If The Bears Are Desperate For Russell Wilson, Cool, But I Want The Farm

This is what a legit pass rush looks like, and if I don’t get it, I don’t deal

This is the one piece written by me that will explore a Russell Wilson trade scenario. Until an actual trade happens, anything else I write about this team will be with the mindset that Russell Wilson is a Seattle Seahawk until he is not one.

Let me start by saying that I don’t want the Seattle Seahawks to trade Russell Wilson. I believe that Seattle should try to figure out a way to make it work out between Russ and Pete Carroll.

That said, I think it is important to note that we don’t always get what what want in life, or sports. Every time that I think they won’t trade Russell Wilson, things float out through the press that make me think that perhaps they will, and they might do it this off-season if the right deal is presented.

I think that could happen easier than many think, and the idea that this $39 million cap hit in 2021 has already been dispelled a bit by those who understand NFL salary cap much better than myself. Seattle could trade Russ now, and restructure a few salaries, and they could absorb the financial hit fairly seamlessly without cutting a bunch of players, and in 2022, they would have a ton of cap space available.

A few weeks ago, I didn’t think there was much chance for any trade this off-season happening, but with news coming out that acquiring Russell Wilson is priority number one for the Chicago Bears, that raised my eyebrows. If they really want him, eventually they could come in with an offer that Seattle would have a hard time refusing, especially if there is another team pursuing a trade for him (which now there sounds like there is). I think it is perhaps now time to start acknowledging that a perfect storm for this could be brewing.

The Chicago Bears are reportedly “all in” on acquiring Russ this off-season, and that’s a big deal

Of the four teams that Russell has listed as his preferred destinations, the Chicago Bears have emerged as the team that appears to want to be aggressive in acquiring him. The New Orleans Saints are also supposedly interested, and it is unclear if the Raiders are, but new reports are suggesting that Seattle is now talking to multiple teams about a potential Russell Wilson trade.

If there is a bidding war happening, it could create a scenario very easily for Seattle to absolutely fleece one of those two teams in terms of players and picks in exchange for their superstar passer. That is why this new report of the Bears being “all in” on getting Russell this off-season is significant.

It makes sense for them to be this desperate for him, too. Both the head coach and the GM could be on the hot seat heading into the 2021 season. Being the head coach and GM that brings Russell Wilson to Chicago, a city with a storied NFL franchise that has never produced a superstar quarterback, would make them automatic heroes. Winning with Wilson is also practically automatic, and that those to things together paints an easy picture of both men having job security in Chicago for years to come.. if they can just get Russell Wilson.

If they really want him, and are ready to out compete the Saints (and possibly the Raiders), if I am Seattle, I am asking for the farm. I think there’s a chance they could get it, too

Here’s what I would ask for if I am the Seattle Seahawks

It is reported that for the Seahawks to even enter into a discussion about any Russell Wilson trade scenario, three first round picks must be on the table. That’s just the starting point for entering into trade discussions with the Seahawks, allegedly.

If I am Pete Carroll and John Schneider, I am demanding premier edge rusher Khalil Mack from the Bears, and on top of those first round picks, I am insisting on a hand full of day two picks and probably a few young starters on rookie contracts. If they refuse on Mack, I’m hanging up the phone.

Additionally, since Chicago cannot offer me a quarterback off of their roster that I like in exchange for Russ, I am insisting that they acquire a young experienced passer on another roster that I like that they can, in turn, flip my way. Personally, I think Gardner Minshew from Jacksonville makes some sense since the Jaguars are prepared to draft Trevor Lawrence first overall, and given how efficient he has been in the league as a two year starter on top of his obvious PNW roots playing for Washington State.

Whoever the player is, though, I am putting the onus on the Bears to acquire the young quarterback that I want, and to package him to Seattle as part of the blockbuster move for Russ. I want a player who can read an NFL defense, understands the NFL passing game, is ready to step into the starter role, and who is preferably on a cheap rookie deal, and I am making Chicago do that work for me.

If they really want my prize quarterback while he is still well in his prime, I will insist on the farm. I want a player who is arguably the best edge rusher in the league, I want three first round picks, a want a young experienced passer with some upside, and I want some combination of second and third round picks and young talented players on rookie deals to fill out my roster.

If I am going into the 2021 season significantly less talented at the most important position on football, I am getting significantly better at most other key positions and areas. I want a pass rush that doesn’t have to rely on blitzing and can easily get home with four. I am giving myself significantly better offensive line that will be built for years. I am getting better coverage corners, and I am giving myself another offensive weapon, and I want a capable quarterback ready to start.

My strategy for moving on from Russ is simple. I am going to build a roster that any competent quarterback could step onto and find success. That is how I move on from a disgruntled legacy driven Russell Wilson.

He can have his legacy style points and be the Savior of Chicago Football. I want a championship level team built up in Seattle. If Chicago can give me enough players and picks to make this happen, and my team can be built this way for the longer haul, I say that we have a deal, and I will be perfectly happy to never have to deal with Russell Wilson’s pain in the butt agent again.

Would Seattle’s 2021 season be doomed if they moved on from Russell Wilson?

I’ve seen the following suggested often. When people assert that the idea of trading Russell Wilson is crazy talk, it almost always is attached with this belief that the Seattle Seahawks would have to enter into a massive rebuild and wouldn’t be competitive inside the hyper competitive NFC West division in 2021.

Personally, I think that’s kinda lazy thinking. Yes, Russell Wilson has largely carried this team over the past few years. It would be foolish to argue otherwise, but let’s examine that a bit.

If we are to be honest about this whole Russell Wilson in Seattle situation, we have to acknowledge how difficult it is for the a team to be strapped with his sort of salary to fill out it’s roster like it was during the height of the Legion of Boom days. It’s harder to find blue chip talent through the draft when you make the playoffs annually, and you’re always drafting in the back end. You aren’t likely to find any legitimate left tackles like Duane Brown, you have to trade significant draft capital for them, and you have to fit their expensive salary into your cap space. Essentially, you are in a constant juggling act of having to give to get.

It’s fair to criticize Seattle for late first round draft misses, but if we are to be honest, when you are picking late in the first, you aren’t likely drafting true first round talent, you’re picking a player that likely has a second round grade. Drafting in the later portion of each round also becomes more of a crap shoot. For even hit on a late day two pick like Tyler Lockett, DK Metcalf and Frank Clark, there are underwhelming picks like Ethan Pocic, and Lano Hill.

If Seattle were to move off of Russell’s expensive contract, and if they got a enough immediate impactful talent and picks in exchange, that would free Seattle up in terms of salary cap to be more active in free agency once again, and they would have extra ammo for the draft. Let’s think back to those Super Bowl years and the seasons before them.

Back in the early portions of the Pete Carroll era, Seattle had cap space to pursue key free agent veterans such as Sidney Rice, Zach Miller, Cliff Avril, and Michael Bennett. They didn’t acquire an expensive veteran quarterback, they took bargain flyers on Tarvaris Jackson, Charlie Whitehurst, and Matt Flynn, and they waited until round three to draft Russell Wilson. They went thrifty at QB and opened up the competition. They spent their money in other ways, and much of that money went into their offensive and defensive lines.

In 2011, which was their worst season, they went 7-9, but they were still a competitive team. They beat good teams. You could feel genuine momentum moving in 2012, the year that they took a third round flyer on Russell Wilson.

For all those who pull their hairs out over how frugal Seattle has been in recent years with their offensive line, the year they won the Super Bowl, they had the most expensive offensive line in that 2013 season. Having a quarterback on a cheap deal allowed them to pay Max Unger handsomely at the time, and bring in Breno Giacomini.

They also paid players throughout the defense line, as well. Chris Clemons, Red Bryant, and Brandon Mebane were all on big contracts at the time, and they went big in free agency on short term prove it contracts for Avril and Bennett. Seattle was able to create an obscenely deep defensive line rotation that was every bit the reason that they won the Super Bowl as it was the Legion Of Boom defenders playing behind that line.

They created a team that won ball games in the trenches with powerful running, play action, and a deep rotational pass rush. That was their Super Bowl winning team, and let’s be honest about Russ’s role on that team. Yes, he did numerous flashy things with his arm and legs, but he was a game managing quarterback, and at that time, he seemed happy to be one.

This is not to be meant as a slight on Russ as a player back then, but many football minds felt that the 2013 Seattle Seahawk roster was so built up that practically any capable quarterback in the league could have guided them to that Super Bowl. San Francisco castoff Alex Smith could have guided that roster to the Super Bowl.

Teams with marginal talent at quarterback can win in this league

Let’s explore this notion of well built teams with marginal talents at quarterback, and look at the league over the last handful of years. You might find the numbers surprising.

Of the teams that played in the Super Bowl the last few years, the 49ers, Rams, and Eagles got there without a star quarterback, and the Eagles won it with journeyman Nick Foles. A few years ago, the Bears went 12-4 with Mitch Trubisky at quarterback, and it was just a short time ago that the Jacksonville Jaguars got to the AFC championship game with Blake Bortles at quarterback (who is not good). In that same year, the Vikings got the NFC championship game with journeyman Case Keenum as their starter. Over the last couple years, the Tennessee Titans have been a playoff team with Miami castoff Ryan Tannehill as their quarterback.

Castoffs, journeymen, and middling talents guided their teams to decent playoff runs repeatedly in recent history, and honestly, throughout time. Rich Gannon led the Raiders to their last Super Bowl twenty years ago, and he was out of the league a few years before.

If the team is built up enough, it makes the quarterbacks job a lot easier. That’s why I’d be leery about drafting an Alabama quarterback high. It way too easy to over inflate the quality of a quarterback on a winning team.

Therefore, this idea that the Seattle Seahawks would automatically be tanking their 2021 season if they traded Russell Wilson is lazy thought processing, in my opinion. If they acquire Khalil Mack and others from the Bears, and have dipped into free agency and the draft to fill out their offensive line better, this team could be built up more to compete than some might think. Really, it could just boil down to them finding a competent and accurate enough passer to get the pass off into DK Metcalf and Tyler Lockett’s hands.

Folks can laugh all they want to about a player like Gardner Minshew coming into Seattle and replacing a legend like Russell Wilson, but let’s peel back the layers a bit with Minshew. He’s an athletic and experienced starter on a cheap rookie contract for two more seasons. His passing numbers over the last two years have shown an efficiency that Pete Carroll likes out of the quarterback position. He generally takes care of the ball, and while he doesn’t have a canon of an arm, he can make all the throws required from an NFL quarterback. On top of that, he’s scrappy and likeable. Plus, he’s a bit of legend himself in the PNW having played for the Washington State Cougars in college, and led them to a bit of a magical year in 2018.

It’s very possible that Gardner could step in with new offensive coordinator Shane Waldon’s offense, and beat out another experienced starter (like Alex Smith or Andy Dalton) for the job, and win over his teammates, if not the fans right away. If Seattle goes 10-6 (or greater), makes it back into the playoffs and wins a game or two with a fierce pass rush, and efficient quarterback play from Minshew, there could easily be Minshew Mania felt once again in the Pacific Northwest. Winning always cures a lot of woes.

This is why I am nowhere near ready to say that Seattle would tank into a total rebuild if they moved on from Russell Wilson in 2021. I would actually say that Seattle is not likely to trade Russell Wilson to rebuild at all. They are not going to take a deal just to take one.

If they are going to move away from Russ, it’s because they will have believed that they got enough in exchange to compete for the NFC West crown in 2021. Whether that happens or not would remain to be seen, but I am certain that the idea of rebuilding would not be in their thought process. They would have gotten enough back for him to have felt like they could move forward in a win now mode.

What do I really want Seattle to do?

I want them to figure out what to do with Russell Wilson and commit to that. Ideally, I want them to work it out between him and Pete Carroll. But if they can’t do that, I actually would be okay with them moving on from Russ if the right deal is presented. But it has to be the right one.

It’s also not realistic to expect that the team in going to move on from Pete Carroll in favor of Russ. I get the logic that suggests that if you had to chose between a near 70 year old head coach, and a 32 year old quarterback who is probably top five in the league, you chose the quarterback. I am not going to argue against that.

I am just more willing to accept the fact that it appears that team ownership is all-in on Pete Carroll having just extended his deal through 2025, and if I am to be honest in my acceptance of that, I would say that if any near 70 year old head coach can carry forth without his star passer and still win in this league, I would say Pete Carroll is probably that guy. He has a formula for winning that has stayed true for decades, and until it is proven otherwise, nobody really knows if he can’t be successful in Seattle without Number 3 as his passer. Personally, I think he has earned the right to try, if need be.

Hopefully, it doesn’t need to happen. Hopefully Russ and his agent figure out a way for them to be happy in Seattle with Pete Carroll running the show. Something tells me, though, that ultimately, they are looking for greener pastures, and even if Pete Carroll concedes to many of their needs and wants, it likely won’t be enough. That’s just my hunch.

If my hunch is true, then I want Seattle to absolutely fleece the Bears. In fact, I am demanding it.

Go Hawks.

Seahawks Hiring Back Carl Smith Is A Good Sign In Rocky Times

When in doubt, call on ‘Tater’

If you’ve clicked onto this piece, I probably don’t need to tell you that the Seattle Seahawks have found themselves in some rocky waters these days with their star quarterback. Anyone who follows this team knows that more and more stuff has been trickling through the news cycle about the divide between the player and the team’s head coach and vice president.

I’ve been resistant to write that I see any sort of trading away of Russell Wilson as something that could realistically happen this year. In fact, I’ve repeatedly wrote that, despite all the noise, I don’t see it happening.

However, when his agent made it known to all late last week that while Russell doesn’t want to leave Seattle, he has a preference of four teams that he would like to be dealt to if Seattle were to choose to deal him, that moved my needle considerably. Now, I am not nearly so sure.

