Thoughts on Jarran Reed’s Six Game Suspension Issued Today

Well, as an old acting professor of mine used to say, “you can’t teach timing.” On the day that I blogged Jarran Reed as my third most important player on the team, the league issues this suspension for player misconduct during a 2017 incident that alleged assault to which Reed was never arrested or charged. I feel weird.

Obviously, as a Seattle Seahawks fan, this sucks, but I don’t think this is in any way the end to their season. For one, this guy is only out six games, and will play in ten, barring injury. Secondly, this is a team that still has Russell Wilson, Bobby Wagner, and they have some interesting young talent on the defensive line that must step forward. Defensive tackle Poona Ford was in a good position to start before the suspension. He is in a great position now. I like the future of this guy.

I wouldn’t worry too much about the loss of Reed’s inside pass rush. I think Seattle has interesting young candidates in LJ Collier and Rasheem Green who are now going to get a lot of looks at pass rushing tackle. What I think is concerning is the lack of early down run stopping help there. Don’t be surprised if the team add a veteran free agent or even trades for a player. Corey Liuget is veteran still available and can provide both run stopping and pass rush inside.

I think now we might know why the team has been a bit on the slow side extending Reed. I’m sure they were waiting to see how the league was going to decide. I don’t know how this suspension helps or hurts his chances of reaching a new deal with Seattle. It might have made him more affordable. Or they simply might choose to go in an altogether different direction. We shall see.

I think the league has a serious issue with how it suspends players not charged with a crime. They are wildly inconsistent. How the league chose to not suspend Kansas City receiver Tyreek Hill for alleged DV of a child and ends up suspending Reed of an alleged assault on an adult women is beyond me. They might have good reasons in both cases, but the secrecy involved leaves a bad taste in the mouth of fans and is becoming a massive turn off. In my opinion, the league must fix this. Just have a policy and make it consistent across the board.

Go Hawks.

 

 

Twenty Reasons Why the 2019 Seattle Seahawks Will Make the Playoffs: Reason 3; Jarran Reed

The 2019 Seattle Seahawks are a playoff team that are going to physically make other teams pay for playing them four quarters of the american football. Ouchy. While other teams will flash with their wide open passing attacks, Seattle will pound you, and they bruise you both sides of the ball, and this guy is going to be a big time leader in that.

Defensive tackle Jarran Reed

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Why is Jarran Reed going to be a big time bruiser in Seattle?

Yeah, I’ve been waiting patiently to write about this one. Mm. You bet.

Because, at his very best, that’s what’s Jarran Reed do, Boss. Coming out of Alabama in 2016, local Seattle NFL draft guru Rob Rang labeled Reed the best pure defensive tackle in a defensive tackle heavy draft. He was thought to be a potential top 15 pick in that class, but ultimately fell to Seattle in the mid second round due to the lack of pass rushing stats for the national champs. Well, last year Big Number 90 collected 10.5 sacks and erased any doubts if he can be a pass rusher in this league. Clearly, the dude is a pass rusher, a run stopper, and clearly, this boy gonna to get paid.

My hope is that Seattle will pony up and keep him in the 206 for at least another four years because defensive tackles that can pass rush and stop the run are really difficult commodities to find, and by all accounts Reed looks like a new core leader on this team. Plus, for the way Pete Carroll gushes about this guy, it seems like there is a whole lot of better football ahead of him, and he’s just getting started. Clearly, the team will want to retain him, but I also think it is important to keep in mind that last year at this time, they were probably looking to sincerely extend pass rushing defensive end Frank Clark as well, and we know how that worked out.

So, because of how things went down with the team and Clark, I’m not sure how this will work out with Reed on an extension, but there is one thing I can be absolutely certain on; if this team does not reach an extension with this guy during training camp, he is going to roll into the 2019 playing with his hair on fire, and that will not be a good thing for guards, centers, running back, and quarterbacks. That potential reality is the one reason why I believe that management might choose to hold off on extending him prior to the regular season. That is not to say they don’t reach a deal in December, though, or after the reason.

If no deal is reached, and he has the year that I expect him to have, I would certainly expect the team to franchise tag him just like they did Clark. My only hope in that is that the franchise tag will eventually lead to an extension, and not a trade because like I previously stated, defensive tackles that are pass rushers and run stoppers are really rare in this league, and they are just too valuable to part ways with, in my opinion.

