ball.
I have seen yet another Seahawk quarterback back in the late 1980s get sacked an NFL record seven times in a game by the same player, and in what should have been sack number eight, he miraculously slipped out, and toss a game winning touchdown.
I’ve seen a Beastquake.
I’ve seen a SharpieGate.
I don’t think I’ve ever seen a player pick up an onside kick and run it in for a touchdown to ice a game in the final minutes 31-7, but thanks to Travis Homer, I have now seen that, too.
The Seattle Seahawks didn’t just beat down this Jacksonville Jaguars dog of a team this Sunday. They kicked the dog in the stomach while it was laying all over the Lumen field artificial grass. I wasn’t upset about that, either.
Here are my thoughts.
The Good
After spending the week lamenting why Pete Carroll chose to shut down his offense in a tight and very winnable game against the Saints on Monday Night Football, it was refreshing to see him give the keys back to offensive coordinator Shane Waldron more in this one. I thought Waldron, for the most part, called a pretty good game. Plays looked varied, it didn’t feel like Alex Collins with getting charged with the task of running into brick wall on third and two, and there where various ways players were getting the ball. This felt like a modern day NFL offense in this one.
It was joyous to see Geno Smith look more like a capable quarterback in the league in this one, as well. He’s a far cry from Russell Wilson, but when drives were clicking, he got the ball out on time, at times down field, and he hit several receivers in stride to provide a run after catch opportunity. Even though he took more sacks than he might should have, this was a solid game for him, as he provided three of Seattle’s touchdowns.
And you want to talk about quarterback efficiency? Geno completed just over 83 percent of his passes in this one. That’s a stat line any top end quarterback would gladly take. Geno Smith should be proud of himself.
This was another overall good game out of the defense. Safety Ryan Neil had a nice game, as did the corners, and safety Quandre Diggs. I thought Ugo Amadi showed as a nickel DB. Seattle only got one sack, but they pressured and hurried Trevor Lawrence pretty much all game long. Darrell Taylor had another nice game.
I think what I liked most in this one was how the Seattle corners played tighter at the line of scrimmage. They were going to give Lawrence quick and easy completions. This is a far contrast to the first month of defensive football Seattle has played. Let’s see if this continues against teams with better offenses like Green Bay, and Arizona.
It would, of course, be horrible if I didn’t give proper shout out again to Travis Homer for scooping up that onside kick and take it to the house. Ain’t never seen that before, and glad I did.
The Bad
I feel terrible putting Jamal Adams in this section. By all accounts, he had a respectable game.
He had five solo tackles, and to my eyes, he didn’t look terrible in coverage. If it wasn’t for the fact that he is now making over $17 million a year to play a strong safety role that hasn’t, to my eyes, been impactful, I wouldn’t think to be writing about him here.
The cold hard facts remain cold and hard.
Jamal Adams is being paid a ton of money, and really has yet to show what he’s anything close to being worth it this season. Through eight games, he has yet to produce a single sack. He’s been in position to pick off a pass and was looked inept at being able to do it.
This is not good for a safety who is viewed as the best pass rushing safety in the league, and is supposed to be a ‘defensive weapon.” Now, his backup in Neil has more sacks than he does.
What does Seattle do with him?
Do they keep him as a safety, or do they try him as a linebacker?
It was interesting to note that when in nickel defense in this one, Neil was playing WILL backer and Jordyn Brooks was pulled off the field. Why not put Adams there, and have Neil at safety in those situations?
Neil looks and plays like a very capable safety. Adams strengths are best suited for being in the box.
Right now, this whole Adams deal feels like a massive busted flush for this team. If Pete Carroll were to lose his job at the end of this season, it would feel like the Adams trade would be a main catalyst for his removal.
And this has absolutely nothing to do with whether Adams is a good or bad player. I actually still believe he is a top end talent. I just think how he is being used in this defense is wrong.
He is being paid pass rusher money. He earned that by collecting 9 sacks in twelve games last year. He should be used as a main pass rusher for this team this year, again.
If this were my defense, I would have him lined off the corner on most third and longs. I would even consider using him much like Rufus Porter was used in the late 1980s to mid 1990s. Older Seahawk fans will know what I am talking about here.
Porter was a small linebacker/edge rusher. He actually made this team initially as a special teams ace, but then head coach Chuck Knox saw a use for his speed on third downs, and he quickly became an aces third down pass rush specialist. He instantly became a fan favorite.
Porter was initially playing at a petite size of 6-1 and 210 pounds. He looked more like a DB than a LB. Eventually, he added another ten pounds or more, but never lost his speed.
Adams is listed at 6-1 213 pounds. He’s a bigger safety, and isn’t that far away from being a light WILL linebacker like Porter was, and a few are in this league.
If I were coaching this team, I’d shift him to linebacker. I think this would be my best way to make the most out of him.
I would trust Ryan Neil to make better plays on the ball at safety, and I would use Adams’ speed and aggressive in the box and at the line of scrimmage. This idea is screaming out loudly to me like the idea I had about marrying my wife. It’s a no brainer. You do it.
But, they probably won’t do this because Jordyn Brooks was last year’s first round pick and he has been playing WILL. They probably don’t want to diminish his game by only having him on the field thirty percent of the time at strong side (SAM) linebacker, but I think it is what they should consider. After all, if they created a plan for Ryan Neil to play WILL on third downs in this one, and have Brooks off the field on key passing downs, why not just do this for Adams?
This is the conundrum Seattle is in with Adams and this defense, and I don’t think it’s fair for the fans, nor the player himself, to continue not using him enough in ways in which he is most dynamic.
Hopefully, Seattle figures something out with him as they go into this bye week.
The Ugly
I was actually going to list this in the Good section, but Good Lordy, did I ever have belly laughing fun watching Urdan Meyer’s disgusted face during the second half of this game, and especially after the recovered onside kick was taken in for the final score.
This could not have been what he envisioned when he took this Jaguar gig, thinking he would be the savor. LOL!
What a maroon.
I’m still laughing as I type this up. It looked like he smelt his own farts all game long, and then someone else’s stinky gas bomb at the end.
Meyer is a joke of a human being. He deserves to get canned tomorrow.
Part of me wishes Jacksonville will keep with him the full season, but that’s only so that he can continue to embarrass himself. I feel bad for his players who have to look at his face on the team flight home and in the team meetings this week. I feel worse for Jacksonville fans.
What a human joke. It’s completely fair to make fun at this douche, too.
He has left piles of crap around him wherever he has gone in college football, collecting national championships. I think he turned a blind eye to a lot of heinous behavior out of his players and coaches, and this whole getting caught on film grabbing ass shit he did at some club in Cincinnati shows us all exactly who, and what he is.
He’s horrible. All those Pete Carroll hating Seahawk fans should be grateful about the person Pete Carroll is, at the very least, and that’s the truth.
Sure, Carroll can be guilty of piss poor game management, and playing things too conservatively in this modern wide open era of offensive football. That’s fair, but Good God, I would gladly take ten more years of Carroll the human being over one season of a putrid person of a coach in Meyer any time. It’s no contest.
Also, careful what you ask for if you’re the sort that wants Carroll out. I fully get all the reasons why, but the fact remains that Pete Carroll is a master culture builder, and that is a huge deal in the world of professional sports, and this whole Urban Meyer saga is a huge reminder of why.
Moving Forward
Seattle is now 3-5. That’s not good, but it doesn’t mean their season is a total loss, even though it sorta feels like it is. We are still in a weird spot as fans.
On the plus side, I was expecting the Jaguars to make this one a go of it, and Seattle whooped up on them pretty good. If they get Russell Wilson back shortly after the bye week, I think a 9 game winning season is still possible with how this schedule breaks down the road. That’s probably not going to get it done to be a playoff team, but it can make for a more respectable year in which Russ missed multiple games for the first time in his career.