Call me crazy, but I sorta think that when someone says that they don’t want to be traded away, but then gives four destinations of places that they would like to be traded to, and then makes it known through the media, that dude probably wants to be traded. They’re just trying to find the nicest way of breaking to the fans. That’s just my honest take on the matter, anyways, and I’ve been through enough broken relationships to know the signs whenever I see them coming.

When this stuff came out late last week on the heals of a fairly explosive article written in The Athletic detailing the growing divide between Russell and Pete Carroll, my needle shifted so much that I decided to start drafting a piece exploring a best case trade scenario for the team. The main reason for it is that two of the Russell’s preferred destinations are presently without a franchise quarterback, and another one is coached by an individual who has long been one of his biggest admirers. In my mind, it’s entirely possible that a bidding war could brew between a few of these clubs, and while Seattle may not want to move on from it’s disgruntled star, an offer could be eventually presented to them that would make them finally consider it.

If that happens, I now think it is possible that they could move on from him this year. I think that the divide between Russ and Pete is significant enough where if the right deal is presented, Seattle would move on, and start a new chapter of Pete Carroll football. I’ve started bracing for that.

Enter Carl ‘Tater’ Smith

Diehard Twelves will probably remember the name ‘Tater’ Smith from Russell Wilson’s first six years in the league. If you are a diehard follower of the team and Russ, and you’ve sat through numerous Russell Wilson press conferences during that stretch of time, you’ve probably heard Russ mention good ol’ Tater often. Carl Smith was Russell’s quarterback coach during that time, and in all likelihood, the one person on the staff closest to the player. Russ has repeatedly mention Tater in only the glowing-est of terms over the years.

When Seattle moved on from Tater Smith a couple years back, I wondered how that would effect Russell. Russell Wilson is a bit of an oddball character. He is very image conscious and because of that, I think it has been a challenge for many players and possibly staff members to relate to him. I don’t think he lets a lot of people in. Therefore, those that are close to him, are likely extremely close. I think Tater was close to him, and maybe even the closest person to him within the whole organization.

So, when news broke yesterday afternoon that the Seattle Seahawks were bringing in back in some yet to be defined capacity, I took that as really positive news. People can debate how good of a quarterback coach Tater Smith actually is (I’ve noticed mixed reviews on Seahawks Twitter, but for my two cents, I think his recent two year stint down in Houston shows that the dude can coach a quarterback). The fact of the matter is that his return signals very clearly that the Seattle Seahawks are trying to make things right with Russell Wilson.

Additionally to being tight with the quarterback, Tater Smith is also very tight with the head coach. His history with Carroll goes back well beyond their days together at USC (it actually dates back to the early 1980’s when both men coached together at NC State). In fact, these two men are so tight that Carroll has often remarked that Tater has been the one guy on his staff over the years who would be in his ear, telling him all the things that he needed to hear that others on the staff likely wouldn’t say to him. Carroll’s trust in Tater Smith is deeply embedded.

I’ve never been totally sure why Seattle chose to move on from the Tater after the 2018 season, but if I had to guess one reason, I would probably say that perhaps they saw enough positive signs of Russell taking to their new offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer that they felt Tater’s influence with Russell was no longer required, and they want that bond with ‘Schotty’ to deepen. Given Russell’s reaction to Schottenheimer being fired a couple months back, I think it’s fair to say that was a successful transition.

I would also say that with Schotty no longer on this staff, Russ might really be in need of someone who he feels will truly be in his corner. Tater coming back just makes too much sense for it not to happen, in that regard.

Here is what I think Tater’s rehiring actually means for Seattle

The reason why I am most excited about this hire is that I believe this signals that Seattle is determined to hang onto it’s superstar quarterback, and make it work out between himself, and the head honcho of the team. It could not be any clearer than that.

Carl Smith is likely coming in to be the guy who Russ can feel like he has as an advocate. With all this business being played out in the news about the player being unhappy with the play calls and offensive line over the years, it’s natural to assume there could be a growing awkwardness between himself and maybe some teammates, and certainly some of the coaches.

Tater can help smooth some of that over, and because he is close to Carroll, Russ can feel confidence that if issues came up, Tater would be the one guy within the organization who could perhaps reach Carroll with Russ’s perspective. That’s a huge deal.

Essentially, whatever title that they officially give the Tater, I believe his main task will be to help bring the player together with the head coach in a functional working way. In short, I think he’s their in-house couple’s counselor hired to work with the two most important figures within the organization. That, to me, is a really good thing.

Will this be enough to repair whatever damage exists between the player and the coach? I don’t know, but I think this can only help settle down the trade flames right now, which frankly need to be settled down.

Seattle is just a few short weeks away from entering free agency. If they can manage to make a couple significant moves on their offensive line, and maybe add another pass catching weapon for Russ along with this addition of bringing back the Tater, that might be enough to convince Russ that the team is finally ready to go further into building around him like he wants them to do. It should convince him of that.

If it doesn’t, then Seattle really does have a gigantic problem on it’s hands. Then it just probably has a quarterback who just wants out, regardless, and if that’s the case, well, at least Pete will have brought back an old friend that he can rely on helping to transition towards possibly a new passer.

For now, I’m not going to look at it that way. I’m going to look at the positive. I think Seattle is going to try to make this thing work out with Russ. I think this hiring signals that loudly enough. I dig that.

I really like this move.

Go Hawks.

How I Would Handle The Russell Wilson Situation If I Were The Seattle Seahawks

Forget hugging it out, these two need to hammer it out now.

The Seattle Seahawks are not likely trading Russell Wilson this year. In fact, I am fairly certain that they won’t, even in the face of increasing levels of drama being played out in the media between the player and the team seemingly every other day now.

That said, it doesn’t mean that the Seahawks and Russell Wilson still don’t have a major problem staring them in the face. As certain as I am that he’s not going to be traded in 2021, I am equally certain that this relationship between the team and the player could escalate to the point of going nuclear if they don’t have some sort of honest sit down moment sometime soon.

This is a hugely critical point in time between the player and the team. Something needs to happen now, and here is why.

The drama being played out in the media is cancerous if not treated properly

Last week, I wrote a long winded piece in an attempt to articulate what I believed was really going on with Russell Wilson and the Seattle Seahawks. Essentially, I believe that Russ and his camp are unhappy with the Seahawks to the point of wanting out of town.

I don’t believe that it is hyperbole to talk about it that directly, either. If you study the tea leaves, it becomes pretty obvious.

The most recent recent drama involves one nationally syndicated Russell Wilson advocate, Colin Cowherd. On his FOX Sports sports talk show, Cowherd voiced his take of the Russell Wilson situation in Seattle. As I’ve mentioned before, Cowherd and Russell are tight, and Russell’s camp uses Cowherd to get their point across always. Whenever Russell isn’t happy, we hear it about from Cowherd.

Cowherd’s latest take on Russell is that his beef really just boils down to Pete Carroll. Cowherd started this segment out by saying that the star quarterback feels like he is stuck in a 1980’s style offense, but then he took it much further. He carried on saying that since former owner Paul Allen passed away, Pete Carroll has gained more control over the franchise than ever, has too much freedom to meddle player decisions, play calling, and that the situation has become too much of an imbalance of power.

To further hammer his point, Cowherd said that he heard from at least a couple other Seahawks that have shared a similar frustration with Carroll and his antiquated offensive. So there we have it. It’s not just Russ that feels this way, possibly DK Metcalf does, as well.

This is a bad situation brewing. The gravity of what Russ has now communicated through Cowherd is intense, and it is escalating into a dangerous territory quickly. Russell has been purposefully breaking Pete Carroll’s number one rule within the organization which is to “protect the team.” In two weeks time, he has done this twice.

As much as I don’t like to be hyperbolic with any takeaways, I find it difficult to downplay any of this. Therefore, I’m not going to do it. I’m just going to spell it out.

Breaking Rule Number One leads to a breakup between the player and team and here is why.

Rule Number One is the cornerstone rule of Pete Carroll. It is his foundational piece to which he builds and maintains an organization. Under this rule, it simply means that no player, or coach, or front office person is to go out and air any team grievances to the public. All grievances are always to be kept in-house.

If you follow Carroll in all of his press conferences, you can see just how careful he is about not throwing any players or coaches under the bus, even if it is obvious that maybe the quarterback throwing multiple interceptions cost them the game, or a defensive back who could not cover cost them it. Carroll is always protective, and is often willing to take on blame himself to protect players and play callers. He would rather awkwardly bumble his way through a response to a pointed question than lay blame on any individual, and has done this countless times in the past.

This number one rule is how Carroll builds his team culture, and it is how he protects it. Be your own person, but always protect the team. It’s his biggest demand for every individual.

Pete Carroll will give you a lot of leeway to be your own person, probably more so than any other Super Bowl winning coach, but once you start breaking Rule Number One, that probably means you’re punching your own ticket out. We’ve seen numerous examples of this, and a few of them from some of the team’s biggest stars.

A perfect example of this is Richard Sherman. Back in 2016, Sherman decided to start yelling at the offensive coach during a game when a pass play was called at the goal line. He went out of his mind, and had to be restrained by his own teammates. When questioned in the press, Sherm brought up the goal line play in Super Bowl XLIX and essentially said “we don’t ever need to see that type of play called again.”

When pressed about it further in another press conference a few days later, he took it much further and got combative with a reporter. The following off-season, he was on the trade block, and when the team couldn’t find a deal worth taking, they cut him the season after that.

They cut the biggest star of their legendary Legion Of Boom defense while still in his prime, and the guy who is known in Seattle for creating perhaps the biggest play in team history (“The Tip” in the 2014 NFC Championship game between the Seahawks and 49ers). Think about the weight of that. It was a stunning move for many fans.

But Richard Sherman broke Carroll’s first rule when he created a semi-brawl on the sidelines of that game, and he knew he was breaking it. Sherman also knew he was breaking Rule Number One in those back to back press conferences that followed. He was fed up, and ironically the reason why he was fed up was because he felt Russell Wilson was being catered to too much by the coaches, and Seattle was shifting away from its identity as a team.

Russell Wilson broke this rule last week when he started calling out his offensive line, and he broke it this week again when he called out Pete Carroll through Colin Cowherd. He knew he was breaking it both times. He is fed up and the reason why is that he feels like he is not being catered to enough by the head coach and organization (Hollywood couldn’t write this irony any better).

Russell Wilson is drawing a line in the sand with the same conviction that Richard Sherman once did even if he is going about it very differently. What he is essentially communicating to team owner Jody Allen is this; if things don’t change, it is either him, or it is Pete Carroll who needs to go. He does not want to continue playing ball under Pete Carroll under the present conditions.

News flash: Pete Carroll isn’t going anywhere anytime soon

For those who feel like it is Carroll who needs to leave, I would not hold my breath over that. Very recently, Allen has chosen to extend his contract through 2025, and then she chose to extend his partner, general manager John Schneider, through 2027. Russell Wilson’s contract runs through 2023. The tea leaves read pretty clearly.

If Allen was more on the side of Russell, she would not have offered those two individuals extensions that long in length. It is obvious that Jody has placed her faith in Carroll and Schneider, and I seriously doubt that she is going to fire Carroll simply because Russell isn’t happy about not cooking enough.

I’m also sure she’s more than aware of all the mini dramas that Russell and his agent have been cooking up over the years whenever they have been unhappy, and what their possible reactions would be towards these two extensions. If she is upset about anything, I’m going to guess she’s upset that they have chosen to be this outwardly public about it all, and are now breaking Rule Number One.

But this situation is what it now is. Russell Wilson is tossing the ball in their court.

How the team handles this now is vital to the present and future of this team. If I am Pete Carroll, and John Schneider, and Jody Allen, this is how I would handle the whole mess right now.

Be willing to meet more of Russell’s surface demands

Russ has stated very publicly what he wants in Seattle. He wants a better offensive line, he wants more up tempo to the offense, and he wants to have input on player acquisition. On top of that, he wants Pete Carroll to meddle less. Essentially, he wants to be Tom Brady in Tampa.

Cool. If I am Pete Carroll and John Schneider, I am going to take the position that if he wants to be more like Brady, he should give back some of his contract dollars to the team like Brady did in New England over the years so that they can afford to pay for better pieces around him. If that is a no-go between Russell and his agent, I would then say “well, we can only do so much, but we will try to do as best as we can to improve your offensive line this year.”

If they become insistent that they spend big dollars in free agency, I would point to the contracts on defensive side. I would say “okay, Russ. If you want Corey Linsley and Brandon Scherff in Seattle, it is going to be incredibly expensive, especially since you have let it be known how much you want your offensive line to be upgraded and their agents are now going to use that as leverage against us.. but if you want us to go there, that probably means moving on from Bobby Wagner, Carlos Dunlap, and Jarran Reed.. and understand that it is going to make it more difficult for us to keep improving our defense without those guys.”

If Russ and his agent say “tough,” I would take that on the chin and be prepared to trade my all-pro linebacker to get out of his contract, and I would be prepared to move on from some other expensive players on defense, as well, if they don’t agree to salary restructures.

In all honesty, it’s probably not a terrible idea to do this, anyways. Seattle has invested a lot in draft capital over the last few years in their defense with Jordyn Brooks, LJ Collier, Darrell Taylor, Marquise Blair, Alton Robinson, Cody Barton, Ugo Amadi and others. Perhaps it is time to turn the defense over to them more. Get cheaper, younger, and hungrier on defense, and get more experienced and talented on offense.

More importantly, if I am Pete Carroll, I would tell Russ that I am willing to concede more control of the offense to new coordinator Shane Waldron because I believe that this offense best fits Russ. I would follow that up by also saying that, while I am willing to be more patient, if we go through a losing stretch where I see that things clearly aren’t working, and our season is in danger, I hold the right to require adjustments as I see necessary.