I love Jarran Reed. I love defensive tackles. My personal favorite position by far. They’re the Marines, the Devil Dogs, the Dothraki, the guys you send in first that establish your whole defense.  You can never have enough of qaulity defensive tackles on your team, especially if your defense is any variation of a 4-3, and with this guy, Seattle has a player who is probably going to be a special one for a long time. Personally, I say pay the man.

Love Jarran. Love his attitude. I love the fact he is a tackling machine inside, wants to put a little extra pepper in his tackling sauce, and he’s relentless. Last season, he grew into my favorite player not named Russell Wilson. The only thing I wanted for Christmas was a Jarran Reed jersey, and I can’t wait to sport it around this Fall.

I think Pete Carroll loves this guy to, and I suspect he will remain in Seattle a long time making offensive guards’ lives miserable on Sundays in the Fall. That’s just my hopeful hunch.

He’s all ball, he’s pure defensive tackle, and outside of Russell Wilson, and Bobby Wagner, he is absolutely the one guy on this team that I do not let get away if I am running the show. Nope, I’m keeping him around.

He is going to be a fun player to watch this year. I can not wait.

Go Hawks.

 

 

Twenty Reasons Why the 2019 Seattle Seahawks Will Make the Playoffs. Reason 4; Tyler Lockett

The 2019 Seattle Seahawks are a playoff team. I think they can win the NFC West Division, and I think they might be a Super Bowl contender. Why the boldness of my claims? Because they got ballers, guys that can flat out ball, and this guy is one of them.

Wide Receiver Tyler Lockett.

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Why is Tyler Lockett a baller?

Because he is a football player, and as legendary Seattle Seahawks Head Coach Chuck Knox used to say, “football players make football plays.” Well, Tyler Lockett has a knack for making the spectacular football play. Whether it is elevating his 5-10 180 pound up in the air to snag a deep pass down the sideline against tight coverage, or running with the ball on a jet sweep play, or taking a punt return 60 yards for a score, Tyler Lockett is fully capable of making a big football play in numerous ways, and with no more Doug Baldwin on the team, expect this guy to be even more of a focus.

Some people worry that with no Baldwin, Lockett’s play might drop off. It’s quite understandable, but I am not really one of them. For one, he has an incredible connection with quarterback Russell Wilson (an insanely perfect 158.3 passing rating in 2018 when Wilson threw to him), he knows how to improvise with him when needed, and vibes with him personality wise. Seattle will further scheme him open. In fact, I would expect Lockett to pick up much of Baldwin’s slot duties, as that was kind of viewed as his natural position coming out of college. Another thing is that, with the presence of DK Metcalf on the field, defenses are most likely going to have to be concerned with his unique blend of size and speed, and this, ideally, is probably going to further open up opportunities for Lockett underneath to play catch and run.

But let’s talk about Lockett the player. This dude is a baller, and was a rare immediate impact player for the team as a rookie in 2015.  He has never not been a factor for this team as both a returner and receiver, and has been an all purpose yards leader in the NFL for a few years now. He can play outside and in, all three receivers spots. There is nothing to not like about his overall game.

In fact, like a lot of other past Seattle receivers, if he was playing in a bigger market, he would probably be talked about a whole heck of lot more. Truth. Last year, the NFL pundits were talking about how Seattle had Doug Baldwin, and nobody else. This year they will surely talk about how they have Lockett and nobody else. It’s a vicious cycle inflicted on the team and Twelves, but screw them. We love our pedestrian receivers because they are ballers.

Someday maybe folks that cover the league will wake up and finally realize that, despite being a team that loves to run the ball, Seattle consistently produces quality receivers. They just do, and Tyler Lockett is their latest greatest, and I suspect that 2019 might be the year he finally gets to the Pro Bowl as one, and not a returner like he has in years past.

Tyler is a baller. He’s a football player. He makes football plays, and I think we are going to see a lot of them this year. A lot. I can not wait.

Go Hawks.

Twenty Reasons Why the 2019 Seattle Seahawks Will Make the Playoffs: Reason 5. Duane Brown.

The 2019 Seattle Seahawks will be a playoff team. I just know it. You know how I know it? Easy. In the former Super Bowl winning Dallas Cowboy head coach Jimmy Johnson’s model for a winning formula, a championship level team must have an answer at these for spots; quarterback, cornerback, pass rusher, and left tackle. Those are the four cornerstone pieces according to Jimmy, and Seattle definitely has a good one of them with this guy.

Left tackle Duane Brown.