This has me wondering if Pete Carroll does give John Schneider the green light to go for a splash trade, possibly for a big name pass rusher, corner, or even a running back with Chris Carson now appearing to look more and more done for the year.
How much better would this offense be if there was a featured back who defensive coaches feared some?
How much more of an improvement could this defense be if there was more of a lock down corner presence on it, or a pass rusher who demanded extra attention on each passing down?
Last week, I was thinking they should be sellers leading up to the trade deadline. A big part of me still believes that is best for the long term health of this club. It still feels like some rebuild is necessary in 2022.
But I am starting to doubt that the Seahawks are going to see it this way under Carroll, and I don’t know if I can fault them for it. If they can turn around a 2-5 start to the season into another 10 game winning season, that would be pretty remarkable.
There are still sure to be many Twelves thinking that Carroll should go regardless, but I would suspect that more than a few fans would jump back on his bandwagon, if he pulls that off. I’m going to guess the Seahawks are going to see it that way, too.
As of now, I’m thinking that they will be buyers to try to salvage this thing. Pete Carroll is not going to quit on this team being a playoff contender. He won’t want any part of that energy, and I respect him for it.
Tuesday is going to be a very interesting day with the trade deadline ending at 1PM Pacific time.
Band Of Brothers is my all-time favorite mini-series. I’m going to guess that most who have watched this HBO show recounting true life events of a group of US infantry soldiers in Europe during WWII will know what I am talking about.
War is hell. That is mostly all that my father, a veteran infantry solder of the Korean War himself, would ever say whenever I would ask him about his experiences. He never wanted to talk about it.
One time, when I was much older and had a better sense of his perspective on the topic, I asked him what was the hardest part of being over there. Given the fact that he suffered severe injuries from hand grenade shrapnel, I anticipated he would open up about the day he received those injuries in combat. To my surprise, he opened up fairly easily to that question, but where he vividly went was somewhere I hadn’t considered.
He talked about when he earned enough combat points to finally be able to be sent state side for the remainder of his duty. At that point, he had gone from lowly private rank to being a squad leader sergeant, and he had to be replaced by another squad leader in order to leave. Squad leaders, apparently, were something hard to come by, and this process of finding a replacement for him took over a month.
In that period of wait, still serving at the front lines, the war became a psychological hell for him. He had never considered that he would make it out alive. Then he was faced with what could become a reality, but only if the US army could just find his replacement in time. Every day, things put him more on edge while he was responsible for leading young men against hostile enemy fire.
War is hell.
It is also extremely silly to use any war analogy with the game of American football, even though, undeniably, it can be an extremely violent sport. So, I am very aware that I am treading on thin ice when I’m about to use a sequence in Band Of Brothers as an analogy to compare it with these 2021 Seattle Seahawks, but here we go, anyways.
At a later point of this Band Of Brothers mini series, Lt Buck Compton started to psychologically reach his breaking point. The soldiers of Company C had endured a lot of combat against the very dug in Nazi forces, and a momentum shift towards the Allies still hadn’t been fully realized by the men tasked to fight at the front.
Buck reached a point where he simply didn’t want to see more of his men needlessly lost. It was an extremely relatable sequence to watch. He would visit each of his soldiers hunkered in their fox holes, have a quick check in, and he would finish by reminding them to make sure they “don’t do anything stupid.”
Part of me wonders if Pete Carroll has been legitimately suffering from some form of PTSD for years with the results of Super Bowl XLIX. Part of me wonders if this is why he has seemingly gotten more risk adverse year after year. It would honestly make a lot of sense to me. It was such a gut wrenching way to watch your team lose, and he was on the headsets allowing that particular pass play to happen.
So, honestly, I kinda think something like this came out of his mouth in the second half of the MNF game against the Saints: “Hey Shane, I know it’s third and two and we should probably throw it, but let’s not have Geno do anything stupid here. Let’s just run it, anyways.”
I get it. I don’t like it, but I get it.
“Please don’t do anything stupid” is a fair thing to request, but living in that fear, man, I don’t know if that’s what you want out of the leader of your organization.
Eventually, in the Band Of Brothers, Lt Buck broke down. He needed to be pulled off the front, and be replaced. He couldn’t function. Not a person alive in Company C faulted him for it. He was a good dude, a good leader. They loved him. He just saw too much.
But how about this game against these lowly Jaguars?
Seahawks win this game by..
Trusting Geno Smith enough to run some form of a modern style offense against a Jacksonville defense that isn’t very good and gives up passing yards. I think Pete took the offense out of Shane Waldron’s hands as a play-caller against the Saints on Monday night. He was having his Lt Buck moment by the third quarter, and it cost this team. Running the ball up the gut of a top defense on third and two was a coward play-call. There can’t be any excuses for it.
And it can’t happen again.
There should have been something in Waldron’s playbook that would have been an easy play for an NFL quarterback to run, even if he is a rusty backup. Pete’s got to let his men carry forth an effective game plan against a defense that is not great against the pass nor the run. Just get the fudge out of the way and let his play-caller dial up a modern offensive.
Play smart defense. This Jacksonville offense also isn’t very good. They are a bad passing offense missing their star receiver, but they have a great running back, and he can be a problem (sounds a lot like the Saints, honestly). The Seahawks defense could have a decent game again in this one, if they play smart. Don’t draw unnecessary penalties, don’t blow coverage, recognize the screen play, and stop James Robinson. If manage all this, Seattle can get this win.
Seahawks lose this one by..
Playing stupid and coaching cowardly.
Predictions
In an adventurous outing, the Seattle Seahawks stave off the energized and refreshed Jacksonville Jaguars, winning this one, 24-21.
This won’t be a game that will give a lot of Seahawk fans much hope for this team to turn this ship around and make any late season playoff push. The Jaguars are coming into town rested off their bye week and they are smelling blood in the water where the Seahawks are swimming in a desperate attempt to get back on their life boat.
Seahawks need this win, and the Jaguars are playing with house money. I see the Jaguars giving this a good go. Trevor Lawrence was the top overall pick for a reason. Yes, he’s a rookie, but he’s better the Geno Smith. Urban Meyer is going to trust him more than Carroll will likely trust Smith. I think they score, but I also see them giving up the ball, and could easily put Seattle in easy scoring situations.
I see Seattle sneaking out this win, but I don’t see it as anything that will give the fans much hope for this team after the bye, especially if Russell Wilson won’t be ready, which I doubt he will be. This could feel like a win that will have a certain amount of fans thinking it would be better to have lost for better draft position next year. I can totally understand that reasoning.
But I’ve been dealing with my own set of Lt Buck Compton issues lately as a Twelve.
I’m going to be honest with you readers. I’m not hopeful about these 2021 Seattle Seahawks making the playoffs this year.
Not that I wouldn’t enjoy watching this team somehow miraculously rally themselves out of a 2-5 hole to go on a month long win streak to have themselves in playoff contention in December. That would be fun.
I just don’t see it happening, and suddenly, I’m not even sure I see them having it enough within themselves enough to beat the lowly Jacksonville Jaguars next Sunday.
Even if they do, and they get Russell Wilson back after their bye week, do you honestly have any real faith that Russ is going to win a shootout against Aaron Rodgers in Green Bay, and then beat Kyler Murray’s red hot Cardinals the week after? Russell Wilson, when healthy this season, could not out dual Ryan Tannehill and Kirk Cousins.
Personally, I have little faith he is suddenly going to out dual two legitimate MVP quarterbacks in mid to late November. Not with the way this offense can’t ever seem to get any consistent flow or rhythm in any single game so far this season, and the fact that he is more of an off script quarterback trying to function in a timing offense.
Even if this defense continues to play better, I just don’t see the makings of a winning football team this year in Seattle. I hope I am wrong, but I don’t think I am.
This game against the Saints validates one of my main growing concerns.