That is a fair thing for Pete to say, and I think that is a fair middle ground for these two to get towards. Pete Carroll should not be forced to tank a season just so that Russ has more freedom to pass, but at the same time, Russ should have the luxury of knowing that when mistakes happen, the keys to the offense won’t be immediately taken away from him, either. This might be the most important middle ground that needs to be reached between these two.

If, for some reason, all of this is not enough for Russ, and his camp starts demanding a trade, I would hold the position that a trade in 2021 is incredibly cost prohibitive for our team, and therefore, it is a no-go. If that isn’t enough to satisfy Russ, and he is prepared to outwardly demand a trade, I would take this following measure to move the needle for him and his agent.

Here is the deal with Russell I would make if he is trying to force a trade now

I would offer to Russell that if all doesn’t go the way he wants it to during the 2021 season, we will look to deal him in 2022 when there will be an appropriate cost savings for the team to do so. I would simply ask that in exchange of this offer, no more public battles on the Colin Cowherd show and in any other media outlets. I would ask that if they have an grievances, they keep them all in-house for 2021. No more breaking Rule Number One.

I would stress that we will make our best effort to aggressively strengthen his offensive line, even if that takes away from the defense that we are trying to build back up, and we will be willing to allow him to have more input into that process within reason. I would also assure him that Carroll will work harder than ever to not step on the toes of his new offensive play-caller.

As I sit back and look at the bigger picture, I feel like this makes a lot practical sense. Let’s give 2021 with Shane Waldron coming in a chance. Let’s give the fan base a break from the drama. Let’s see where this all goes for a season.

Why I think this deal makes sense for Russell Wilson

From Russell’s perspective, I think this might be the type of agreement that he and his camp are actually angling for, anyways. I do believe it when Colin Cowherd says that Russ is tired of being coached by Pete Carroll.

Whether he is right or wrong, it doesn’t matter. He’s been in Seattle for nine seasons and he has seen how Carroll sticks his nose into the offense at times, and he knows how risk adverse he is. As much as Russ might like the potential of a Shane Waldron offense in Seattle, he has little reason to believe Carroll won’t ultimately meddle with it, and won’t demand that the training wheels be placed back on it when Russell throws a handful of interceptions and the team loses a game or two because of that.

As it stands right now in February in 2021, Russ might just want out right now, especially when he sees a fluid quarterback trade market and an opening for the starting job in New Orleans. He might view this as a rare opportunity to leave to a highly desirable spot now and not waste another season in Seattle falling short of his post season goals. It’s understandable for him to think that, especially as legacy driven as he is.

At the same time, it is implied pretty strongly through the media by former teammate Brandon Marshall that Russ doesn’t want to leave Seattle being viewed as a villain, and his legacy in Seattle is important to him. This is perhaps Seattle’s best leverage to buy a bit more time with him.

Having this deal in place allows for the remote possibility that things can still work for Russ in Seattle under Pete, if the Shane Waldron offense really takes off in 2021. If he has a great statistical year in 2021, and they actually do manage a deep playoff run, and he sees that Pete has given him and his play-caller more autonomy than in prior years, maybe that moves Russell to have a change of heart.

Maybe, deep down inside, this is just what Russell Wilson really wants; a way to make it work in Seattle. It’s just that he doesn’t see it with Carroll, and how the coach operates with his offense. Maybe he just needs one season to actually see it for himself.

I believe Russell when he says that, ideally, he would love to play all of his seasons in Seattle. I don’t fully buy into the notion that Ciara just wants out of Seattle. I think it’s more like, if Russ isn’t going to win another championship in Seattle, why would she want to be up here, if she can be in her home town of Dallas, or be in an entertainment hotbed like Vegas? Winning cures a lot of ills, and for Russell Wilson, it is clear that just getting to the post season yearly isn’t winning enough.

Probably more importantly to him is the simple fact that, with this deal in place, he can move on from this team and area without being vilified like Alex Rodriguez was decades ago, if he still wants out for whatever reason. Russell is hyper concerned about his imagine, and he likely doesn’t want to feel like all the work he has done in the Seattle community will become tarnished, if he leaves.

If he doesn’t have to outwardly demand a trade to eventually be dealt, he can have that imagine protected to a much better degree, and he can leave Seattle with a better standing. Essentially, he can leave like Griffey did instead of A-Rod.

That is likely a huge deal for him. I think that moves the needle.

Why I believe this deal would appeal to the team

First and foremost, this agreement will buys Seattle time to make things right with their star player. It gives them a drama free season to see how things go between Russell and Shane Waldron, and it give Pete Carroll a chance to resist sticking his nose into the play calls after Wilson gets picked off against the Rams.

Equally as important, though, it gives John Schneider proper time to set his team up for a different quarterback situation down road should Seattle chose to move on from Russ and his agent. This is a huge benefit for the club.

They could make moves through free agency and the draft to fortify their offensive line for years down the road. If Russ doesn’t want to be here in 2022, the next quarterback will inherit that better line (ironic, I know. I love irony).

This also buys John Schneider time to be able to hand pick his next starting quarterback, should they have to move on from Russell. If I am Jody Allen and Pete Carroll, I fully trust John’s ability to do just that. I think he is aces at it.

When he was in Green Bay, he was the one who had Aaron Rodgers as the top rated player coming out of the 2005 draft when Green Bay took him at pick 24 even though they had Brett Farve in his prime. Reportedly, it was John who banged the table loudest for him.

In 2012, it was John that had Russell Wilson graded as a first round talent even though the rest of the saw him as a mid rounder at best. It was also John who had to convince Pete Carroll for them to draft him in the third round, even though they had just signed Matt Flynn in free agency, and allegedly Carroll kind of preferred Kirk Cousins over Russell that year.

A few years ago, it was said that had Patrick Mahomes fell to Seattle’s pick in the first round, they would have taken him even with Russell on the roster, and it was rumored that in 2018, the team was considering trading Russell to Cleveland to take Josh Allen (what likely prompted Camp Russell to demand that no trade clause when their renewed in 2019). As much as we love Russ, I think we can all agree either Mahomes or Allen would look great in a Seattle Seahawk uniform today.

I think it can easily be said that if John Schneider has a year to prepare for life after Russ, that probably bodes well for Seattle down the road. Maybe there is a quarterback that he really likes already on an NFL roster that could be traded for. Maybe there in a player in the 2022 draft that they would feel good about once their team is a bit more fortified at other positions.

I’m no football expert, and I don’t pretend to be one, but I know enough to comfortably say that if John Schneider takes a quarterback early enough in the draft, or makes a significant trade for one, there’s probably a good reason for that, and we should give him the benefit of the doubt. Furthermore, I think it is likely that the team would willing to take that chance, if they needed to do that.

But to circle back to what they have with Russ, this agreement really just buys them time to see if it can still work out, and that might still be their number one goal in all of this. Ideally, they probably want to hang onto him for a few more years, and win another championship (or three) with him as their passer. Why wouldn’t you?

This is how I feel about this proposition

I love Russell Wilson as much as the next fan, and I love my Seattle Seahawks. I think this deal makes sense for both sides.

I am willing to bet that if Seattle actually commits significantly more resources into its offensive line at left guard and center, Russell Wilson might likely enjoy the best offensive line in his tenure in Seattle this season. This deal would place a big time urgency on the club to do just that, and if that proves to be the case, I think there would be very little holding Russell back from enjoying another winning season with some nice passing stats to back it up with, and maybe going further through the playoffs.

Even if they don’t make the Super Bowl, Russ could see a realistic path towards it again in Seattle, and that could persuade him to stick around longer. Maybe all he really needs to want to stay in Seattle is to actually see that path, and not feel like he is a part of a franchise that is just spinning its wheels in the mud every season.

I also think that this deal would incentivize Pete Carroll to actually give more autonomy to his new offensive coordinator and see what that brings. Maybe it opens his eyes to the notion that he can just be a CEO head coach in his remaining years in the league instead of feeling like he always has to be so hands on all the time. This is could be what Russell wants most, but it might be what Carroll really needs most as a coach.

From my own fan perspective, as I sit with this, I think it’s all fair, and whatever happens happens. Let the chips fall where they may.

If Seattle does go in a deep playoff run and Russell still wants out, I am also sort of at the stage where I would be fine with them moving on, to be honest. At the very least, I would be relieved that they would be removed of the drama that his agent loves to create whenever Russ feels unhappy. I would be perfectly happy to be removed from that as a fan.

I would also be more than a bit curious to see how John Schneider and Pete Carroll put the team together without that hyper expensive quarterback contract prohibiting them from spending more at other areas of the team. Maybe they get back to what is really Pete Carroll football. A defense that is talented enough to just rush with four dudes and plays great coverage, and a balanced offense that is talented enough throughout that the quarterback just has to be the distributor of the ball like a point guard in basketball.

That was the 2013 World Championship Seattle Seahawks. It wasn’t one player. It wasn’t Marshawn, or Richard, or Earl, or Russell. It was all of them with Kam, Golden, Doug, Max Unger, Michael Bennett and Cliff Avril, Brandon Mebane, Bobby, KJ, Okung, Bruce, and many, many others. The MVP of that Super Bowl was a backup linebacker. I would be fascinated to see if this team could get back to that.

The one thing that I know for certain is that place that Russell has gotten to with the team feels miserable, and it could only get worse. They have to do something. This, at the very least, feels like something that is very reasonable to do.

At the very least, this proposal buys them all time, and maybe just a bit more time is really all they need. It’s a wager that I am comfortable making.

This is what I would do, anyways.

Go Hawks.

The Seahawks Are Probably Not Going To Trade Russell Wilson, But Still..

Ugh. What does this stuff keep coming up with this dude?

Good lord. This stuff again.

Man, I don’t want to be writing about this stuff again. After Tampa trounced Kansas City in that Super Bowl, I was excited to step away from the football, think more about the Seattle Storm and Mariners, and binge watch all those Marvel movies because of WandaVision.

Now, I gotta sort through all this stuff, and try to figure out what is really going on between Russell Wilson and the Seattle Seahawks. Every year, it feels like there is something new going on, and this time around it’s like everyone’s on crack cocaine about it all.

Buckle up, Twelves. It’s going to be another wild controversial filled off-season again, and we might as well gird the loins now. I don’t like hyperbole, either, so I am going to attempt a very measured approach with all this.

For those unaware, bubbling beneath the surface within realms that relate to the Seattle Seahawks, there has been growing speculation that the team and quarterback could be heading for a divorce. Many see a defensive minded head coach who likes his offense to run a certain ball controlled way coupled with a quarterback who wants more of an aggressive passing attack, and they have a difficult time seeing how both of these sides can stay married to each other in the long term.

Either one side concedes enough to the other, or they figure out a way to meet in the middle, or one of the two figure heads of the franchise has got to go. I would have thought that the Shane Waldron hiring from the Rams to become the new offensive coordinator would have meant that Pete and Russ met somewhere in the middle. I guess not, or at least, not enough.

Given that Pete Carroll has just been extended through to 2025, and Wilson is only signed through 2023, it now feels it could be Wilson who will be on his way out first, especially with what has been playing out in the media between the player and team over these past several days. It’s no longer that crazy to speculate this being a possibility down the road.

Given the fact that trade rumors have existed between the player and the team for a few years now, people have been smelling this smoke for a while. You put that together with what has been floated around this week, and people are now seeing flames.

Do I think that this is going to lead to the Seattle Seahawks trading Russell Wilson anytime soon?

Not really, but I am nowhere near as confident about that as I have been previously whenever this stuff has gotten kicked around in the press (which has been annoyingly often).

Here is the order of the most current leaks to the press stirring the pot now

Hours before Super Bowl LV kicked off, it was leaked to the NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport that a few teams have called Seattle about the availability of Russell Wilson, but Seattle was not interested in trading him. On its face, this felt like a bit of a non-story. Why wouldn’t any quarterback needy team call Seattle to see if Wilson is available, especially with all the previous trade speculations that have been floated through the last few years?

Cool. Cool. Moving along.

To dumb a bit of fuel on these flames, exactly one day after that story made the national news, CBS Sports reporter Jason La Canfora reported that Russell has grown increasingly frustrated with the team’s inability to give him a great offensive line. Honestly, who can blame him? I wrote a piece last week imploring Seattle to go out and spend big dollars in free agency to give him a better center and left guard. I didn’t love that his camp had decided to now publicly complain about the quarterback’s teammates, though. I thought that was a bad look.

But, if that wasn’t enough, the next day on the Dan Patrick Show, Russell, himself, was asked about his offensive line. He awkwardly doubled down on it saying how many times he’s been hit in his nine years in the league and that it all needs to change. To his credit, he stayed very much within his nice guy persona, took blame for some of the sacks, and he said “we need to get better” instead of “they need to get better.”

Okay, fair enough, but now this is feeling increasingly more awkward, and unnecessarily so at that. Why is this happening? Please stop.

He then essentially tripled down on that position hours later in an oddly called press conference with the local Seattle media that the team was not involved in. I say that’s odd because Russell had just won the Walter Payton Man of the Year and the press conference doesn’t appear to really be about that, and we don’t have access to it because it wasn’t organized by the team. It’s felt more like, after he appeared on the Dan Patrick Show, someone in Russell Wilson’s camp felt it necessary to have a press conference with local reporters to perhaps tamper the flames because things started to get a bit awkward in the interview with Patrick when Patrick started to press Russ more. This just sorta further dumped more fuel on the flames.

Where things really start to take wonky turns is when former Seahawk Brandon Marshall goes on national television later that day and he says the Russell is beyond frustrated with Seattle and Pete Carroll. Marshall talked about how in his own limited time with the club, he thought Carroll didn’t trust Russ enough, and then he dropped the bombshell that he believes Russ is just trying to find a nice guy way to exit out of Seattle, and that is what’s really going on.

Boom. Brandon Marshall just dumped a fire gallon bucket of gasoline on that fire, and now the neighbors are calling 911.

