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About curtiseastwood

Sometimes an actor and writer, always a husband, father, gardner, and a big fan of the Seattle Seahawks.

Seahawks 2025 Offseason Primer: Who Stays, Goes, And Other Stuff..

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The Philadelphia have just done a very 2013 Seattle Seahawks thing in this last Super Bowl. They just beat the living shit out of a team that most thought would comfortably walk away with another title because of their superstar quarterback. Philadelphia did this by playing dominating defense on top of getting good enough production out of a good not great quarterback who they have paid a lot of money for, and they got good production out of a bunch of skill players who they also invested in.

They also just so happen to have one of the better offensive lines in the league; one that is comprised of players they drafted, and one key player they added in free agency who flamed out with his former team but Philly decided to take a flyer on (pun intended).

Let us keep these Philadelphia Eagles in mind as we sift through Seattle’s roster in order to determine who is likely to be a part of this thing in 2025 and who is likely playing elsewhere. I am not saying that the Seattle Seahawks are a few players away from the dominance of the Eagles, but I am saying that there is a pathway towards it, and it starts this offseason.

In preparation of what is sure to be a hugely important offseason for the Seattle Seahawks, I have decided to breakdown their current roster to determine which players are good fits for their new offense under coordinator Klint Kubiak, and who are good fits on defense for head coach Mike Macdonald. We all know that offensive line will be the biggest focus area for the team, but year one of defensive minded Macdonald proved that some of his defenders appear to be solid fits, while others have major question marks as to whether they should return. We shall dive into all of this.

Firstly, let’s look at the Kubiak offense that is likely an offshoot of his dad Gary’s offense, and thus an extension of the Mike Shanahan offense. Basically, it’s the Shanahan west coast offense that is becoming more in vogue in the league again.

This offense emphasizes running the football and play action passing in a zone blocking scheme where outside runs become more of a focus. It requires pre-snap motions of receivers and tight ends to create better angles for blockers to attack defenders, and it requires runners who can hit the gaps quickly and make quit cuts through the creases.

In terms of passing, it requires quarterbacks to make quick reads, and get the ball out quickly and accurately on short and intermediate throws. You don’t need a big armed quarterback to run this offense. This scheme does not hunt for big shots downfield very much. It needs a quarterback who is athletic enough to roll out, and a proficient enough in his mechanics to get the ball out quickly and accurately on the move. It is great if the QB has an arm like Brett Farve’s, but it is not essential. Accuracy, proper mechanics, playing decisive, and smart, is.

Bill Walsh, the founder of the west coast offense that inspired this scheme once said that his ideal quarterback would be about 6′-2″ to 6′-3″ range with good mobility and great throwing mechanics to get the ball out fast, and accurately. Joe Montana, John Elway, Brett Frave, Aaron Rodgers, and Matthew Stafford are all quarterbacks of this stature who played at high levels in the WCO scheme. There is a long list of other quarterbacks such as Steve Young, Jeff Garcia, Donavan McNabb, Matt Hasselbeck, Matt Schaub, Matt Ryan, Alex Smith, Jimmy Garoppolo, Michael Vick, Dak Prescott, and Brock Purdy, who while maybe they don’t all have that exacting height range, had the same abilities of moving well, and getting the ball out accurately on time in this scheme. Sam Darnold showed a pretty good ability doing this last season, finally, in this scheme last year for the Vikings.

The west coast offense, whether it is the Shanahan/McVay/Kubiak version, or the Walsh/Holmgren/Reid one, is a very quarterback friendly. Many quarterbacks who did not have first round pick pedigrees have found high success in this offense.

This scheme also requires receivers to be precise route runners that can get quick separation from defenders, have reliable hands, and be really good run after catch fellas. It additionally relies on receivers to be good run blockers as the whole scheme is built on the pass and run being tied together through play action. Therefore, receivers must be willing to sell blocks on defenders and then be able to spring out of them for a quick pass. The perfect mold of receiver for this offense was Jerry Rice, who was not a burner, but was quick out of his breaks with just enough size and strength to play like a running back gaining yards after the catch, in addition to being an effective run blocker.

Tight ends must be good blockers and equally good receivers. George Kittle is the perfect tight end for this style of offense.

Offensive linemen need to be athletic movers. Recently hired offensive line coach Joe Benton described needing to be ambidextrous at offensive tackle, meaning that the left and right tackles need to be both good run blockers and pass protectors as opposed to the traditional view that the left tackle must be the good pass blocker and the right tackle be the road grader in the run game. He mandates that his guards and his center to be athletes, as well, capable of breaking off to the second levels of the defense, opening up further run lanes downfield. Power run blockers who are not premier athletes are not a system fit. Additionally, there is a big emphasis on the center being a super sharp dude who calls out pass protections for the line, thus taking that pressure off of the quarterback. Max Unger famously did this for Seattle in the back to back Super Bowl years, taking that responsibility away from Russell Wilson.

This is essentially the Kubiak offense in terms of player requirements, but what can be said about the Mike Macdonald defense?

Well, after a year of it, I think we can determine that, overall, Macdonald loves size and length up front at defensive ends and defensive tackles. He runs a scheme that currently lists itself as a 3-4, but in fact plays more like the 4-3 under front that Seattle used to do in the early years of Pete Carroll.

In the depth chart of the team, Jarran Reed was listed as the big defensive end, Byron Murphy was the nose tackle, Big Cat Williams was the defensive tackle, and both Dre’Mont Jones and Derick Hall split the rush end role duty. Boye Mafe, and Uchenna Nwosu were SAM linebackers, Ernest Jones played the MIKE linebacker, and Tyrice Knight was the WILL backer. By assignment, Seattle essentially ran a 4-3 under in 2025, and I would expect this to continue in 2025 and beyond.

There appears to be a very specific physical template for each of these spots that Macdonald prefers. The big end must be roughly a 300 pound lengthy strong as an ox type of fella, the nose tackle must be a stocky win low sorta power dude, the DT ideally needs to be a long strong athletic freak, and the rush end must be lengthy burner who wins with power converted to speed. Think about to the Super Bowl winning season when Red Bryant played big end, Brandon Mebane played nosed, Tony McDaniel played DT, and Chris Clemons was the rush end. Macdonald’s front played very similarly to that in 2024 in terms of assignment and player types.

In terms of the second level players, the middle linebackers must be great in coverage and solid tacklers against the run; a ton is put on their plates and they need to be high football IQ guys. Even more so, the SAM linebackers must be able to be jack of all trade types, as they need to hold a strong edge against the run, be good droppers in coverage, and they need to be good pass rushers. No position in this scheme requires more out of it than the SAM position in the base front.

In terms of the secondary, corners need to be physical against the run, and very good zone players. Safeties need to be assassins as potential blitzers, great in coverage, and solid run support guys. The entire back end must make up of fellas willing to be assignment sound over anything else. Former practice squad player Josh Jobe earned a quality role by being assignment sharp, and so did former backup safety Coby Bryant. Macdonald values discipline over size and athletic traits in his secondary. All of his pressure packages up front are contingent on the discipline shown by his corners and safeties.

Alright, I think this sums up both sides of the ball pretty well in terms of what this franchise is looking for. Now let us break down the specific position groups and find out who the fits are for this club as we plow into what is sure to be a busy offseason.

Quarterback

There is no doubt that a portion of fans will reject this notion, but Geno Smith is likely a great fit for this Kubiak offense. He’s naturally a very smooth play action passer, he throws a very accurate short to intermediate ball, and he has shown to throw with good anticipation, overall, when not forced to hunt downfield. Geno had his best year starting in 2022 when Pete Carroll had him working mainly as a play action passer similarly to Jared Goff in Detroit. Weirdly, Seattle deviated from this some in 2023, and practically abandoned it all together last year with Ryan Grubb’s play calling. I suspect Klint Kubiak was hired by Macdonald with a very specific mindset to getting Geno Smith back to his 2022 form of being a play action facilitator, but this time around in an even more quarterback friendly offense.

Kubiak, himself, has said that Geno was a huge draw for him wanting this gig, and that he appreciates his toughness, and his ability to lead drives in the fourth quarter. It makes sense. An experienced OC should want an experienced veteran QB that he believes in.

I am not sure Sam Howell fits. I liked it when Seattle traded for him, but I think his game might be more about taking deep shots downfield, as opposed to getting the ball out quickly with accuracy and anticipation based on what he sees out of the defense. There is a significant chance Seattle will look to add a quarterback of the future in this draft class, or through trade, or even free agency.

Running back

The Kubiak scheme is likely the best fit for Ken Walker to truly ascend to greatness as an NFL running back. His speed and explosiveness, and desire to break to the outside made for this scheme. K9 just needs to be more decisive as a runner in his contract year of 2025 to earn a big pay day in 2026. I think we could see huge production numbers out of his, if he can stay healthy, and I think that is somewhat of a big if.

Kenny McIntosh is potentially another really solid fit for this scheme. He is kind of the inverse of K9, he’s a bit more limited as an athlete, but he runs with a bunch of decisiveness and intensity. I think we could see surprise production of him in 2025. I’m kind of excited to see that happen for him.

The one guy who I have some questions about is the guy who I thought was Seattle’s best running back last year in Zach Charbonnet. Zach was a revelation at times in Grubb’s system when he had to step up, but his best games were when Grubb abandoned the zone blocking concepts for a power gap scheme that the young offensive linemen were more comfortable with, and Zach felt like a natural fit for. When they were more zone blocking, he felt less impactful, but maybe I am overreaching, and Kubiak will find ways to make his power style useful, and he will be just fine. Kubiak did say that they will combine zone blocking with some gap stuff, so maybe I’m just being overly skeptical of Charbonnet’s role this year.

Wide receiver

Jaxson Smith Njigba is an absolute natural fit for this offense. He is well sized enough to play through contact, his route running is elite, his hands are solid, he has next level gears he can reach in order to run after the catch, and he’s not afraid to throw down on blocks. JSN should be the primary receiver in this offense for years to come.

I think Jake Bobo might also be a really good fit as a big physical possession receiver kinda like what San Fransisco has with Jauan Jennings, and I am perfectly willing to go out on a limb for that. Bobo is never going to be a burner downfield, but he’s a natural route runner with sure hands, and he’s a great blocker in the run game. There is a spot for him in this offense.

I think Tyler Lockett has the hands and the route savvy to be productive in this system, but I am not feeling his physicality to be a reliable blocker in the run game. Like many, I sorta feel like he played his last game for Seattle, unfortunately.

I have some questions as to whether the Kubiak system will fit DK Metcalf. DK is an excellent run blocker, has good enough hands, but his route running feels inconsistent at times, and this scheme absolutely requires precision pattern running from all pass catchers. Kubiak made it sound as though DK was another big factor as to why he wanted this job, though, and has said that he is very much looking forward to working with him. These comments have poured cold water on the idea that Seattle is open to trading DK, but we shall see.

Tight end

I think AJ Barner fits this scheme like a glove with his run blocking traits and his surprising abilities catching football and trucking defenders. I am not sure he’s a tight end number one in this offense, but he should fit it fine. He’s a natural tough guy.

I am not convinced Noah Fant is a fit. He has world class athletic abilities, but I don’t think he’s much of a blocker, and I sorta suspect Seattle might look to replace him through free agency or the draft. Kubiak has said he needs tough willing blockers to play tight end for him. That does not sound like Fant.

I expect this to be a focus area in offseason. The draft is deep at tight end, and there will be tight ends in free agency familiar with this scheme. Right now, I see Barner has been the most promising player rostered at this time to fit right in.

Offensive line

Charles Cross, Abe Lucas, and Christian Haynes are fits for the zone blocking scheme. Cross is a decent left tackle, and Lucas is a talented yet often injured right tackle. Haynes was a promising right guard prospect in last year’s draft who some feel former OC Ryan Grubb mishandled during the regular season, but is also player Macdonald name dropped at the end of the season as someone the team is excited about moving forward with.

There should be a high expectation that the team will look to address left guard and center through free agency, and the draft this Spring. It could be possible that they may look for a more durable solution at right tackle, as well, but we will see.

As for the other players they have rostered, it feels like Olu Oluwatimi may not be athletic enough at center, and Sataoa Laumea might be a poor fit. Anthony Bradford is a good athlete, but an iffy blocker, at best. Reserve players Jalen Sundell and Michael Jerrell might be good developmental players in a zone blocking scheme, though.

Again, expect this position good to be the BIGGEST focal point of the offseason for improvement. People can talk about replacing Geno Smith for a younger QB all they want to, but if this area does not get fixed, it won’t matter much who the QB is short termed, or longer termed. Fix the F’ing line.

Defensive line

Leonard Big Cat Williams is the ideal defensive lineman for this scheme, capable of playing all for positions. He’s a rare breed, and a great defensive tackle. Byron Murphy is a promising DT who can also play nose tackle. Jarran Reed can play DT, nose, and end. Roy Robertson Harris was a good rotation tackle/end type, but might be a cap casualty if the team looks to re-sign Jarran Reed who Macdonald really seems to like a lot.

Derick Hall is a promising rush end player who has a chance to be star player in this defense. There should be an expectation that he takes another big leap forward in 2025.

Dre’Mont Jones felt like a square peg trying to fit into a round hole in this new defense. He came into the league as an undersized DT, and was signed by Seattle two years ago to play big end in the previous scheme. He was not big enough for Macdonald’s tastes for end, so was asked to drop wait and play the rush end/OLB type position. I expect he will be a cap casualty in a few weeks time.

It is very possible that Seattle goes shopping for more at defensive end and rush end in free agency, trades, or the draft.

Linebacker

Ernest Jones and Tyrice Knight played great together at the team’s starting middle linebackers, and it is expected that the team works out a deal with Jones to keep him around as a fixture at MIKE linebacker. Boye Mafe and Uchenna Nwosu were pretty solid SAM linebackers, but Nwosu’s huge cap hit for 2025 puts him in danger of being a cap casualty when the team has Mafe playing pretty well while still on an inexpensive rookie contract.

If I were a betting man, I would say Seattle likely parts ways with Nwosu, and they look to bargain shop in free agency for an edge player who can play SAM and rush end, and they will look to the draft for this guy, as well.

Cornerback

It can be inferred that Devon Witherspoon is Mike Macdonald’s favorite player on the team, and it feels like the player loves the coach, equally. There is likely a thought inside the club that he is a cornerstone player, capable of playing all the corner spots and probably safety, as well.

It feels like the coaches also really appreciate Josh Jobe for his assignment soundness in a scheme that can be pretty complex with its coverages. I would expect him back in 2025.

Personally, I think Riq Woolen is full of as much question marks as he is with physical talent. I would not be surprised if he is a player dealt this offseason, and I think schemes played in Washington, Houston, and possibly now Vegas with Pete Carroll might be better served for him to be in. For him to be at his best, I think he needs simplified cover schemes, and that is not what Macdonald wants to run. Therefore, I think it is 50/50 whether he is back next Fall, despite his obvious talents.

This area, in my opinion, has the biggest question marks outside of offensive line on this team, presently. I can see Seattle being active in free agency bringing in veterans that Macdonald sees as better fits, and it could be a surprise area in the draft that they attack earlier than some are thinking.

Safety

Mike Macdonald wants his safeties to be interchangeable. He isn’t looking for a prototype free safety paired with a hard hitting box safety like Seattle made famous in the Legion Of Boom days. He wants both of these guys to be great in coverage, solid against the run, and he needs smart guys guarding the backend of his defense.

Julian Love fits these requirements like a glove, and it feels like Coby Bryant is blossoming into a similar type of player. Rayshawn Jennings is capable of playing both safety spots but probably works best as a strong safety, and the emergence of Bryant might make his bigger cap dollars expendable.

Beyond these three, Seattle’s depth players are a small handful of unknowns. My spidey senses are that the team could part ways with Jennings this offseason and look to free agency for inexpensive proven depth talent, and they might be in the market in the draft that feels deep enough at this position.

Final thoughts

For months now, I have entertained the notion that Seattle could be in pursuit of Sam Darnold in free agency as an attempt to get younger at QB1 while not wasting a pick in this draft on a quarterback when the position is not thought to be an area of strength in it. Darnold would come with questions as to whether 2024 was a fluke year for him, or if like Matt Hasselbeck over twenty years ago, at age 27, everything finally just clicked for him, and he is going to remain a pretty good QB for the next several years in the right scheme with the right play caller, and enough proper targets around him.

I would be perfectly fine waging on the latter with Darnold, and I believe wherever he ends up, that team is going to get a pretty good, if not great quarterback. If that happened in Seattle, I would be all over it. I think he’s potentially a great fit here. He knows the scheme due to his time in San Francisco when he had Kubiak as his QB coach. As witnessed at Lumen Field last Fall, he’s more than capable of getting the ball out quickly and accurately in this style of offense, and he can extend and make a big time throw downfield, as well.

Philadelphia just destroyed the almighty Kansas City Chiefs in the Super Bowl by having built up defense, a great offensive line, a good group of playmakers, and good not great veteran quarterback who made enough plays in a scheme built towards his strengths. They just showed that it is possible for a team to spend big money on a good not great passer, and still achieve greatness. The narrative will no longer be centered around how Philly spent too much on Jalen Hurts.

This all leads us back to Geno Smith. I can want the team to get younger at QB, and so can you. It is not a crime to desire seeing this team draft and develop its future starter, or find that guy in some other way. At the same time, I think the only thing that separates Geno from Darnold and Hurts is likely age. He will be 35 in October, and these other guys are still in their twenties. Other than that, I think he is in the same tier of NFL QB with these guys, I believe, and I think the team believes this, too.

That is why I believe it when it is now being reported that Seattle is working to get an extension done with Geno. I don’t believe this is some elaborate smoke screen, and I don’t think Mike Macdonald is blowing smoke when he said recently that he believes this team can win a Super Bowl with him. Macdonald knows better than any fan what scheme best fits Geno, and this is why I believe Klint Kubiak was ultimately hired.