I believe Pete Carroll doesn’t want to take risks on offense, and that is crippling the chances of this new offense under Shane Waldron to grow. I think Pete wants to coach this team as if he still had the Legion of Boom on his defense, but he doesn’t. This defense of his will not win Seattle games like the defense he had 2011 through 2015.
Even with the better play they have shown against Pittsburgh and New Orleans, they still couldn’t stop those offenses enough when needed. In this game against the Saints, the game plan was obvious. It was to stop Alvin Kamara running the ball, and to force Jameis Winston to beat them with his arm. It made sense. The Saints were severely limited at receiver and Winston can be a streaky passer.
But what happened here is that Jameis found Kamara in the pass game early and often enough for big plays to made the difference. Seattle had answers for stopping the run, but they didn’t have answers for Kamara on screens and in the flats. New Orleans’ head coach Sean Payton likely stayed patient with his plan knowing that Seattle has not been good defending the screen pass all season, and that was enough in this one.
So what did Carroll have his offense do to respond? He had them run Alex Collins up the middle of a defense that is near tops of the league against the run on third and two. No play action boot leg for Geno Smith to try to find Will Dissly on a short out pattern for an easy gain, which is the touchdown throw he tossed against Pittsburgh last week. Just Alex Collins up the gut against one of the stoutest defenses in the league.
Not very inspiring play calling. I seriously doubt that was Shane Waldron’s go to play there.
Pete Carroll is a good coach. He can get his team to rally through all sorts of adversity, and I wouldn’t be shocked if he has this team rallying to make things interesting in December. I suspect we will continue to see better defense played throughout the season (especially when the schedule softens more), but probably not anything close to a top ten defense.
I also think once he gets Russell Wilson back, he will be willing to open up his offense more than the ridiculous play calling that happened against these Saints.
But will that be enough to make the fans and Russ happy?
I don’t think so. I think Pete Carroll is perfectly comfortable dialing things back offensively when he knows his defense is playing well enough that they can pull out close wins. I think he is perfectly comfy in those scenarios, and I think he was attempting that against these Saints.
I think he believed all he needed was his kicker to make the necessary field goals to win a tight match, and that would be enough with a backup quarterback playing in only his second start in several years. In his mind, it made sense.
Unfortunately, this was not the night for Jason Meyers. One could argue that the logic of a relying on a kicker during an windy night might be a bit faulty, but this is what happens when you fear your quarterback will make mistakes, and you don’t mind winning ugly. You would rather trust your kicker with cray winds than Geno Smith.
It’s a shame because there were so many good things that came out of this game in a losing effort for Seattle, especially on the defense. Second year linebacker Jordyn Brooks, by far, had his best game of this year and looked worthy again of being a first round pick. Defensive tackles Poona Ford and Al Woods had strong games. Jamal Adams had his best game of the season in this one. I thought second year defensive end Alton Robinson had a good game.
I can’t really dish out tons of praise for the offensive effort, however. Even that dynamic catch and run score by DK Metcalf to start the game feels like there should has an asterisk next to it. It was a good throw and catch, but Marshon Lattimore lost his footing in coverage, and had he kept his feet, frankly, Seattle might not have seen the end zone for the entire game, and this one wouldn’t have really felt as close as it was.
So, yeah. I look at this team and it’s remaining games, and I kinda see a 8-9 finish for this club, at best, and that’s assuming Russ comes back and plays through most of these matches.
That’s okay for me, and here’s why.
The Seattle Seahawks need a massive shake up
I think it’s time for large scale change for these Seattle Seahawks. I don’t really care how it happens, I just know it needs to.
Pete Carroll is coaching into his twelfth year with this club and that is a pretty long time by NFL standards. In a league of 32 teams, only Sean Payton, Mike Tomlin, and Bill Belichick have coached longer with their clubs than Pete has with the Seahawks. I won’t be upset if he decides to step away after this season, and I have always been a big Pete Carroll fan. I also won’t be upset if he is graciously shown the door.
Russell Wilson is in his tenth year as the Seahawks starting quarterback. That’s as long has Matt Hasselbeck played for Seattle, and Dave Krieg stayed twelve years in Seattle but was only a starter for nine. If Russ decides that, after this year, he would like to refresh his career playing somewhere else, I wouldn’t be upset, and Russ has always been one of my favorite Seahawks of all time. I would feel the same way about him wanting to leave as I did with Ken Griffey Junior. I would get it.
And if John Schneider wants to seize an opportunity to become the new general manager of the Green Bay Packers, I would hardly fault him for that. Of these big three figure heads for this organization, I probably trust him the most, and he is probably the one I would least want to see go, but I would get it.
I’m honestly very indifferent to who stays of goes for this club. The one thing I know, deep in my gut, is this team needs a rebuild, if not a massive overhaul.
I see a team that hasn’t drafted enough good young talent to find a new young core, and is relying on a lot of older players to hold up and play well through a long grueling season. I see all the other teams in the NFC West division with younger and better overall rosters.
As much as I would like to say that it is time for Pete to leave and bring in a new coach with a fresh perspective, I see Russell Wilson as this team’s greatest chip to play for this overhaul. If Seattle can get three first round picks and decent change for him, I would be good with that.
If Pete Carroll wants to be part of a complete rebuild at age 70, I can be cool with it, so long as he gives John Schneider more reign over player acquisition decisions and the draft because I seriously doubt that it was John Schneider’s decision to trade two first round picks and a third for Jamal Adams, and I doubly doubt it was Schneider who wanted to take LJ Collier in the first round back in 2019. I sorta feel like Schneider has had to grin and bear a lot of Pete’s requests and demands over the years. He is the guy I feel least willing to criticize in this current mess.
That said, if Pete and John were to go, and Jody Allen decides she wants her team to build around Russ with an offensive minded coach, I hope that they pick the right one, and not just some patsy for Russ because I think that could be disastrous.
I have been a diehard Seahawks fan since the early 1980’s. The best moves that this organization have ever done is with their coaching hires. It was hiring Chuck Knox in 1983, hiring Mike Holmgren in 1999, and bringing in Pete Carroll in 2010. These were the best eras of Seahawks football, and each of these coaches decided who their own quarterback would be to lead this club, eventually.
This is why I feel like, if Pete Carroll needs to go, this team needs to nail the next head coach, and if that person is really good, they should be the one who decides who the Seattle Seahawks quarterback should be. This is what is best for the long term health of this club.
It shouldn’t be about who the team chooses to coach Russ because, frankly, I don’t think Russ is the ideal flavor at quarterback for a lot of coaches out there. I think he is a very acquired taste and he needs to be paired with a head coach willing to adjust scheme to fit his unusual talents. I actually think Sean Payton in New Orleans would make a ton of sense for him.
So, I am going to keep a very open mind to all of this, and how this team could go about any rebuild or reorganization.
All I want to see happen is for this team to commit to getting more dominant at the line of scrimmage on offense and defense with younger talent that will be a part of this thing long term. That’s how I want to see them built.
I also want to see them play smarter on both sides of the ball, and with schemes more willing to embrace more of the modern trends of the game, especially on offense.
I look at these Seattle Seahawks and I see old players on the offensive and defensive lines that will need replacing, and you generally don’t draft starting left tackles beyond round one.
This team needs so much, and hanging onto expensive older players because we are emotionally attached to them doesn’t make practical football sense in a situation like this one. I would rather part ways with them now, and let younger players get a shot at it.
Who is the young nucleus of this team beyond DK Metcalf? I can think of Darrell Taylor, Jordyn Brooks if he continues to play better, maybe Damien Lewis at guard, maybe Poona Ford.
Do we think Jamal Adams is a young core player? Are we convinced he is worth that contract?
Are we trusting Tyler Lockett can stay healthy for what is now a 17 game season?
