A Seattle Seahawks Mock Draft For The Thanksgiving Holiday. Yay!

Trey Adams

Could Adams become a part of the Seattle Seahawk family? Perhaps.

 

With the 2019 Seattle Seahawks being as hot as they have been in the win column, and back to back road victories that have shown a defense starting to round out nicely, I have been less compelled to think to heavily on the future state of this team. Outside of feeling the need for Seattle to reach new long term deals with Jadeveon Clowney and Jarran Reed, I haven’t delved to heavily in prognosticating the 2020 off-season. There will be plenty of time to do that once they have played their final game (hopefully, that is a Super Bowl victory). Right now, they are knee deep in a battle with the red hot San Francisco 49ers for the NFC West Division title.

That all said, 2020 projects to be an interesting off-season. Seattle is projected to have about $66 million in cap space, and could have a lot more after a few veteran cuts (the harsh business reality of the game).  Key veteran free agents include Clowney, Reed, Quinton Jefferson, Mycal Kendricks, Germaine Ifedi, Mike Iupati, Al Woods, Josh Gordon, Joey Hunt, and George Fant. There are going to be a lot of tough decisions for GM John Schneider to make. He won’t be able to keep them all, and maybe not even half.

In my mind, you’d really like to keep Clowney and Reed, and after them, probably at least two other key players on this list. However, should Clowney prove to be north of $20 million expensive, and should Seattle commit to that, it might be difficult to even achieve that. Should Seattle elect to tie a bunch of money into four veteran starters, or more, that will probably leave little cheddar to make a big splash in free agency, and thus the draft will become even more critical to the future of the team.

Fortunately, Seattle is projected to have a lot of picks. So, with that all said, what do you say? Let’s mock!

WITH THE 28TH PICK IN THE FIRST AROUND OF THE 2020 NFL DRAFT, THE SEATTLE SEAHAWKS SELECT – TREY ADAMS, TACKLE, WASHINGTON

The thought here is that Seattle made a tough decision on Germaine Ifedi who has actually been fairly good this year. Clowney and Reed soaked up a lot of cap space and when young starting tackles hit the open market, they tend to get paid a lot, and thus Ifedi moves on. This is looking like a deep class for at offensive tackle, which is kind of rare. With Adams, Seattle gets a big physical player who can play the right side and might be able to side to the left once Duane Brown retires. Adams is a good ball player who’s injury history maybe makes him available here.

WITH THE 28TH PICK IN THE SECOND ROUND OF THE 2020 NFL DRAFT, THE SEATTLE SEAHAWKS SELECT – TYLER JOHNSON, WIDE RECEIVER, MINNESOTA

This pick is a continuation of the “Build It Around Russ” philosophy. Pete Carroll loves to add play-makers on the offense, and they love to draft receivers early. Personally, I think Josh Gordon is likely a rental for this year. Johnson has the talent to go much earlier in this class, but this is looking like a deep class at receiver, and last year at this point, DK Metcalf was projected to be a first round pick.

WITH THE 31ST PICK IN THE SECOND ROUND OF THE 2020 NFL DRAFT, THE SEATTLE SEAHAWKS SELECT- JAKE HANSON, CENTER, OREGON

I have been watching the Oregon Ducks all season long, and with each game, I’ve been thinking Seattle would be attracted to their offensive line. This pick reflects a tough choice that Seattle might make with veteran center Justin Britt. He’s scheduled to make $10 million in 2020, and he is coming off of a knee injury. If Seattle is determined to hang onto Clowney, Reed and a few other key veterans, this could easily spell the end of Britt’s Seahawk career. Hanson reminds me of former Seahawk/Duck center Max Unger, and seems like a natural fit.

WITH THE 36TH PICK IN THE THIRD ROUND OF THE 2020 NFL DRAFT, THE SEATTLE SEAHAWKS SELECT – NAJEE HARRIS, RUNNING BACK, ALABAMA

This is an easy pick for the Seahawks. Seattle loves to run the ball. Chris Carson is heading into a contract year, and so is cornerback Shaquill Griffin. All things being equal, I can’t see Seattle choosing Carson over Griffin, especially with Rashaad Penny in the wings. Harris fits the perfect running back profile that attracts Seattle. He is a big physical runner with decent speed who can also catch out of the back field.