Geno Smith fits this scheme like a glove. As much as I would enjoy seeing them pivot to Darnold in order to get about seven years younger, I think the challenges of pulling that off are too risky. Does Seattle want to trade or cut Geno in order to enter into a bidding war for Darnold, risk losing out, and then having to pivot to ancient Kirk Cousins, brittle Jimmy Garoppolo, or dare I say the difficult to deal with washed up version of Aaron Rodgers?

Geno Smith is a popular leader inside the locker room, beloved by players and coaches. I suspect these players and coaches felt that Ryan Grubb did him no favors as a play caller for reasons I have poured over many times already. Moving on from him now and bringing in a new vet could cast a big negative effect inside the locker room, especially if the team struggles next Fall while Geno is playing well somewhere else.

These are the risks of moving on from Geno, and I sense Macdonald isn’t the sort to want to bring on unnecessary risks at this position. He knows what he has in Geno, appreciates who and what he is at a QB, and is ready to continue rolling with him.

Therefore, I feel like it is most likely Seattle and Geno Smith work out another contract extension within the next month or so. This feels inevitable.

That doesn’t mean that they don’t seek to draft someone this Spring to develop behind him. There are a few quarterbacks in this class who the team could still look to target. Given what we know about the Kubiak offense, I think Ohio State QB Will Howard could be an interesting fit, as could Texas QB Quinn Ewers, Ole Miss OB Jaxson Dart, and Notre Dame’s Riley Leonard. I also think Syracuse QB Kyle McCord might be a sneaky player on their radar. Any one of these guys in the second, third, or fourth round, could make a lot of sense.

I also wouldn’t be surprised if they punted on the position again in the draft, as well, and gave Sam Howell another year to try to develop. It is an uninspiring thought, but maybe part of the hire of Kubiak is that there is a feeling in the front office that Howell needs to be in this sort of scheme to thrive as much as Geno does. I am not convinced Howell is going to work out, but maybe they have a very different view.

I also want to say that, of the many young free agent quarterbacks out there who could be looked at as a developmental signing, perhaps Zach Wilson is one they would be willing to look at. He flamed out badly with the Jets, and was buried in the depth chart in Denver behind Bo Nix, but he played in a similar scheme with the Jets, and he also possesses a strong arm that Schneider seems to value. Just a thought to keep in mind before free agency.

But Geno Smith is almost certain to remain as the quarterback for this team moving forward this year, and possibly for a few more years. Personally, I would highly enjoy watching him flourish in this scheme and then seeing all of his dug in haters die on a very stupid hill on the internet. That would be fun for me.

As for all these other position areas, aside from the interior of the offensive line being the biggest area of focus, I feel that if the team were to get splashy with trades, DK Metcalf and Riq Woolen are the two most likely candidates to be moved for decent value. That said, I don’t know how very likely that is, it sorta vibes like the team is aiming to extend DK again, but maybe Woolen is someone they would look to move for the right price.

Coming out of Super Bowl weekend, there was a growing buzz within league circles that DK, in particular, would have a trade market. It very possible that DK’s trade market will not be as high as it is right now. There are teams at the top needing a player such as his quality at this position, and this is not thought to be a very good receiver draft class for them to get one.

Right now, I think it is more likely the front office feels the need to not let its best overall athlete leave the building, but will perhaps listen to offers in order to see if something emerges that will blow them away like the Russell Wilson trade did. Whether those offers come up, is another thing entirely, but what if Dallas comes calling to discuss Micah Parsons for DK and change? Parsons has history with Seattle’s defensive coordinator and is a bona fide game wrecking edge defender. Put him in this defense, and watch 49er fans cry in their beers on Sundays for years to come.

That said, back to Riq Woolen; Seattle’s other freaky young athlete. He’s a bit inconsistent, but he has elite physical traits and length, and I think there are schemes in which he might be better suited for. I could see Dan Quinn and Pete Carroll both having an interest in adding him, and I can see Houston and Dallas having interest, as well. With Vegas having two third round picks in this coming draft, could Pete be inclined to have their front office make a push for one of his favorite young players? I could see this being a thing, actually.

My prime candidates for being cap casualties are Dre’Mont Jones, Tyler Lockett (sadly), Noah Fant, Rayshawn Jennings, and very possibly Uchenna Nwosu. If Jones and Chenna are cut, Seattle will most certainly look to add edge in the draft, and free agency. Don’t be shocked if the first player they would take in the draft is an edge talent, there’s some good ones there, and they might see value at guard more in the second and third round ranges.

There will tons of pressure from fans and media to see Seattle hyper aggressive in free agency and the draft to go after offensive line. On Local radio Tuesday afternoon, when pressed about the question of how he sees the offensive line, Klint Kubiak said that he needs a good center to make it work. I would expect Seattle to go hard after a center through free agency, and then most likely target a guard in the draft.

Atlanta’s Drew Dalman might be their top target should he make it to the free agent, but there will likely be a number of other options such as Green Bay’s Josh Meyers, and Indy’s Ryan Kelly. The draft is not thought to be rich with centers but it appears deep at guard. Conventional wisdom suggests that Seattle will look to draft one at pick 18, but if a special player is sitting there at another position that could significantly help this team in other ways, they might decide to look for a guard on day two of the draft, much to fan ire, I would expect.

Depending on how the draft lands, tight end, corner, edge rusher, DT, and safety could be considerations with the first pick. I will also say this; I don’t think it is beyond the scope of reason that Seattle could surprise everyone by taking a quarterback at 18, if there is a guy there that they love.

In 2011, John Schneider was ready to take Andy Dalton in the bottom have of round one, but he was vetoed by Pete Carroll. John wanted a young quarterback and felt that the team was built up enough for one to take then and there. Nowadays, however, he no longer has Pete Carroll to insert his veto powers against him. If he loves a guy, and believes in his potential, he might decide this is the year to do it, even if Geno is extended a few more years. Then the team is set up with a very interesting Jordan Love type scenario. I can absolutely see this as a possibility. It will be fascinating if that happens.

At any rate, if I were to predict this offseason, I would predict both a Geno Smith and DK Metcalf extension. I think they will trim some salary cap fat by moving on from Dre’ Jones, Lockett, Noah Fant, and probably a couple other vets. I think they will re-sign Ernest Jones, and most likely try to bring back Jarran Reed again.

In free agency, I believe that the big move will be made on bringing in a big name center, and I suspect that they will look to add a quality tight end who better fits the Kudiak scheme (Nola’s Juwan Johnson played for Kubiak last year and is a name to watch). These two moves feel most certain.

Depending on what the team does with Riq Woolen, I suspect corner could be a bigger than expected free agent target, and it might be regardless of whether or not they trade or keep Woolen around for another year. Baltimore’s Brandon Stephens played for Macdonald, and might viewed as someone they want to target. They could also look to add one of two former Seahawks in Michael Jackson and DJ Read.

It feels inevitable that they will look to add more edge rush through free agency and the draft. Dre’ Jones wasn’t a great fit, and Chenna is expensive and injury prone. I think edge rush could be the sneaky move with their first pick, and there are interesting names who could be available. As much as guard is a need, it would be a shame to pass on a great pass rusher for a position that is usually available to fill in the second and third rounds.

More likely, however, I think Seattle, by virtue of having Macdonald as their HC, will attract veteran pass rushers who will want to be a part of this particular scheme. Macdonald coaches a scheme that sets pass rushers up for success.

Dallas edger rusher, DeMarcus Lawrence might want to come up here to play in a scheme he can close out his career being productive in potential a top five unit, and a sneaky playoff contender with some veteran stability at quarterback. Haason Reddick might like signing a one year contract here with a chance to pack his stats for a bigger payday in 2026. Maybe Khalil Mack sees an opportunity to play in front of the Twelves in a top defense. At some point, older players with a bit left in the tank start looking at situations in free agency as bucket list opportunities. Could be a chance for a ring, or a location to play, or a specific coach to play for. Macdonald and his scheme could be attractive for some of these players.

If I were to map out the ideal offseason for Seattle, it would probably be extensions for Geno Smith, and DK Metcalf, followed by re-signing Ernest Jones and Jarran Reed. It would then be followed by landing the best center available in free agency, a good well rounded veteran tight end, a good reliable veteran edge rusher, and another veteran quality corner. I would also like to add one free agent bargain level guard to hedge for the draft.

If I could achieve these moves in free agency, I would feel really good about the prospects of heading into the draft where guard is relatively deep, and so are other positions like D-tackle, corner, tight end, safety, and running back. This way, if pick 18 comes up, and there is unexpectedly a player there that I really love at position such as quarterback, I could feel good about taking that swing, and feeling like I have my bases covered during rounds two through four.

If I get a guy I believe in at 18 to be the next franchise quarterback in time, and I can still land a decent guard prospect at 50, I would probably feel as if I absolutely hit the lotto, if I had made all these prior moves in free agency. After all, Joe Flacco was drafted around that range years ago, and Jordan Love, Aaron Rodgers, Lamar Jackson, and Andy Dalton were all late first round picks. All of these guys had question marks around them that made teams leery of taking them at the top of the first round, but they went to good enough teams in the later frame where they could be developed by better coaches with better rosters.

I will say this now, and I will say it again. I will not be shocked if this year, we see Seattle try to strike late first round gold on a quarterback if it falls that way for them. I think it could be possible.

This is what makes the most sense for me when I think of them extending Geno Smith and DK Metcalf. It makes sense to have Geno around for a few more years until a young quarterback that he is the bridge for is fully ready to take over. It makes sense for that young passer to also have DK Metcalf and JSN locked into contracts to throw the ball at.

It just makes a lot of sense.

And if some fans want to bitch and moan about extending Geno Smith, fuck ’em. I would rather have a proven veteran to pass the torch off of than seeing a rookie getting tossed into the flames of the NFC West having to play against Nick Bosa and Fred Warner.

That’s kinda how I see this, anyways.

Go Hawks.

Seahawks Hire Klint Kubiak As OC And Pete Carroll Goes To The Raiders

(AP Photo/Chris Szagola)

Over the past few days, it has been quite a news cycle for Seattle Seahawk fans. On Sunday afternoon, it was reported that the Mike Macdonald and the Seattle Seahawks finally settled upon their new offensive coordinator who will replace Ryan Grubb. Two days prior to that, it was announced to the world that 73 year old Pete Carroll would take over the Las Vegas Raiders head coaching gig. I think both news events are worth touching on here, and I also think there’s a chance that both fronts could have impact on each other in the coming months, and I will explain later.

Firstly, here are my collected thoughts on Mike Macdonald choosing former New Orleans Saints coordinator Klint Kubiak for the gig here. On the surface, I like the move a lot, and I believe it felt inevitable for a while that he would be the guy chosen here to replace Ryan Grubb.

Kubiak is an experienced play caller who has been a coach in the league for sometime now. He’s also got strong NFL bloodlines with his dad Gary being a former NFL quarterback, coordinator, and Super Bowl winning head coach, and his philosophy is strongly tied to the Mike Shanahan system that has retaken the league in recent years. It is clear that based on most of the candidates that Seattle was interviewing, they had particular interest in the Shanahan system, and by extension of it, the Sean McVay system. Arguably, they got the top available person on the market to agree to come here to incorporate it. Bravo. Of the list of known candidates who interviewed with this team, I preferred Kubiak.

Personally, I wasn’t super stoked about the prospects of Seattle hiring the Detroit Lions offensive line coach to come out here to OC. I loved what the Lions offense has turned into over the past couple years, but for this gig out here, I needed an experienced NFL play caller. Maybe Hank Fraley will blossom into a sharp offensive play caller someday, but after one year with Ryan Grubb, and two years of Shane Waldron, I kinda needed Mike Macdonald’s choice to be someone who has been around the league for a while and has experience play calling against NFL defenses. Of the persons they interviewed, I kinda needed it to be Klint Kubiak.

And I totally get it if this selection does not wow you. Seattle has toiled with being good enough to compete for the playoffs but not good enough to win in them for nearly a decade now since their back to back Super Bowls. They aren’t a bad NFL team, but they aren’t an A Lister organization currently, either. So, I get it that when any move they make, it is likely to be met with a bit of a toxic skepticism from some fans, and I anticipate that there will be sorts who will look at Kubiak and his stints in Minnesota and Nola, and not be fully embracing of the hire.

My feelings on this front, is that if there is push back on this hire from fans, it likely is reflective of folks who are tired of Seattle being middling more than anything else. At this time last year, Seattle had just hired Mike Macdonald who many thought was the brightest young head coaching candidate out there, and then it was seen that they pulled off a coup by luring popular UW offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb to pair with him. Diehard Husky fans poured over promises to Seahawk fans just how special and dynamic Grubb would make this offense become with its power trio of receivers and Geno Smith, but the reality was that he was not ready to match wits against NFL defenses on a consistent basis, and he had to be babysat by coaches working under him at times, per reports.

So, I think this is very much an important hire for Seattle, and it is perhaps their biggest move of the offseason, if they do not make major changes to their personnel. They have to get this hire right by Kubiak, or fan discontent will only grow. That is the risk they made when they decided to move on from the legend of Pete Carroll for the young upside of Mike Macdonald.

But many fans are growing more tired of Seattle being in the middle of the pack. I get that. It has been four years since they last won their division, and it has been five years since they last won a playoff game. I feel your frustrations.

You want them to be more than what they are, and you might even be a bit more frustrated that they simply don’t tear it all down to struggle at the bottom for a while in order to built themselves up with a bunch of lottery picks from the NFL Draft. I get it.

The trouble is that the teams that tend to often pick in the top five or ten of the draft, usually routinely suck as clubs. These are the Jets, the Giants, Jaguars, Browns, Titans, and Cardinals. They tend to give up on quarterbacks too early, and coaches too fast, and it is a rinse and repeat vicious cycle for them.

Seattle is not that sort of organization. They strive to be competitive every year much like the Pittsburgh Steelers. They moved on from Pete Carroll last year when everyone assumed that they would replace him with a bright young offensive minded head coach, and they took another defensive minded head coach simply because he was the guy they believed was the best overall coach out there. The result was ten wins. This feels very much like Seattle.

Now they have paired Macdonald with a coordinator who, while maybe not the flashiest, comes from a balanced run married with play action system that will be more aligned at what Macdonald wants to do. For all those who will be likely to doubt his success here, he had a fair degree of success coaching this system in Minnesota getting a bright play out of Kirk Cousins, and his first two games of 2024 down in Nola proved spectacular before the swarm of injuries hit his offensive personnel. While there is no guarantee that Kubiak is going to be a big hit here, I think it is also true that the book is not fully out on him yet as a coach. This is where I think his pedigree matters.

He is the son of Gary Kubiak who has coached highly productive offenses throughout the league in Houston, Denver, Baltimore, and Minnesota. In fact, Mike Macdonald was in Baltimore when Gary coached Joe Flacco in 2014, and the Ravens had the most explosive attack in the league, and Flacco had his best statistical year as a passer. I am positive that when Grubb was fired, Macdonald likely thought of Klint Kubiak probably right off the bat by witness to what his father had accomplished.

Klint Kubiak also comes to this staff with Super Bowl experience being Brock Purdy’s QB coach in San Fransisco the year before last when they went to the Super Bowl and Purdy looked like the second coming of Joe Montana. Personally, I think it matters that our new OC has a deep background in coaching QBs and it appears that Klint it pretty good at it.

For the sake of throwing a little spicy speculation into this hire, I think it is worth pointing out that should Seattle choose to be a surprise team in the offseason pursuing Sam Darnold, well, Darnold was QB2 for San Francisco two years ago, and thus he probably knows very well what Kubiak plans to run here, and Kubiak knows him well. If Seattle’s front office has a desire to get younger at quarterback than Geno Smith, and Kubiak has a desire to bring in a quarterback who knows his system pretty well, I wouldn’t totally brush off this idea of Darnold coming in. I have been outwardly speculating about Seattle perhaps being interested in him for a while, and this hire of Kudiak only adds to the fuel behind those thoughts I hold.

I am not suggesting that Sam Darnold to Seattle is anything close to a given, nor am I actively trying to push Geno Smith out the door on my humble blog. I am just saying that certain aspects of Darnold sorta align with what Seattle could realistically do at quarterback given the likelihood that they will not be picking in the top five of the draft annually where bright young college quarterbacks typically now get selected. Do they want to pay 34 year old Geno Smith a big three year extension this offseason, or will they be more willing to take an educated guess on the upside of 27 year old Sam Darnold instead, and pivot towards his availability?

Many would see this as a lateral move at quarterback, and I get that. Personally, I think Darnold falls into a similar category of quarterback as Geno Smith. With Darnold, however, Seattle could conceivably have about a seven year window of steady play with a definite possibility that his ceiling of a player has not been met, yet. With Geno, however, I think even his strongest supporters would say that his window of playing quality QB1 ball is probably about two more years.

So, I am just going to leave my thoughts on the potential of Darnold to Seattle at that. On the surface, I think it is interesting, and with this new hire, I think it only adds fuel to the notion.

I will say that whomever Seattle does have quarterbacking here over the next few years, this hire feels more promising for that player whether it is Geno Smith or someone else. When the Mike Shanahan system clicks, it is incredibly quarterback friendly. Many quarterbacks have found success running it, and often times, they have not been premiere physical talents, either. Kirk Cousins, Matt Schaub, Joe Flacco, Jimmy Garoppolo, and Brock Purdy are not who you think about when you think of big rocket armed quarterbacks who have tilted the fields on Sundays like a Josh Allen or Patrick Mahomes, or even a Joe Burrow.

You don’t need a freak of nature to run the Shanahan machine. You just need a dude who has good enough accuracy and athleticism to handle bootleg roll outs, smarts to know the playbook and where to go with the ball, and probably enough size to see where to go with the ball over the middle of the field. If he’s got a big arm, great, but really, this is a system tailor made for a dude willing to be a good game manager.