I see a team with so many holes and longer term questions. I see a quarterback who is going to be 33 and is possibly looking for greener pastures elsewhere, and I see a head coach who will be 71 next September.
I see a lot of star aligning for sweeping changes.
What would I do if I was owner of the Seattle Seahawks?
If I am Jody Allen, and I had to chose which direction to go with this all, I am probably prepping to get ready to ask John Schneider is he wants to tough it through a rebuild. That would be the person that I would most want to gauge
Because, if I am owner of this team, I’m not willing to go through another off-season of Russ wanting out, and Pete wanting to hang onto Ken Norton Junior as defensive coordinator again and wanting to bring in more older players for his defensive line because he doesn’t want to bring along younger players. I’ve seen that, and done that enough.
If I was owner of this club, even if Pete and Russ were to turn this ship around mid season, I would be willing to part ways with both next off-season. I would ask Pete to gracefully step aside. I would entrust John Schneider to pick his next head coach, and I would empower him to make his own moves with this roster without any coach meddling in the draft room, or in free agency.
If John decides he is willing to work with Russ’s very difficult agent, it would be his choice. I seriously doubt he would. I kinda think John’s sniffing around other quarterbacks in recent drafts is an indication he would rather have some other general manager in the league deal with the wackiness of Mark Rodgers.
Whether Russ stays or goes, I am very indifferent. All I know is I’m ready to start hearing the winds of change.
I will be blunt. The Seattle Seahawks can ill afford to muck around against these New Orleans Saints on Monday Night Football. If they want any shot at digging themselves out of a 2-4 hole and be in playoff contention by December, each Seattle player better bring their A game in this one.
A loss against these Saints will put them at 2-5 in a division that has the Arizona Cardinals currently at 6-0, and the Rams at 5-1. Best of luck catching either team moving forward, especially if both win this Sunday (Cardinals get the Texans and Rams face Detroit).
So, as I look at this match up on Monday night, I very much see a “do or die” game for Seattle. They have to beat these Saints. It’s a must.
A win against these Saints will put them at 3-4 with a really good shot at being 4-4 by next Sunday when they face Jacksonville. Then they go into a bye week with a small chance at getting Russell Wilson back against a very tough Green Bay team and then an even tougher Arizona squad, afterwards. The remaining schedule will offer more “winnable” games, but will also offer tougher matches within their own division.
In short, even if Seattle manages to get to 4-4 by their bye week, any road to the playoffs won’t be an easy one, but at least it won’t be an entirely closed off one, either. After all, we’ve seen these Pete Carroll Seattle Seahawks rally before. Multiple times, in fact.
But they have to take care of business first this Monday Night against a Saints team that is 3-2, and in possession of one of the very best defenses in all of football right now. Given that these Saints are currently in a dog fight for their our division with the Super Bowl winning Tampa Bay Buccaneers, this game in Seattle is also a very big deal for them, as well. They will want to bury these Seahawks on Monday Night Football, and make a statement to the league that they are a major force to deal with this season.
People are free to laugh at Jameis Winston as their QB1 right now, but Winston has been pretty efficient this season playing within himself completing over 60 percent of his passes for 12 touchdowns and only 3 interceptions in a ball control offense that would make Pete Carroll gleam with pride, if he were coaching it. There is some thought from those who cover the Saints that Sean Payton is starting to open his offense more for Jameis now as they are getting further into the season. One would think that against a bad Seattle defense, Payton might decide to let things rip even more.
Ironically, in many ways, these 2021 Saints have a look about them that isn’t too far off from Carroll’s Seahawks circa 2013-2014. Ball control offense built around a premiere running back and efficient quarterback play, and a top rated defense.
It’s also worth noting that former Seahawks defensive coordinator Kris Richard is currently the Saints pass defense coordinator. Given all the lamenting over current Seattle defensive coordinator Ken Norton Junior still being employed, knowing Richard was available last off-season for a potential return to Seattle, I’m sure is going to sting for a lot of frustrated Seahawk fans. It stings a lot for moi.
But enough of that.
Seahawks win this game by..
Playing significantly better on defense than they have at any point this season to take the run game away from a very talented Alvin Kamara, and forcing Jameis to beat them with his arm the whole game. Right now, Sean Payton has sorta been nursing Jameis along as his QB1. For most quarterbacks not named Brady or Mahomes or Rodgers, the run game is their best friend. If Seattle can manage to deal with Kamara enough to get Jameis in third and longs most of the night, surrounded by a hostile environment during a nationally televised game, maybe they get Jameis to revert back towards his turnover machine days. Turnovers could give Geno Smith more shorter fields to work with, and that would be a pretty significant advantage.
Geno Smith playing enough within himself as QB1, but not so within himself that he becomes a “Check Down Charlie” against the Saints. Geno is not nearly as talented as Russ. He’s probably not a quarterback who can function well off-script like we are so used to seeing Russ do against tougher defenses. That said, he has an NFL caliber arm and he can throw a nice looking rope down field when he has the play action working. We saw him do this last week against a good Pittsburgh defense. At some point in this game, Geno has got to dare this defense enough to keep them honest. If he doesn’t, the run game won’t likely function, and it’s going to be a long night as a Seahawk fan.
Rashaad Penny looking like a running worthy of a first round pick. The depth of running back for Seattle is starting to look flimsy with Chris Carson on IR, and Alex Collins banged up coming out of Pittsburgh. I’ve thought all along that Collins has been Seattle’s best runner this year. Even if he is good to go against this Saints defense, I’m not feeling great here.
What would really help Seattle out in this one is Rashaad Penny coming in fresh and breaking out with some big explosive runs. For as much of a bust as he has appeared to be as a first round pick, there is no other back on Seattle’s roster capable of taking it to the house like Penny. If we get an explosive night out of him, Seattle can win this game.
Seahawks lose this game by..
Not being able to establish the run enough to give Geno Smith a chance against one of the best defenses in the league. A working run game is going to be Geno’s best friend in this game. If the Saints stout front seven takes that run game away, Geno will be tasked to play hero ball, and it won’t likely be pretty.
Seahawks failing to stop the run game, and that allows the new and improved Jameis Winston to throw darts down field attacking the areas where Seattle’s coverage as been its weakest. I’m almost certain that Seattle needs to use Jamal Adams in and around the line of scrimmage most of this game to slow Kamara, and also send pressure towards Jameis. It’s going to have to be the dice Carroll and Norton Junior are going to have to be willing to roll because teams are figuring out ways to counter Adams on the blitz, and Seattle has not done a great job responding.
I think we could see early success with Seattle playing Adams down low, but I continue to believe that Seattle’s greatest weakness is its depth at defensive tackle. It feels like, as games wear on, these big fellas inside wear down. When that happens, big runs happen. When big runs happen, it all gets pretty ugly afterwards. The Saints have a pretty talented offensive line and a premiere runner. If I am Sean Payton, I am testing Seattle’s abilities up front to hold up for four quarters, and I am looking for ways to take advantage when they send extra to stop the run. Basically, I am licking my chops as a play caller.
Prediction
Oooooooooof.
This one isn’t going to be pretty, and afterwards, I think there’s going to be a lot of chatter about how Sean Payton has turned Jamies Winston around and is making him the top contender for the NFL’s Comeback Player Of The Year award. I kinda see him becoming Ryan Tannehill 2.0, and this might be the game to really put him in that discussion with the nation watching.
I’m feeling a lot of folks favoring the Seahawks in this one. It makes me question a bit what I’m seeing, or not seeing. My Dorks On Sports podcast pals all like the Seahawks in this one. The guys on KJR 950’s Seahawks Round Table, who all generally seem more willing to show skepticism with the Hawks than perhaps some folk over on 710 who cover the team, seem to favor these Hawks, as well. Perhaps it’s slow start to the season that the Saints’ offense has had with Jameis, and the fact that they are playing without their star receiver in Michael Thomas (and their starting left tackle and center) that has many feeling confident about the Geno Smith led Seattle Seahawks in this one.