WITH THE 28TH PICK IN THE FOURTH ROUND OF THE 2020 NFL DRAFT, THE SEATTLE SEAHAWKS SELECT – NEVILLE GALLIMORE, DEFENSIVE TACKLE, OKLAHOMA

This pick is based on the assumption that the team extends Jarran Reed, but allows Al Woods to exit in free agency, which I think is the likely scenario. There is an a bit of an odd debate floating out in Twelve circles as to whether Seattle should sign Clowney or Reed. I’ve been pretty firm in the stance that Seattle should keep both players and continue building the defense around them. I think Gallimore kind of fits what Seattle tends to look for at DT and that is a guy big enough to play nose tackle but athletic enough to also play 3 technique. He would be a pretty good value selection here.

WITH THE 35TH PICK IN THE FOURTH ROUND OF THE 2020 NFL DRAFT, THE SEATTLE SEAHAWKS SELECT – JEFF GADLEY, DEFENSIVE BACK, TCU

Seattle almost always targets corners in the mid rounds. The highest Seattle has ever drafted one was at the bottom half of the third round and that was Shaquill Griffin. They have a profile that the target later, and they draft there, and then develop. With Griffin entering a contract year, I see the team selecting a corner at some point, and with this class projected to be deep at corner, I think it is probably either going to be late day two or early day three. Like a lion, they lay in the weeds waiting to bounce at this position.

WITH THE 11TH PICK IN THE FIFTH ROUND OF THE 2020 NFL DRAFT, THE SEATTLE SEAHAWKS SELECT – MATT BUSHMAN, TIGHT END, BYU

Like, running back, receiver, and corner, Seattle tends to spend a fair amount of draft capital at tight end. It’s a valued position on this team. I’m less concerned about the position than I was a month ago, thanks to a emergence of Jacob Hollister, but I do think it is a position that they will likely target either in free agency, or the draft. Bushman seems to be the type of player Seattle is drawn to, and I can even see them potentially taking one higher if they are nervous about Will Dissly’s ability to stay healthy.

WITH THE 36TH PICK IN THE SIXTH ROUND OF THE 2020 NFL DRAFT, THE SEATTLE SEAHAWKS SELECT – BRADLEE ANEE, EDGE RUSHER, UTAH

Like tight end, I’m  less nervous about edge rush than I was a month ago. It’s not just the dominant play of Clowney from a few weeks ago against the 49ers, it’s also about the subtle emergence of second year player Rasheem Green, and the fact former first round pick LJ Collier is also likely to emerge at some point, as well. This isn’t looking like a deep class at edge rusher, so I think it is unlikely Seattle is going to find a top end one by the time they draft late in round one. That doesn’t exclude them from drafting at the position, but affords them to be patient. Anee is a good college player that might not be a great combine tester but might offer good value here.

WITH THE 37TH PICK IN THE SEVENTH ROUND OF THE 2020 NFL DRAFT, THE SEATTLE SEAHAWKS SELECT – EVAN WEAVER, LINEBACKER, CALIFORNIA

Seattle spent good draft capital last Spring at linebacker in Cody Barton, and Ben Burr-Kirven. Should they move on from Mychal Kendricks or KJ Wright, I’m fairly confident one of those guys takes over (probably Barton). If this happens, I think it’s almost a given Seattle will draft at the position again in 2020. However, if they do see bright futures in Barton and BBK and maybe even Shaquem Griffin, I think it is unlikely that they take one early unless a genuine blue chip talent is there.

Thoughts about this mock draft.

This is just a fun initial exercise to think about what might lay ahead for Seattle in a busy 2020 off-season. I could see the team go a lot of different directions. Maybe Clowney will prove too expensive for their tastes, and Reed, as will. Maybe they will feel the need to keep Ifedi despite fan opinion about the player. If all that happens, then we are probably looking at a very different draft.

But this mock reflects the idea that they commit top dollars to Jadeveon Clowney and Jarran Reed, and on the offensive side, they maybe elect to spend cheaper on guard Mike Iupati over offensive tackle Germaine Ifedi. With this looking like a decent draft class at offensive tackle, might be a way easier position to replace than at other positions such as edge rusher and defensive tackle.