There are a lot of quarterbacks in this league who could find success in this scheme with the right parts in place. Sam Howell, as bad as he looked against Green Bay when he was forced into the game, could conceivably find success should Seattle turn to him down the road. I can imagine a middling guy like Mac Jones having some success, or even Spencer Rattler if Seattle wanted to now work out a trade for him.

Or they could just as easily choose to hang onto Geno Smith a few more years, and he could most likely run it to pretty good effect. I feel like with this hire, many possibilities open up for Seattle at QB, and that includes taking a day two or mid round flyer on a quarterback in the draft this Spring.

At any rate, I am glad they settled for Kubiak. I got worried about some of the unknowns with Fraley, Adam Stenavich (never called plays in Green Bay despite his OC title), and Grant Udinski. I know there is some speculation out there that Fraley might have been their top choice, but Ian Rapoport’s tweet suggests that Kubiak was their guy all along. Either way, I am glad that it is settled, and we can move onto an offseason that will surely focus largely on fixing the offensive line.

When Seattle closed their season out almost a month ago now, I stated my desires to see a change at offensive coordinator, a major focus of improvement to the offensive line, and for them to keep an open mind at quarterback. They have now accomplished the first task.

Let us now see how they approach the offensive line, and I hope it is with aggression, and let us see how they handle what they have at quarterback. This feels like a pivotal offseason for John Schneider on both of these fronts. We shall soon enough see.

Onto thoughts about Pete Carroll with the Raiders

I was happy news brought Friday morning that Pete Carroll got back into the league by agreeing to coach the Vegas Raiders. I don’t particularly like the Raiders, but I am pretty long over the old AFC rivalry we used to have with them a quarter century ago.

I think that a lot of Raiders fans are pretty obnoxious people, and I was at Lumen Field last year when we blew that overtime game to them, and lost. I was followed, and heckled by a couple thuggish young Raiders fans as I was walking to my bus stop on Alaska. I am sure other Seahawk fans were being harassed, as well. Raider Nation walked out of Lumen Field as if they had just won a championship game, and they wanted Seattle fans to feel it.

The Raider faithful are not the only fans to behave this way. I suspect fans from many other markets come into Seattle sensing that Seatteites aren’t very aggressive people by nature, there is not a lot of edginess in the PNW, in general, and when their visiting team wins, they love to stir up shit with disappointed Seahawk fans. I have seen it amplified with New York fans, San Francisco fans, and Philly fans, especially.

But Raider fans are a whole different level of toxicity. For that reason, I have always particularly enjoyed their long suffering.

Therefore, I will say that because I am still very staunchly a Pete Carroll fan, I will be perfectly willing to pause my Raider schadenfreude for the next however many years Carroll coaches down there. When they aren’t playing against, Seattle, I will root for them.

And they need Pete Carroll desperately there. They need a total culture reset, and Pete Carroll is a hall of fame culture builder. I suspect he will get them going the right direction straight out of the gates.

I also anticipate we will see former Seahawks down there fairly soon. Bobby Wagner and Russell Wilson will be free agents, and Wagner in particular I can see heading down there. Jarran Reed could be on his way, as well, and should Seattle sever ties with Tyler Lockett, or Geno Smith, I think Vegas would be the prime landing spot for both.

It wouldn’t shock me if Vegas calls Seattle about DK Metcalf’s availability via trade, or even Riq Woolen. With Kubiak bringing in his Shanahan offense, I don’t know how much DK is a fit for that, and Woolen seems maybe more of a Carroll style outside corner than maybe perhaps Macdonald’s, but I am projecting here on both accounts.

I see a lot of speculation out there that the Raiders could show interest in Geno Smith given how much Pete Carroll favored him, and that there remains a lot of mutual respect between the QB and coach. In that, I have seen it suggested that perhaps John Schneider has never been as warm about Geno as Pete was, and would be fine to move on if negotiations proved too difficult.

I would just say to that, if Pete Carroll knows how John truly feels about Geno, instead of calling him and asking what it would take to deal him to Vegas, Pete Carroll could simply tell the Vegas GM to hold tight and not do anything, and see if Seattle just cuts Geno outright if a team friendly extension cannot be had. If Pete can sorta detect that scenario, why would he encourage his GM to hand Seattle a valuable draft pick?

So, I would just encourage that maybe breaks be pumped a bit on the idea that suddenly Vegas will trade one of their third round picks to Seattle for an older quarterback that Seattle might be reluctant to sign to a big extension. I am very skeptical of that probability when there will be other quarterbacks on the market they could just as easily pursue.

Here is what I would say about what Pete likely wants to do in Vegas. I think he sees about a three or four year window to finally right their ship and have them contending. I don’t think he will likely want to babysit a rookie quarterback in that stretch of time. He will want to be paired with a veteran, and certainly Geno Smith or Russell Wilson could be prime candidates. I could also see them wanting to aggressively pursue Sam Darnold and perhaps pay him top market value. It could be a situation as to whether that is where Darnold wants to be, though, or does he want to go to a team that is, in his mind, a closer contender in a division that does not feature Patrick Mahomes and Justin Herbert.

Oddly, I could see scenarios where Vegas trades for Geno (or signs him in free agency if he is cut), brings in Russell Wilson to reunite with the guy who drafted him, and perhaps even battles against Seattle for the likes of Darnold. In any of these scenarios, it is likely going to have a pull on Seahawk fans, but at any rate, I think it if for almost certain that Pete will want to pair with a veteran quarterback who he really likes and trusts a lot.

It is going to be really interesting down there with how they handle the QB spot. If I had to guess anything, I am now starting to think that a Russ and Pete reunion in Sin City now maybe has greater legs than I would have thought a couple days ago. There is a lot buzz building around that. The two personalities are wired very similarly on the holistic positively thinking stuff, and I think it is now possible that Russ has been humbled enough to now see that for him to exist as a starting NFL quarterback, it is probably best to not be cooking to the extent that he felt he needed to a few years back. I think it is also still very possible that Russ holds enough positive belief in himself that he would not shy away from signing with a team that has to play against Mahomes twice a year.

At any rate, I am happy for Pete, and I will be rooting for his success with the Silver and Black. With what he built up in Seattle with the Legion of Boom defense, I have always thought that Carroll had an affinity for the Raider way. Now he gets to close out his coaching career building it back up. I am interested in seeing where it now goes.

I am also very excited to see what Seattle can do this year with Kubiak paired with Macdonald. I feel like they are close to upper tier contention, and they have personnel who will fit what Kubiak will want to do at running back, receiver, and tight end, and quarterback even with all of my Geno speculations. They just need to fix that offensive line.

So, just bloody well fix the thing.

Go Hawks.

Grubb Firing And The Dudes I Dig For the Seahawks OC Gig

On Monday morning, less than two hours after I posted an article on this blog stating my desire for the Seattle Seahawks to move away from Ryan Grubb (and other matters I would love to see them address such as offensive line and the future at quarterback), they did just that. They canned Grubb.

I was elated with the news. I felt saw it coming for a while, and the only thing I found surprising was the amount of pushback with fans and some in the media. It was way more than I expected it to be, and I get it if you are a big time Husky fan who had a deep attachment to Grubb, but it clearly was not working with him here this year, and I have listed many reasons why.

Could have Grubb gotten better at his job in year two? Sure, it’s possible. It is also very possible that he wouldn’t have, and then suddenly you have a young head coach in Mike Macdonald potentially feeling the hot seat along with maybe GM John Schneider because the offense couldn’t connect with the defense enough for two years in a row.

So, I just wanted a couple days let dust settle before sharing my thoughts on the firing, and offering up some of my favorite potential candidates to replace Grubb. Here are my quick thoughts after the firing, and then my dudes that I really dig for this gig.

Firstly, firing Grubb was absolutely the right thing for Mike Macdonald to do. It had been painfully obvious throughout the course of the season that Grubb and Macdonald did not see eye to eye on how the offense should function. It is not that Ryan Grubb is a bad coach, it is that Grubb proved bad for what Macdonald wanted, and needed of this team.

There are now some very strong implications that Macdonald had numerous talks with Grubb after games that were squandered by the offense (Giants, Packers, Vikings, etc) about how game management was handled, run to pass ratios were lopsided, and yet Grubb could never seem to get the memo from his boss outside of one game in Arizona where the offense looked like it had a functional balanced plan of attack. It is also kinda now out in the open that Macdonald had to get his more NFL experienced coaches on the staff to tutor Grubb on how NFL defenses and offenses work.

Imagine being the passing coordinator having to explain to the person who is your boss in charge of the offense what NFL defenses do in the red zones against NFL offenses that college defenses don’t do. Yikes.

I have seen reactions from fans and some folks on podcasts and radio waves in Seattle that this firing was unfair to Grubb, and he deserved another chance in 2025. Okay, then. To that, I ask why.

Why does Mike Macdonald owe Ryan Grubb a second chance when Grubb had seventeen games in a NFL season to get on the same page with his boss and he failed to consistently do so?

If you think it is unfair for Ryan Grubb to be given the boot, how come you don’t think it would be unfair for Mike Macdonald to have to work with him again for another season?

Where is your allegiance in this?

Do you think he needed another shot simply because you are a big time Husky fan such as Dave Mahler on Sports Radio KJR and his former Husky QB buddy Hugh Millen?

Did you have high visions of grandeur that your Husky fandom would marry with your Seahawk fandom with Grubb play calling here?

Or is it that simply are you a bigger bleeding heart than you are a football fan, and morally you just find this firing super unfair?

None of these questions are an attack on anyone who hated this decision from the Seahawks, by the way. They are just meant to cut to the source of why there was so much outcry over the decision.

The Seattle Seahawks narrowly missed the playoffs this year because the offense was imbalanced and not nearly as complimentary to the defense as Mike Macdonald would have preferred it to be. It was not connected to Macdonald’s defense, on any level, and Macdonald wasn’t really asking that much from Grubb to bend a bit more to a balanced approach.

And who says that Macdonald did not give Grubb ample chances through the course of the season to correct course?

By way of SI writer Corbin Smith, it sounds like Macdonald had many talks with Grubb to adjust his offense more to the his will, and Grubb just failed to do it, almost stubbornly so. If your boss requests you to do things a certain way, and you routinely fail to adapt, you do not deserve to keep your job. This is how the business world works and why should the high profile world of the NFL be any different?

Ryan Grubb has made millions of dollars playing calling in college and now in the NFL. I am pretty sure he is not destined to have to now live out of an old RV parked across from a Safeway in Ballard while he works a mail route for sixteen hours a day.

I kinda think he will be alright in this, and will probably land on his feet just fine coaching again. He could return to college as a coordinator again. He could also stay in the league as a potential pass game coordinator which maybe he should do.

So, yeah, I don’t really feel to the need to rehash all of my reasons why I felt it was time to move on from Grubb. I don’t feel like the state of the offensive line was a big enough excuse to defend him, as there were many examples in games where the line showed better run blocking abilities than it did pass blocking.

If anything the state of the line should be seen as a bigger reason why Grubb’s play calling needed to go. So maybe don’t listen so much to former Husky Hugh Millen railing on the radio about how John Schneider is washed up and failed Ryan Grubb with offensive line talent, and maybe listen more to former NFL offensive linemen Mike Schlereth and Ray Roberts when they say the Grubb just didn’t do enough to put his offensive linemen in better situations to succeed.

What I believe is most important for Mike Macdonald moving forward his to pair himself with a smart offensive play caller who really understands NFL football, and who will be perfectly aligned with what Macdonald wants this team to be in terms of physicality and connectedness. Listening to the way Macdonald described his ideal offense recently, being able to be physical running the ball, getting the ball out fast to playmakers in space does make me think of the west coast offenses deployed by the McVay/Shanahan schemes of today, and it also made me think of a few other offenses out there, as well.

The one commonality I have with all my preferred candidates is that they are all coaches who have been quarterbacks. At the end of the day, I think it is just so much of an important advantage to get someone play calling who sees the game through the lens of a quarterback whether it is pass plays or run schemes. I think this is especially important if the head coach is a defensive minded one such as Macdonald. Someone high up on this staff needs to see the bigger picture from a quarterback’s view. Therefore, everyone on this list is going to have that common thread.

So, that said, moving forward, here is the list of candidates for the Seattle Seahawk offensive coordinator gig that I really like a lot for this team right now. For each one, I will go over the pros and cons, and likelihoods. Maybe at the end of this exercise, we will have a couple really good and likely candidates narrowed down.

Frank Reich

When I started thinking of Grubb replacements about a month ago when I felt it was more likely that he was going to be one and done here, Frank Reich was the first coach out there who came to mind. He coached top ten defenses in Philadelphia and Indianapolis that were more run centric versions of the west coast offense, and I just liked the idea that maybe he would return to coaching as a coordinator again instead of being a head coach after his last two stints.

The pros of hiring Reich are very obvious. He has been around pro football for over three decades both as a backup quarterback and a coach. He has worked great with a variety of quarterbacks, and gotten high results. He coached an incredibly dynamic Super Bowl winning offense in Philly six years ago, and had a good offense going for a while in Indy for a while as a head coach. He is also a very even keel mature dude who, in addition to Leslie Frazier, can offer wisdom and insight for what is still a young head coach in Macdonald. Perhaps most important, his offenses have always been tough physical running ones. Also, players seem to really like him a lot. He’s very genuine, and that is what Mike Macdonald is, as well.

On the surface, I can think of very little cons of hiring Reich should he decide that he wants to get back into coaching as a coordinator again. My question would be whether he still has the juice and fire for it, or whether at age 63, he would only be interested in giving coaching another go as a head coach again, if there was an opportunity for it. He’s older, he’s made a lot of money as a head coach twice, and he has won a ring as a coordinator. Maybe he is good to walk away from coaching and pursue other aspects of life, but if he does have the zest for running a professional offense again, I would absolutely love this hire.

Doug Pederson

Personally, I would be shocked if Doug Pederson decided that he wanted to be an OC again after all of his years being a head coach and winning a Super Bowl as one, but if he did, and wanted the gig up here, I would be pretty jacked up about his hiring. I just don’t see this as very likely. I would have to think that at age 56, after this dumb firing in super dysfunctional Jacksonville, he could take a year off, and be a candidate again with another vacancy. Maybe the Arizona job opens up, or Dallas, or Miami, or Tennessee.

I have a bit of a personal connection with Pederson. We were both Ferndale boys and he worked for a spell on my dad’s farm when we were in high school. On a personal level, it would be awesome if my old high school quarterback became the Seahawk OC, and as I knew him from way back then, he was a pretty big Seahawk fan. So, because of this, I cannot fully rule out this idea. He might dig moving back to PNW with the pressure off from being a HC and just call plays again.

The pros of Pederson being the next Seahawk OC are that he is from this area and his success with the Seahawks would likely matter to him greatly, he has been around the league for decades as a backup quarterback and coach at the highest levels, he’s a Super Bowl wining head coach, and he’s shown a pretty strong ability to be balanced on offense running the football. He is another guy who players tend to like, and could offer a wealth of insight and wisdom to the much younger Macdonald.

I can think of very little cons to hiring Doug Pederson. The only thing I can think of is just how exhausted he looked this last season in Jacksonville. If I were him, I would take another year off and really decide in that time if coaching is something that I would want to continue with, or whether I want to enjoy life was all the millions that I have made, and the fact that I won a title and never need to do it again. That’s what I think he will do. I think he takes this year off in 2025 to decide if coaching is still something for him.

Tee Martin

Tee Martin is a guy who I didn’t think about initially when I thought maybe they would move on from Grubb, but he is a name that I am seeing mentioned a lot. In case you are unaware, he is the current quarterbacks coach in Baltimore working with the greatest quarterback in the game in Lamar Jackson. I gotta admit it, I dig the idea of Martin a lot in Seattle, and let me explain.

There are huge pros to hiring Tee Martin. He is from Baltimore, knows Macdonald really well, and would probably know exactly what Macdonald means when describing his ideal offense. He has spent years in the league as a backup quarterback and a coach, and he has coordinating experience from his days at USC play calling for Sam Darnold. In fact, if the Seahawks wanted to pursue Darnold in the offseason, having Martin here as the OC could be a big selling factor. Martin can be viewed as responsible for transforming Lamar Jackson into a more complete quarterback capable of beating you as easily from the pocket as he is as a runner, and Lamar absolutely loves Tee Martin.

I cannot find any cons at about about bringing in Martin outside of the fact that he is only ever coordinated in college, but that doesn’t concern me because he has been around the league for six years as an assistant and he spent six years in the league as a backup quarterback. I think it is safe to say the Martin probably knows NFL football pretty well. Right now, I rate Tee Martin as one of the most likely coaches out there to land this gig. It makes that much sense.

Josh McCown

This is the guy who I think he getting a lot of buzz amongst the fans and other bloggers who hover around the Seattle Seahawks. He is the quarterback coach in Minnesota where we have seen Sam Darnold resurrect his career this year in ways in which nobody saw coming. Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell has a track record out of getting great results out of quarterbacks in his system from his time spent in Los Angeles with Sean McVay, and his time currently in Minnie, but I think it is fair to wonder how much of Darnold’s success this year is also due to McCown who spent 18 years in the league as a quarterback on 13 different teams giving him insight and pointers on how to elevate his game.

The pros to bring McCown are very obvious. Look what he has done with Darnold this year in his one year as the quarterback coach of the Vikings. Throw out the last game played against the Lions, and there has been a significant case for Sam Darnold being the MVP of the league this year much less Comeback Player. Should Seattle have a deep interest in bringing Darnold here to become the next franchise quarterback, then landing McCown would make all the sense in the world. The same would be very much equal if they wanted to instead trade for JJ McCarthy. It can also be said the if Seattle likes the offense the Pederson and Reich ran in Philadelphia a number of years ago, McCown was in that offense as a backup and therefore, would be pretty good familiarity.