I’m looking at the fact that over the last couple games, Jameis has been putting up bigger numbers, though, and that has me quite a bit more nervous. Last week against Pittsburgh, Seattle faced a geriatric quarterback who doesn’t have the arm he once had to test a defense down field, and he chose to dink and dunk against their struggling defense, and it worked enough to get the win. Even without Michael Thomas, Jameis has the top level arm talent test Seattle deep, and even if he doesn’t hit all those passes, that arm talent of his can work to soften up Seattle’s efforts to stop Kamara.
Therefore, I just see the New Orleans Saints riding this one to an easy 35-17 victory over the Seattle Seahawks. I got that kinda gross feeling about this one.
Ironically, this loss will come against a team that is built to win in a way that Pete Carroll would likely greatly appreciate. They are built to win at the line of scrimmage on offense and defense. They can run and take away the run. They have a big strong armed quarterback who can make chunk plays down field with play action. They can get after the quarterback on defense, and they can take the ball away. I suspect that this is how they will beat these Seattle Seahawks in this one.
What’s also going to be ironic, is that these Saints are one of the four teams that Russell Wilson made public that he would be winning to be traded to last Spring. I am positive that will be made mention on ESPN a time or two as this game wears on. It will be hard to image that Russ won’t be looking at the Saints’ sidelines with his own envious eyes as this game wears on. That’s likely to spark interesting sports talk next week, as well.
Which brings me to my closing question to you all right now. If these Seattle Seahawks sit at 2-5 next week, with the trade deadline a few short weeks away, do they become buyers to try to salvage their season, or to they become sellers to acquire the draft capital needed in order to commit to a roster rebuild in 2022?
If they lose this game to the Saints, I think this is the question all fans should maybe start asking. This is why this game is do or die.
Here’s the latest episode of our podcast Dorks On Sports where we discuss lots of Seahawks, Kraken, Nick Rolovich WSU fallout, and the wonderfully hilarious comedy show Only Murders In The Building staring Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez. Please hit us up. I enjoyed recording this episode in particular.
Also, I just wanted to share some thoughts I’ve been having about my Seahawks lately, and I wanted to throw a question out to you all.
These are interesting times for our Seattle Seahawks. A month and a half into the season, sitting on a 2-4 record with Russell Wilson on the IR probably isn’t what we were anticipating. Yet, here they are, facing a what looks like a strong New Orleans Saints team at home on Monday Night Football next week.
If our Hawks fall to these Jameis Winston led Saints, Seattle will be dropped to 2-5, and it will take an incredible effort for them to dig out of that hole into playoff contention by December.
Curiously, these Seahawks have been sitting on nearly $11 million in available cap space to make a splash addition (or two) to their team. With clear needs on the defensive line, and needs at corner (even though rookie Tre Brown played well against the Steelers), and now possibly other spots with injured running backs and spotty receiver depth, now would probably be a good time for Seahawk GM John Schneider to wheel and deal if Seattle wants to get back into the playoff race.
I would have liked to have seen some urgency come out of the front office after the loss to the Rams, but alas, we got diddly squat. Now, sitting in a hole at 2-4, well behind Arizona and Los Angeles in this tough division, I’m not even sure if I want them to be buyers at this point, and I am almost more welcoming a bit of a fire sale in order to get out in front of what feels like a much needed rebuild.
My simple question to all of you readers is this. Would you rather see John Schneider be a buyer to save the season, or a seller to usher in a rebuild for the longer term health of this team?
Feel free to leave your answer in the comments section for prosperity purposes.
It’s hard for me to imagine how this game would have gone had we had a healthy Russell Wilson playing in this one. I understand the sentiment that many fans would have in believing that, if we had Russ playing, we likely would have won this game. Forgive me if I am a little less convinced.
This isn’t to say that Russell Wilson isn’t a significantly better quarterback to Geno Smith, he clearly is. I’m just saying that I have watched every single game Russell Wilson has played as a professional quarterback, and I think I’ve developed a decent sense on what style of defenses he can go after, and which ones are likely to give him troubles.
The Pittsburgh Steelers have a dominant defensive tackle and defensive end combination in Cameron Heyward and TJ Watt up front. Defenses that have typically that combo has long made games difficult for Russ. If you have smart and talented edge rushers like TJ Watt, you can contain Russ, and if you have a dominant interior rusher like Heyward, he can easily be flushed into the loving grips of a guy like Watt, if Heyward doesn’t get there first. He’s a short quarterback, who often needs to hang onto to the ball longer to find his open receivers. This is a big part of what Russ is.
So forgive me if I watched and enjoyed a significantly less talented quarterback in Geno Smith often get the ball out quickly to check downs and quick slants against this aggressive front seven of the Steelers defense. Yes, Geno got sacked too, but I have a sneaking suspicion that had we seen Russ playing in this game, the sacks could have been a lot more.
I think this was a good game for Russ to stand on the sidelines and see how things were available to Geno and how Geno found enough success to give Seattle a chance to win it in the end.
I think this is also a really good game for Pete Carroll to see that Alex Collins can be more of a featured back in this league and rookie Tre Brown perhaps needs to be considered that starting left corner for his defense.
Here are more of my thoughts.
The Good
Alex Collins was undoubtedly the star of the Seattle Seahawks on SNF for me. His 20 carries for 101 yard and a score sparked Seattle’s offense in the second half that was very reminiscent of Marshawn Lynch circa 2012. He was quick and decisive hitting his holes and his cutbacks were next level. If Seattle had managed to win this game, there is no doubt in my mind that he would be the player most talked about this week. If Seattle is to win games with Geno Smith as QB1, Collins must be a more focused part of the game plan moving forward.
Bravo to rookie cornerback Tre Brown for flashing on this defense and making an impact when forced to play more after Sidney Jones got injured. I honestly cannot remember in recent history when a Seattle corner made a splash like this. If Seattle had managed to pull this win off, his critical late game third and short snuff of a screen pass would have been talked about all week. His defense of a sideline go ball earlier in the game was sweet to watch, as well. I’m not going to pretend that this dude is the second coming of Richard Sherman, but judging off what I have seen from left cornerback play from the Seahawks over the past three seasons, I will gladly take seeing this guy lined up there more moving forward through this season.
It was positive seeing the offensive line run block with solid success in the second half, especially to the right side of the line. Yes, Pittsburgh finally adjusted their defense to snuff the run out late, but that sorta opened things up for Geno to hit passes over the middle. This effort worked to Seattle’s second half advantage to get back into this game. It was fun to watch.
It was also nice to see Jamal Adams finally being used in this defense more like he was in 2020 as a box safety, and he was finally making some impact plays. I still have a lot of issues about this defense that Seattle is rolling out with, but at least I saw them using one of their best players to play at his strengths instead of being tasked with things that are not. This was a positive step forward. I will take that.
Finally, while many fans will remember the fumble that Geno Smith gave up trying to scramble up the middle in overtime, I will more likely remember his toughness against adversity and doing enough little things to give this team a chance to pull off a miracle win on SNF.
I will be honest, I didn’t give Seattle much of a chance in this one. Seattle played better than I thought they would and they got better play out of Geno Smith that I thought they would get. Yes, there were plays in which he did not look great throwing on a scramble to Tyler Lockett, and this fumble play at the end. But there are also plays were he hung touch in the pocket after play action and delivered beautiful touch balls down the middle of a good Pittsburgh defense. In short, I think he did enough to play within himself to game manage Seattle to an unexpected win.
The Bad
As impressed as I was with Tre Brown’s effort on defense, along with his mate on the other side in DJ Reed, I was not loving this Seahawk defense again in this game. We can talk about what kind of talent they have on this roster, and I don’t think it’s great (especially at defensive tackle), but for me, the issue still remains with what Seattle has at defensive coordinator in Ken Norton Junior.