While we can surely write this off as speculation on Marshall’s part, I would say that it is worth noting that Marshall had DK Metcalf on his own show the other week, and if you watched DK, you could see a significant amount frustration when he was asked about what happened to Seattle’s offensive in the second half of last season. DK talked about how defenses took away the deep pass and Seattle didn’t adjust, but in that, he also took what was maybe a bit of a side ways shot at Pete Carroll.

DK is perhaps the closest player on Seattle’s team to Russell Wilson. It is very possible that Brandon Marshall was hearing enough things from those close to Russ to feel comfortable to say on national television that Russ wants out of Seattle.

Then to circle back to the team, the latest bit of news that broke in all this saga is that on Wednesday, Dan Patrick said on his own show that he has been talking to Seahawk team sources, and that management is essentially extremely pissed off with Russell right now because of this little campaign of his, and that if things continue down this path, it could lead to an unsustainable relationship between the player and team.

Holy crap, that’s escalated rapidly inside those 72 hours.

Leaks happen for reasons. Why are these happening now?

My question to these fresh back to back story-lines is simple. Why were they leaked now?

Leaks happen in the media for a reason. Often when there is discourse, one side wants to get information out to put pressure on the other.

There’s other reasons, as well. Another big one that could be also happening now between the player and the team is leaking to win the public perception battle.

The Seahawks could have leaked that teams have been calling them about Russ but they aren’t interested in trading him because they want fans to know that they aren’t interested in trading their most popular player. Let’s think about that.

Seattle could be seeing that trade rumors were going to be floated one again, and they wanted to get out in front of it. It makes sense to me that they would float something to the effect that “teams are calling us about Russ, but we love him, and he isn’t going anywhere.” That very possibly could have been the reasoning for the leaks that has sparked this whole thing.

At this point, you might be asking yourself why they felt this was necessary. Here is my best guess.

Russell Wilson is represented by a baseball agent who is schooled to use leaks as a form of pressure to be placed teams, and he does this often. Because this individual annoys me to no end, I am simply going to refer to him as Camp Russell. The reason Camp Russell annoys me to no end is because nearly every off-season, Camp Russell feels the need to stir the pot with leaks and rumors.

“The team doesn’t value Russ enough.

“They are wasting his talents.”

“They aren’t letting him cook like other quarterbacks”

You’ve probably heard these ones many times over. In fact, you’ve probably heard them on nationally syndicated sports shows. Typically, it is nationally syndicated sports talk show host Colin Cowherd who the Camp Russell most often uses.

Russell Wilson and Colin Cowherd are close partly because they share the same entertainment agent in Hollywood. Anytime you hear Cowherd going on about how Seattle doesn’t do enough to support Russell Wilson, you can be sure that Camp Russ is feeding this view to Cowherd. There’s no reason to think otherwise. Colin Cowherd is very much Russell Wilson’s voice and has been for years.

Conversely, in the past, I think anytime stories leaked out about Russell being perhaps a part of trade discussions, it has largely been the Seahawks leaking, and using that as leverage towards Camp Russell. This has been their shot across the bow saying that they had better simmer down a bit, or Russell is going to end up quarterbacking in Cleveland. That has been their tool against Camp Russell.

It’s a bit different this year, though, because in Russell’s new contract with the team, he now has a no-trade clause that he can use as a tool to control where is plays under the current contract. If Seattle were to reach a deal with a club to trade him, and Russ doesn’t like the destiny, he can simply veto that deal.

In many ways, this clause makes a trade of Russell Wilson even more unlikely. In fact, the only single reason why a trade would become likely is if Russell becomes so unhappy in Seattle that he just wants out. He could do things to try to force a trade, and he could use the no-trade clause as a tool to navigate his way to a team that he prefers to get traded to.

What do they say about seeing smoke?

This is what I think is happening with Russ

The only answer that I can come up with in terms of what is actually going on is with Russell is that he is unhappy in Seattle to the point where he no longer wants to play for this organization. I hate to say it, but I think that’s what it’s now become.

He’s probably tired of being viewed as Pete Carroll’s game manager, and given the fact that the team has chosen to extend Pete through 2025, and John Schneider through 2027, he doesn’t believe anything will change for him here. He wants to cook to win titles and not manage to get back to them.

In his mind, he knows perfectly well that he will never run a Kansas City Chief style offense in Seattle under Pete, and he wants out. This is where I think the truth is sitting at, and it all circles back to what Brandon Marshall said on Tuesday.

I think Marshall basically let the cat out of the bag. Russell wants out and he is awkwardly going about it while trying to maintain his nice guy character that he has carefully crafted over the years.

The way in which I believe Russell is going about his exit plans is by putting as much of a squeeze on the franchise as he can by going well beyond any idle threat of “letting me cook or else.”

I think it is now perhaps in the realm of “I want this, and this, and this, and if I don’t get this, and we don’t make it to the Super Bowl next year, I want out.”

I think that is why the team jumped ahead of any trade rumors it felt was going to be surfacing. It decided it was necessary to put out there “teams are calling us about Russ, but we are not interested in dealing.” The Seahawks are letting us know that they are not the ones who are trying to initiate a breakup.

There could be a Plan B also in the works with the team

I just want to state again that I don’t think the Seattle Seahawks are going to trade Russell Wilson, at least this year. That said, any well run organization will always put forth a solid Plan B should things unexpectedly transpire, and despite what some would say (Camp Russell and Colin Cowherd), I still believe that the Seahawks are one of the better run organizations in professional sports.

On the surface they could be saying that they are getting calls but aren’t interested. That all could be true.. to a degree.

Underneath that, while trying win a public perception battle, Seattle could be waiting for a team that Russell would want to go play for to sweeten the pot enough for them to be willing to make this move, and essentially move on from Camp Russell. This would also make some sense for me.

When I add all this up, I can see a situation where maybe John Schneider and Pete Carroll have huddled together to have a very frank discussion about their team and their star quarterback. I can see them looking at a uniquely fluid quarterback trade market heading into the 2021 off-season, and they might see a rare window to move Russell Wilson now, if the right deal is out there, given the weight of everything Camp Russell is now throwing at them.

People can point to Russell’s salary and how that makes him unlikely to be traded in 2021, but I am not so sure. It feels like if, in fact, Russell wanted out, Camp Russell could agree to alter Russ’s 2021 numbers to make it more flexible for Seattle to move him.

I am no salary cap expert, but if teams are looking at Russell’s salary and the Seahawks salary cap situation, I doubt they would be calling Seattle about him now if they felt that it would be too cost prohibitive for Seattle to deal him this year. I think they probably look at the situation and the probably believe that if there is a will, there is a way to make it happen.

When I look at the NFL landscape to see which teams Russell Wilson would likely enjoy playing for, and perhaps markets that his superstar entertainer wife would enjoy living in, I can see Vegas, Miami, Dallas, and New Orleans all being likely destinations. In fact, if I had to choose a spot probably most ideal for Russ, I would probably lean towards Vegas.

Laugh all you want to about the Raiders, but if Jon Gruden truly believes that he is a Russell Wilson away from overtaking the Chiefs in the AFC West, Vegas could get pretty creative sweetening the pot for Seattle. If they offer Derek Carr and multiple first and second round picks plus a couple promising young players on rookie contracts, that could be enough to persuade Seattle to move on.

Pete Carroll wants to field a competitive team now, and I’m not convinced that he is at the point of his career where he would want to break in another rookie quarterback. If he had to move on from Russell, he would probably want a capable starter to run his play action offense, and while Carr isn’t nearly as talented as Russ, he probably checks a lot of boxes for Pete. If I had to imagine a trade, this is a scenario that I can see happening.

I am not writing this to convince you that the team should trade Russell Wilson

I have officially reached the portion of this piece where I feel like I need to state that I am not arguing for the Seattle Seahawks to trade Russell Wilson. I am merely trying to illustrate what I think is likely happening in all this chaos, and why they might ultimately entertain the idea.

I honestly do not know whether or not the Seattle Seahawks will trade Russell Wilson this off-season, but I do feel like a break up is feeling more likely. It would definitely be more likely next off-season should Seattle falls short of it’s 2021 playoff aspirations.

Because I see that as a real threat, I can see the team looking to maybe get out of the situation ahead of it happening. In my opinion, it would be smart to at least gauge the market now to see what is out there.

If the right deal is there, it might be worth taking it, even if trading him now might be costly against their 2021 cap. They might be willing to take that hit now to have a much better situation in the following years to come. This is what good organizations explore doing.

I think Russell is wrong to publicly be complaining about his offensive line

Finally, I want to inch towards the end this piece by saying that I am really disappointed in Russ did earlier in the week.

I love Russell Wilson. I have worn his jersey every game since his rookie season, and a big part of my heart breaks having to write this piece, but I have to be honest. I think Russ made a bad move this week.

Part me thinks that he knows this, and that’s why those interviews felt so awkward. Russell is officially traveling out of his comfort zone, and if he doesn’t get dealt, he is going to have to deal with some unhappy teammates in 2021 much like he did in the earlier part of his career in Seattle when older players on the team weren’t buying into him.

I think publicly complaining about how your offensive line as blocked for you is a really bad move. It’s especially bad when you know perfectly well that your own style of play invites sacks and hits that other quarterbacks don’t take. I don’t think that is how to win over teammates. I think that is how to further create a divide.

How does Duane Brown feel about this right now?

I’ve seen people say that what Russell is now doing isn’t a big deal. I’ve seen them point to the bad offensive lines through Carroll’s tenure in Seattle, and that Russell is right to assert himself.

I have answered back with the following.

In the lean years between her championships (and there were several), Sue Bird never once publicly complained about how the Seattle Storm wasn’t doing enough to surround her with better low post players. She gutted through those years playing through numerous injuries until Seattle had amassed talent around her again. Eventually they did and she has won two more titles. I am sure those lean years were hard on her as a competitor. She didn’t publicly complain once. She played, and she led.

Russell says how much he admires Bird, and wants to be more like her after the Storm won that last WNBA title during the Summer. If that is true, it’s time for him to put his money where his mouth is on that. It’s time for him to maybe tell his own camp to simmer down a bit.

If he isn’t going to do that, it’s clear to me that he just wants out of Seattle. He’s not thinking about the Seahawks if he continues making demands about how the team acquires talent. He’s thinking about himself, and his own legacy, and brand.

It’s that simple in my mind, and it is really disappointing.

A huge part of me wants Russell to understand how bad this looks, and to take ownership of it. I would love for him to acknowledge that he took a poor tack earlier in the week, to say that Brandon Shell and Damien Lewis are two really good young players, and Duane Brown is rock solid, and that Seattle has a great opportunity in the draft and free agency to add more pieces there. It is within him to do this. I think it would be a smart move to make as well as the right move to make.

Finally, what would I do if I were John Schneider and Pete Carroll?

Honesty, I would hold to my guns about not trading him. I wouldn’t deal.

I would also try in good faith to meet Russell half way. If Russell don’t like that, and it still isn’t enough, I would remind Russ and his camp that he is contracted to play for the Seattle Seahawks until 2023, and that afterwards, it is well within the team’s power to use the franchise tag for a season or two afterwards, if they so choose.

I would play hardball with him and his agent. I would compel them to play nicer by doing that, and if Russ wants to look more and more like the bad guy in this, that is his choice.

If Russ threatens to walk away from the game. I would dare him to do just that. With all of those legacy goals that he has, I would say to him, “well, we would love for you to play for us for the next several years but if you want to walk away from the game for a few years, it’s certainly your choice to do that.”

This is what I would do, and I think that it is probably a direction that they are likely most likely going to take, as well. It would probably make the most sense in all of this.

How much farther will Camp Russell take things? It could go farther, I suppose, but if Russell wants to protect his good guy image, it might have limits.

I’d play hardball with that. I’d be inclined to see what comes out of that dare. I personally doubt the Russell would walk away.

Is he going to honestly walk away from the game for three seasons and then enter back into the sport at age 35 as a free agent?

I seriously doubt that. This dude talks about legacy and titles all the time, if he takes three years off the sport, that’s going to diminish both of those things for him, and you can’t convince me otherwise.

This is why I believe it is ultimately still unlikely that the Seattle Seahawks trade Russell Wilson. They are going to play hardball with his camp and they are going to dare Russ to break further away form his good guy image.

And if they do trade Russ, it will be on their terms, not Camp Russell’s. It will be a perfect storm that creates a situation where a team that is a preferred destination for Russell offers Seattle the perfect package for them to finally move along from Camp Russell, and be done with him. Anything short of that, and Russell Wilson is not going anywhere, and Camp Russell can bitch and moan to Colin Cowherd as much as he wants.

It’s his choice to make. Who knows, though? Maybe Russell will finally wise up enough to ditch that camp.

Can you tell that I don’t like Camp Russell very much?

Go Hawks.

Russell Wilson Deserves A Great Offensive Line: A Plead For What The Seahawks Should Do This Off-Season

Must get Corey Linsley. Go Hawks!

Make no mistake about it, the NFC West is a hotly contested cold war. Really, it’s probably mostly a three way battle between Seattle, LA, and San Francisco, but should Kyler Murray take the next step forward as a passer, Arizona could easily become a much more dangerous team of 2021, especially if they do just a bit more to boost their pass rush.

It’s a fascinating division of football that just got significantly more fascinating last weekend when the LA Rams agreed to trade Jared Goff (plus two future first round picks and a third rounder) to Detroit for Matthew Stafford. The Rams are a really good football team who not only just got better at it’s most important position, they got better at the position that was probably the weakest on their team, in all honesty.

It is very important to note that this move hasn’t come without potentially a very steep price to be paid to be in what is now a clear “win now” mode for them after this deal. Rest assured, they looked at this division, saw what they needed to do, and they boldly placed all their chips in for getting better where they felt that they most needed to do it to help stay on top.