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Why is Brown going to make a big impact for the 2019 Seahawks?

Did you not read that opening paragraph? He’s a Jimmy Johnson cornerstone player, and a pro bowl one at that. Seattle has not been this strong at this position since Walter Jones well over a decade ago, and at 33 years of age, he is still very much in his prime, and if truth be told, he is probably the alpha dog of this offense, if not the entire team. That is going to help this team big time, and allow me to explain.

When wide receiver Doug Baldwin suddenly retired last Spring, it was fairly panic inducing for many Twelves, understandably, including yours truly. Even though he had a down statistical year due to injuries, when healthy he was still impactful, but I think his impact went well beyond his play.

Baldwin was Angry Doug. He would ride players when he felt he needed to at critical times, including the beloved franchise quarterback. I think some panic with the Twelves probably lands pretty squarely in this one aspect: without Angry Doug, who is going to be that critical voice when the offense isn’t playing well?

I think it’s pretty obviously going to be Brown. He was the alpha of the Houston Texans offense before he was traded to Seattle, and in the season and a half of play that I’ve seen from him in this town, I have, on more than one occasion, noticed him chirping a bit to Russell Wilson when maybe the quarterback took a sack he shouldn’t have, or let the play go on longer than it should have before getting the ball out. I’ve also noticed him being a calming force on the line for younger players, such as Germiane Ifedi, when maybe they get a little too caught up in the moment.

These are things a true alpha does, and some alphas are so alpha that they don’t really need to do or say that much, but when you do, you can not deny their awesome alpha-ness, and you listen. You just do it. You have to.

Duane Brown is that type of awesome alpha. When you look at him, as his big, solid doorframe of a body steps into the room, with his oozing confidence and cool intelligence, he kind of makes you feel all warm and mushy. Like you just want to bask in his awesomeness. You just subconsciously think to yourself “yeah, that guy’s pretty cool. I could hang with him. If my significant other thinks he’s hot, I’m cool with it.”

Leadership is a word that constantly gets said about him, and players naturally respect him. He is very much a part of the new nucleus of this team, and as left tackles can play longer in this league than other positions, he could easily be here another three or four years. So get used to every awesome fiber of this alpha dog.

And get used to an offensive line that is now a strength of the team as opposed to a painful blemish. This line has a chance to be one of the best in the league this year, and it all starts with this one awesome player paid handsomely to protect the beloved franchise quarterback.

Sleep easy knowing Duane Brown is on your team, and everything will be okay. He’s that kind of awesome.

Go Hawks.

Twenty Reasons Why the 2019 Seattle Seahawks Will Make the Playoffs: Reason 6; Shaquill Griffin

The 2019 Seattle Seahawks are a playoff team. They are actually probably a bit more than that, I think. The Los Angeles Rams should be nervous. They won’t be because they’re too business soaking up La La Land, but they should be. Oh, yes. They should be.  The Seattle Seahawks are going to be back with a vengeance, and no player on this team is looking forward to redeeming himself more that this guy.

Cornerback Shaquill Griffin

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Why is Griffin poised to be an impact player this season?

Because last year he suffered a bit of a sophomore slump, and this guy is too talented and dedicated to not bounce back from it. Athletically, he is probably the most naturally gifted corner Pete Carroll and John Schneider have drafted during their tenure in Seattle together. Griffin has blazing 4.3 speed and is an incredibly athletic tester. He has all the physical traits in this league to be a top level cornerback. People have talked a lot about how his game slipped in 2018 from his promising 2017 season. I have a few thoughts on this.

One thought is that he not only switched positions on the field from right corner to left corner, but he was also tasked the job of replacing a living legend in Richard Sherman. This is almost like Sammie Hagar having to replace David Lee Roth as the lead singer of Van Halen. Hagar was a great rock and roll singer on his own, but he was not Roth, and the band never felt the same, and fans knew it. So, it stands to reason that some fans are destined to forever compare Griffin with Sherman, and I think that is a bit of a shame because Griffin is a good player. In my opinion, it’s a bit of a stretch to say he was awful last year. I think it’s more accurate to say that his play slipped noticably down the stretch.

I think it’s also important to remind fans that for the first month of the season his play was actually pretty darn good. Both of his two interceptions for the season were picked up in one really good game against the Chicago Bears when he also had three pass defenses. That was when Seattle’s defense still had Earl Thomas. During that game, it felt like perhaps Seattle truly had made the right decision moving on from Sherman to Griffin. Two games later Seattle lost Earl Thomas for the rest of the season, and let’s be honest, the whole defensive backfield was a bit hit and miss the rest of the way, and that is saying it nicely.