My trust is completely broken as a fan of this team, and because Pete Carroll did not seek to replace him this off-season when former coordinators Dan Quinn, Gus Bradley, and Kris Richard were all available to be hired back, my trust is actually most broken by Pete Carroll. It is without a doubt that the Seattle Seahawks have played the worst defense in the Pete Carroll era over the past three and a half-ish seasons with Norton as the DC. While it is possible that not all of that is on Norton, something has to give, and honestly, maybe that is Pete Carroll himself.
In my inexpert opinion, this defense still looks like it is trying to do and be too much. It’s not simplified enough for the linebackers to play fast, and why did we suddenly see Benson Mayowa being used as a drop back linebacker through much of the first have when Ben Roethlisberger was finding most of his success? Who was Seattle thinking they were fooling with that look?
I’m done with this defense. Ain’t no defending these defenders anymore for me this season. Sadly, I also don’t think it’s their fault. I still think too much is on their plate. 4-3 defensive ends shouldn’t be tasked to be drop back linebackers. A talented box safety shouldn’t be asked to play deep coverage, and this team should be carrying more on its roster than three freaking defensive tackles inside. It’s beyond ridiculous.
Do you want to know why Seattle wasn’t using Collins enough in the first half? It’s because Pittsburgh was driving on this defense just like most other offenses have been this year, and that likely made Shane Waldron more compelled to dial up pass plays to try to get back into this game with little time remaining in the first after after long Pittsburgh drives. It’s a nature reaction as an offensive play caller.
So, yeah, forgive me if I continue to throw most blame towards the Seattle defense. Pete Carroll is supposed to be a defensive mastermind head coach, and his defense is continually playing like butt. I’m tired of it. I’m not even angry about it anymore. Just tired. I need change.
Sorry. Moving on.
The Ugly
Obviously the ugliest part of this game was seeing talented second year defensive end Darrell Taylor laying flat on his back on the field late in the game with an apparent neck/head injury. It actually hurt my heart because I have been loving his story this year coming out of nowhere to become Seattle’s best edge rusher, and maybe even the best young defender on the defense.
The news that the CT scans were initially clear at the hospital is a very big plus for him, but who knows how he is going to come back from this and how long he will be out. I have a very difficult time seeing this Seattle defense further turn the corner this season without him. Maybe Alton Robinson comes on more, or Carlos Dunlap will start kicking it in gear, but I’m not very hopeful.
I just hope Darrell is okay and will get back to full health at some point this year. The dude as sooooooo much promise as a player, and I think he’s a dude who you want to root for.
Moving forward
It’s a shame that Seattle wasn’t able to pull off this win. The whole complexion of their season feels shifted after this loss.
They are now sitting at 2-4, and are facing a better team next Monday night at home against the New Orleans Saints. Seattle will have to bring their A game without two of their best players on offense, and with a defense that is still sorting itself out and now has lost it’s best pass rusher.
Personally, I don’t want to see Seattle make any sort of splash trade for a big name defender at this point. I think the hole they are in is too far dug for them to climb out of. If they want to sign someone off the street (cough, cough.. Geno Atkins.. cough, cough), great. I just don’t want to see them trade valuable draft capital for another expensive older player.
In my humble opinion, I think a big reason why Seattle is in this current mess is that they have spend far too much draft capital trading for vets who they think will push them over the top, and the result is that most of those trades have not paid off, and because of all that, the young depth of this team is bad. This is the whole issue in a nutshell for me.
Simply, this team needs a reset and possibly a rebuild, and they need to go back to the 2010-2014 years where they largely functioned as a draft and develop team. I worry that at age 70, Pete Carroll is nowhere close to being interested in doing that, though.
So, I fear that we will see them trade a valuable third round pick for an aging big name corner instead of leaning more into a younger guy like Tre Brown, and just signing a street veteran or two to get better at defensive tackle.
If any trade were to happen, I would honestly welcome a bit of a fire sale, and embrace the notion of a 2022 rebuild now. I don’t see Pete Carroll being willing, though.
So, here we are.
Maybe a win against the Saints next Monday will make us all feel better. I would welcome it.
Oh, the thoughts I have on these Seattle Seahawks right now. Before we begin with this SNF preview, I just wanted to point out the link above that is the latest episode of the Dorks On Sports podcast where we discuss the Seattle Kraken, life with Geno Smith as Seahawk QB1, thoughts on the Steelers match, the Jon Gruden mess, and then we spend a lot of time talking Ted Lasso (which will be spoiler stuff if you haven’t watched all the way through season two). Fun episode, good talks, gets a little raw in spots, but we always strive to keep it light as possible.
So, this game on Sunday Night Football, in Pittsburgh, against the Steelers, without Russell Wilson.
Okay, here’s what I’m thinking.
There are likely to be fans who are going to become increasingly more down on the Seattle Seahawks this year, and I sensed that happening well before the Russell Wilson finger injury.
I would love to call these folk fair weather fans, but I gotta be honest. I think there is likely to be an increasing portion of diehards who have been with this team for a very long time, such as myself, who might start turning away some, and it’s not just because this team will be without Russell Wilson for four to possibly eight weeks or more.
I think there’s likely a growing number of diehards who have just become exhausted in how the Seahawks ship as been run over the most recent few years. If Pete Carroll and Ken Norton’s defense continues to play at this historically bad pace, I would not blame a single soul from turning their heads away from that, especially in the excitement of Seattle now having an NHL team playing real games.
I will be watching these Seahawks closely, win or lose. I will be looking for whatever little victories come out of losses, and I will glow about whatever wins they can manage to pull off. My expectations for this team have fallen to a low that I haven’t felt since the 1990s, frankly.
So, I just want to see if Geno Smith can function and have success in this Shane Waldron offense, and whether third down efficiency will improve with a quarterback who will perhaps look more towards taking what is more available to him instead of seeking out the more dynamic play down field. Many think that has been a major issue with Russell Wilson. Let’s see if a lessor talent at quarterback creates a weird step forward in ways for the passing offense.
I want to see if second year defensive end/linebacker Darrell Taylor can expand his role and production as the leading sack earner for this defense. I’m eager for that.
I want to see if Pete Carroll can fix this horrific defense to serve as something that is at least functional. Right now, it’s not even that.
I want to see how Russell Wilson comes back as a passer, if watching the game on the sidelines gives him better insight into how Waldron wants to run this ship. Over five games, I’ve developed doubts about whether a Ram style offense that relies so much on quick timing throws is a fit for Russ. Going into the season, I thought it would be, but I’ve jumped off that ship. I would love to be proved wrong.
I would love to see Geno Smith win some games as Seattle’s QB1 and play well enough to show the league he can be a starter in this league. Personally, I think that would be a great story.
And finally, I would love to see Jamal Adams be put in a position on defense that better suits his skills so that he can have an impact on games. The way this team has been using Adams is the biggest disappointment for me, overall, through five games.
All that said, my expectations are pretty low for this team to win games now and it starts with this one against the dreaded Steelers this Sunday night.
Seahawks win this one by..
Geno Smith building off of his strong late second half outing against the Rams last week, and running an efficient offense that moves the sticks be mixing run with pass and getting the ball out accurately and quickly. This is ideally how an Rams style offense is supposed to run with Shane Waldron coming up to the PNW to install it. This is what Pete Carroll had hoped it would be for Russell Wilson. It’s about hitting receivers on quick patterns to slow pass rush and move the sticks. If Smith can run it close enough to how Carroll and Waldron want it to be, this gives Seattle a chance in this one.