Not only are they going to be without first round picks for the next three years, they are projected to now be over $30 million dollars over their 2021 salary cap with four starters on its top rated defense set to be free agents along with several key members of its offense. They are going to have an enormous challenge restructuring current expensive contracts and trimming roster fat just to get under the cap enough to sign 2021 draft picks and maybe keep a few of those pending free agents.

Because of this Stafford trade, they are likely going to lose a number of good players off of their talented roster, and they won’t have great draft capital to work with to replace a lot of these guys. This is the gigantic price that they are willing to pay to get the player that they think will lead them to the promised land.

What this move reveals to me, more than anything else, is that the Rams saw they had to do something. They weren’t wrong to see it that way, either.

Seattle had just poached their pass game coordinator and their assistant offensive line coach to reshape their offense to better fit Russell Wilson, the best quarterback in their division. Arizona’s quarterback has star qualities and should only get better and better, and San Francisco is an extremely well coached team that should boast a very strong defense again in 2021, and they might feel compelled to make a splashy quarterback move of their own over the next month or two (cough, cough.. trade Jimmy Garoppolo and the twelfth overall pick to Atlanta for Matt Ryan.. cough, cough).

I’m positive that the LA brass looked at this NFC West landscape, and they felt that if they didn’t do something, the window of winning a title with Aaron Donald and Jalen Ramsey on their defense could quickly dwindle. This was their bold move to go all in for the now, and frankly, I applaud their willingness to go for it. It was inspired.

You know what? The Seattle Seahawks need their 2021 off-season to be about a bold move or two of their own.

If I had to pick one area of the team that most needs improving, it would unquestionably be the offensive line. Further more, with limited draft capital, and being a bit tight against the cap themselves, I think they should be compelled to make some pretty big earthshaking decisions to make this happen. In fact, I think they must.

Simply put, Russell Wilson will be going into his tenth year in the league, and now is not the time to continue spinning wheels in mud while value shopping for his offensive line. It’s time to truly invest there, and they should be prepared to pay heavy costs.

I want to see two major additions to that line, I want a stud left guard, and I want a top level center. I don’t frankly care how they go about this, either.

Honestly, I wouldn’t be upset if both of those players come from free agency at expensive costs. Russell Wilson deserves to have the best offense line that he can have, and while it will be super enticing to draft another young talent like Damien Lewis was last year at right guard, I think adding top talent that is NFL battle tested front of Russ makes a TON of sense. I believe that now is the time for doing this.

Because the NFL salary cap is expected to go down an estimated $20 mill this year due to Covid, now is a time where they could find top talent at a slight bargain compared to past off-seasons. In my opinion Seattle needs to take advantage of that situation.

A perfect example of this is center Corey Linsley. He is one of the very best centers in the league. He’s a seven year vet who played on a great offensive line in Green Bay that has a similar enough blocking scheme to the one that Rams used, and new Seahawk offensive coordinator Shane Waldron will likely now deploy here in Seattle.

The Green Bay Packers, like the Rams, are also one of the few teams that are projected to be significantly over the cap in 2021. Keeping Linsley will be a challenge for them, and they can easily use one of their top picks to replace Linsley instead of restructuring existing contracts and cutting players to fit him back in. Their line is talented enough at other spots to probably roll with a rookie center in 2021.

It is very probable that Linsley will be a free agent in March, and Seattle could have a rare opportunity to pounce. If so, they must.

Sportrac.com is estimating a free agent contract for him at slightly under $10 million annually. In fact, because of his age, they are projecting a three year deal worth about $30 million. For Seattle, I would make that deal in a heart beat.

Seattle could simply cut defensive tackle Jarran Reed or edge rusher Carlos Dunlap to fit him onto there roster. Honestly, if I were GM, I would sacrifice one of those guys to make that move. Seattle has an emerging talent behind Reed in Poona Ford that they might likely chose to keep over Reed down the line anyways. As for Dunlap, as good as he was for them in 2021, I think they could chose to dump that $14 million 2021 salary of his and find some free agent value elsewhere at edge rush with some degree of confidence that they have a developing Alton Robinson and possibly Darrell Taylor ready to take the next steps forward on cheap rookie deals. It’s a gamble that I would feel comfortable making to get significantly better on the offensive line.

I trust that Seattle can find good value at defensive tackle and end through free agency and the draft. They have a long track record of doing just that. What I don’t have much trust in is how successful they are able to be in putting together a good offensive line on the cheap.

I’m done with bringing in older injury plagued guards like Mike Iupati on cheap short term contracts because nobody else wants them, hoping that they will somehow magically be less injury riddled in Seattle. I am also done with throwing larger money at a young talent who never lived up to his first round draft status on a short term deal like they did with Luke Joeckel a few years ago in the hopes that he will somehow finally blossom as a player. He never did and that move made them look incredibly stupid for even trying it.

I trust Seattle to play a smart game of money ball on their defense line. John Schneider has a good eye for how to find value at defensive tackle and defensive end. What I don’t trust is for them to play smart money ball with their offensive line, because they simply haven’t shown any ability to do this.

When they won the Super Bowl in 2013, they actually had one of the more expensive offensive lines in the league that year, and they had a relatively affordable defensive line that was filled with bargain depth. They had two first round picks on the left side of their offensive line, and they were paying their pro bowl center, Max Unger, a lot of money at the time.

Of all the talent that was on that roster, I think Unger’s impact at center was highly underestimated in hindsight. He was the calming presence for others, and it was he who gave Russell Wilson confidence to step up inside the pocket to make the necessary throws when needed. For as much as they ran the ball back then, Russ cooked pretty well whenever called upon with Unger in front of him. Hence my deep desire for a player such as Linsley in Seattle.

Even if Linsley is the only significant free agent signing of theirs in 2021, I would be good with that, especially if they used their first pick on a quality young guard. It appears like the 2021 is shaping up to be a good one for offensive line, and generally, second round is a sweet spot for interior offensive linemen, but they have to nail that pick just like they did with Damien Lewis in the third round last year. My question is, honestly, how much do we as fans trust that they will land that guy?

They can’t reach for a raw athlete like Justin Britt again only to have it be three years before he finally looks like a player worth keeping around. If they are going to use the draft to find solutions, they need to get a guy who will be a positive day one starter. They must. Russell Wilson is going into his tenth year, and it is critical for the team and player that it is a quality bounce back season from the disappointing second half of the 2020 season he had.

As Russ takes on a new offense, he needs to feel confidence in that line up front, especially when he faces the pass rushes that both the Rams and the 49ers will throw at him. A great way to achieve that is for him to know that he is pro bowl talent in front of him. Having a pro bowl center directing traffic against Aaron Donald the way Linsley did for Aaron Rodgers in the divisional round of the playoffs just a few weeks back is a fantastic way to start.

Seattle might feel compelled to bring Ethan Pocic back. He played okay as a first time starter during the first stretch of the season before he got injured. His athletic profile might actually fit the Waldron scheme pretty well as a center, but it took four seasons for Pocic to finally grab a starting job on the line after being drafted late in round two in 2017, and he has yet to prove he can stay healthy. How much trust is Russell really going to have with that decision?

Seattle could simply chose to pluck Austin Blythe from the Rams in free agency. In many ways, this would be the smart and practical thing to do. Pro Football Focus had Blythe rated as the 6th best center in the league last year by December. In comparison, Seattle’s Ethan Pocic was rated in the twenties. So, at least in terms of PFF’s analytical rating system, Seattle would significantly improve it’s center spot by replacing Pocic with Blythe.

Perhaps the biggest reason to make Blythe a well paid man in Seattle is that he has been a regular starter at both as a guard and center for the Rams, and would fully understand, and be able to help teach others on Seattle’s line that particular blocking scheme that is very different than the one they’ve been running in Seattle for the last three seasons. He would likely help smooth out the transition significantly.

Seattle could do much worse this off-season than sign Blythe and then use it’s first pick on the best guard or center available, and then have Blythe play either spot depending on who they drafted. It is very possible that this is the direction Seattle eventually goes with. Still, Blythe has never achieved pro bowl status, and has probably met his ceiling in terms of development. He is what he is. At best, he would be a steady and reliable presence on the line who would help others transition into the new blocking scheme. For folks that remember the Mike Holmgren years in Seattle, he’d be a Robbie Tobeck, and there is nothing wrong with having this sort of presence in the starting line up, but Seattle would need more, much more.

This is why I propose that Seattle go aggressive in bringing in a player like Linsley, and possibly even splurging for another big time player such as Brandon Scherff at left guard, as well, if such a player is floating out there in free agency. Get the two best guys out there on the market. For one off-season, go big and bold in free agency. Why not?

And I don’t frankly care if they have to cut Carlos Dunlap and Jarran Reed, or dare I say it, trade a popular player such as Bobby Wagner to open up the cap space necessary to do it, as well. Be bold. Be biggly bold.

And look, don’t get me wrong, I love Bobby Wagner as much as the next Seattle fan, but I also know that the team just drafted Jordyn Brooks, and by my eyes, that young cat looks like he is more than capable of starting in place of Wagz this coming season, if they needed him to do that. Moving Wagner now would make would make sense because he is still talented enough that some other team out there with cap space available that wants to make an immediate splash in 2021 might actually give up a decent enough draft pick on an expensive older player of his sort.

You can doubt whether a team would be willing to do this, and that’s fine, but let’s take Jacksonville as an example for a minute. Highly competitive and newly hired Urban Meyer doesn’t like loosing, and if he drafts college quarterback phenom Trevor Lawrence first overall and then pairs Bobby Wagner with Myles Jack at linebacker on the defensive side, suddenly, Jacksonville looks potentially like a very dangerous club again very quickly. Jacksonville has the salary cap space to fit Wagner in, and draft capital necessary to give Seattle general manager John Schneider a fair offer for him.

In fact, don’t be surprised if we see Seattle make a dramatic move like this. With only roughly under $3 million of cap space and only four picks in the draft and no first and third round pick due to the Jamal Adams trade, something has got to give, right?

Trading Bobby Wagner, even if it was for a mere third round pick and chump change (I think they could get more), would save Seattle over $9 million off the cap. There is value to be had in the third round typically at defensive tackle, wide receiver, guard, center, corner, tight end, and running back. If Seattle has confidence in Brooks taking over for Wagner and being a new leader on the defense with Jamal Adams, this could easily happen. That pick could be the future starting running back, eventual replacement for Tyler Lockett, starting nose tackle, or possibly even the new left guard playing between pro bowlers Duane Brown and Corey Linsley.

Shoot, they could even go more bold with trades, and deal Jamal Adams for a pick to gets them back into the first round this year. As wild as that sounds, that would also take about $9 million off of the cap, and it could put them in better position to further fill out their roster with younger talent, especially when you consider that having a first round pick gives the team flexibility to trade down and acquire more picks, as John Schneider famously loves to do.

Honestly, this might be a move that they decide to make. Even if they don’t get back the same draft capital that they used to acquire him, they could just write that off as another expensive one year rental on a player that they felt would give them a solid chance to go over the top in 2020 just like the one they did a few years back when they acquired Sheldon Richardson for a season.

If you are wincing at this idea, I can respect that and even relate, but think about it this following way. What if trading Jamal Adams lands Seattle the very best guard in the draft, and a pass rushing presence that takes the place of Jarran Reed or Carlos Dunlap, and thus, Seattle gets younger and better on both sides of the trenches for years to come? Would you make this trade if that were the result? Would you be okay with Ryan Neal and Marquise Blair battling it out for the starting safety spot next to pro-bowler Quandre Diggs to get significantly better on both lines? Personally, I find that compelling.

I’m not writing any of this to poke buttons and be controversial, either. I am just saying, to circle back to the beginning of this piece, Seattle is in the midst of a cold war with LA, and San Francisco, and it feels like Arizona is maybe one pass rusher away from doing serious damage as well. Because of all that, this is the time for boldness.

For my money, the best way and the clearest path for Seattle to successfully battle through this division is to give Russell Wilson the best offensive line that they can put together for him. Green Bay gave us a model for how to play against Aaron Donald and that Rams pass rush. It’s no small coincidence that Green Bay had a great offensive line situation working in their favor.

So, go get Corey Linsley, John Schneider. Prepare to pay him handsomely, and while you’re at it, get us a stud left guard.

Don’t settle for bargains this time around. Go big on the offensive line. Go all in aggressively with the same willingness that the Rams displayed by trading for Matthew Stafford to fill their biggest need. It’s time for this.

Outside of Duane Brown, anyone who is not Russell Wilson should be trade-able to better help make this better happen. Bobby, Jamal, Diggs, Lockett, and even DK Metcalf should all be considered as potential chest pieces. In fact, considering his immense upside that is still likely untapped, DK might be the one Seahawk player to net the most draft capital on this team who isn’t named Russell. As crazy as it sounds, it should be considered, if the right deal is presented.

When I see Seattle line up against the Ram and 49er defensive lines this Fall, I want to see a bonafide stud filled offensive line functioning together as one. I want to see them assert themselves against these dynamic NFC West pass rushers with a potent run game, and I want to see them win one on one battles when they have to pass block. This, in my opinion, is how we finally get Russ cooking again.

Ain’t nothing in this league more dangerous than Russell Wilson playing the game with supreme confidence. Getting him a great offensive line, finally, it probably the best way for him to achieve that level of confidence. Build around Russ by building it in front of Russ first and foremost, for once.

Go get Linsley. Go get Scherff as well. Why not?

If not, get one of those two, and use the draft to land another future stud.

Just give Russell a great offensive line to work with, finally. He deserves that, and we as fans deserve to finally see him work with that. Period. End of story. No ifs ands or buts about it.

Do it.

There, I said it.

Go Hawks.