In his one Spring mini camp press conference, Griffin explained that his play fell off in part because he got caught up on thinking he had to make a big play instead of simply doing his job. I think that this is actually a pretty honest self scouting report. He was likely  pressured with not only having to replace an icon, but he was also pressured by not being supported by an all world free safety anymore, as well. When interceptions weren’t coming for the defense, it was perfectly natural to feel the pressure of having to make a play.

Carroll always preaches to do your job and don’t get caught up in another player’s job. That can be easier said than done, but this defense truly demands that. It will let you have the shallow plays, but it can not allow explosive plays down the field. When Sherman was still in his last couple years Seattle, his INTs went way down and he wasn’t really making Sports Center highlights any longer. Quarterbacks also weren’t throwing his way a ton. He did his job.

But let’s pause for a moment, and realize who Richard Sherman was in Seattle. He was a tall, lanky, not incredibly athletic, mid round pick of a corner who was also a former college receiver from a pro style offense at Stanford. He understood route trees, and offensive play-books, and because of that, he had incredible anticipation to make plays on the ball. He also came into Seattle with a massive chip on his shoulder, and had to fight tooth and nail for a roster spot as a rookie. That literally built his brand.

Griffin, on the other had, was drafted much higher, and was immediately handed a starting spot as a rookie. So in short, it’s pretty unfair to compare Griffin to Sherman. They are two really different dudes, truly, and as anyone who raises a child can attest, folks take leaps differently at different times. This will be his third year. Last year was Jarran Reed’s third year, and we saw how things clicked for him.

So, let me tell you what I am going to do. I am going to go out on a limb for Shaquill Griffin. I’m going to say that I take solace in his self scouting, and I believe he’s going to correct his game in 2019. In fact, I think he is going to have a big bounce back year. So much so that I am projecting him to be the sixth best player on the team out of fifty three guys. I think he’s that talented.

Seattle had eleven picks in the draft last spring and they didn’t take a single cornerback. They took a couple safeties, and a couple linebackers, and a couple defensive linemen, but no corners. I think Seattle likes their cornerback situation A LOT more than many fans do. So, I’m going to trust Pete Carroll on this one. I think Griffin will be chomping at the bit to redeem what even he acknowledged was a down sophomore year for him. He’s got a good head on his shoulders, and he’s way too talented to not improve.

And I think Seattle’s defense is going to be a lot better than a lot of people think.

Go Hawks.

 

Twenty Reasons Why the 2019 Seattle Seahawks Will Make the Playoffs: Reason 7; Chris Carson

The 2019 Seattle Seahawks are a playoff team. They might even be a team of destiny. You know how I know? Because this is a team comprised of tough mega-talented men. Men that matched with other men make those men seem considerably less manly. A few of these guys, I would almost consider supermen. Oh, yes. Super-humans in football pads, and this guy is one of them.

Running back Chris Carson.

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Why is Carson a superhuman?

Have you seen this guy leap over tackling defenders? Have you seen him pull three defenders with him to power his way into the end zone? If not, you didn’t watch very many Seahawk games in 2018 because that was the kind of show this dude put on, and I highly advise you to simply watch this one highlight of his game against Carolina. He did a feat in that match that would make Captain America blush. Check it out.

Chris Carson is a star in the making. That is not hyperbole. He has every tool you need to be the very best back in the league. He has power, explosion, speed, agility, determination, and he catches and pass blocks well on top of being a dynamic runner. He is an every down back. This is just me, but I think he can be better than Marshawn Lynch, and you can tell Pete Carroll just loves the guy. Nobody on this team is in better shape the Carson. Those aren’t my words. Those are the words of the coach himself.

His only problem is the nagging injuries that he tends to pick up every season going all the way back to his college days. That bit of kryptonite is likely the main reason Seattle felt the need to draft Rashaad Penny when they did in 2018. Can Carson hold up for a full 16 game schedule? That is a very fair question to ask. He didn’t last year when he had his breakout season rushing for 1,151 yards and 9 touchdowns.

Fortunately in Seattle he won’t be asked to be the bell cow that Lynch was. Penny is going to get his increased reps, he’s too good not to, and don’t get underestimate just how good Penny can be in this league. However, expect Carson to continue being the guy that starts and likely still sees more touches. He’s too good to not continue going with him, and Penny would have to have an absolutely INSANE preseason to unseat him.