Getting good production from Chris Carson and Alex Collins at running back against a good run defense. The Steeler defense is good and its strength appears to be against the run. This game will be a good test to see if Seattle can lean more into its run game without Russ running the show. Seattle has good guards to run behind, and I like the potential of mixing Carson with Collins. If they can get it going enough, Geno’s job probably becomes easier as a passer.
Carroll finally getting his defenders back on the same page in coverage, especially the middle of the field. As bad as the Seahawks defense has been in coverage, Carroll insists that it is all very correctable. The Steeler offense is not great. This might be a good opportunity for Jamal Adams, Jordyn Brooks, and Bobby Wagner to get their games turned around.
Stopping the run. The Steelers have a talented young running back in Najee Harris. As games have worn on, the Seattle defensive line has shown a predictable weakness against the run due to how light they appear at defensive tackle. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to look at this match up and predict the Pittsburgh will intend to lean into Harris to secure a home win. Seattle needs to take that run game away.
Seahawks lose this by..
Not getting their ground game going enough to take pressure off of Geno Smith against a quality Pittsburgh defense. Chris Carson and Alex Collins have to be productive and if they aren’t, this could get ugly early and stay ugly the whole way through.
Seattle not fixing their defensive issues with coverage and Ben Roethlisberger taking advantage. Big Ben isn’t the same player he once was, but he is still a very proven vet who has seen a lot of football. He’s probably licking his fingers looking at the footage of Seattle’s pass coverage this week. If Seattle doesn’t fix this defense, Seattle isn’t likely winning this game.
Prediction
Sorry Twelves who believe Seattle has landed at a soft point in their schedule. Steelers are going to win this one handily, 24-17, I predict.
Unless Carroll gives into making Jamal Adams more of the blitzing in the box safety he was for this team last year, I don’t see Seattle turning a corner enough with this defense to pull off a win. Carroll seems intent on playing Adams back more (probably to help the corners), and that is taking away what is probably Seattle’s best weapon on defense. Until I see that change, I won’t believe it actually will.
Because Adams has been reduced to being a non weapon, I see the Steelers leaning in Harris knowing that Big Ben will find success against Seattle’s weak middle of the field coverage as the game wears on, and the Steeler defense being good enough to force Geno into a situation where he has to win this game with his arm.
Alas, the conclusion of this game will feel very anti Pete Carroll football. They will not have played good enough defense, and they will not have been able to lean into the run game enough due to being forced to chase points with unfavorable time left on the clock.
A legendary duo in a legendary era of Seahawks football
Well, this has suddenly become a very fascinating season for our Seattle Seahawks, hasn’t it? Maybe not in the way we had been hoping, for but let me count the ways.
Never before has Russell Wilson ever missed a game of professional football. In 2016, he played through a high ankle sprain that would have kept most quarterbacks off the field for weeks. Russell Wilson critics can list many things to make their case as to why he isn’t their preferred flavor. One thing that can never be questioned is his toughness and overall durability. Well, an injury to his middle finger on his throwing hand will now prevent him from properly gripping a football, and we will see Geno Smith as our starting quarterback for possibly six games or longer. Word has filter out that Russ intends to be back within four games, but that would be two week sooner than medical experts have projected. We shall see.
Jamal Adams is currently playing like one of the worst defenders in professional football. Through five games, his Pro Football Focus grades have been abysmal. In fact, he is graded as one of the worst safeties in football. That sucks because he is also the most expensive safety in all of football.
While a strong argument can be made that Seattle is not using his skills properly, it is still inexcusable for a player that Seattle traded two first round picks and a third round pick for to be playing this poorly. A top end strong safety should be able to be functional in coverage. Jamal Adams has been awful, thus far.
Pete Carroll’s 2021 defense is on pace to become the worst defense in the history of the NFL. Let that sink in. When Carroll was hired by Paul Allen twelve years ago, he came into the PNW as a defensive mastermind out of USC. For the first six seasons of his Seattle tenure, this label held true. One can argue the the Legion Of Boom was the best defense in all of modern football, but slowly, that defense has eroded and what is left in its place now is horrendous.
There is many reasons that I can list as to why I think it is in this state, but that is another long piece to write. Let me just say this; this Seattle Seahawk defense, in its present state, can not stop the run for four quarters, they can’t generate a reliable pass rush, and they can’t cover worth crap.
Even if Geno Smith plays well in place of Russell Wilson and the Shane Waldron offense functions well enough for Seattle to win without Russ, I find it incredibly hard seeing these Seattle Seahawks winning the majority of the games left on their season with this defense playing this way. If you can’t stop the run, and you can’t stop the pass, you literally do not have a functional defense. The Seattle Seahawks, right now, do not have a functional defense. It’s a tough task to win where you are strapped with that kind of mess.
And finally, there is this whole other situation. Despite all the off-season Russell Wilson controversy, at the start of this season, I believed it was highly unlikely we would ever see the Seattle Seahawks actually ever trade Russell Wilson, and I certainly never believed that Pete Carroll’s job as head coach and vice president would ever be at risk (even in a down year).
Like many others, I saw the pairing of Wilson and Carroll as the dependable secret sauce for the Seahawks to remain a playoff contending team, and I believed that, as long as Pete Carroll was coach, he would likely never be truly willing to part with Wilson. I believed it would take a ridiculous haul to pry Russ out of Seattle, and that sort of offer would be unlikely.
Right now, I think it is entirely possible this could be the last season we see both figure heads in Seattle. I hope I am wrong on that, but I have to be honest, I think we could be sitting inside the perfect storm that could ultimately send them both out of the PNW, even if Carroll can somehow summon enough magic to make his Seahawks competitive in December (more on that later).
Personally, I wouldn’t be upset if this actually happens over the following days and weeks. I think the biggest reason why we are in this position as a team is that Seattle hasn’t hit well enough in recent drafts, and I think, because of that, this organization has felt more compelled to trade high picks for expensive veterans in order to stay competitive in the tough NFC West where other teams have had more down years that have led to opportunities to draft higher, and therefor, collect better talent out of college.
This is the function of parity that the NFL is built on, and I believe it has finally caught up to Seattle. It certainly feels that way.
Arizona and San Francisco have younger and better rosters by way of draft positions, and the Rams have done a better job collecting talent and scheming them to success than Seattle has. Credit Seattle for staving off these rivals for a decade of football, but it looks like it has finally caught up to them.
Watching San Francisco and Arizona play each other yesterday, I could see all that young bright talent from both clubs popping off my television screen. Seattle simply does not have than on their roster, not to that level.
So for me now, entertaining this thought of a full blown rebuild, nobody on this roster is really that sacred. Not the quarterback, the middle linebacker, the “defensive weapon” safety, the left tackle, or really anyone else, if the right deal is there.
In his piece, Nemhauser lists DK Metcalf and Darrell Taylor as the only two players that are untouchable for him, and I can dig that. Both look bright fixtures for the future to build on, but I gotta be honest, if Indianapolis comes calling for DK and offers me two first round picks, I am listening.
In my gut, I believe that Seattle needs to suck it up, bite the bullet, and truly get back to building this roster back up through the draft. I think we need that sort of rebuild, and I am ready for that.
The reality is, though, that I don’t think rebuild is on Pete Carroll’s radar. At age 70, I don’t think he’s interested, and I think he’s going to see the present state of his team as a unique challenge to prove his coaching mettle. I don’t think it is in his DNA to coach his team to tank for any rebuild, and frankly, I don’t blame him. In fact, I praise him for it.
Pete Carroll is many things. He’s an eternal optimist, he’s a master culture builder, and above all, he’s a shrewd motivator. He’s also not stupid.
He’s probably well aware of what stakes are staring at him. If his 2021 team ends up bottom basement in the league where they don’t own a first round pick in 2022 because of the Jamal Adams trade, it’s very unlikely Russell Wilson is going to want to stick around. His camp might likely go nuclear and demand a trade this time, instead of weirdly sorta sideways suggesting one like last off-season. That could easily create an instant fan apathy that could make Jody Allen very nervous as a hand’s off owner who trusted Carroll to maintain a playoff level team in Seattle.