Seahawks Hire Rams Pass Game Coordinator Shane Waldron And This Is Great News

Portland boy does good coming back to the PNW to save the Seahawks

Twitter brings the world a lot of stupid things. For every poignantly sharp tweet put forth, there seems to exist dozens of hot takes that function as nothing more than the equivalent of road rage for all to read. Because of that, I’m not convinced that Twitter offers us much good, and I think it can often exacerbate things that might just be modest annoyances into issues that feel like bigger deals than they actually are.

Seahawks Twitter is a very big deal among the Twelves, especially the younger generations. Much of the demographic lives and works in the tech industry, and because of that, we have a healthy dose of young smarties that exist in this unique Twitter bubble. I am not yet active on Twitter because, well, I am incredibly lazy, but I peak on it when it comes to my Seahawks.

In the realm of Seahawks Twitter, I see some well reasoned tweets that come out from those that cover and write about the club, but I also see numerous tweets that read like they were authored by a semi-deranged Jerry Springer guest. Perfect examples of such Seahawk related tweets usually involve firing Pete Carroll and/or trading Russell Wilson (the two foundational cornerstones of this franchise that annually makes the playoffs, like, annually).

Don’t get me wrong, I get why these tweets exist. The Seahawks have not made it back to a championship game in over five seasons now, and they haven’t made it out of the wildcard round twice in three consecutive post seasons. For Seahawk fans that have become very use to winning over the past decade, that has become a clear annoyance.

For many, the feeling is that this team is underachieving based on the talent that exists on the roster. Many see an expensive quarterback that is not being leaned into enough. Some also see him as simply not talented enough to justify his salary, and the team cannot spend in ways to better fill out the roster. Many also see a head coach that, while he is a great culture builder, he is also prone to bad game management and the modern game of offensive football has passed him by.

In my view, these are sorta extreme takes. Russell Wilson is an elite quarterback who had a rough second half of the 2020 when the Seattle offense never adjusted to how defenses were playing it. Pete Carroll is a great football head coach who hasn’t suddenly forgotten how to coach the game. In fact, he called for his offense to adjust mid season, and his offensive coordinator failed to deliver. Brian Schotteheimer was shown the door immediately after their post season concluded, and Seattle put forth a search for a new offensive coach who would marry together what Pete wants with what Russell wants.

Enter former Rams pass game coordinator and Portland Oregon native, Shane Waldron. This in my view is a sure fire home run hit of a hire. Read me now, feel me later. The Seattle Seahawks hit this one out of the park, and they needed to do that. Bravo.

Pete Carroll wants to run the ball more after he saw his offense get way out of balance in 2020 with the pass to run ratio numbers. He also stressed that he wanted to figure out how to get better on third downs and quick passes. For the last four seasons, the Ram offense has been the ideal definition of balance between the run and pass, and they have been highly efficient on third downs.

In an hour long media session after the play loss to the Rams no less, Russell Wilson stated that he and Pete were on the same page about getting back to the run, but he also said that it wasn’t just about running the ball. He wanted the offense to be great on all phases and he expressed again a very strong desire to play with more up tempo. For the last four years, the Rams have also been a very good team at attacking defenses with varied tempo. This fits.

When I wrote my season ending review of this team, and offered thoughts about the future offensive coaching, one thing I mentioned was that I thought it would be wise for Seattle to poach off of the Rams staff or the 49er one because I thought that either offense would ideally fit one Russell Wilson. Just imagine, if you will, what Russell Wilson would look like in that Ram offense. That’s pretty exciting stuff.

By hiring Shane Waldron, I believe Seattle will surely bring a variation of that Ram offense up to the Pacific Northwest. Pete Carroll will his desired balanced attack. It will have its pass game built off of the run by way of play action, and Russell Wilson will likely have the tempo he desires. This move fits what the coach wants and what the quarterback does best.

No longer will the team try to make a short quarterback be a drop back pocket passer with long developing pass patterns. They will ask him to move around, and attack defenses with quicker passes, and at times, tempo.

The Rams offense is ideal for all of this. It only runs a hand full of various pass plays and run plays, but is does it out of countless looks that keep defenses guessing whether it will be run or pass. It also tests all areas of the field. It requires the quarterback to be mobile and accurate on the move, and make smart decisions with the ball. That is Russell Wilson at his best.

After the Pete Carroll and Russell Wilson exit interviews a few weeks back, there was a growing number of extreme speculations with regards to the direction of the club. Folks looked between the lines of what both figure heads were saying, and they started to openly entertain ideas of a divorce brewing. I think the hiring of Waldron can safely put a lot of that to rest now. This is a clear sign that the franchise is very determined to marry together what both figures want, and that’s the right thing to do.

The Seattle Seahawks are not going to trade Russell Wilson anytime soon, and they are not going to fire Pete Carroll. Safer bets are that both could easily retire Seahawks someday much far down the line.

I’m excited about this hire. I’m very excited about the 2021 Seattle Seahawks. I think this will be their Abbey Road season, as I see Pete and Russ getting back to where they once belong.

If you don’t get the reference, maybe you should take a Twitter break, and put on the head phones while you plug the Super Bowl winning 2013 season back in the DVD player. Sit back, eat a pizza, and try to enjoy what a winning franchise looks like.

Today is a very good day.

Go Hawks.

Seahawks Flew Too Close To The Sun: A 2020 Season In Review And Realistic Wish List For 2021

Come together, right now, gosh darn it all.

Icarus was an ancient dude who was gifted with a rare ability to fly with constructed wings made of feathers and wax. He and his dad busted out of an ancient Cretan prison each wearing a pair of these magical wings, but his dad warned him not to fly too close to the sun, for if he did, these wings would melt and burn. But poor Icarus got too caught up in the moment while’st in flight, felt himself rather invincible, and forgot the advice of his risk adverse father. He did, in fact, fly too close to the sun, the wings predictably melted, he fell, and he died. All he had to do was to heed the wisdom of dear old dad.

If I am to pick one mythological tale to use as a metaphor for the 2020 Seattle Seahawks, I don’t know how I could possibly not chose this one. The Seattle Seahawks were committed to letting Russell cook, it became intoxicating, and it all caught up to them, and it become their demise.

It’s taken me about a week to put this piece together. I’ve needed time to process what happened during the season, and think about all the reasons why this team’s post season run ended as abruptly as it did. To write a proper post mortem of these 2020 Seahawks, dust needed to settle a bit, and I think it has.

After a stellar first month of the season in which the Seattle offense put up historic passing numbers, NFL defensive coordinators caught up to it just before mid season, and it was rough watching what eventually unfolded as a result. Seattle inexplicably did not adjust well enough to what became a standard two deep safety look that was routinely deployed against them as a basic means to take away the deep pass. Weirdly, Seattle chose to continue dialing up deep pass patterns against it with outlet patterns that either Russell Wilson did not see, or did not feel comfortable to decisively go to. In result of that, our star quarterback regressed.

Ultimately, they ran into a buzz saw against the best defense in the league in the playoffs, and it was an embarrassing early exit on their home field. An impressive 12-4 regular season record with historic offensive numbers will not remove the sour taste out of the mouths of many Seahawk fans, coaches, and players after that loss.

As a result of all this, offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer lost his job at the end, even though he was the play-caller for an offense had put up record setting franchise numbers. That’s an astonishing fun fact to digest.

So, there it is. That was the 2020 Seattle Seahawks for you, and thus, we are going to see changes to this team during in 2021. How vast the amount of changes, we can only speculate at this point, but there are only two things that I am certain about that won’t change.

Number one is that this team will not fire Pete Carroll. He just signed an extension that keeps him in Seattle through 2025, his team just went 12-4, and the rather remarkable defensive turnaround this his team achieved mid season (to possibly save their season) shows that Carroll is still a master at coaching up that side of the ball. One could argue that with no Paul Allen, Carroll now has more control over the franchise than ever. The safe bet moving forward is that this is his ship, and he will sail it his way probably until he decides to retire. The idea of firing him is pretty futile. Won’t happen.

The other thing is that this team will not do is trade Russell Wilson, at least not this year, and probably not at any point at all, no matter how much some will feel convinced that a trade is inevitable. Beating that drum might be even more futile than the fire the coach drum.

Russell Wilson had a rough stretch of games to close the season, no doubt about it, and it wasn’t all on the coaching, either. During this difficult stretch, there appears to be plenty of tape showing that Brian Schottenheimer schemed outlet receivers for him to check towards that he either didn’t see, or he was just too hesitant to go towards while being hyper protective with the ball. This suggests that Schottenheimer was not solely at fault for his struggles. This also suggests that Russell regressed as a passer in 2020.

Many of the Russell Wilson detractors will gloat some over this, and they will feel vindicated by their skepticism over him through the years. They will espouse the notions that he’s too short and age has diminished his wheels. Many will most definitely yearn for him to be traded, but that will be mostly silly talk, and there are numerous reasons why.

I will not go in depth in this piece to explain all these reasons why trading Russell is highly unlikely. As trade rumors are sure to start brewing, I will write more about it then. I will just say that, for starters, his 2021 salary makes it very cost prohibitive to move him this off-season. The second thing is that, for a mega-trade to happen, it takes two to tango, and with Russell Wilson’s no-trade clause in his contract, it actually takes three to tango.

For John Schneider to move his favorite player, he will have to find a team willing to give him what he feels is fair compensation for a quarterback who is inching into his mid thirties now with each season. If Russ were to try to force a trade, any general manager trying to low ball Seattle for him, you can bet your bottom dollar Schneider would tell them exactly what dark hole they can put their offer up inside. Furthermore, if he does find a team desperate enough to give him what he wants for an older expensive quarterback, if Russell doesn’t like the destination, he can veto it through his no-trade clause.

Finally, if Russ wants out, the truth of the matter is that he just doesn’t hold any power to force his way out. Pete Carroll and John Schneider can just tell him and his agent “your signed through 2023 and we can revisit after then.” What would Russ do? Do you think he would honestly sit out seasons when he knows his window of being in his prime is closely? Russ and his hardball agent don’t have as much power as you think.

Therefore, I think the truth of everything is that it’s going to be best for Russell, and it is going to be best for Pete to find a solid middle ground with each other. If Pete wants to establish the run more, Russ should be cool with that with a practical eye towards regaining his highly efficient form again. It would also be logical for Pete to listen to Russ and concede that more varied tempo on offense, from time to time, helps his quarterback to play more confident, and therefor better. No matter who the next offensive coordinator is, there is room for both of these figure heads to concede some towards the other. This would be best for all sides.

There, I said all that I wanted to say about it for now. Moving forward, I think it is more worth it to focus on what the realistic changes might be in 2021, and to create a wish list off of that. This is what I will focus on in the later portion of this piece.

Before that, I want to quickly revisit the season by breaking it down into the three categories that have become the standard with this blog; the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. So, here we go.

The Good

DK Metcalf took an enormous step forward in his sophomore season in the league, and it feels like he is still just scratching the surface of what he can be as a receiver. It has been such a significant step forward that it feels like he is now perhaps the second best player on offense, and that is saying something when you consider that this offense has Duane Brown at left tackle, and they have Tyler Lockett at the other receiver position. I see greatness for years to come with this guy, and I’m excited about that. The smart move to to buy stock in him as a player now.

The defensive turnaround that this team made mid season was very promising. It’s obvious that the addition of Carlos Dunlap was a huge factor, but I think that a lot of credit has got to go towards Ken Norton Junior and Pete Carroll adjusting the scheme to a more aggressive “bear front” to take advantage of other talents on the roster, such as Poona Ford up front, and Jamal Adams and DJ Reed on the back end. Maybe the biggest factor in this turnaround was the shift of KJ Wright to the strong side (SAM) linebacker and his role in this scheme. This was a defensive front unlike anything Carroll has had in Seattle before, and I think that they are onto something with it. I’m excited to see how far they take it in 2021.

This might have been the best year John Schneider has had as a general manager, and it was awesome news that the team extended his contract to 2027. This year he made the right call during free agency to re-up defensive tackle Jarran Reed, and to put a firm limit on how much to spend on Jadeveon Clowney (Clowney proved injury prone again with the Titans while Reed regained his pass rush form from 2018). Schneider also hit the ball out of the park with the 2020 draft class, as Jordyn Brooks proved to be a dynamic linebacker, Damien Lewis was inspiring at right guard, and fifth round pick Alton Robinson flashed starter potential as an edge rusher. Further more, while his bold trade for Jamal Adams was inspiring, for my money, what really set this year apart from others was when he sent a 7th round pick and a backup center to the Bengals for Carlos Dunlap, and he picked DJ Reed off the waiver wire from San Francisco. Both of those moves were brilliant ones, both players feel like big factors for this team moving forward, and I think Schneider deserves to be GM of the Year for those two maneuvers alone.

Despite what it looked like against the Rams in the playoffs, I thought that this was one of the best offensive lines Seattle had rolled out with in sometime. Schneider, again, needs to be applauded here by letting right tackle Germaine Ifedi walk in free agency and then replacing him with free agent Brandon Shell. Shell and Damien Lewis look like fixtures on the right side together, and Ethan Pocic did a decent job when given the opportunity to finally play center (the position he excelled at in college). I think Seattle is one talented young left guard away from having one of the best lines in the league. You heard it here.

The kicking game was awesome this year. For all weirdos out there that love the kicking game, and kickers, and Seahawks, this was the season for you. An argument could be made the going down the final stretch of the season Jason Meyers and Michael Dickson were deserving of co-MVP honors for this club.

Lastly, circling back to John Schneider again, the trade for Jamal Adams was a home run decision, in my opinion. Adams feels like the heartbeat player for the defense for years to come, and expect this defense to continue to reshape itself around his unique skill set. I think we have already caught glimpses of that in 2020. Trading two firsts and a third round pick for him feels like a no-brainer now. That’s essentially Germaine Ifedi, Rashaad Penny, and Lano Hill for Jamal Adams. I’ll make that deal every single time over.