Could it happen? Sure it could, but again, I don’t think it matters which back starts. Either way, they will be the one-two punch, and that is probably what Carroll most wants. Carroll has always favored having a running back committee, and it goes all the way back to his USC days. He’s tried to establish it in Seattle by having Lynch and drafting Robert Turbin and Christine Michael, but it never really materialized. I think it can and should this year.

I’m excited for that. I think Seattle could easily have the best running situation in the league this year. I can’t wait to watch it. My only hope is that Seattle doesn’t get cocky and decides to trade one of these guys for a player at a different position. For a team that loves to run, you can’t have enough good backs, and you got both of these highly talented runners on cheap rookie deals. Keep both of them. Period.

Go Hawks.

Twenty Reasons Why the 2019 Seattle Seahawks Will Make the Playoffs: Reason 8; Ezekiel Ansah

The 2019 Seattle Seahawks will be a playoff team, and they might even be a Super Bowl team. Don’t feel like you need to adjust your eyes after reading that. I’m serious. Super serious. I think they can make a super serious run. Why this confidence you ask? Simple. I think their defense is going to be a whole lot better than people think, and this guy is going to be a big part of it.

Defense end Ezekiel Ansah

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Why is Ansah going to help elevate the defense?

Because this veteran addition to the defensive line is an answer to the pass rush woes, even with the loss of Frank Clark. In fact, in 2018, Pro Football Focus rated Ansah as the most productive pass rusher in the league when combining sacks, hits, hurries and pressures, and he didn’t even play a full season. Let this plurality “pressures” sink in for a moment because that is going be a thing later in this piece.

I think this was the plan that Seattle had in place when they ended up trading Clark to Kansas City pre-daft. They weren’t necessarily looking to replace Clark with a rookie. Ansah was most likely going to be their guy. I believe this to be true because I feel Pete Carroll tipped his hand in a few offseason press conferences.

When asked about the pass rush and how Seattle will look to improve, he talked about the importance of quarterback pressures. Even more than sacks, Carroll wants his rushers to make quarterbacks uncomfortable. The reason for this is that Carroll wants his defense to create turn overs, and the best way for that to happen is to get a quarterback throwing when he doesn’t want to. That leads to inaccuracy or balls getting tipped and that can lead more easily to interceptions. Carroll wants turnovers more than sacks. He will gladly take sacks because that can lead to fumbles, but he absolutely wants defensive created turnovers more than anything else.

When talking about pressures, Carroll was quick to praise rookie Jacob Martin for his ability to create pressures as the season went on, and he stressed the importance for Rasheem Green to step forward in 2019. He also said that when they were looking to this draft, they were looking for guys that were keenly adept at creating pressure, and to no surprise, defensive lineman LJ Collier was one of best last year in college at quarterback pressures. That why he was drafted where he was in the first round, and that is why they also sought to bring in Ansah after trading Clark.

Some folks will worry about his injury history and age, and it’s valid. I’m not going to be one of them, and the main reason why is that Pete Carroll’s ideal is to have a rotation with his defensive line, and probably prefers not to be reliant on one superstar player (hence the reason he was willing to trade Clark when his price tag got too big). He is also probably wanting to give younger players like Green, Martin and Collier a chance to blossom. He also loves to have a steady mixture of veterans in the mix and Ansah, Jarran Reed, and Cassius Marsh are all that. I’m pretty comfortable saying that this particular cocktail might be more than enough.

So much so that Seattle may not have to rush Ansah into the start of the season, if his offseason shoulder surgery is not a hundred percent healed. If you remember back in 2013, they rested newly signed free agent pass rusher Cliff Avril during the preseason and the early portion of the regular season, and it proved substantially beneficial. Seattle got by without it’s best pass rusher early to have the whole pass rush, as a collective, clicking on all cylinders as the season went on. Not having Cliff early allowed others to emerge, and a chemistry to form. The same could be the case with Ansah this year.

Rotation, rotation, rotation.

That should be the mantra for Seattle’s 2019 pass rush. Last year Seattle had Frank Clark and Jarran Reed collecting all the sacks. This year, I expect Ansah to probably be the main threat, but I also expect Reed to continue to be quite effective, and I expect leaps out of Martin and Green with Marsh and Collier also in the equation.