The biggest con with hiring McCown as the OC would be that he has simply never done it before. That might not be a super big deal though because his familiarity with the league spans 18 years as a quarterback who has had to learn 13 different systems, and backup quarterbacks have a tendency of transitioning well to coordinating. It is very possible that McCown could interview with Macdonald and have a great grasp on what exact offense he wants for the Seahawks.

Another con for hiring McCown is that he could simply be such a hot coaching commodity that Macdonald loses him in a year or two for a head coaching gig, and we are left searching for candidates again in 2026 or 2027, but perhaps that would also probably be a good problem to have because that means that 2025 was that successful for the team.

Right now, I would say the hype for Josh McCown is super intriguing. Like Martin, I wouldn’t be surprised if he is one of the few coaches out there that are high on Macdonald’s list. We shall see.

Tanner Engstrand

This guy interviewed for the OC job last year in Seattle after Macdonald got hired, and seemingly lost out to Ryan Grubb. Given the fact that he is the pass game coordinator for the Detroit Lions, the team with the best offense in football right now, and a team that plays offense exactly like Macdonald’s describes his ideal offense playing, it is fair to imagine Seattle circling back to this guy.

The pros are that he is the pass coordinator for a quarterback in Jared Goff who comps pretty favorably to Geno Smith, he is a coach from the Jim Harbaugh tree where Macdonald partly springs from, and therefore it is probably safe to assume that he will be naturally more aligned with a physical running offense that Macdonald likely prefers. He is a former college quarterback who has a position coach for both quarterbacks and running backs. He has offensive coordinator experience from a brief stint in the XFL.

I can’t think of many cons about this guy outside of the fact that he interviewed for OC gigs last year with New England and Seattle and landed neither, but in terms of Seattle, I kinda have a sneaking suspicion that John Schneider was super in on Ryan Grubb becoming the coordinator here and with all things equal in interviews between Engstrand and Grubb, Macdonald got more swayed to take a shot with the candidate that the GM was pushing for, but that is just my own wild speculation. It could also be that maybe Engstrand wasn’t seriously interested in this gig thinking he could stick around longer in Detroit and wait for their OC Ben Johnson to leave and he would take over. With some rumblings out there now that Johnson is no longer desiring being a head coach and maybe wants to just continue on in Detroit play calling, Engstrand will feel a stronger need to move on for advancement elsewhere, and Seattle can come calling again.

On the surface, I like him as a candidate for the Seahawks. It is exciting to think of someone coming here and building an offense here that plays like the one in Detroit; tough, grinding run blocking that wears teams down, and builds lethal play action pass plays off of it. It is just such ultimate big boy football, and Seattle’s offense has very similar skill players to what the Lions have. For these reasons, I have to have Engstrand on this list.

Marcus Brady

Marcus Brady is a guy who I heard mentioned on a podcast the other day that really got my ears perked up when I heard the hosts discussing, and that led me to dig around a bit on the internet. First off, he was a quarterback who played small college ball in California and he had to venture up into Canada to spend a bunch of years playing in the CFL, and then he spent time coaching up there before landing coaching gigs in the NFL. In the NFL, he landed on the Indianapolis Colts coaching staff under Frank Reich where he worked as a quarterbacks coach, and eventually he became their offensive coordinator. Today, he is the pass game coordinator for Jim Harbaugh with the Chargers.

The pros with Brady are that he has spent time as an offensive coordinator in the CFL and the NFL, and he is a guy that Jim Harbaugh who is a mentor to Mike Macdonald thinks pretty highly about. You can chuckle about all the CFL background but Canadian football actually produces a lot of high end passing concepts, and has for decades. Current NFL offensive coaches have spent time studying their league. Brady has spent time working for both Reich and Harbaugh who are two offensive coaches known to be heavy leaners in the run game. This year under Harbaugh, the Chargers quietly had one of the more efficient offenses in the league. Justin Herbert threw 23 touchdowns and ONLY 3 INTERCEPTIONS. If what Macdonald craves most is a balanced offense that is physical in the run, and doesn’t make many mistakes, then I would imagine Marcus Brady is a very likely person to be interviewed here.

What are the cons and drawbacks and concerns with Brady? I don’t know. His stint as the OC in Indianapolis only last a year and a half as he was fired mid season in 2022 when Frank Reich was impulsively let go by Jim Irsay. His lone full year as OC there was when they replaced Phillip Rivers with Carson Wentz, and Wentz sucked, and they narrowly missed the playoffs after going 11-5 the year before. I guess on the surface, one could look at his stint there, and have a meh attitude about it.

I just think there is potentially something very interesting about this guy. After he was let go in Indy, he joined the Philly staff as an offensive consultant, and then he was highly sought after by Harbaugh in LA. Harbaugh, as much of a whack job as he can kinda come across as, is also sort of an idiot savant as a coach, and has a very good eye for coaching talent. The Chargers were a really well coached team this year, and Herbert was crazy efficient with the football. Something tells me that Brady could be a hot name for Seattle given what it feels like Macdonald wants. I kinda like him a lot. He’s an idea that is growing on me.

In Summary

These are the dudes out there externally that get me excited most for the Seattle Seahawks OC gig. I am sure that I left a lot of names out of other quality coaching candidates that folks are championing for. There is Klint Kubiak who is from the Shanahan school down in New Orleans that people seem to dig. Some people might think Mike Kafka with the Giants who Seattle was interested in as a head coach last year could be a great candidate because Andy Reid really loves him as a coach and so does Patrick Mahomes. I have seen some in the Seahawks media championing a bit for the return of Brian Schottenheimer who had Seattle as a top ten offense here for a while with Russell Wilson. I have seen some odd suggestions for Jon Gruden to be a consideration.

In the end, I think Seattle has to be really careful about getting this fit right for Macdonald. Is Mike Macdonald going to want someone from the Andy Reid or MacVay/Shanahan branches, or does he just want a Harbaugh guy who speaks his football love language?

Macdonald wants physical football here, and ball control. He wants to shrink the game and make things easier on his vaunted defense. That sounds a heck of a lot like Harbaugh football, both Harbaugh brothers, and his other old boss John Harbaugh is an Andy Reid guy. Frank Reich and Doug Pederson are Reid coaches.

That is why I kinda put Reich and Pederson at the very top of my list. They are guys sharing similar DNA with John Harbaugh. Both of them long time former NFL backup quarterbacks, both of them huge believers in the run game, highly successful coordinators and head coaches. Both of them currently out of the league right now and maybe wondering if there is a way back in.

A huge part of me believes that if either would genuinely consider the OC gig here, whether that could be a game changer for this franchise that we have not felt for over ten years. To pair the bright young defensive mind with Mike Macdonald with a sharp offensive mind in someone a couple decades older who has absolutely been there and done it all at super high levels that he can fully trust to run the offense to the point where he just does not need to think about much of it at all?

Yeah, sign me right up for that idea.

Conversely, all these other candidates super intrigue me, as well. If they can’t convince either former head coach to sniff out this gig here (very possible), the I really kinda think that Tee Martin, Josh McCown, Tanner Engstrand, and Markus Brady are all very likely candidates. Martin, Engstrand and Brady all have direct Harbaugh Brother tie ins to Macdonald, and Martin coached together with him.

McCown is just such an intriguing wildcard and a certain hot name in the coaching searches with what he has done with Sam Darnold this year. He might be a head coaching candidate very soon, depending on what the Vikings do in the playoffs. He has worked with Reich and Pederson, and other brilliant offensive minds. He could be a very strong lure for Darnold should the Viking quarterback be made available in free agency or trade, if Seattle wants him. He’s the biggest unknown in terms of a coordinator type, but something tells me that with long background as a quarterback, he will be well suited for the leap.

But at the end of the day, I think our guy may boil down to Tee Martin, Engstrand, and Marcus Brady. Unless behind close doors they really think in house Jake Peetz can be a serous candidate, I sorta think that this process may boil down to one of these three guys.

I would be down, but man would I ever love to see them land Reich or Pederson. I’m going to hang onto that until I have to let it go.

Go Hawks.

Seahawks Finish 10-7 And Here Are My 2025 Seahawks Needs And Wants

To Geno or to not Geno? That is the question

In his first year with the Seattle Seahawks, Mike Macdonald coached his team to a 10-7 finish, just missing out on the playoffs. That is a best first season win total for a new head coach in franchise history, better than Chuck Knox’s 9-7 finish in 1983, and better than Mike Holmgren’s 9-7 season in 1999. I suspect any long time Seahawk fan over the age of 40 would probably agree that joining the ranks of Holmgren and Knox is pretty good company. Therefore, I think this is pretty cool.

On the flip side, the Seattle Seahawks also achieved being the first team in NFL history to go 7-1 on the road, and not make the playoffs. That kinda sucks and home losses to the Giants, Rams, and Vikings sting more now knowing that each of these matches were very winnable for Seattle. Thus we have the highs and lows of this season pretty much summed up.

These 2024-25 Seattle Seahawks officially concluded their season by winning a game played in Los Angeles against the division winning Rams who started a backup quarterback nicknamed Pornstar Jimmy by Stephen A Smith, and a bunch of other backups because Sean McVay was too chicken shit to play Matt Stafford and other key starters. Even if this win wasn’t a decisive as I would have preferred, it felt nice that Seattle was able to get the W, and thus finish their season tied with the Rams at 10-7. I will take that.

It is good to see Seattle finish first year head coach Mike Macdonald on a positive two game win streak, and to feel momentum heading into the offseason where change will be inevitable. I am a big believer positive momentum carrying forth into a new offseason. The taste of narrowly missing out on the playoffs should sting, but the idea that they are building up towards something special should also be sensed. 10-7 is the best regular season finish that this team has had since 2020. That should mean something.

On a personable level, it also felt good to watch Geno Smith end his season on a high note, playing a statistically great game, and making a bunch of key incentives that has made him $6 million richer. Geno wasn’t perfect this season, but watching him getting beaten to a pulp on Sundays while playing behind a subpar offensive line and extremely suspect play calling made me more empathic to his cause.

Instead of recapping this game, I am more inclined to kick things forward into the new year focusing on what I feel this team needs to do in 2025 in order to get closer towards being a true contender. It is a very simple list of three things I would like to see happen.

I am not really interested in rehashing all of what transpired in 2024, as I think their season can be summed up in two easy sentences. They started off hot in September, but chilled very quickly by October. As the season wore on, their defense improved dramatically, but their offense fell off in a lackluster manner.

Heading into the 2025 Season, I think the Seattle Seahawks have a roster with enough talent to compete for the playoffs. Some will debate that, but I am actually very bullish on the talent that John Schneider has built up over the past three years. I think they are one more productive offseason away from taking the next step, but if you want to disagree with that, you are welcome to it.

I also firmly believe that this team has a head coach in Mike Macdonald who is, indeed, a pretty sharp defensive mind fully capable of out-scheming opponents. In that, however, I also firmly believe he needs to be paired with a sharp offensive coordinator who will better carry out a scheme that compliments his defense. For this organization to truly take it to the next level, finding this offensive coach is an absolute must this offseason.

I do not believe that Ryan Grubb proved to be a good match for Mike Macdonald, at all, and it would be in the best interest of this team (and probably Grubb himself) for them to move in a different direction. I actually put this as a higher matter of importance above the state of the offensive line, but more on that in a minute.

For now, I think that any talk of Macdonald being a questionable hire and John Schneider perhaps needing to be on the hot seat is impulsive noise from factions of the fanbase and media that are perhaps a bit too spoiled in the PNW with a decade and a half of Seattle football being meaningful in December. John Schneider is one of the most respected general managers in the league who routinely hits in the draft and finds value through trades and waiver wires. As already mentioned, Mike Macdonald is just the third head coach in Seahawks history to start his career here with a winning record in year one.

Bad organizations make bad decisions by listening to overreacting fans. Good organizations do a good job at seeing the bigger picture clearly, know when to be patient caring forth, and when to move on when something clearly is not working. I don’t suspect that Jody Allen is ready to move on from John Schneider when it appears that he got the head coaching hire right, and this coming draft looks like a good one to address the issues with the offensive line.

Could I be wrong on this? Sure, but I am pretty confident that I won’t be. We shall see.

What I do see, however, is three very simple aspects of the offense that I feel this team should address in order of importance. If this organization can nail these the right way, I think Seattle can be well positioned to win the NFC West in 2025. They are as follows.

Pair Mike Macdonald With A Bright Offensive Coach Who Fits His Vision

After getting hired in the Winter of 2024, Mike Macdonald stated that his vision for the Seattle Seahawks was to be a tough, physical team that played great defense, ran the ball well, and was a team that nobody wanted to play. His words made me think of the Baltimore Ravens, and the Michigan Wolverines, two football programs where his roots stem from. It was an exciting thought in my mind to envision something similar being built in Seattle, and it still is.

The biggest problem of the 2024 season was that Ryan Grubb really could not bring that offensive part of Macdonald’s vision together. Try as he might have, I think his instincts as a play caller was to abandon the run too easily whenever the defense showed faint signs of struggle, and then when he did lean into the run, and it would start working, his impulse was to often abandon it for his favored passing attack. The result of this often felt very disjointed as a product.

Honestly speaking, his play calling might have the worst that I have seen out of a Seahawk offense since the 1990’s. It teased with the passing attack, at times, but it never found consistency. He play called as if he had peak Payton Manning and the best offensive line in football, and he had neither of that.

I don’t really want to get down into the muck of the offensive line, either. Run blocking is much easier for offensive linemen to do together than pass blocking and Seattle had, for the most part, guys in the interiors of their offensive line who were more apt to be better run blockers in this league than pass protectors. Grubb just failed to device a scheme to suit them as an offensive line. It is that simple.

Grubb was more inclined to lean into a veteran quarterback, and that was what he put his trust into. The result was as big of a mixed bag from Geno Smith as you could find in a quarterback. Sure, his passing yardage went up, and so did his completion percentage, but his interceptions went dramatically up, as well.

Geno’s red zone interceptions lost us games this year that were winnable. That said, I am significantly more willing to place greater blame on Grubb for riding with this impulsive pass happy approach than I will for Geno throwing the amount of picks that he did, even these critical ones (although Geno isn’t totally absolved, more on that later).

Had Grubb adopted a more committed approach to running the ball, the offensive line could have stabilized better and we could have seem more games like they had in Arizona than what we got against the Bills, Packers, and 49ers at home. I truly believe this.

Even worse, as the season wore on, Grubb’s offense displayed tells to defenses that he simply did not do a good enough of a job altering and adjusting. He would substitute running backs where it became obvious that it was a pass play. Eventually, defenses stopped playing single high safeties because they knew Grubb would stay passing out of two high looks instead of challenging with the run. There were times in games where cameras caught Mike Macdonald looking dumbfounded when Seattle was on offense, and there were times where key offensive players displayed meltdowns on the sidelines.

Grubb also never committed enough to a play action approach to help keep defenders honest, and his compulsion to primarily play call out of shotgun made it harder to run the ball effectively. Simply put, he made life harder for his cheaply put together offensive line instead of easier, and he put undo pressure on Geno Smith to play perfect football practically all of the time. This is not good coaching.

So, I do not want to hear bringing up the state of the offensive line being a prime excuse for Ryan Grubb who was hired late in the hiring process of coaches last Winter because Seattle waited out Macdonald’s hire until after the AFC Championship game. Seattle took a shot on a college coordinator from the PNW who fans would recognize the name, and they gave it a shot. It did not work out, and it is that simple.

But do not use the offensive line as a reason to defend what Grubb was in Seattle this year.

This league is filled with subpar offensive lines. Minnesota does not have a great line, but they found ways to be wonderfully balanced with Sam Darnold at the helm. Seattle failed to find this was Grubb leading the offense. There is nothing in this season with Grubb that warrants his return. For me, it would be a stunner if he is given another go at it in 2025.

Instead, it is my biggest hope that Seattle goes a very different direction, and they bring in a guy who actually understands NFL defenses really well, and will know how to attack them on every level with the talent this team has on its roster. Who that person is, I don’t know. I am open to options, but I just need him to partner well with Macdonald and be in sync with the head coach’s vision of seeing this team being a tough, hard-nosed team that nobody wants to play.

The guy could even come in house with passing coordinator Jake Peetz, who the Seahawks pried away from Sean McVay with the Rams, and is said to be a bit of a hot commodity. Peetz has bounced around the league and has a track record out of getting career years out of Dereck Carr with the Raiders as QB coach, and Christian McCaffrey as a running back coach with the Panthers. He was a guy that McVay valued in Los Angeles, and was sorta sore to see leave for Seattle. He might be the top choice here to replace Grubb, should they move on, if his relationship is good with Macdonald.

But perhaps what Macdonald most needs is a proven coordinator with pelts on his wall who will truly act as a second head coach on the team. The guy who really runs the offense much like Steve Spagnuolo runs the defense for Andy Reid in Kansas City. Spagnuolo was a failed head coach but his defenses have always been stellar whenever he’s been a coordinator.

Perhaps Seattle reaches out to Frank Reich who didn’t really cut it as a head coach in Carolina or Indianapolis, but was a good offensive coordinator for the Super Bowl winning Eagles in 2018. During that year, the Eagles were an exciting dynamic running team that offered an explosive passing attack downfield. Reich was the one that Eagles fans most gave credit towards, and were bemoaning his departure to Indy, afterwards. Their offense fell off quickly in the seasons to follow, and there was regime change sorta after winning the title.

Perhaps Reich is someone who could come in and be content with essentially being given full control of the offense, and partnering up with Macdonald long term in order to win titles together. He has a demeanor that is players like, and I can imagine meshing well with Macdonald.