The Bad

The Let Russ Cook movement died a death mid season and this team’s offense never really recovered from it. Some will blame Russell for it, some Carroll, and probably most will agree to blame former offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer. Personally, I think there’s room to spread the blame around equally to all three.

I would blame Russ and his agent for allegedly putting a gun to the head of the organization last off-season that basically forced them into a throw first mentality that perhaps this offense wasn’t entirely constructed to be. I believe it backfired on both the player and the team, equally. I also believe that if he and his agent, Mark Rodgers, intend to play the same sort of hardball with the club again this off-season, the play of Russ through the final second half of the season has lost them A LOT of leverage. They would be wise to shut it down and just see what unfolds after a 2021 season with a new offensive play-caller. That would be the smart thing to do.

I was also not a fan of Russ deciding to take advantage of the Let Russ Cook thing and trademarking that saying. I think it signaled to the team that he was more concerned with material and statistical gain than he perhaps was at the team doing whatever needed to win games. I think it was a bad look that bit him in the butt, frankly, and if I was a teammate on the fence with him a bit, that move probably pushed me off the fence further. If I were him, I would dump that trademark now.

But I also think Carroll and Schotty deserve every bit as much blame as the quarterback does. After the interceptions started coming in a loss happened in Arizona in which the team should have come out with the win, Carroll was calling for the need to run more, and I don’t believe he was wrong in that. However, what followed was maddening as it all unfolded.

They got back to the basics against San Francisco and it was a nice win for the club, but then they lost to Buffalo and Los Angeles (back to back) because they got away from running and weirdly stayed with a deep passing attack that wasn’t there for the taking. Pete, again, called for more of a running attack, and they then won a nice game against the Cardinals when they ran more and Russ had a good game passing off of it, but then they inexplicably got away from it against the Giants, and lost to Colt McCoy, of all quarterbacks.

Even during the final four games in which they won all of, they never really stayed enough with the run, and they made things more harder for Russ, as they kept with calls to hit deeper passes that were not often available. This offense struggled more than it needed to and it was for all to see.

I think Schotty obviously got canned for continually chasing a deep attack defenses were taking away, but we also have to blame Carroll for not putting his foot down enough when he should have. This is Carroll’s team, and he could see what was happening. He needed to be more firm and he wasn’t. People complain that he meddles too much with the offense. I am willing to argue that he didn’t meddle enough.

Also, if I were to put the 2020 Seattle Seahawks inside a nutshell, I would say that perhaps that nutshell showed us exactly what Russell Wilson’s ceiling is as a player. I still firmly believe that Russell Wilson is a tremendously talented quarterback (perhaps still top five), but I also firmly believe that he is probably a very scheme specific one.

I think in 2020, the Seattle Seahawks got away from a scheme and identity that best suites him as a player. I think he is ideal in a run to set up pass offense. This is what he was in college, and it is what he has excelled at in the pros.

If you put him in a Kyle Shanahan offense, I think that team probably goes to the Super Bowl. I believe that is a safe bet. I think that if you have in an offense that Andy Reid is running with Patrick Mahomes, well, I’m not so sure. As much as I love Russ as a player, I’m not convinced that’s a fit.

If Seattle really wants to get Russell Wilson cooking, I am fully convinced that they need to be more like the 49ers, or even the Rams. Russell Wilson would thrive in either offensive. My hope is that in 2021, Seattle’s offense will more closely resemble the offenses of one of those two division rival teams. That’s my big hope.

The Ugly

All fans saying that Russell Wilson is broken, and Pete Carroll can’t coach. Folks, please..

Quiet, Coyote. Let’s calm down and cool the temperature. Russ is pretty. Pete is pretty. We’re all pretty. Let’s all share some orange slices together.

My Wish List for the 2021 Seattle Seahawks

The 2021 Seattle Seahawk offense resembles something closer to the San Francisco 49er offense or the Los Angeles Ram offense (or the Cleveland Brown offensive, for that matter). Any of those would be a great fit for Russ.

Pete Carroll and Russell Wilson must have a long sit down together to figure out an offense that will make both of them happy. There needs to be a strong and well defined melding of the minds. Both figure heads will need to concede some. I think they will. There is a reason why the team had Russell give an hour long press conference very recently. I believe it is to show that there will be a united effort for the player and coach to come together, and to squash speculation that they are drifting apart. But make no mistake, it needs to happen.

Bring back KJ Wright, John Schneider. Yes, there is word leaking out that he wants to be paid handsomely. Yes, he is older at 31. However, I see nothing in KJ’s game that leads me to believe that he is slowing down, and I think he move to SAM linebacker might have been a big straw the stirred the drink for Seattle’s defense turnaround. Bring him back.

Improving the left guard position is a gigantic must. When healthy, Mike Iupati is a good left guard for the power blocking Pete seems to favor. The huge problem here is him staying healthy and he is only getting older. Presently, Seattle just has no first round pick, and they only have one day two pick in the second round. The second round is generally a sweet spot to take a quality young guard. Seattle found Damien Lewis in the early third round last Spring. I would love to see a repeat of that in 2021.

I want to see Seattle commit to Poona Ford long term. He took a huge step forward as a pass rusher at defensive tackle, and it feels like he is just scratching the surface of his potential as an every down player. I don’t want to see him playing in another uniform and every down defensive tackles are too rare. Lock him in long term, Schneider. Do this.

Find Russell Wilson another dynamic target beyond DK Metcalf and Tyler Lockett. This could mean another wide receiver or it could be a tight end. It’s going to be a challenge to find this with a shrinking cap, and presently no first or third round pick in this year’s draft, but I would argue that perhaps it is best for Russ, as a quarterback, to have another high end outlet. Part of the issue with Russ, I think, is trusting receivers. I believe he needs that trust to be more decisive. Someone either has to emerge from this roster, or they need to go get one through either draft, free agency, or trade. I would like to see them aggressive here.

Don’t be afraid to be bold again with trades. With limited draft capital in 2021, John is going to have to work some magic again. He could do this a few ways. He could continue the pattern of trading down in the draft to collect more mid round picks that he thinks might develop into starters down the line. Another thing he could do is look at his own roster, and see what he has that could be dealt if he feels like he has quality depth behind that player. As we all know, this team has not advanced deep into the playoffs in years. There should be no sacred cows if the right deal is there. Be bold if it becomes available.

Rework the Carlos Dunlaps deal so he is here for the next two or three years. Judging from what I saw in his 2020, this cat doesn’t look like he’s slowing down as an edge rusher. He is going to have a big hit against the team’s 2021 cap, but I would consider eating that because I believe that his presence on the defensive line opens up opportunities for other to succeed. We could all see how Jarran Reed’s productive shot up once Dunlap was rushing with him. It was glaringly obvious. If I am Schneider, I am working with Dunlap’s agent to extend him to a deal that shrinks his 2021 costs down a bit, and I am adding maybe two more years on the deal. That gives the player security, and the team as they try to develop younger talent such as Alton Robinson and Darrell Taylor. It’s an easy win winner.

Be care when considering big contract extensions to Chris Carson and Shaquill Griffin. As much as we might enjoy them as players, is either worthy of a big contract? Is Griffin a true lock down corner? Can Carson, for as dynamic of a back as he can be as a runner, honestly be trusted to stay healthy enough? I would love to see both players back in 2021. I just don’t want to see big contracts given to either players that, after four years, are still question marks. I’d rather punt, and take chances on players on the roster and what they might find in the draft.

Finally, if I have one other big wish for 2021, it is that I will finally see my beloved Seattle Seahawks play a football game wearing the iconic team uniforms from the 1980’s. That look was dope, and yes I am a middle aged man who just used the word “dope” in a sentence.

My Predictions for 2021

I think Pete Carroll and Russell Wilson will come together enough for the team to select a new offensive play-caller that both will be happy with. I think there is way too much knee jerk reactions from a lot of folks looking at this situation. I don’t believe that Carroll just wants to run it as much as possible, and I don’t believe that Russell will be adverse to the team running more. I think Carroll wants more committed run but he also wants a sharper passing attack that he can lean into when needed. I like Russ wants that same flexibility. Bottom line is both want this team to win and if running more helps that, I think Russ will be cool with that. There is a reason why the team chose to make Russ available for that long press conference. I believe that reason is to show fans unity between the coach and player. I think both individuals know what is at stake with that, and there will be a mutual willingness for that. Color me not worried.

I don’t know who the next coordinator will be, but if I had to guess, I think Pep Hamilton would be a solid bet. He’s worked with Andrew Luck in the past, and he did wonders with Justin Herbert down in San Diego as the quarterback coach there most recently. He also has strong ties to John Harbaugh who I think Carroll honestly admires a lot as a coach. I think looking at Hamilton, I see an established coach who will be good for Russ, and he will know what Pete is looking for in a run to set up pass offense. I also think Pete and Russ would each get something out of Pep that they would like. Pete would get his classic pro-style offense, and Russ would get a really good quarterback coach as his play-caller. I think also, Pep is a type of coach who perhaps won’t be ambitious for a head coaching gig and that will play big with Carroll. It just feels very destined to happen. We shall see soon enough.

I think that the defense takes a big jump forward in 2021. I think Jamal Adams will have a stronger and more defined roll that will stir the whole drink, and that will make others play even better. I think Poona Ford establishes himself even more as an interior pass rusher. I also think Jordyn Brooks takes a big step forward at linebacker, and so will Alton Robinson and Darrell Taylor as edge rushers. I’m not sure if the team brings back KJ Wright or Shaquill Griffin, but I am confident that Carlos Dunlap and DJ Reed will continue to be big factors for this club. I like A LOT of the pieces on this side of the ball, and I really like a lot of the younger pieces to step forward in bigger ways.

I think Russell Wilson will have a solid bounce back year in 2021. I think there will be a stronger offensive identity, who that they can all hang their hats on, and I think Russ is going to show the world again just how efficient of a passer he is when defenses have to play him more honestly. His passing yards may very well go down, but I think he touchdown passes will remain high, and best of all, his interceptions will be down once again. This will be the big story-line for 2021.

The NFC West will be a dogfight division again, but I expect that Seattle will find another way to win it. Prognosticators annually find every reason they can to predict a Seattle collapse at the start of every season, and I expect it to be no different this year. They never learn, and it’s simple folks, the Seahawks have an hall of fame head coach, and they have one of the very best quarterbacks on the planet. They also have one of the sharpest general managers alive who consistently finds talent hidden under rocks. That’s as good of a recipe for winning as any out there. I think the 49ers will bounce back, but I am not convinced the Cardinals take the next step, and I think the Rams are going to find themselves in a pickle because they are stuck with Jared Goff as their quarterback. Seahawks will win this division, I don’t know how, but I just know they will gut out a way. Safe bet.

Once Seattle gets into the playoffs, it get murkier for me. I think they will likely get past the first round, but I’m not convinced that they play in any championship game. Too much recent history suggests that they won’t. Much like a Russell Wilson trade, I’ll believe it when I see it. I also think not getting back to any NFC championship will only further stoke the Fire Pete flames, and the Russell trade talk speculation, and I will be right back at square one, right around this time next year in 2022. I will be writing yet again how this team will not fire Pete, nor they will trade Russell.

I see all of these as very safe bets to make.

Stay well, everyone. Stay safe out there in all these crazy times.

Go Hawks!

Seahawks Lose To The Rams In The Wildcard And I Don’t Care

Neener neerer.. whatever.

Let’s face it. It was a weird week last week. In fact, it had gotten so weird on Wednesday that I actually found myself substantially missing 2020.

Weird isn’t even that right adjective to use for it. Disturbing is significantly more appropriate. Any person who values American democracy should be deeply disturbed right now. I value democracy, and I am, to my core, deeply disturbed, and have remained so since Wednesday afternoon last week.

So when kick off happened at 1:40 on Saturday, I found myself sort of caring less about this game. Like, I could take or leave a win. Not that I didn’t want the win, or wasn’t rooting for the win. Just, kinda.. yeah.. whatever.

The Seahawks sucked in this one. The defense played okay for spells, but couldn’t hold it together long enough. The Seahawks sucked, and the Rams simply sucked less. This, in a nutshell, was the game.

I apologize if the tone of this piece has a sore loser vibe. That’s not my intention. Had Seattle won this game, and even won handsomely, I was prepared to write in a similar fashion. What happened in this past week was a tipping point for me as an American, and I simply cannot get past it. I don’t know how, and I’m not sure that I am supposed to.

So, Seattle lost, and it was a crummy end to the season that was, for the most part, enjoyable. At least I found it enjoyable even though there is a growing trend of fans and maybe a few beat writers who appear to believe (seemingly very strongly now) that Pete Carroll can’t coach and Russell Wilson is broken as a franchise quarterback. I respectfully disagree, and I believe that the issues that plagued this offense over the past several games will become resolved during the off-season. Pete Carroll is not stupid and lost as a coach. Russell Wilson isn’t either as a quarterback.

Also, I am appreciative towards all the players and coaches that, to a degree, risked their safety to gather to play a professional sport during a massive pandemic that has now killed nearly 400,000 American lives. Their decisions to do that has given me a most welcome distraction to all that has been incredibly difficult to deal with in this past year. I am grateful for all that.

Here are my notes about the game.

The Good

I generally liked the way the defense played. I thought the pass rush was good. I thought young players like Poona Ford, LJ Collier, and Alton Robinson had some positive impacts up front. I liked how the linebackers and defensive backs were hitting and covering for stretches. It was unfortunate that they weren’t supported much by the offense and as the game wore on, the Rams had success against them and were able to push them around.

I loved the kick return the DJ Reed had to start the second half.

I loved the improvised scramble play the Russell Wilson had that led to a 51 yard touchdown pass to DK Metcalf that kept Seattle in it for a while. I could have stood to have seen more scramble drills in this one, frankly.