This could be a lot of fun to watch. I can’t wait.

Go Hawks.

 

Twenty Reasons Why the 2019 Seattle Seahawks Will Make the Playoffs: Reason 9; DJ Fluker

The 2019 Seattle Seahawks will be a playoff team. Oh, yes. They will be. You know how I know? Attitude, and and a relentless drive to be dominant. Great teams have guys that comprise of those special traits. When the Seattle Seahawks won Super Bowl XLVIII, it was Marshawn Lynch that had that defined that kind of special, and on this 2019 roster, I see someone else who’s got some of that, and he is my ninth reason why these Seahawks are playoff bound.

Offensive guard DJ Fluker.

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Otto Greule Jr/Getty Images

 

Why do I compare Fluker to Marshawn?

Because he wants to own people. He wants to physically own them, and these aren’t little wee defensive backs that he wants to own. Oh, no. This 6-5 330 pound monster wants to own and wreck other 300 plus pound men in front of him just like he owned Ndamukong Suh twice last year in the run game when Seattle played Los Angeles. This is what Fluker lives for. Total domination.

The dude also loves football and plays with a level of love and badassedness for the game that is infectious for teammates. Much like Marshawn, this guy goes about things in a style that makes you want to play harder. He’s tough, determined, and just this far enough on the right side of whacky. In my humble opinion, bringing DJ Fluker back to the team this last offseason might have been the best move for the team, and that is taking nothing away from drafting LJ Collier and DK Metcalf. Getting 330 pounds of DJ back is big time. Trust me.

Look, y’all. The Seahawks don’t just want to return to the playoffs again. That’s become the standard here in Seattle under Carroll. This team wants to get the division back from the Rams, and they want to get back to that Super Bowl thing. The best way to get there is to build a team around Russell Wilson that has that same attitude as they had in 2013. DJ Fluker has been in the league for a while, and after a while, those knees and joints on that MASSIVE body of his aren’t likely destined to hold up long term. So, this is just me, but I am guessing that big bad DJ wants a ring badly before it’s all done for him. That’s just my best educated hunch. So, I’m going to say the DJ is going to do what DJ has to do to get one of those things, and that is to hammer away and wear defenders down to the best of his MASSIVE abilities.  He’s going to continue owning other grown men.

For a team that loves to run the ball, having DJ Fluker on your offensive line is a huge advantage. Will he hold up for 16 games? Quite possibly not, as recent history has shown, but last year Seattle was able to get by without him for a few, and if you have him run blocking for twelve out of sixteen games, I would absolutely take that. I’m pretty sure Pete Carroll would too.

Can’t wait for Seattle to continue their trend of pounding the ball with this enforcer blocking. Can not wait. Let other teams chuck it all over. I wanna see Seattle run.

Go Hawks.

Twenty Reasons Why the 2019 Seattle Will Make the Playoffs: Number 10; Poona Ford

The 2019 Seattle Seahawks are a playoff team that can and should retake the NFC West Division. Last year, they were a playoff team because of their offense. This year, I think the defense catches up to the offense, and I think this guy will be a big part of that equation.

Defensive Tackle Poona Ford.

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Why will Poona make an impact?

Poona, Poona, Poona, Poona.

Poona, Poona, Poona, Poona.

Poona, Poona, Poona, Poona.

Get ready to chant that mantra a lot every time Poona Ford makes a play in the backfield this year because he lived in the backfield in college at Texas when he won Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year in 2017, and he flashed mightily making plays in the backfield down at stretch for Seattle last year. In fact, he was so impactful that Pro Football Focus gave him a remarkable analytical grade of 90.3 for the year, the tenth best overall grade for a defensive tackle in the league.

Good lordy-ba-gordy. I have been chomping at the bit to write about this guy. Where to start?  How about here.

Every indication from Pete Carroll is that this team is going to give this guy every opportunity to earn the starting role next to Jarran Reed inside, and the vibe that I get listening to players, coaches and those close to the team in the media is that this guy could become a really special player for Seattle for years to come. Like, really special.

One thing that really caught my attention was a couple months ago, shortly after Seattle traded Frank Clark, when I was listening to former Seattle middle linebacker (and 12thLife favorite) Dave Wyman on 710 ESPN comment that not only does he think Poona is special, he thinks Poona is the best player currently on the defensive line and that includes Jarran Reed. Wyman is not known at all for hyperbole, but he even went so far as to compare him to legendary Seattle defensive tackle Cortez Kennedy. That most definitely raised my eyebrows, but in his explanation, he said Poona is a rare inside player that can basically do whatever he wants to, and blockers are going to have a really hard time with him.