Personality is also an important thing to consider. I have seen Josh McDaniels as a suggested name, and he has been a way better play caller than head coach, but I don’t know if he is a good culture guy. Seattle, under the ownership of Jody Allen, still feels like a destination that values positive culture in the building, and I don’t think there was much positives that ever came out of McDaniels as a culture guy.

There will be other names to consider. I won’t go through the list of potential candidates, although Doug Pederson just got let go in Jacksonville and grew up in Ferndale. Would he be enticed to return to the PNW as a high paid coordinator? My hunch is that he will take a year off and wait out an opportunity to be a head coach again. Winning a Super Bowl as a head coach probably equates to not wanting to suck it up and retreat towards a coordinator role, but we shall see.

The important thing to find the right guy who is smart enough to properly go after NFL defenses, and meshes well with the head coach and players. Ultimately, this has got to be the goal, and Seattle must nail this hire this offseason if they do not believe Grubb is up for it.

Invest Properly With Fixing The Offensive Line

I have said this a few times, but it bares repeating. The NFL has offensive line problems league wide. Building great offensive lines is increasingly more difficult to do. The talents in college are more apt to be on defensive lines than offensive lines, as sacks lead to more dollars than pancake blocks do.

Also, all you bleeding hearts who have complained about Seattle’s offensive line for years can thank the last collective bargaining agreement that the player’s union forged for fucking up the ability of teams to physically practice in ways they had in the past that better build cohesion with linemen playing together. Nowadays it is paddy cakes on the field in August, and the early portion of the regular NFL season is a routine clown show for offenses to figure out their units. It literally is what it is, so we all have to deal with it in degrees.

That said, in 2024, Seattle had the cheapest offensive line in football, and it showed. Personally, I don’t blame the front office for pulling most of their resources on the defensive side to fix what had truly became an awful defense in the last three years of Pete Carroll’s time here, but now they need to buck up and do the same for the offense with their offensive line.

If I were the general manager of this team, I would most likely spend big on one quality veteran guard or center on the free agent market, and I would be open to trading for a player should one be available by that means. I would then look to the draft for a couple more. The draft next Spring appears to be promising for guards and tackles who could convert to a guard. Getting two of them feels necessary.

This won’t be a wildly exciting take for many fans, but I would also be willing to leave open the possibility that there exists a young player (or players) already on this roster that by simply moving onto another offensive coach, could be developed into a decent starter in 2025. Perhaps Christian Haynes is better served converting to a center and becomes an upgrade there over Olu Oluwatimi. Perhaps Anthony Bradford or Sataoa Laumea takes a big step forward as a player with a new approach on offense towards being run heavier. While it is easy to look at the Seattle’s line and proclaim that they need at least three new starters there, perhaps there is more potential there now than most fans are seeing, but they just haven’t been coached properly enough, or the scheme hasn’t committed enough towards what they do best. Honestly, I think this could be as big of a case as any for why this line was this bad in 2024.

At any rate, if John Schneider goes into this offseason shopping cheap again in free agency and then waiting to the third or fourth round before taking another guard, the public outcry for his job will almost certainly be at the highest point it has ever been, and it was pretty high with some through the course of this last season. Therefore, for the sake of sanity throughout the fanbase, I think it is very important that he hit this offseason hard with ways to improve this offensive line. It is an absolute must.

Be Open Minded About The Quarterback Position In 2025 And Beyond

This is going to sound like I am ready to move off of Geno Smith. That isn’t necessarily the case, but I do feel like it is time for John Schneider to think more long term about this situation at quarterback in Seattle.

For my money, based on his 2024 play on the field, Geno Smith has not earned another big contract extension in Seattle. I know he wasn’t helped by Grubb’s play calling and the offensive line, but he still felt too reckless with the football for my tastes, and what I feel like a franchise quarterback should be. I was at four games at home in this last year, they lost all four, and in each game, Geno turned the ball over in ways that cost them.

Personally, I really dig Geno a lot, and I think he is a very easy guy to root for with him wearing swank KISS t-shirts post game, and routinely taking accountability, but I also feel like age is now working against him, and he has just never really built off of his surprising 2022 season enough.

My gut kinda tells me that he is what he is. He is a mid tier starting quarterback who can win a decent team 9 or 10 games if they have enough talent (which Seattle does), but he’s also going to do things on occasion that will cost you some games (two red zone interceptions at home against the Rams in early November will forever be burned into my mind).

Because of all of this, I don’t want that signed to another big-ish three year extension. If they want to do a shorter termed extension this offseason, I am fine with it, but I think if they sign him to a three year $120 million extension just because they are afraid of the unknown, it is going to alienate a growing portion of the fanbase, I am afraid. I sense this growing online, in the stands, and on the airwaves.

2024 brought us a storyline in Seattle of opposing fans filling out seats at Lumen Field. I am no longer into shaming season ticket holders from selling their seats online in a region where the cost of living is high. The Seattle Seahawks need to do better putting a product on the field that is better than being a mid tier team. They got off to a decent start in 2024 by hiring a coach that would ultimately fix their once vaunted defense. Now, they need to center 2025 on the offense, and for causal fans who do not spend every waking hour pouring over analytics, Geno Smith probably does not get them wildly excited. He just does not. So, I think something needs to give in 2025.

In my ideal scenario, I would be very okay with Seattle pursuing Sam Darnold should he be available on the free agent market or by a franchise tag and trade scenario by Minnesota. I don’t know how likely this is because if I were the GM of the Vikings, I would be more inclined to sign him to a sizable extension and slowly develop JJ McCarthy behind him, but I have always been a Darnold fan, and you can search this blog as far back as 2021 when all the Trade Russ noise started to happen. I was super into Seattle trading for Darnold four years ago.

Color me Colin Cowherd, but Sam Darnold was my favorite quarterback coming out of college in the 2018 draft, and in this season, when he finally had a chance to be in a good situation in the league to be a starter, look what he was able to do with it. I don’t think it was all because of Kevin O’Connell, either. Darnold showed glimpses of this style of play on the bad teams of Carolina and the Jets. Neither organization could commit enough to uncorking his potential and it is no surprise the both teams remain basement dwellers in their divisions, respectively.

So laugh this one up, if you like, but Darnold is seven years younger than Geno, has better arm talent, he’s athletic enough, and is just hitting now his prime years. For all the silly talk of the Vikings giving up on JJ McCarthy, if they really wanted to replenish their 2025 draft stock that they lost moving up to draft the Wolverine quarterback, they could just as easily tag Darnold and work out a trade to probably numerous teams who would likely be willing to offer packages of picks and maybe players for him. Seattle, in particular, could offer Geno as a hedge for McCarthy coming back from his knee injury, and another player from an area of depth on their team along with draft picks.

Be honest. If you knew you could get the 2024 version of Sam Darnold for the next six years of Seattle Seahawk football, and you got him by sending your 2025 first round pick to Minnesota along with Geno Smith and Ken Walker, would you do it? I would sign up for that, especially if paired with an offensive play caller who comes from the McVay coaching tree, or the Andy Reid one.

Six years of this level of quarterback play from a more youthful Sam Darnold would probably be the shot in the arm that this fanbase could use in order to fill up the stands again with Seahawk jerseys. Seattle would still hold their second and third round picks in 2025 to address their offensive line, and perhaps that could lean further in free agency to address the line, as well.

At the very least, it is an interesting thought. How realistic it truly is would be another matter to discuss, but this would probably be my ideal scenario for this team if the front office does actually rate Darnold highly (I think they might) and the coaches dig him enough.

But as it stands, ideal scenarios do not come along often. Therefore, in that event, I wouldn’t mind seeing Seattle either take another flyer on a young quarterback with talent that another team has moved away from, or somebody in this coming draft class.

Maybe Will Levis is a guy who will be available via trade if Tennessee wants to draft another quarterback high. If I had to pick one young quarterback out there who might be on the trade market that has anything close to Darnold-ish potential in terms or stature and arm, it would be probably be Levis.

Maybe they take a shot on Daniel Jones, Mac Jones, or Zach Wilson to come in and compete with Geno. None of these guys get me excited but Daniel Jones had a fairly decent year in 2022 playing in a run heavy offense for the G Men, Mac Jones showed some promise as a rookie, and Zach Wilson had crazy hype around his arm talent coming out of BYU.

Maybe they really like a guy in this draft like Ole Miss QB Jaxson Dart who has some fun moxie to his game, or maybe Shedeur Sanders slides in the draft like some think that he might. For my money, I am drawn to Dart with his maturity and play making skills. He gives off Bo Nix vibes with a smidgen of Jalen Hurts, and I would absolutely take that in Seattle.

Ohio State QB Will Howard is another guy who intrigues a lot. He is tall mature dude with good athleticism and arm traits that feel translatable to the NFL. He’s also played a lot of college football for Kansas State and the Buckeyes, and has his current team rolling in the college football playoffs. If he is there in the second round and the Seahawks select him, I think I would get behind that.

This coming draft class with quarterbacks is getting a bit of a bad rap, in my view. A lot of people are making blanket statements that it is a bad class, but I am not so sure. While I don’t think there are guys in this class who are going to comp to Andrew Luck or Josh Allen, I think there are guys who do comp closer towards Dak Prescott, Bo Nix, Geno Smith, Andy Dalton, Derick Carr, Jalen Hurts, Tua Tagovailoa, and Brock Purdy. Those sorts on cheap rookie contracts are worth taking shots on, in my view.

Getting a guy who is talented enough to be a decent NFL starter on a cheap rookie contract is an absolute golden ticket in this league. Ask 49er fans over the past couple years before injuries finally caught up to their aging team. Think about Russell Wilson in 2012-2015.

At any rate, these are probably the most realistic scenarios that I think Seattle, at this point now, should consider exploring at quarterback. Pursuing Darnold over retaining Geno makes sense, if it is possible. Adding a young QB via trade or free agency makes sense. Drafting a guy in 2025 should now be a very real possibility, and perhaps the ultimate goal.

We can forget any wild pipe dreams that Mike Florio will dream up about trading for Jalen Hurts or Trevor Lawrence. None of this is happening, and I highly doubt that the Vikings will be willing to part with JJ McCarthy who they traded up for last Spring, and was generating all kinds of positive hype during the preseason in their system before his knee injury. If anything, they will try to sign Darnold to a short extension and see how things play out between the two quarterbacks over the next few years. If Darnold balks at that notion, and they decide to tag and trade him during the Spring, then perhaps Seattle will try to make themselves a trade partner. We shall see.

I also don’t think the team likely views Sam Howell as a potential future starter. Just my vibes on that. There was no competition between him and Geno in camp, and the gulf of talent between them felt vast at practices that I watched. If anything, they might be more inclined to bring Drew Lock back to compete with Geno than open things up for Howell, but that is just my hunch.

At any rate, I feel like now is the time to truly take bites at the quarterback apple in order to find their next long term starter. Personally, if it is not a big move for a guy like Darnold, I would prefer them to look towards the draft, and I don’t care if they draft a guy like Dart or Howard higher than Mel Kiper would have. Draft pundits weren’t wild when Schneider took Russell Wilson in round three in 2012, either, but it would be really good for this organization if they at least begun this process.

Dak Prescott was a fourth round pick, and so was Kirk Cousins. Jalen Hurts was taken late in round two, Russell Wilson in the mid third round pick, and Brock Purdy was famously the last player taken in 2022. I don’t need them to take a quarterback in round one, but I kinda need them to take a quarterback at some point this Spring, pretty please.

Start taking shots at this thing. It’s time.

In Summary

If you have made it this far through this piece, you can see that I am not really stressing about Seattle’s defense much at all these days, and almost all of my needs and wants are centered about the offense. This is what 2024 has shown me about this team.

In Mike Macdonald, I very much trust the direction of this defense. I wouldn’t even be wildly upset if during the draft this Spring that their first round pick went towards another defender, if that was truly the best player available. Adding one more dynamic player to this side of the ball is just going to make a good thing better, and I will not deny my excitement in that notion.

But I need more on offense. I need a better offensive coordinator first and foremost, and I need better results on the offensive line, however they can get it. These two things are musts, in my mind.

Closely behind those is my deepening desire for Seattle to further start the process of getting younger and perhaps more talented at quarterback. I get it that it is an easier said than done sorta request, but I need this process to start this offseason, earnestly.

I also don’t think that sticking longer termed with Geno Smith should be a decision based out of fear of the unknown. He is going to be 35 years old next October, and on a roster filled with decent talent, he has shown the ability to win 9 or 10 games a year and flirt with the playoffs. If we are being truthful, he has been pretty up and down as a starter over the past three years. He can make tight windowed gorgeous throws downfield, for certain, and he is generally pretty accurate with the football, but he can also make boneheaded turnover plays that frustrate. After three years of watching him, rooting for him, I kinda think this is who he is. He is decent, but not great, and he is only going to get older, and possibly more injury prone.

Is that worthy of a $40 million dollar a year deal, or is that money better spent keeping a young nucleus together, adding to it in free agency, and waiting it out for a truly top end quarterback to come around who merits those kind of dollars, or better, is found through the draft?

This is the ultimate question to ask about Seattle and what they have with Geno Smith. You don’t need to be labeled a hater to ask this question. I truly like Geno. If they continue to roll with him, I will continue to root for him, and hope that with a better coordinator, we see better results.

But this is an important question that they have to ask.

In terms of 2025 predictions, I don’t have a ton, but here are a few.

I predict that the Seattle Seahawks will move in a different direction at offensive coordinator and Jake Peetz will be the guy to assumes the position. It will not wow a lot of fans, but I think the organization clearly appreciates the Sean McVay system, and they will take a shot at another McVay guy hoping for much better results than what they got out of Shane Waldren.

I don’t believe we will see a DK Metcalf trade despite the speculation and hype for that to happen. I believe DK likes being a Seattle Seahawk enough, and the front office values his elite athletic traits enough that an extension gets done this offseason with the hope is that better offensive play calling will make the combination of him and Jaxson Smith Njigba even more potent in 2025, and beyond.

I believe they will sign a significant piece to their offseason line in free agency, and they will use this draft that is rich enough with offensive linemen to draft a couple more players. The result will yield at least two new starters on the offensive line in 2025, and my best guess is two new guards with Olu Oluwatimi and possibly Christian Haynes battling for the center spot.

I predict that inevitably some big named players on this team will be cut in order for John Schneider to be active in free agency to improve the offensive line. The most likely players getting cut will be Tyler Lockett, Dre’Mont Jones, George Fant, and probably Roy Robertson Harris. I think there is a chance they value Uchenna Nwosu’s leadership enough along with his pass rush to keep him around on an expensive cap hit for another season, but we will see. I could also see them move off of Noah Fant’s big contract, and possibly Rayshawn Jenkins.

I believe that they will get a big multi year deal done with linebacker Ernest Jones right before the start of free agency similar to the deal they got done at the time with Big Cat Williams last year. Both the player and the team want to see this deal get done, and it will get consummated.

I don’t believe the Vikings will be willing to trade Sam Darnold or JJ McCarthy, and therefore, I think Seattle re-signs Geno Smith to a short extension, and they will continue the process of going year to year with him until they find a younger solution ready to take over. This feels inevitable. Macdonald feels like he truly digs Geno, and I don’t think he is going to be interested in gambling that they can flip Zach Wilson into a serviceable starter.

That said, I also think it is more likely that this is the year they look to the draft to find a quarterback to groom behind Geno. Jaxson Dart could be a player that they like a lot more than maybe some realize. They had a long look at Bo Nix during his pro day in Eugene, and he was an invite to their facilities days before the draft transpired. It is possible that they had a desire to draft him at 16 had he been available there, but we will never know because of Denver. As mentioned, I kinda think Dart has some Nix traits.

Finally, I predict that with a new offensive play caller, we see the offense catch up closer to the defense and Seattle becomes a playoff team in 2025. I think we see better results from Geno, and I predict that Ken Walker will have a career year in his contract year with all the debate around the Seahawks as to whether they should sign him to a big fat juicy contract extension that will surely divide the fanbase.

What is the Seahawk fanbase if they are not sharply divided on something, anyways?

Isn’t the internet fun?

Go Hawks.

Seahawks Dial Down In Win Against The Bears To Stay Alive In Playoff Hunt

Getty Images

Let me guess.

The Seattle Seahawks beating the Chicago Bears on the road on Thursday Night Football by a final score of 6-3 probably doesn’t have you wildly excited as you sip your coffee and read this piece. Well, let me go through the box scores to see if you be aroused.

Geno Smith was 17/23 for 160 yards, 0 TDs, and 0 INTs.

Zach Charbonnet ran 15 times for 57 yards with a 3.8 per carry average.

Little used Kenny McIntosh ran 7 times for 46 yards with a 6.6 per carry average!

Norah Fant had 4 receptions for 43 yards.

DK Metcalf had 3 receptions for 42 yards.

Jaxson Smith Njigba had 3 catches for 32 yards.

Not a lot of offense in this game for the Seattle Seahawks. Turns out that they didn’t need it.

The Seahawk defenders took this game over and held onto it all throughout the game. They sacked Caleb Williams 7 times, stuffed the run, limited passes, and the game ended with a poetic Riq Woolen interception that killed off Chicago’s last chance to pull of the win. They played championship worthy ball even if the offense decided to not show up.

Many fans will look at this game and will probably not be wildly excited about Seattle’s chances against the Rams next week, much less their chances in the playoffs should they get there. I get it. This teams feels incomplete, in many ways, and I don’t need to rehash what I have already said about with the offensive coordinator, the offensive line, and, at times, the erratic quarterback play.

I will just say that I think it is important for Seattle to finish with a winning record in year one of Mike Macdonald’s regime, and with this win in Chicago, we now have that. Good. Finishing strong matters in this league no matter whether a team makes the post season or falls short.

I imagine there will be other Seahawk bloggers and writers who will be less glowing about this win in Chicago than I am. Some will bemoan being 9-7 yet and again and firmly kinda middle of the pack as an NFL franchise.