As much as she would probably prefer not to be in this position, she could feel compelled to make a very tough decision for the very first time as team owner. There have been some rumblings that she might be looking to sell this club in a few years, and she has seen franchise stability and a loyal fan base as a big selling point to maximizing profits in such a sale. If this is true, if that stability and loyalty from fans feels suddenly in danger, Carroll could easily end up with walking papers.
Pete Carroll isn’t going to want to go out like that. Therefor, I think we are likely to see him attempt to pull over a miracle in Seattle.
Instead of any fire sale, I think it is much more likely we could see Carroll spend more draft capital trying to bring in more pass rush to fix his defense. Who and what that player is, I have no idea, but I do know this; Seattle is currently resting on roughly $11 million in available cap space, and Carroll keeps insisting it’s the lack of consistent pass rush that is holding his defense back and the cover stuff is fixable.
If Carroll truly believes Geno Smith can successfully run this Shane Waldron offense, and he is one big time pass rusher away from turning this defense around, this move feels very obvious and predictable. I think we could see it happen fairly soon.
Pete Carroll won’t go down without a fight, and he will use adversity as a motivating force for his players. He won’t quit on this team because he doesn’t want his players quitting on him. That’s not how he wants his legacy to end in Seattle. That’s not the culture he fosters.
I expect this team and coach to put up a fight. Whether that is right or wrong for the long term health of this franchise in a tough division is a different matter, but this is what I expect to happen. From a pure football fan perspective, I’m intrigued to see what comes out of it.
What do I, Curtis Eastwood, life long diehard Seattle Seahawks fan since 1983, want to see happen in these fascinating circumstances?
Well, this is a very interesting question.
A big, huge, gigantic part of me would welcome a fire sale right now.
If the Colts called for DK and offered me two first rounders, I would say “deal.”
If Sean Payton suddenly calls from New Orleans and offers me three first round picks, a third, and Jameis Winston for Russell Wilson, I’d likely take it.
If Bill Belichick wants to take Jamal Adams off of my hands for a third round pick and a run stuffing defensive tackle, I’d bite that bullet.
If former Seahawk front office exec Scott Fitterer calls me about Duane Brown and offers me a third round pick, I’d say “cool,” and if someone wants Bobby Wagner for a second round pick, I would do cartwheels as I say “oh, hell yes.”
As I look at this team, I see these pressing long term needs: starting left tackle, starting center, starting defensive tackle, two starting cornerbacks, starting tight end, starting running back, and I probably also want one more talented young edge rusher to mix in with Darrell Taylor and maybe Alton Robinson.
It also goes without saying that if Russell Wilson does in fact want out, we need a new longer term answer for QB1. Even if the next starting quarterback isn’t coming out of college and is currently on another NFL roster, draft picks help getting him to Seattle just like this team did years ago getting Matthew Hasselbeck up here. That move turned out pretty well for the club.
I gotta be honest in also saying that if Pete Carroll decides to fight and manages to somehow coach this team up into playoff contention in December, I would be pleased to see that happen. I have always remained a Pete Carroll fan, even in the face of his declining defense over recent seasons. I will always be a Pete Carroll fan.
As a Pete Carroll fan, I would love to see him pull off a coaching miracle in a season when so much is stacked up against this team. I would love to see the growing number of Pete Carroll haters among the Twelves eat that flavor of crow.
Afterwards, as a Seattle Seahawks fan, I love to then see Pete Carroll back it all up, and ride out into the sunset with the title of best coach in Seattle sports history firmly secured.
In the end, I’m ready for a regime change. I’m ready for new blood, and a fresh perspective on how to build and manage winning football in Seattle.
Twelve years in Seattle as head coach is a heck of a run for Carroll, but I’m ready for something new, especially with local boy and Super Bowl winning head coach Doug Pederson sitting out there potentially ready to step in. I see a lot of cards lining up for that.
I just think Pederson potentially stepping in, still being young enough and with perhaps fresh perspective, with a year away from football, is too enticing. I believe he also has a history with John Schneider too from the Green Bay days, if Schneider wants to still stick around. Either way, I just sort of sense this being a perfect storm for this particular opportunity.
This move might even entice Russell to want to stick around. One thing I feel most certain about, if Pete Carroll remains head coach, I don’t think Russell and his camp will want to remain here. I honestly think Russ, right or wrong, believes he needs to get away from Pete to further his legacy. I think what we saw happen last off-season were calculated attempts at a long breakup so that he doesn’t leave Seattle perceived as a villain.
I certainly hope I am wrong, but I think that’s the likely case, and honestly, I think I can probably take this one further.
I think that if Sean Payton decides that he wants Russ down in NOLA, Russ is likely going to want to go there no matter who is coaching in Seattle. Russ is such a Drew Brees fan, and I think it is highly likely these two have talked about Payton. Whether Pete Carroll stays or a new coach comes it, if Payton believes his team is one Russell Wilson away next year of betting him another Super Bowl ring, his team has a lot of talent and draft capital to make Seattle a very attractive offer.
This is another reason why I think a hiring such as Pederson is important. If Seattle needs to make a change at quarterback and go through a mini rebuild, I want a younger coach who knows quarterbacks to handle that task. I trust Doug for that. He comes from the Holmgren tree as a player and the Andy Reid tree as a coach, and Holmgren did a pretty could job establishing his offensive identity in Seattle, and finding the quarterback to run that ship.
Doug Pederson did pretty darn well with that in Philly, too, when you think about it. Maybe it didn’t work out for the long run for him in the City of Brotherly Love, but getting fired in that market shouldn’t be seen as much of a blemish. After all, that was the franchise who thought it was a good idea to fire Andy Reid and replace him with Chip Kelly.
Just some of my thoughts, anyhoo.
Closing Thought
Before I end this, I just want to bring up one more final thought to this State of the Seahawks address.
Enjoy these games this season, win or lose, if you can.
No, I don’t think it is likely that we are to see these Seahawks in the playoffs this season, but it doesn’t mean it can’t happen, and if they put up a good fight against these odds, that will be fun to watch.
We should all root for Geno Smith to play well in place of Russell Wilson.
We should be excited if Darrell Taylor, who some more cynical sorts thought might not ever play a down of professional football, continues to lead Seattle in sacks all the way through the season.
We should be happy if Jamal Adams can turn his game around, and if Jordyn Brooks does, too.
We should enjoy watching Russell Wilson come back from injury and giving it a good fight at the end.
If Pete Carroll is able to turn this defense around enough to make it functional again, we should enjoy that, as well.
Even if none of these things happen, I think we should be grateful for what Pete Carroll and Russell Wilson have brought together in terms of professional football in Seattle for the last decade. I hope most fans will take this approach.
If Seattle does not make the playoffs this year, Carroll and Wilson’s record of getting to the playoffs together in ten seasons will be eight out of ten times. Of those eight playoff runs, they went to two Super Bowls and won one, they went to the divisional round four times, and they lost in the wildcard round twice. I would take that ten year stretch over and over again as a Seahawk fan in a heartbeat. Hell yes, I would.
There is a negative narrative out there among some Seahawk fans and writers about what this club has only accomplished in the last five years. Fans are free to look at their favorite club anyway they want to, and I won’t tell them they are wrong.
That said, even in the face of what is presently upon us as a fan base, I am choosing not to look at it negatively like that.
I have lived through 1990’s Seahawks football. I know what bad football truly looks like in blue and green. I think what Carroll and Wilson have done together over this decade is remarkable football. If it all ends this season, I won’t be upset. I will be grateful.
As the late great George Harrison sang it, all things must pass. If this era is going to be over with soon, I will be ready for the next. I’m in this with this team for the long haul.