Why is this? Well, in a simple word, it is all about leverage. Poona is listed at 5-11 and 310 lbs. That is significantly short for a defensive tackle (clearly the most likely reason that he went un-drafted coming out of Texas despite winning defensive player of the year honors), but it is mitigated by the fact that he possesses unusually long arms, which work in his favor disengaging and getting through blockers. Over the recent five years or so, shorter bodied but long armed defensive tackles have become increasingly more vogue thanks to the Los Angeles Rams’ Aaron Donald. It’s really tough to block someone who is strong and quick and low and has long arms. Simply, if you are a taller guy, it’s really hard to get inside them, which is what offensive guards, and centers need to do.

When Seattle’s defense was at it’s very best, they had squatty Brandon Mebane over center, and it made a center’s life miserable. I fully expect Poona Ford to play this role in Seattle, and I think the likes of Bobby Wagner and KJ Wright are going to love that. Mebane used to be able to get under the center, and forklift them backwards into the quarterback. I think this is very much going to be Poona’s game but with even more quickness. A few months ago, Seattle defensive end Quinton Jefferson was boasting on AM 950 KJR that in one late season game against the 49ers, the 49er center was literally crying in frustration because there was nothing he could do to blocker Poona Ford.

Expect Poona Ford to be even more un-blockable in 2019. In fact, don’t be surprised if he increasingly becomes the new fan favorite in this market. I think Seattle definitely has landed its latest undrafted gem in this guy, and I cannot wait to see more out of him this year. I am really excited.

Poona, Poona, Poona, Poona.

Go Hawks.

Twenty Reasons Why the 2019 Seattle Seahawks Will Make the Playoffs: Reason 11; Rashaad Penny.

The 2019 Seattle Seahawks will make the playoffs. Oh, yes, and not only that, I think they are going to retake the division. Why this confidence you ask? I got three words for you that go back to the early portions of the Pete Carroll era in Seattle; Bigger, stronger, faster. That was their motto in 2011 through 2013, and my eleventh reason why these Seahawks exemplifies all those traits.

Running back Rashaad Penny.

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Why is Penny poised to make a big impact?

This 220 lb running back is a rare compensation of size and speed that can go the distance every time his touches the ball. Coming out of San Diego State last year, there was some Marshawn Lynch comparisions, but if truth be told, from my point of view, this dude’s style feels more think a combination of Lynch and Seahawk great Shaun Alexander. He’s got the power to run through tackles, but his extra gear is Alexander special. Combine his running style with the power style of Chris Carson, and Seattle could have the best offensive backfield in the league this year. I kid you not.

The vibe from OTAs and mini camp is that Penny has looked really good both from his conditioning, and his much improved command of the offense, and that should excite you as a fan. Last year, he supposedly came into training camp weighing closer 240 and that extra weight likely hurt his initial explosion. Now before you go crying Eddie Lacy 2.0, let’s at least concede the fact that as the regular season went on, Penny at least started to flash some of those traits that made him so dynamic in college. His extra gears in the open field were pretty impressive.

My hunch is the Penny suffered from something that is not uncommon with a lot of rookies that were first round selections; an overconfidence that teeters on full blown entitlement. Of course he thought he was going to be the guy. He led the nation in rushing yards in college, and Seattle just spent a high round pick on him, and are they really going to favor former seventh round pick Chris Carson over him? Well, they did, and Penny had to watch a lot of early football from the sidelines, and when it was time to spell Carson, they coaches initially went with Mike Davis.

I’m pretty sure that didn’t sit well with Penny, but I also think that he didn’t spend too much time sulking about it. As the season went on, I think he dug in, and worked hard to earn his time, and in spots, it really showed. You could see the potential. Coach Carroll even intimated as much in his pressers that was the case. He had to rededicate.

So, I like a dedicated, humbled, focused Rashaad Penny going in 2019. I like that a lot. By all accounts, Chris Carson looks like a great running back, but I think Penny has the potential to be really special in this league. There is a reason why Seattle felt the need to draft him in the fist round in 2018, and for Seattle to snatch this division back from the Rams, they will need both of these guys at the top of their games. If they both are, this could be a really exciting offense to watch that the league may not see coming.

I can’t wait to find out.

Go Hawks.