Personally, I think there are different sorts of middle of the pack teams. There are middle of the pack teams that slide by having a good quarterback and not much less (Chargers). There middle of the pack teams that aren’t bad enough on either side of the ball but nor are they good enough either.

Then there are middle of the pack teams that are good on one side of the ball but not enough on the other. This is where I think Seattle lays in the mid tier of the league. They have what seems to be a very promising defense, but they are a hot mess on offense. I will take being this type of mid level team right now with the hopes that the defense continues to carry into next season with improvement from the offense to follow.

Trends matter in football, and Seattle’s defense has trended very well over the coarse of the season half of the season. They were the sole reason why they managed to win this one.

In all honesty, this uneventful game against the lowly Chicago Bears might be as big of a signature win for Macondald and his team as any all year. This was a game that felt like the Bears could pull off a win, but Seattle’s bad ass defense said NOPE. This matters moving forward. Seattle needs to hang its hat on something, and I think they absolutely can with this defense more and more.

Let us remember that there was a time just two months ago where it felt like Seattle would be lucky to find six wins. Neither their offense nor defense were playing well, and fans began questioning replacing Pete Carroll with Macdonald. People all over the internet were calling Seattle a bad football team, devoid of enough talent to win, and the widespread projections of them were to be the basement dweller of the NFC West.

Then during the second half of the season, Macdonald turned their defense around from being bad to being solid and exciting. If you love good defensive football, you should feel excitement in the direction of this team as we head into 2025, no matter what happens against the Rams next week.

Yes, there will probably be many changes to this team this offseason. I would expect an aggressive upgrading of the offensive line. I think we could see a new offensive coordinator. We will pour over all these needs and wants after their season concludes. Right now, I think it is worth celebrating them getting to 9 wins this year with perhaps a chance to win the division next week.

Instead of lamenting the lackluster nature of Seattle’s offense against Chicago, I would rather celebrate the stellar offensive play of Seattle’s defensive line, linebackers, and secondary. Their best players on Defense took this game over. Devon Witherspoon, Big Cat Williams, Derick Hall, Riq Woolen, and Jarran Reed all played dominant against an inferior opponent.

In fact, the defenders played so elite in this game, that I have to imagine a scenario inside the VMAC earlier in the week where Mike Macdonald asked Ryan Grubb to call a more conservative game plan on offense. Like, he looked at the Chicago tape with Caleb Williams and he knew what his defense was going be dial up in this one.

This is why I am not personally all that stressed out about how Seattle’s offense played. It was a weird Thursday night game on a short week with the numbers down at running back, a gimpy quarterback, and banged up receivers. It was rare that Seattle pushed the ball down field in this one. It felt like they weren’t interested in it, and were hoping short gains would lead to favorable conversions.

While I am sure the team isn’t thrilled to win a boring 6-3 slug fest on Thursday Night Football, I wouldn’t be surprised if they would have looked at a 13-3 win scenario in more glowing terms. This game had that sort of conservative offensive vibe to it, and had Pharoah Brown not gotten the ball stripped out of his hands in the third quarter, it is possible that we would have had a final score more similar to that.

So, take that for what it is worth. It is fair to question if Macdonald has lost faith in Grubb with in this sort of dialed back approach as we witnessed. Maybe he was concerned about whether Geno would put the ball unnecessarily in harms way again.

Or maybe he just looked at the Chicago Bears and felt “yeah, I think we can win this one 9-3.. fuck it, let’s just do that.”

They won’t be able to play this way against the Rams. They will have to open up the offense again. I think they will and that this version of their offense is a mirage. They suddenly didn’t forget how to pass the football. They just chose to be close vested about it in this slop vest.

The good news is that they will have ten days of rest and the Rams will be less rested. If the Cardinals beat the Rams on Saturday night, this one in LA next week will be for all the NFC West marbles and the division title. This is exactly what football is all about.

So, while folks can point to Seattle having a losing record at home this year, their road record has been stellar thus far. While we can bemoan the inconsistencies of the Seahawk offense, it feels like their defense is building towards a style that can be championship worthy around the corner.

Generally speaking, I am happy with what is trending with this team. I know a lot of work needs to be done, but it feels mostly isolated with the offense. One aggressive offseason fixing this offense line could be enough to make this team a contender next year. I fully believe that.

Am I crazy?

Sure! I might be.

But this is what being a fan is all about. You have to be made of thick layers of fan fiber to watch your team play a good old fashioned slobberknocker like this on Thursday night and feel good about them afterwards, and I feel kinda great about them, honestly.

Now, I just need to be the biggest Kyler Murray fan on the planet on Saturday Night.

Go Cards!

Seahawks Fall Short Against Vikings And I Got Ryan Grubb Issues

Steven Bisig-Imagn Images

Through fifteen games this year, I have seen enough of the Seattle Seahawks under Mike Macdonald to know who and what they are. In many ways, I see a talented football team, not too far from the talented teams that have just beaten them in the last two weeks, and not really much less talented than the NFC West leading Los Angeles Rams.

They are rich at the skilled positions on offense. Jaxon Smith Njigba is an ascending star in this league. Ken Walker and DK Metcalf offer elite physical talents even if they are not wholly consistent as players. Zach Charbonnet, Tyler Lockett, Noah Fant, and maybe now even AJ Barner could probably flourish in several offenses in the league.

They have depth and talent on their defensive line. Their defensive tackles are stout run stoppers and they can rush the quarterback. Boye Mafe and Derick Hall can be pro bowl edge rushers together for years.

They have a good middle linebacker and talent in their secondary.

They have a capable veteran quarterback who can win them games, as he almost did it yesterday against a very good Viking defense.

They need to build up the interior of their offensive line this offseason. It is an absolute must. This, you would think, should be the priority number one for this team moving forward.

Or is it?

Hm..

Well, let me say that, as I sat through this game against the Vikings at Lumen Field watching Seattle drop yet another close winnable game, I reached a definitive conclusion about what is preventing these Seahawks from actually becoming the Vikings, Packers, and Rams. I don’t believe they have a quality NFL offensive coordinator, and I am now more than ready to move on from Ryan Grubb.

These are my feelings today, and they can certainly change if they go out on the road on Thursday Night Football and smoke the Bears in Chicago with an efficient offensive outing, and then they march down into LA on the following week, and upset the Rams on their home field in a similar manner. If this happens, I will probably fall victim to a blinding recency bias, and believe that Grubb is the man to continue with.

Right now, however, I do not believe he is the guy to pair with Mike Macdonald and his defense. I do not feel Grubb is up to coaching quality NFL offensive football. It isn’t just about a problematic offensive and erratic quarterback play. Too often we see receivers lining up illegally, and other piss poor procedures. They are a sloppy lot that oozes with talent, but they cannot consistently put it together, and I think that is solely a reflection of Ryan Grubb. Lack of sound fundamental details is a coaching issue.

But that is not the worst of it for me.

Grubb’s approach to the run game is killing my soul as a diehard Seattle Seahawk fan who knows full well the long traditional history of this being a running team in the scenic Pacific Northwest. They ran the snot out of the ball under a decade and a half of Pete Carroll, they ran it hard under pass happy Mike Holmgren, and in the 1980’s they were coached by a dude nicknamed Ground Chuck.

Seattle Seahawk football is about running the holy snot out of the football. This is who and what we are as a people as much as it is that people in Southern California surf, people in Russia drink vodka, and people in Canada drink beer and ice fish. People in the PNW watch run centric football. This is our birthright, and Ryan Grubb is pissing all over it.

When Mike Macdonald was hired last winter, the first thing he said when asked about what his vision was for this team was that he said he wants a tough program that plays hard, and runs the football. So, excuse me if I feel like Ryan Grubb is perhaps now the only person in the Pacific Northwest who doesn’t understand what this current head coach wants, and what the tradition of this team is all about.

I will also just say this again. I don’t want to hear another utterance about what their offensive line is right now, so zip it around me, they actually played surprisingly decent enough against a dominant Vikings defensive front. They just needed to, yet again, run the ball more.

If you have Ken Walker and Zach Charbonnet in your backfield, and you cannot figure out ways to consistently and properly utilize their talents as running backs, then you do not belong coaching in this league, period. If Grubb cannot commit to this, he should go back to college and coach in the Big 12 where coordinators make millions of dollars chucking it all over the place against soft college defenses.

Running the football takes a commitment to it, and the easiest way to build consistency on even a porous offensive line is to get the five so-so guys building chemistry run blocking together. Find something you do well, and do it over and over again out of different formations that disguise it. Once you master that, add a new wrinkle, and then you got a couple fun cords to play a decent Ramones song on your guitar with. It is not rocket science, but it takes fucking discipline, and determination.

It is literally that simple. The more you run, the better your offensive line grows together, blocks together, and the more balanced and cohesive your offense then becomes. Simple as pie, and I honestly now miss the good old Schotty days of Seahawk football four years ago.

Let us just look at this Minnesota team that just came into Lumen Field and beat us.

The Minnesota Vikings are 13-2 right now, and they are playing without their starting left tackle, have similar pass blocking issues as Seattle does (it showed in this game, by the way), and yet Kevin O’Connell is very committed to his running attack (even if it is not prolific), and building play action off of it that Sam Darnold is executing at an impressive rate. He has paired this offensive approach with the wonders that Brian Flores is doing with their aggressive defense. Imagine what Seattle could be right now if Mike Macdonald was paired with a similar offensive mind.

Could Grubb morph into a similar play-caller?

Sure, I guess he could. I guess that I could also be discovered by a Hollywood filmmaker while I am mowing a parking strip, end up in the next Jurassic World movie being chased by a gigantic Allosaurus Maximus, but I am not going to hold my breath on that.

I think in his heart, Grubb would love to play call for vintage Payton Manning and Marvin Harrison and that stellar offensive line Manning had to work with in Indy. Grubb just lives for shotgun plays with loads of drop back passing, and just enough run to keep defenders honest.

As you step back and really take a big long look at this animal, it really is a stupid beast to look at, don’t you think?

The problem is that Geno Smith (bless his heart) is not Payton Manning, and this offensive line is not anything close to being geared towards pass blocking in that sort of chuck it all over the place scheme. Laken Tomlinson, Olu Oluwatimi, and Sataoa Laumea are all run blockers suited for run centric schemes. Geno Smith is, in many ways, an ideal play action quarterback.

If you want to run a Kevin Stefanski or Kyle Shanahan run centric offense, Geno is probably a very capable quarterback to game manage those sort of attacks, guiding his team towards the playoffs. If Seattle did move on from Geno in the offseason, and he ended up in Cleveland playing for Stefanski, I would honestly not be surprised if we saw them become a pretty decent playoff contending team there again.

But Grubb does not seem to have any designs to do any of this.

When he does start games with a run and play action approach, and it is effective, as was the case in this one, he quickly abandons the approach in the following series to dial up drop back shotgun passes. It is mind numbing how often this scenario has occurred this season.

This has happened far too often this season, and far too often, the results end in a three and out series that kills away any momentum previously gained by the offense. Far too often this places more pressure on Geno Smith to be perfect on the next series once the defense has sorta figured out what is coming. Honestly, it is not fair what he has been doing to Geno Smith.

Seattle had one game this year in Arizona a couple weeks back where they leaned into the run, stayed consistently with it, and Geno wonderfully game managed, and as a result, they played perfectly complimentary ball with their defense. After that game, it felt like Grubb had finally graduated into being a proper NFL coordinator, but then that ass-hatted game against Green Bay happened, and then this game was pissed away at home against the Vikings.

So, I am really kinda done with Ryan Grubb. Sorry Husky Fan person who thinks I am not giving him a fair shake, but I want Seattle to have an offensive approach that pairs well with a promising defense. I just do. That is what I am ready for moving in the 2025 offseason as it now feels more unlikely that Seattle will see the playoffs.

I fully get it if you want to blame Geno Smith for the terrible interception in the first half that led to Minnesota points, and the interception at the end that effectively killed any chance of a miracle come from behind finish. I will see that, and add that he also threw two other balls that should have been picked, and he could have easily had four interceptions on the afternoon, and we could have seen a more lopsided loss in result. Geno also took a terrible sack that brought us out of much needed field goal range in the closing minutes that could have tied the game and brought us to overtime. I will also just say, again, that I don’t think he was helped by Grubb’s play calling nearly enough as he should have been.

You can also blame DK Metcalf for a poorly ran route that led to Geno’s final INT. I will give you that. Seeing it live, it looked like Geno threw a dumbass pass into double coverage, but the replays I watched afterwards showed what was supposed to be a simple corner route to the sideline that DK decided not to break off on, for some inexplicable reason. Who the fuck even knows what that was about, maybe it is a sign of him growing frustrated in the offense and maybe no longer being the favored target with JSN coming on, but maybe you could also ask the question as to why JSN or Lockett wasn’t running that pattern in the first place.

You could also blame Byron Murphy for inadvertently grabbing Sam Darnold’s face mask on a sack that gave the Vikings new life during their go ahead drive. Sure, maybe that was a rookie mistake, but I feel like next year, perhaps with more NFL savvy, he makes the sack without grabbing the mask. So, really, lay off of Murphy for Christ’s sake.

You can blame Tre Brown for lining up offsides as a corner, which I don’t believe that I have even seen before in a game. WTF????

Speaking of cornerbacks, you can most certainly blame Riq Woolen for giving up the big time go ahead touchdown thrown to Justin Jefferson (although it sounds like he was expecting better help from the safety in a cover two look). There are some justified concerns about Woolen regressing that I think are warranted, and news that he was benched at the top of the game for breaking team rules doesn’t help his imagine these days. It is all currently a shame because he is such a physical talent, but at the end of the day, Seattle needs dependable players at key positions and not players oozing with potential but not living up to any of it enough.

So, yeah, there was a lot of slop in this game, and I suppose there will be those who will point directly towards rookie head coach Macdonald as the one chiefly responsible for it all. Go ahead and point there, if you need to do it. He is the head coach and ultimately the one in charge of the whole inconsistent ship.

But at the end of the day, I don’t know how any fan looks at this game, and the game a month ago against the Rams, the game last week against the Pack, and the gawd awful game against the Giants in early October, and not think that Ryan Grubb out thought common sense for the sake of throwing the mother fudging football. I just don’t.

So, yeah, maybe there are changes coming to this roster this offseason. Maybe Woolen isn’t a fit for what Macdonald needs at cornerback in his defense. Maybe DK could get dealt. Maybe they do move on from Geno Smith, instead of extending, and maybe the very quarterback we just saw play against them comes to Seattle through free agency this Spring and takes over.

None of any of this will matter, in my opinion, until they fix the offensive play-calling, and they invest more into the offensive line.

But really, fix the fudge-nugget-ed mother-fudging fudge-mudging play-calling.

Drafting a good offensive guard in round one next Spring, and signing a pro bowl center in free agency will not alleviate my concerns about this offense if the theme continues to be a pass happy Grubb offense in 2025. Unless Geno Smith suddenly does turn into Tom Brady or Peyton Manning next Fall, I would be bracing for more frustration as a Seahawk fan if this approach continues on.

So, please, Seattle. Don’t make me brace for that.

These are my thoughts, and feels. It is a shame that Seattle did not seize the day and pull off this upset win. Now, in order to make the playoffs, they will need to win in Chicago, have the Rams lose to the Cardinals this weekend, and then they will have to beat the Rams in ten days. It is what it is.

That said, merry Christmas, onto Chicago, and go Hawks!

Seahawks Humbled And Exposed By Green Bay

 (AP Photo/Stephen Brashear)

One thing that I want to say before we move further through this piece. Good God, do I ever hate watching the Seattle Seahawks losing in action green uniforms. If you are going to go bold with the looks on national television, then you better bring it and win that fucking game, or you are going to look like a massive boob. Last night the Seattle Seahawks were boobs worthy of a their our Russ Meyer picture. Big Lime Green Boobs.

It was boob ball. They were out coached, and out played. I could list individual positive efforts, but I am not really in the mood for it. My eyes still hurt from all the action green stupidity from bad play calling to bad cornerback play to bad red zone quarterbacking (again).

So, that said, if any of us got overly caught up in the after glow of that win in Arizona last week, we can now certainly wipe anyway any fanciful notions that the Seattle Seahawks being a true contender this year. With a healthy Geno Smith, they are probably a solid B lister in the NFC, with a decent chance of the playoffs (if they don’t puke all over themselves), but with Sam Howell, I think they will be lucky to win one more game out of these remaining three and finish out 9-8. Hopefully, we will get Geno back at least by the time this team suits up in Chicago in tens days because what I saw from Howell having to sub in for an injured Geno made me miss Drew Lock tremendously in the second half of this game.

So, it is what it is after the Packers and their hoards of fans spilled into Lumen Field last night. We were sounded beaten on all phases. Asses in action green handed to us by a bunch of marauding, laughing cheeseheads.

Our defense was a slight bright spot in the second half after it adjusted to its bad play of the first half, but it was not enough. In the end, they gave up a bunch of yards through penalties downfield, they didn’t sack the quarterback once, and they didn’t stop the run enough. Conversely, the Green Bay defense sacked our quarterbacks seven times, held Seattle to 128 yards passing, 80 yards rushing, and it collected two interceptions. For me, the Green Bay defense was the big story of this game, and it exposed Seattle for what it is on offense.

Ryan Grubb continues to coach a drop back shotgun heavy offense that doesn’t seem to know how to be creative with its run game even though it has a talented collection of running backs. I don’t want to hear or read comments about the state of the offensive line. Plenty of teams in the league this year suffer from subpar offensive line play, and yet they find ways to overcome. It is a league epidemic, so please don’t @ me with comments about the offensive line.

Good offensive coordinators figure out ways to mitigate the issues with subpar lines. They get the quarterback under center more, they use motions for window dressing, they use a flipping fullback, and they get their starting five finding rhythms with run blocking together, they use play action, they run out of spread instead of predominantly drop back passing out of it as Grubb chooses to do.