I like that whenever Seattle plays the Rams, Jarran Reed tends to grab a couple sacks a game, as he did it again in this one.

I thought Chris Carson had some good hard runs, and wished that he had gotten more.

The Bad

What can I possibly say about the offense that hasn’t been said a hundred times all over social media, and with those the cover the team?

It was so bad that I don’t even know where to start, anyways. I will just repeat on this blog what I said to a distressed friend on Facebook.

It’s hard to win a ball game against a dominant defense when you start the game with a 1st and 25 due to back to back penalties.

It’s hard to win a game when you drop multiple passes.

It is hard to win the game when you force passes into difficult coverage.

It’s hard to win a game when you throw a pick six.

It’s hard to win a game when you have a short quarterback pocket pass against a gigantic athletic pass rush and tight coverage.

It’s hard to win by not establishing the run and building off of it like what the Ram offense was eventually able to do against Seattle’s defense.

Ultimately, it is hard to win a game when you do not take advantage of what your best players do best, and a perfect example of that is Russell Wilson as the threat to run and pass.

This was a hard game for Seattle to win because they had all of these things working against them. It will haunt them through the off-season.

My hope is that it will lead to a more defined offensive identity that they can rely on in 2021 because it seemed like they were playing a big portion of this season without any identity. That is the one narrative out there that I fully agree with.

The Ugly

On Wednesday, January 6th, a large ground of paranoid insurrectionists stormed the United States Capital Building. They overtook a severely undermanned police force, and they threatened the lives of a US Congress as they were working to certify the November general election. It felt like a coup attempt to overtake the US government, frankly. That isn’t hyperbole. Never in my life would I imagine that ever being a thing. Yet, here we are.

The Seahawks lost. So what?

Football is a privilege that I have been able to enjoy all of my life. Democracy is a significantly greater privilege. That is what last Wednesday proved to me.

It’s not the end of the world if your football team loses and does not play well. Losing a long standing democracy is significantly worse. Last Wednesday, our democracy was threatened in a way it had never been since the War of 1812. Make no mistake about that.

It has had a carryover effect that effected my ability to enjoy my favorite team playing a playoff game that I should otherwise enjoy, and I think it will be something that I will have a difficult tune shaking off for a while. So, I guess maybe Tom Brady, or even the Rams now should just go win the Super Bowl because I frankly won’t care. Whatever. It doesn’t matter.

What matters if for Americans to collectively look at themselves in the mirror and ask themselves what they have personally done to contribute to our collective getting this this place that we are now in. It starts with each of us as individuals. It must.

This isn’t even a Republican versus Democrat thing for me right now. I am neither, and have proudly stayed a independent voter since I registered as a teen. Outside of being a diehard Seahawk fan, I fundamentally do not believe in tribalism, and what has been going in over the last several years in this nation is exactly why. Little good comes from that mentality.

No good came out of it last Wednesday. We have go to change.

Moving Forward

Hopefully, our country will start to finally come together. Hopefully, Wednesday last week was the rock bottom that we needed for that to begin to happen. Hopefully, we are not headed towards a needless second civil war.

I don’t believe we are, but for God’s sake, do we ever have a bunch of work to do. We must figure out a way to come together.

As for the Seattle Seahawks, I like them to spend the off-season sorting out their offense, and building more on defense. They have nice young pieces on both sides of the ball and they have top level talented veteran leadership.

Mainly, I like for Pete Carroll and Russell Wilson to come together during the off-season with a united vision of their offense and a fully bought-in commitment to that vision. I like for Seattle to continue building on it’s young pass rush, and having a defense that will compliment its offense. That compliment is mainly having a defense that will more reliably be able to protect leads.

I think they will be fine in 2021. That is the safe bet, but I would like to see them be better than fine. I want to see them fully realized. Just like I want to see this country of our realized.

Go Hawks, and God bless America.

Thank you for reading this blog.

Battle For Helm’s Deep: A Seahawks Vs Rams Wildcard Playoff Preview

Be Water, Legolas

And so it begins..

The 2020 Seattle Seahawks have returned to the playoffs, and this time around as the NFC West Division Champions. They will be defending the cold wet turf Lumen Field from the dreaded Los Angeles Rams, a team that certain to be fueled by the deep thirst of revenge.

Any Twelve nervous about this match up cannot be blamed for it. The Rams give any sensible mind a cause for concern, and they are largely owned this series for the last four years.

Aaron Donald simply is not human. No way. This dude is a 6-1 285 pound Orc Berserker that does things to offensive guards that no other being in a football uniform can do in terms of speed, power, and skill, and he does it was ease. He was also captured on film after the Rams defeated the Cardinals smiling into the camera with glee saying that playing Seattle again was exactly what his team wanted.

Aaron Donald wants to eat Russell Wilson, and he will be aided by a shutdown corner in Jalen Ramsey who will be determined to take away Russell’s favorite weapon in DK Metcalf. Their defense will present another menacing challenge for Seattle. Bank on it. Embrace it.

But here is the rub. Russell Wilson is not human either. He is a magical nimble forest creature who can out maneuver his foes with fleet feet and can send footballs to his receivers with arrow like precision whenever on the run, and the game is on the line. Once you think you have him had, he can start turning on that magical juice at any time, and if he gets hot, you’re in trouble, no matter how good your defense is.

This is essentially going to be the crux of this battle for Helm’s Deep. Does Aaron Donald and company feast on Russell Wilson, or does Russell Wilson have it within himself again to beat another top level defense with his arm and legs as the game progresses?

Seahawks beat the Rams by..

Not cowering to Donald and his orc army of defenders. Offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer must devise a plan that will use Donald’s aggression against him. Like Bruce Lee, they must be water, my friends, on offense.

When Donald is in pass rush mode, perhaps that is the time to run right at him with a large offensive line that will have all five of its starters back for the first time in quite sometime. Donald is a terror when it is third and long, but you if can get on him and drive block him, he can be pushed around. It might be wise for Seattle to run at Ramsey as well and force him to be a run defender. It is also likely that the Rams will be thinking that Seattle will attack often with short passes, especially with the game Tyler Lockett just had against the 49ers. With a healthy offensive line, and a healthy set of running backs, there could be opportunities with the ground game against the looks the Ram defenders will be giving. Staying with the run might be the wise move in this match.

But staying with the run does not mean abandoning the pass game for it. It means using the run to set up the pass a bit more, and that means getting Russell Wilson moving. This is the single biggest must for Seattle, in my opinion. Last time around a couple weeks ago, Schottenheimer had Russ pocket passing often against this club, and it was a struggle. When the game took off for Seattle was when Russell Wilson took off with his feet outside the pocket and he was able to make plays with his arm and legs there. Play action and boot legs make Wilson tougher to defend than defending him from the pocket, especially when there is an effective run game going. It forces the defense to use a spy on him, and while that might limit his ability to run for bigger gains, it leaves a hole open in the defense. In short, another way to use Ram aggression against them is to have the defenders thinking about Russell Wilson on the move. Play action, bootlegs, zone read could all factor in here.

On the flip side, if Seattle stays true to who they are on defense and continues to defend the edges against the run, and not be fooled by the motions the Ram offense loves to use, the Rams are going to have another hard time against the squad. The Rams will be healthier at running back with Cam Akers back this time around. He’s a really good back for them, and will be a factor. Another difference in this game could be with Rams starting John Wolford at quarterback over Jared Goff, if Goff is not recovered enough from his thumb injury. Wolford can tuck the ball and run, and that is a dimension that Seattle would have to be ready for.

Discipline will be the key for the Seattle defenders, as it always is against these Rams. If Seattle cannot play with Jamal Adams at safety and Jarran Reed at defensive tackle, it is up to the replacements to carry on. I really like what Seattle still has inside with Poona Ford at defensive tackle, and LJ Collier as an interior pass rusher, and I like what Ryan Neal has done in the past as a replacement to Adams. Even without Adams and Reed, Seattle could very well be fine here.

Seahawks lose to the Rams by..

Getting out of their assignments on defense and allowing McVay’s offense to take advantage. If Wolford is playing, McVay might try to use his legs as an added dimension for Seattle defenders to think about. This could test Seattle’s discipline. Seattle should be ready for this, but if they aren’t, that could be trouble.

Seattle can’t find enough ways to run the ball, the Rams figure out ways to limit Russell from making plays outside the pocket, and this all leads to a one dimensional offense that will be limited against a top level Ram defense. Ways this could happen could be penalties on run and pass plays that lead to third and longs. Seattle must play a relatively clean game against this defense. They cannot be plagued by false starts and holds. If they are, it could be an especially ugly affair, and a painfully early playoff exit.

My Prediction

Pain. This game will be another heavy weight slug fest, but the Seahawks will prevail, winning it, 23-17.

The Rams will get pressure on Russell Wilson and it will probably happen early and often for a while, but as the game wears on, Wilson will find ways to beat the Ram defenders. Conversely, I think the Rams will try to roll out with Jared Goff, but will end up with Wolford playing, and that might spark their offense a bit more, but it will likely be a little too little too late.

I think Jamal Adams will gut out and play with gimpy shoulders, and Jarran Reed will tough it out as well. There might be mixed results in this, but I feel like at least one of these two guys will make a key play or two as the game progresses.

I have a sneaking suspicion that rookie linebacker Jordyn Brooks is going to have another big game, and I think Chris Carson and Carlos Hyde will be big time factors on offense to help open things up for Wilson with their hard charging running. I also think DK Metcalf will have a bigger game in this one this time around.. just a vibe I’m feeling.

Make no mistake, though, it won’t always be pretty, but Russell Wilson and company will prevail at Helm’s Deep. The good guys win this one.

Go Hawks.

Seahawks Sweep 49ers, Finish 12-4, And Will Host The Rams in Playoffs.. Yay!

Mama said knock out, Huh.

Nope, this here season ending game against the 49ers wasn’t pretty. But then again, how much can we depend as Twelves for the Seahawks to play pretty football for four quarters under the current construction of this team?

Leading into this match, I felt that this game would likely feel like a struggle at times, and I wasn’t wrong about that. The 49ers proved to be an impressive tough out for Seattle, more so that I even envisioned. They are a proud club, and they are extremely well coached on both sides of the ball.

In fact, had it not been for an endless list of injuries to key starters, they very much could have been the class of the NFC West yet again in 2020. But that is football, and injuries are very much a part of the game. It’s been impressive to see that team fight its way through a difficult season. A tip of the hat must go towards Kyle Shanahan and his ability to coach a team up. He’s really good, and they reflect that.

That said, it felt like the Seattle Seahawks were often fighting themselves a bit in this one, offensively. In fact, for three quarters this game felt eerily similar to the game they played against the Giants over a month ago and lost. Seattle seemed to be stubborn with pocket passing in the third quarter when the 49ers were bring a lot of pressure and they weren’t doing anything to counter, and they weren’t staying with the run to offset the pass rush.

It was only when the 49ers went up 16-6 at the start of the fourth quarter that Seattle started to move Russell Wilson outside the pocket that they were able to get out of their rut. Once that happened, this game started feeling like we were finally about to see some quality football with the offense. It should have started much sooner, in my opinion.

With this game won, I firmly believe that, if Seattle is going to do any damage in the playoffs, two things need to happen with the offense. Brian Schottenheimer needs to stay committed to mixing in the run with the pass is the first thing. The second thing is that they must get Russell Wilson factoring into the pass game more from outside the pocket where he is most dangerous. If they do this, Seattle can do damage against any club they face.

Here are my notes about this season finale against San Francisco.

The Good

The Seahawk defense continued to carry the team and the played well enough for this club to win. Yes, there were plays and yards given up as the game went on, but they also made plays, and they made plays when it mattered most without key defenders in Jamal Adams and Jarran Reed at the end. The rise of this defense continues to be the bright spot on this club.

Russell Wilson had a horrid third quarter trying to pocket pass against an aggressive 49er front that was sending the house. I don’t think this was all on Russ. He wasn’t helped by any attempt of a run game. Once they adjusted in the fourth quarter, and got him moving, he turned into an unstoppable force. Because of that, he is the player of the game for me. When they needed it most, he gashed the 49ers with his legs and his arm. That fourth quarter performance was vintage Russell Wilson.

Other impressive individual efforts were the hard running from Chris Carson (and Alex Collins at the end), the continuous brilliant play of KJ Wright at SAM linebacker, and the marvelous game from Tyler Lockett who was catching everything.

On the defensive line, I thought it was a good collective effort from the group bringing pressure and Benson Mayowa, in particular, gave an inspired effort. Also loved the play of Poona Ford and Rasheem Green.

Rookie linebacker Jordyn Brooks is really good.

The Bad

Brian Schottenheimer getting away from the run in the third quarter did not help this offense against that aggressive 49er front. Having Russell Wilson pocket pass against that was hard to watch. If Seattle would have lost, this probably would have been a big talking point all week. Fortunately, he adjusted. Maybe is was a rope a dope thing. I dunno. Go Hawks.

Jarran Reed and Jamal Adams getting injured heading into the playoffs is not ideal. Hopefully, Adams will play in the wildcard round.

The Ugly

All the 49er players jacked up and in the face of Seattle players whenever there where big hits, and plays. The 49ers hate Seattle with an intense passion. You can feel it bounce off the television. In a way, it’s impressive, but as a Seahawk fan it’s also gross. Like, really gross. Yuck.

Seriously. I did a lot of flipping off of 49er defenders and a few offensive players in this one. Go suck on a gas piper, losers! Enjoy being owned by Seattle once again, ya butt wipers!

I never said I was mature.

Moving Forward

Bring on the Rams. I’m stoked. I don’t care if the Rams have given Seattle fits over the years. Bring them on.

It was a big cherry on the top of this season to end it by sweeping the 49ers. A playoff victory over the Rams would be a prime rib sandwich.

I love a juicy prime rib sandwich. I’m ready for that.

Go Hawks!