I would love for Ryan Grubb to work out in Seattle. It would be huge for the team to maintain stability with the offense, and have this side of the ball taken care of as Macdonald focuses on his defense, and I don’t love the idea of bringing in another OC for young players to learn yet another scheme, but sometimes, you just have to cut your losses. After this game, I just do not feel certain that Grubb’s offensive philosophy can be a match for what Mike Macdonald wants his team to be in the stated goal of being a physical team.

The best offensive play of the game was a beautifully executed gap pulling play to the right that broke Zach Charbonnet for a long explosive touchdown run. This was the type of run blocking that soundly beat Arizona on the road last week. Why did we not see more of this?????

Was Grubb caught up in wanting to continue to get JSN more involved and DK? Was he trying to reward long time Seahawk receiver Tyler Lockett more Scooby snacks catching the ball downfield? Does he just get bored dialing up run plays????

The whole approach that worked wonderfully against the Cardinals felt like it was thrown out the window against the Packers perhaps because of some injuries in the Green Bay secondary, and this is why I feel like Grubb maybe just isn’t going to provide a good marriage for Mike Macdonald. I just don’t sense that the ground game matters enough to Grubb, and this is why we have such an uneven offense. He wants to play call as if he is gifted the best offensive line in the league, and he has Tom Brady. Perhaps he would be well served going back to college where he can be a bit of a rockstar again because in Seattle, he feels more like a liability that is going to waste good defensive efforts.

In the second half of this game, Seattle’s defense gave Grubb and his offense chances by making stops, and after Geno Smith was knocked out of the game, Grubb squandered them trying to make short Sam Howell be a drop back passer. With the way the Packers defensive line was pass rushing, it was like watching Emperor Nero throwing Christians into a pit of starving lions with what Howell was tasked to do.

If Geno hadn’t gotten injured, he might have, indeed, made it a game in the end. His fourth quarter comeback charms are legit in this league. Yet, at the same time, I feel like Geno’s pension for throwing red zone interceptions could have just as easily crept up in the late moments of the fourth quarter, as it did in the first half. In short, I am not sure even Geno would have had it in him to pull this one off.

So, what does this all mean for Seattle moving forward through these next three games, at 8-6?

I think the answer to that question will be revealed once we know more about Geno’s knee injury. I have a hard time believing this team will win a couple of these games (much less one game) with Sam Howell quarterbacking, but maybe I am wrong. Maybe having Sam out there forces Grubb to dial further into the running attack, and Sam does some decent game managing over this next stretch of games.

Something tells me that when Geno went out of this game, so did a lot of our chances of winning this division and making the playoffs. I don’t particularly believe that Geno Smith has been that great this year, not like others have been claiming he has anyways, but I certainly do believe that he gives Seattle the best chance to win this year. If the goal is the playoffs, he is our best bet at quarterback to get us there.

So, we will see on the state of Geno. Fingers crossed that we get him back soon.

Despite the terrible way they showed up at home against Green Bay, I still want to see this team win the division and make the playoffs. I need this young roster and coaches to feel playoff football to build off of into next year.

In the meantime, I now want to see how this team will rally through these final three games. If they have to hide the Howell Train, I want to see how player rally around him. I want to see the fight. I don’t necessarily need to see all the wins, but I gotta see the fight. If we get the wins, it will be icing.

As I have said many times before on this blog, I see this thing with Macdonald most likely taking a few seasons before we really start seeing the big returns. This year, in many ways, is a trial to see how all these new coaches work with each other and the players, to see which players are the real big time pieces moving forward, and to determine what needs to be addressed next offseason. That is what 2024 is really about for these Seahawks, whether or not that is what they openly state that or not.

So, in that, I don’t think this ass whooping from the Packers is that much of a big deal as ugly as it was. Sure, it sucks that it ended the fun four game win streak, and yes, it does suck that the stadium was yet again filled with a bunch of away fans, but the best way to prevent ticket holders from selling to out of town fans is to put a product out that makes them want to attend in person more often. That product should include a better offensive line, more competent offensive play calling, and maybe it needs to involve having someone at quarterback who isn’t a 34 year old second tier passer with a pension of throwing a lot of red zone interceptions.

I know this sounds harsh, but I think it is worth stepping back and looking at this Seattle Seahawk product for a moment. The Green Bay Packers feel like a well oiled machine. They have a talented young quarterback that they invested a late first round pick into acquiring him with (and developing), they have a stable offensive line, a smart play caller as their head coach, and they have a talented defense. They are a true contender because of all this, and they have now beaten every single team in the NFC West after this game. Conversely, Seattle can kinda say that they got a decent defense, and that is about it. Their offense teases but cannot be trusted to leave the house without a proper babysitter looking after it, and they don’t have one.

Seattle has a lot of work to do in order to keep ticket holders from selling off their tickets to out of town fans pouring in. It is that simple. They need to improve the offense line, get an offensive scheme that has an identity to match its defense, and they probably need to figure out the longer termed solution to the quarterback position, one way or the other.

That doesn’t mean that they can’t find a couple more wins to finish this year out right. It honestly wouldn’t surprise me if they managed to do that. It just means that they need really start attacking this thing strong after their football playing raps up for the year. However these final three games play out, next offseason will be critical for John Schneider and Mike Macdonald to make the right calls on how to best take this team forward towards being an A List contending team again, finally.

After watching them lose to the Packers like this, it is clear that there is a lot more work to be done. I am excited to see what this offseason brings to Seattle. It will be a huge one for this team.

But for now, I just need to see Ryan Grubb mandated run the ball, and I need to see this team fight and claw through these next three games. Something tells me that they will give it a good fight, win or lose, and that is worth something in this league.

Go Hawks.

It Is Okay To Get Excited About These Red Hot Seattle Seahawks Right Now

Let Zach cook!

Another week, and another victory for the Seattle Seahawks. In the event you haven’t noticed because you are too busy watching videos about people licking melted chocolate off of each other’s toes, wins are beginning to become a standard for Seattle. They are winners of four in the row, and are sitting atop a tight NFC West Division at 8-5.

A month ago, they lost a close game at home against the LA Rams, fell to 4-5, and it felt all but certain that their season would be lost. At that time, I started bracing for writing articles about whether or not Seattle should bench Geno Smith in favor of Sam Howell, whether they should trade DK Metcalf in the offseason, and whether or not they made the right coaching hire with Mike Macdonald. In hindsight, I am glad that I held off on all of those.

The other week, I asserted my deep belief in Macdonald, and it is now a belief that is only growing stronger. With this win against Arizona, a team that many national talking heads felt would win this rematch, I feel like Seattle has, indeed, found a coach who has the potential to be well ahead of the competition in terms or strategy, and execution.

Without using a bunch of football jargon, I just get a sense that Macdonald is figuring out with his defense how to match each opponent they play, and he will adjust scheme accordingly. It is fitting the he spent his early childhood in Boston watching the Patriots because the one head coach who I would now comp him to is Bill Belichick minus the grumpy demeanor.

In terms of example, against Arizona, Macdonald’s D seems to have very detailed plan for how to limit Kyler Murray. His rush plan for using his defensive ends to not allow Murray to do his Sonic The Hedgehog type things on the perimeters should be studied by others. Last week, against Aaron Rodgers, he found ways to take away what Rodgers prefers to do as a passer. A few weeks ago, against the 49ers, he seemed to be well inside Kyle Shanahan’s run game playbook.

I did not watch this game against the Cardinals, but I caught a key moments version of it afterwards. I would have loved to have seen it in its entirety, but I had a very special event to attend. So, for what it is worth here is my overriding thought about this game, and moving forward with the Seahawks this year in the final month of games.

It is entirely okay for you to start getting excited about this team now. I give you permission.

I get it if you are reluctant to climb on board, and you need to see more. They still have to play the Rams again, and also have a couple tough games left at home against the Packers, and Vikings.

While it frustrates me a bit why there seems to be some continued fan apathy for this team, and I want to point out that Seattle is only one of the few teams in the league that continually play meaningful football in December for well over a decade now, I also sorta get it. I think this is a fanbase that has gotten spoiled, and simply being competitive for the playoffs isn’t enough. Also, Seattle doesn’t have a marquee quarterback who will move a lot of needles for the average fan as some other teams have, and while I think there are a handful of teams who would probably take Geno Smith right now, a decade of Russell Wilson has also spoiled this fanbase.

Still, I think it is now time for the fair weather folks to climb back on board with this club, and just enjoy what they have been able to do this last month, and how they might finish this season. Over the past month, they beat a 49er team who was in the Super Bowl last year and just murdered the Bears, they swept the improved Arizona Cardinals, and they found a way to win on the road against the Jets despite shitting all over themselves on special teams. A year ago, they would have lost that game in New Jersey, badly.

Seattle may not win the division this year. They have a tougher final stretch of games in front of them than the Rams do, and it feels possible that they will have to beat the Rams down in LA at the end of the season in order to secure the division. While the Rams do not have Aaron Donald anymore, they still have Matthew Stafford and all those fancy weapons that Sean McVay loves to use. Personally, though, with the way Seattle is now playing, I cannot wait for this matchup to close the season, and I cannot wait for future seasons to come.

I think Seattle is trending very positively, on the whole. I’m getting really excited now, and I invite you to join the party.

In this game against Arizona, the Seattle offensive line felt more settled it, finally, and offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb felt more dialed into his playbook. Defenses have adjusted to his tendencies of throwing deep over the past month, offering for two deep shell looks, and in this game against the Cardinals, Grubb finally got Seattle successfully countering it with a strong commitment to the run and using runners as receivers in the flats. He had this offense ready to play against a good run stopping AZ defense that also came in ready to limit DK Metcalf. He got coordinated counter runs going, and it was glorious. Now he has given defensive coordinators something else to think about in terms of targeting any of his potential tendencies.

It is imperative for the wellness of this franchise that Grubb and his offensive line coach Scott Huff grow to how NFL defenses play against them as opposed to what they saw in college at UW, and that they can be answers to the riddle of making this team great again instead of being two coaches that they will need to replace. The most important thing in this decisive win against AZ is that they seem to be stepping up as coaches, and this is HUGE for this team moving forward.

In all of that, I also love the way Zach Charbonnet and Kenny McIntosh ran decisively and hard. This was an important game for Charbonnet to answer the call with Ken Walker down, and it is really encouraging that he delivered as a runner and receiver. At UW, Grubb had a physical playmaking runner in Dillion Johnson that he leaned on when he needed to run, and I think Charbonnet fits that mold. I want to see more of it during this last stretch of games.

Many fans have been bemoaning Charbonnet, but I was excited to see him get this start. I haven’t been fully happy with Ken Walker, lately. I know K9 has big play potential, but I have just felt for a while that he wasn’t attacking holes very hard, and had become more indecisive as a runner. Perhaps it is because he hasn’t been healthy, and fans can certainly blame a poor offensive line, but sometimes, you just got to hit it as a runner, and this had felt less of a thing for his willingness to do, perhaps.

Enter Charbonnet and McIntosh, and rookie sixth round steel Sataoa Laumea. I get it if Charbonnet is your player of the game, but for my money, it is Laumea at right guard who offered solid pass protection, and athleticism kicking out on counter runs, stoning linebackers and defensive ends.

After this game against Arizona, I want to see Charbonnet and McIntosh more involved. I want to turn on the heat behind K9. My hope is that K9 will look at the tape of this game, and he will take it to heart to mimic their efforts. K9 is, by far, the most physically talented runner on this team, but in a league full of tough defenses, offenses need runners willing to be physical, especially with spotty offensive lines.

Charbonnet and McIntosh feel like those type of guys now that this offensive line is settling in better with its blocking scheme. Seattle will need this to continue for the next four games. If it does, I do think that they can win this division, and if K9 gets healthy enough, and takes to heart some hard decisive running on his own, then watch out. Seattle could be the surprise team of the league should they make the playoffs.

In fact, after this game, I think Seattle can beat any team left on their schedule. I absolutely believe they can. Why not?

Geno Smith is playing more efficient and protective with the ball, lately, and being a good game manager with these perimeter weapons is a more important secret sauce than any hero ball that he might have been plagued with a month ago. Sataoa Laumea feels like a guy who is the answer at right guard instead of the fill in. JSN continues to prove to be an ascending wide receiver. Big Cat Williams and others feel dominant on the defensive line, and Seattle is now getting very solid linebacker play to go along with their deep secondary. For as good as Devon Witherspoon and Riq Woolen are as corners, and Coby Bryant and Jullian Love feel as safeties, Ernest Jones and Tyrice Knight are becoming a dynamic linebacking duo together.

Yeah, man. Seattle can do some damage.

I am looking more forward to these remaining four games that I can remember in recent years, and this is still with a belief that Seattle is still likely another season or two away from being a true contender.

So, I will just say that maybe now more fans should start jumping on board. Go ahead. Go for the plunge of positivity. What is the worst that can happen?

A month ago, Mike Macdonald got this defense turned around, and now maybe after this game against the Cards, Grubb is finally getting the offense settled back in. I am excited to see if that can be the case. I think it could be!

I am not expecting perfection. I don’t need all these games to be neat and tidy. I just really want to see them land at least a couple more wins, and I think that they can.

Do you?

Go Hawks.

Let Big Cat Cook And Other Fun Seattle Seahawks Musings

Andrew Mills | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

I will be honest with you. I did not watch any of this game at Met Life Stadium in New Jersey between the Seattle Seahawks and The New York Jets.

It is not because I didn’t want to watch. I really did, especially after their surprising two game win streak against divisional opponents Arizona and San Francisco.

Three weeks ago, this team felt on the ropes and heading towards the dumpster. Now, they are in first place in the NFC West and they control their own path towards winning a very tight division. Each game moving forward should be a must watch, and it pained me not to see this one.

But I had greater things going on.

I did not watch this game because I was duty bound to drive my family safely home from beautiful scenic Kamloops, British Columbia back down to Seattle, Washington, and the best time to head across the mountain highways was right around kickoff. So, I made a call, and it was the right call. I love the Seattle Seahawks but I love my Canadian Family, and my immediate family more, and I knew that by stretching out our stay up there, I was probably not even going to catch this thing on the radio driving through potential high mountain slush and low visibility conditions.

But I tried. I really did try to listen to this batshit crazy game on the radio, but I just could not decipher most of it under the loud static noise that was driving my wife towards very outward frustration, if not total insanity. She wanted to talk about bathroom fans and jujitsu classes for our son, and I just wanted to decipher if what Steve Rable was yelling about under the demonic static was a good thing or bad thing for Seattle.

As, we inched closer to Hope BC, I heard something about JSN catching a sweet 28 yard pass from Geno Smith in the third quarter that got Seattle down towards the red zone, or so I thought. Then sometime later, as we started driving through Hope, the static cleared enough that I caught Zach Charbonnet rambling in for a touchdown that put the Seahawks on top. I did fist pumps of joy, but I had not known any of the chaos that transpired up to that point.

Then a few minutes after that, we finally got finally good radio reception heading towards the Sumas Border, and I was able to hear all the dreaded passing Aaron Rodgers was able to do against the Seahawk defense that sure as shit made me wonder if I even wanted to listen any further, and then it happened. Leonard Big Cat Williams brought Rodgers down with an F You Aaron Rodgers sack, a few moments later, Rodgers missed a guy in the end zone on fourth down, and the game was over.

I missed Big Cat’s stunning history making pick six, his other sack, and all his other splash plays that kept Seattle in this one, but I heard it all talked about post game. All I got to say moving forward is to let Big Cat cook.

Leonard Big Cat Williams, in back to back weeks, has indeed cooked the Seattle Seahawks to victories, and he has been doing it in a multitude of ways as a defensive tackle collapsing pockets, a stand up end overpowering left tackles, and as a Nose Tackle who can drop into coverage to snag an interception for a record breaking 92 yard pick six return for an NFL defensive lineman. In this two game stretch, Big Cat feels like Mike Macdonald’s cheat code to gutting out stellar defensive ball, and victories.

If Leonard Williams does not receive Defensive Player Of The Week honors this Wednesday, then there is simply no justice left in this world, and we should just all walk into the Pacific Ocean to never to return to land again. Demons and Elon Musk cyborgs would control everything, mayonnaise would be our primary government controlled nutrient supplement, and all social media algorithms would involve muscle bound AI images of Kermit the Frog. It is imperative that Big Cat wins this honor this week.

Let Big Cat cook, indeed.

Yeah, I think Mike Macdonald is feeling exactly that, and is going to keep letting this big fella loose through these final five games. I sense that Macdonald knows the unicorn player he has on the defensive line. Like what he had in Baltimore last year with Justin Madubuike, I sense Macdonald finding ways within his versatile multi front scheme to make this Big Cat purr loudly atop of terrified NFL quarterbacks.

He isn’t the only one on defense primed to feast through this final stretch of the season. Linebacker Ernest Jones is enjoying newfound success since being traded to Seattle. Safety Coby Bryant is coming on, and the other safety Julian Love playing like the second best defender behind the Big Cat. There are others who, each week, you can sense coming on. I don’t need to list them because you can sense them.

As it stands right now, however bonkers this game was in New Jersey, Seattle is 7-5, and is holding onto first place in a tight division. After a rough patch of games in October and early November, things have suddenly gotten fun, and it will only be more intriguing in a tightly contested division where the bottom of the division team in San Francisco is only two games below first place.

If Seattle can find another win against Arizona next Sunday, and if they can get a win in Los Angeles against the Rams at the end of the season, those to wins alone might be enough to become division champs in Mike Macdonald’s first year coaching this team. Bitter rival San Francisco can ironically help out by battling hard against the Cardinals and Rams as they seek to salvage their season in these last remaining games.

I think that it would be really awesome if Seattle won this division this year despite the clear need to shore up their offensive line next offseason, and to build upon their overall depth. If they can steal a home win against Green Bay or Minnesota, and take care of business in Chicago against a struggling Bears team, that could be enough to put them into the double digit win column this year, too. That would be really sweet considering how rough things felt in October.

Personally, at this point, I care less about draft position next Spring, and I care more about Macdonald building a winning culture with this team he has inherited from Pete Carroll. In short, I think the best way to properly build a team up is to coach up young talent now over relying on highly drafted college players being franchise saviors. If Seattle guts out a division title, and is one and done in the playoffs, I could care less. It is more import for me to see young players finding ways to win together, and improve as players together.

I make no pretenses that Seattle is any sort of powerhouse club this year. I wouldn’t even place a bet for them to win this division even though they hold a lead.

In this game, their special teams were all but pissing away any sort of potential road win. I also don’t think Ryan Grubb calling a bunch of pass plays at the goal line, abandoning any sort of attempt to punch it in on the ground, ending the fourth quarter drive with Geno taking a fourth down sack is a great winning formula on the road, either. Most teams playing like this lose these sort of games, even against bad teams.

But Seattle still stayed resolved enough to find a win mostly thanks to Big Cat and a few other key vets. Objectively speaking, that is pretty interesting, is it not?

I find it interesting in terms of the personality that this team feels to be forming in this second halve of the season. They have an interesting mix of young talented players finding reasons to believe in themselves, and they are led by a few savvy veterans like Geno Smith and Big Cat Williams who are smart enough and talented enough to find ways to win ball games.

I am not saying that they will be a dangerous team in January. I am just saying that if they find ways to continue to stack wins while maybe not playing wholly ideal football, win perhaps three out of these last five games (or more), they might be sneaky dangerous to contend with come playoffs, if they do get in.

I am genuinely very interested in seeing what comes out of these final five games. I am neither getting my hopes up too high, nor am I bracing for disappointment. I am just interested to see what comes out of this last month of ball.

I have a broader outlook for this club now with these new coaches, schemes, whatnots. I see the blemishes, can sense the roster needs, but holy smokes am I ever excited about the trends on defense. I am also jazzed up about the fact that there seems to be enough gritty fight on both sides of the ball for me to think that maybe we aren’t too far off from seeing something special being built up here again right around the corner.

So, I am just really pretty damn excited about all of that. There is good stuff emerging with this team. They can now hang their hat on being a scrappy defensive team, and that is something.

I am no longer looking at this team from the prism of a fan of Pete Carroll, desperately hoping during the past couple years this organization back on track after trading away Russell Wilson, and feeling the anxiety of watching defensive collapses. I am now looking at this team from the lens of a fan of Seattle Seahawks who increasingly believes that John Schneider made the right call on hiring Mike Macdonald.

One thing that I enjoyed after this game was finally catching Macdonald’s press conference and seeing the rawness of a new coach who knew his overall squad had not played ideal ball, but still gutted out a win. He looked like a dude who just watched his eight year old kid walk across the street while some crazed douche bag in a Honda Civic floored it a block away and narrowly missed the child as he was trying to make an amber light. It was a look of both abject horror and elation.

He addressed the wild nature of this game with all the special team screw ups right away. It is safe to assume that he fully intends to have these issues cleaned up before kickoff happens in the desert lands of Arizona next Sunday.

I like how Mike quickly addresses the issues on everyone’s mind in these pressers. I see this as important in his coaching style that he is outward about all the warts.

Not to be constantly comparing him to Carroll, but it is hard for me not to notice the differences in their personalities and style. Too often, I would sense from Carroll a need to push back on close victories, saying that he didn’t mind winning close down to the wire games. I think he did that to maintain positive confidence in his locker room, but sometimes, I just wanted him to say “wow, that was fucking crazy but I am really glad we got this W anyways.” With Macdonald, I get the sense that he is more annoyed with screw ups, and will be more outward in saying that they gotta clean up a bunch of stuff, but that it is good to get a win regardless.

Outside of these overall thoughts, I can’t remark on many things about this game because I did not catch most of it, but I will say that it was cool seeing in the highlights rookie tight AJ Barner making another nice touchdown play for himself. It was even more enjoyable seeing rookie guard Sataoa Laumea (who was making his first start) springing Zach Charbonnet on a block that created the touchdown run that got the team its go ahead points to pull out the come from behind win.

For as much crap as John Schneider has been getting from fans a month ago (me included), it is vindicating and encouraging to see rookies from this draft class contributing down this stretch of games. If Laumea can grow enough to settle down the right guard position in December, that could be critically huge for this team in the future. If Barner proves a quality tight end, and Tyrice Knight continues trending towards being a plus starting linebacker, and Byron Murphy continues to make splashes as a defensive tackle, this will have been another really solid draft for Schneider. I am rooting for all of this to happen.

As much as I am currently living to see Big Cat play, Julian Love, Ernest Jones, JSN, and DK, and others, seeing rookies contribute positively is the most exciting thing for me about this club right now. Again, my gaze upon this team is much further out than these five remaining games, and it is critically important that we see rookies stepping in and playing well, if not perfectly well, and I think we are getting enough of it now.

Hopefully the injuries to Michael Dickson and DK Metcalf are not serious. Hopefully this team continues to stack wins, and find more gritty ways to win together.

There is not a game in this final stretch run that is a gimme, not even that game in Chicago against the struggling Bears. If Seattle proved anything yesterday, they showed us that even against a bad team, we can expect it to be a tough out, especially if one phase of their team doesn’t show up ready to compete. None of us should feel absolute certain they can hold this lead in this division after this one. Yet, at the same time, I think it is okay to dream a bit more about playoff football for them this year.

In a way, I find that liberating as a fan. Sometimes you just want to see a loved one jump on a board, paddle out beyond the reef, and get up onto it surfing back to shore before a twenty foot great white takes off their leg. I know this sounds dark, but football is not for the queazy.

But I am just happy to continue to take whatever this wild and wacky season brings. Football is fun, and Seattle is finding fun ways to win lately.

They aren’t perfect. They aren’t a powerhouse. This offense still does things that make me want to throw sand into my eyes so that I don’t see all the drop back passing that Ryan Grubb continues to be obsessed about.

But I like their resolve.

I dig it.

I can live with it while feeling like Mike Macdonald does not want to live this way as the coach of the Seattle Seahawks, and they will continue growing towards being the complete team that he envisions. Right now, I am just enjoying their fight led by Big Cat and others. It’s fun.

Lastly, let me leave you with this fun fact of joy I saw after the game on the internet. Observe this bit of history made yesterday, and enjoy it.

Suck it, Aaron Rodgers.

Go Hawks!

My God I Love This Seahawk Defense As They Destroyed Arizona

All week long, I heard the doubters doubting. I heard it on podcasts, and I read it online.

Seattle only beat San Francisco because Nick Bosa came out of the game. The Arizona Cardinals have the best running offense in the league, Kyler Murray is playing his best ball as a pro, and it is nearly impossible to stop James Connor as a runner.

A week ago, people felt like Seattle was gifted luck in their win against the dreaded San Francisco 49ers, and they were ready to see their fortune all come crashing down against Arizona. It will be interesting to see where the skeptics land this week on the team, and they have now climbed into sole first place in the division after pummeling Kyler Murray and James Connors on a rainy afternoon in Seattle.

Now look, I get it if you read the title of this piece, and you shook your head. If you did, you are not a believer yet in Mike Macdonald’s incarnation of the Seattle Seahawks. I’m hopeful that someday you will.

You might be jaded, perhaps, and maybe also spoiled by the success of the Legion Of Boom era a decade ago. You need to see this Seahawk defense have more sustained success after holding the Rams offense to 13 points, the 49ers to 17 points, and what was an explosive Cardinal offense to now 6 points. The images of what Buffalo did to Seattle last month could be still too fresh, and that early season loss to the Giants still too annoying.

I get all of this. I also think that things within our culture like toxic masculinity prevent people from seeing the positive growths of a team searching for its identity with a brand new coaching staff. Feeling cynical can make a fragile soul feel stronger than it actually is. It’s an easy emotional retreat.

The Man wants you to exist in cynicism. In fact, he needs you to be there in order to consume enough beer and processed foods to develop a chronic decease that will prevent you from reaching your fullest potential. This is the way the Man stays in control and keeps us all divided and distracted.

But I digress.

I am feeling much more positively about the Seattle Seahawks these days. What a difference a couple of interdivisional wins makes in a row over the past week.

As I see it now, I feel like I do see an identity of this team emerging. They are a scrappy bunch of versatile defenders who exist in an increasingly exotic scheme playing confidently badass defense, and they are an explosive passing team who chooses to live and die with the arm of Geno Smith.

That is who and what they are, and what they shall remain as this year, for good or bad.

Now, I will be the first to admit that it is an odd sight seeing a team led by a defensive minded coach so willing to air it out, offensively, each game, but it is what it is. Mike Macdonald wanted Ryan Grubb as his play caller, and it appears as though drop back passing it too much in Grubb’s DNA to expect major changes for the remainder of this season.

I know this team is not perfect because of it, too.

I could stand to see way more cleaner play on offense, and more judicious passing from Geno Smith, if this is indeed to be a pass heavy offense through the rest of this year (it most likely will). Judging by Macdonald’s post game comments, I feel he is also growing tired of Geno’s routine INTs, as well, especially the ones that have occurred in the red zone negating scoring opportunities.

Three games ago, Geno threw two red zone interceptions that prevented the team from earning a home victory over the Rams. Last week, he forced a bad sideline throw over the head of his receiver that gave San Francisco a great opportunity to score. Yesterday, he forced a critical red zone interception when he had green grass in front of him to run for a potential first down.

His red zone interception in this game, and his interception against the 49ers last week are as bad of picks as I have seen. For as great as he looks in many moments during each of these games, he continues to throw far too many interceptions for me to fully get behind what Ryan Grubb is envisioning as the offensive coordinator.

It is what it is, though, and until he plays a fully clean game again, I feel this is what we are going to get out of this offense this year. We will get a lot of fun plays, and also a number of hair pulling ones, as well.

In Geno’s defense, he could be helped out by Grubb, if at least there were more bootleg rollout opportunities called to mitigate the subpar pass blocking issues at guard, and Grubb could also be way more creative with designed weeps and gadget ways move the ball on the ground. At this point, though, we can only hope that Grubb will search for more ways to get more creative through these remaining six games of the year, and Geno will be more protective with the football. They might.

It is baffling to me how uncreative Grubb has become as the OC of the Seahawks after being so creative for two years as a play caller for the University of Washington. Outside of some fun abilities to get JSN involved in brilliant run after catch opportunities, and to use K9 more as a receiver, I just don’t see enough from Grubb yet with motions, jet sweeps, or even moving pockets to help Geno out against athletic pass rushes.

I almost don’t care anymore, frankly. I am head over heels in love with this defense. So screw letting Geno cook. I say let Big Cat sizzle.

The way Macdonald deployed Leonard Big Cat Williams in this game against Kyler Murray was nothing short of inspiring. In throughout this matchup, Big Cat dominated by lining up at nose tackle, three technique, and stand up defensive end outside of the left tackle. This is the type of chess playing we should expect to see from Macdonald as his defenders continue to settle into this scheme that morphs from being a 3-4, 4-3, 4-2-5, 2-4-5, and what-have-you each and every series.

The biggest difference between what this defense is growing into, and what it was back in October is that now Macdonald has his guys getting it, and getting each other. They have taken the hero ball mentality out of their games, and they have replaced it with gritty, smart discipline. Together, they are truly one, and what a sight it is now becoming.

This team is playing great defense, and has for three games in a row. They played good enough to beat the Rams nearly a month ago (the offense screwed up that game), and they broke Brock Purdy last week in Santa Clara, and then just put a beating on Kyler Murray yesterday in Seattle.

The Seattle Seahawks are in first place again in the NFC West and it is because of this Mike Macdonald defense. A couple weeks ago, fans were losing their minds on twitter saying he should be fired, but I say that Seattle is damn lucky to have landed him as their new head coach even if some toxic fans can’t fully see that right now.

Will this team sustain and win out the NFC West division?

I dunno, but I will say that there is nothing about the Rams that impresses me right now, the 49ers feel like they are falling off of a cliff, and the Cardinals just got their asses kicked in Seattle. A few weeks ago, I was thinking of benching a bunch of starters, playing youngsters, and aiming to get into the offseason as quickly as possible to attack free agency and the draft again. After beating the 49ers and Cardinals, I am seeing reinvigorating new life in this team this year. I am excited to see how it shakes out, good or bad, or somewhere in between.

Of the six games remaining on the schedule for Seattle, with games against the Jets, Cardinals, Packers, Vikings, Bears, and Rams, they may just need to find three more wins to sow up this division. For example beating Cardinals again, and the Rams along with finding one more win might be enough to do it. With the way this defense is coming along, I wouldn’t be completely shocked if they muster out four wins in these remaining games.

I am not saying this should be the expectation of this team now, but I do feel like we can dare to dream a bit more these days. If Seattle keeps making these gains on defense (I think they can), and if they can just simply play a bit cleaner on offense, I like their chances of winning this division as much as any other team that play in it right now.

The biggest question is will they cleanup it up, offensively. This feels like this is where the success of this team will hinge on through these remaining six games.

Can Macdonald impress upon Geno Smith the high importance of being protective with the football, living to fight for another down instead of forcing a throw that maybe isn’t really there?

These six remaining games are as big for Geno Smith as anyone on this team. Ryan Grubb has chosen to lean into him, and with how electric JSN has become and DK Metcalf is capable of being, there is little reason to expect Grubb to pull back now. Therefore, it is incumbent upon Geno Smith to truly show this team and fanbase he is worthy of spearheading this attack by not just making big time throws, but also being really smart how to protect the ball at critical times.

It is not an easy thing to balance, but great quarterbacks find ways of doing exactly that, and if Geno wants to be paid as great quarterbacks are, he must be better about protecting the football. We are now eleven games into the season, and we cannot use the state of the offensive line as a constant excuse as to why Geno Smith has had the amount of interceptions as he has had this season through these games. With six games left, the onus is on him to be smart with the football each and every game here on out.

Oddly, I have some degree of optimism brewing that he will be better moving forward. The stakes are real again now. This is where he needs to show his fourth quarter magic through all quarters.

I am also willing to run counter to what I have felt about this offense lately. Weirdly, as much as I have been frustrated in Ryan Grubb’s scheme, I am honestly seeing a potential light at the end of the tunnel with it, as well.

Having Olu Oluwatimi now at center feels, well, kinda centering. The shotgun efficiency feels significantly better, and the way Grubb is getting JSN and K9 involved in screen passes is a really interesting watch.

No, this offense is not running the ball with the physicality that I would like to see, but, at this point in the season, I see the merits of leaning into what its strengths are. JSN and K9 are upper echelon playmakers with the ball in their hands in space. Grubb is trying to get them into those situations, and you can see why.

I would also add that Seattle is currently playing without its starting tight end in Noah Fant who is also pretty special catching the ball in space. Rookie tight end AJ Barner is doing fine with what he can do, but Fant with the ball in his hands in space is kind next level if you think back to some of his more explosive plays when he has had those opportunities. I have optimism of this offense clicking more when he gets back.

Until then, they just need to clean it up. Limit the false starts like JSN had in this one early on. Protect the ball better (Geno). Find more creative ways to run the ball (Grubb). This all feels doable.

But this defense, my God.

My God, do I ever love how it is now gelling.

Tyrice Knight and Earnest Jones are fun to watch at linebacker. Fun. To. Watch.

Big Cat Williams, Jarran Reed, and Byron Murphy are making me giddy with their defensive tackle play. Devon Witherspoon, Coby F’ing Bryant, and Julian Love are making me truly enjoy this secondary, and Boye Mafe and Derick Hall make me love these edges.

There is talent and depth at all layers of this defense now, and you can feel them building confidence inside this scheme. For three games in a row, they have notched it up more.

They are making me really excited. Like, I am glued in just to watch this defense play, and I have not felt that way about a Seattle defense in well over six or seven years now.

Two weeks ago, knee jerk reactors were ready to fire Macdonald, and fire John Schneider. No trust that Macdonald would be able to turn it around, and people were bemoaning what Schneider did in the offseason. Most of us were almost ready to put a fork into them, and call them all cooked, even the most glass half full sorts such as myself.

Well, two years ago, it took Macdonald half a season to get the Baltimore Raven defense turned around within his new scheme, and now it is looking like same is happening here in Seattle. I appreciate that casual fans set expectations high for their team, and get frustrated when they go through a bumpy patch, but realistically speaking, we should have all probably assumed that this first year under Macdonald would be patchy, and it still might. That said, I feel like we have gone through three games now where this trend on defense feels very sustainable.

That is what has me so damn excited. More than any other aspect of football, teams that win with top notch defenses get me significantly more excited than any sorta offensive juggernaut teams.

Football, at its purest core, is not a contact sport. It is a game built on violence. That is what all the protective armor is about. It is about being in proper positions, holding your ground, trusting your brothers to do theirs, and beating the ass of the dude in front of you. Great defenses do this, and I feel like a great one is brewing in Seattle, finally again.

The offense might require another full offseason to catch up, and that is okay for me. Use the draft and free agency to further address the offensive line. Make trades, if you need to do it. This all feels doable, and I feel much better as a Seahawk fan this morning feeling like one side of the ball is taken care of as opposed to what I felt last month seeing both sides of the ball needing tons of work.

I trust Mike Macdonald as a defensive guru now. I am fully bought into that. I am more comfortable waiting on the offense to get there.

At the end of the day, I would much rather feel like the team I root for has a defense that fans from other teams simply do not what to see their team face. I feel like we are inching towards that again in Seattle, and that is a very exciting thought, indeed.

So let’s have Big Cat cook, and whatever else happens will happen.

Go Hawks.