I also think, even with the extensions of Clowney and Reed, Seattle might use extra dollars to dive into the veteran edge rusher department, and that will not be cheap. If this happens, I think Justin Britt very likely becomes a cap casualty.

This draft class also fully reflects a continuation of the club’s philosophy shift towards building around their star quarterback, and in that, the first four picks go to the offense. Moving forward, Seattle has got to be careful not to get too old on the offensive line like the Los Angeles Rams have suddenly found themselves. Drafting two good young offensive linemen early might be the smartest move in the long term. It also might be quite likely that they will want to continue giving Russell Wilson more offensive weapons. Just make what is your strength stronger, and this draft class looks like it can lend for that.

Yay!

Go Hawks

 

 

 

 

A Couple Thoughts About The Seahawks Heading Into The December Stretch

With a couple days removed from Seattle’s relatively dominant win in Philadelphia, I think we’ve learned a few things about this club. We have learned that the defense plays a lot better with Quandre Diggs at free safety. We’ve learned that the defensive line isn’t perhaps as bad as we thought it was a few weeks ago. Perhaps most importantly, though, we have learned this team can win ball games when their best player, Russell Wilson, isn’t at his best.

Here are a couple thoughts about this team that have been running through my mind lately.

Is the defense improving enough to make Seattle a major contender this year?

Over the last couple games, Seahawk fans have enjoyed a defense that came alive against the upstart 49ers and the struggling Eagles. Skeptics can point to this Eagles match and say that Philly didn’t have their top offensive linemen and receivers in the game, and Seattle feasted on that. That’s fair, but you can also say that Seattle didn’t have it’s best pass rusher in the game, and then lost their second best pass rusher in the second quarter.

Further more, when looking at the game against the 49ers, skeptics are going to have a much harder drawing up reasons why Seattle handled that then unbeaten team in their own house. Yes, the 49ers didn’t have their all world tight end, but Seattle still snuffed out what had been their dominant run game, and they made Jimmy Garoppolo look awful at times.

On the surface, it is easy to see why Seattle has had a sudden uptick on their defense. Here are a few of them.

Quandre Diggs is a much better free safety than Tedric Thompson and rookie Marquise Blair. He actually might be a lot closer to Earl Thomas than maybe many imagined, and has been a difference maker in back to back games as a starter. This has likely settled down strong safety Bradly McDougald and all three starting linebackers. They can step onto the field knowing that the back end will play assignment sound football, and that allows each cagey veteran to simply focus on their own task. This is a big deal.

Ken Norton has done a better job mixing up the defense. I think this is also a credit to Quandre Diggs and his veteran leadership. Now Norton and Pete Carroll can ask more out of their players because they have enough veterans on the defense that will understand the adjustments. This is making the defense a lot less predictable for quarterbacks.

The defensive line is starting to show positive signs of depth emerging. We know Jadeveon Clowney and Jarran Reed are two really good football players. We also know that Quinton Jefferson, Al Woods, and Poona Ford are really nice depth pieces all capable of quality starter play. Up until the game in Philly, we still had major question marks on Ziggy Ansah, and youngsters Rasheem Green and LJ Collier. Against Philly, Ansah looked more powerful and explosive against both Eagle tackles, and Rasheem Green had a great game. The latter of that is really great news. Quietly, Green is starting to become productive as a pass rusher, and against the run. Collier is still a pretty raw rookie, but even he flashed a bit against the run in Philly stretching out an outside run play for no gain.  These are all positives.

For a bonus X factor in all this, Ken Norton is finally figuring out ways of using speedy undersized linebacker Shaquem Griffin on the field. Mainly, he’s now being deployed as a speed rusher, and so far, he has been making an impact.

It is certainly possible with the insertion of Diggs at free safety, and the different looks that can now be utilized coupled with the improved pass rush, this defense can make a much bigger leap forward during these final five games. What will be a big positive carryover effect into next season is if youngsters such as Rasheem Green, Marquise Blair, LJ Collier, Ugo Amadi and others look like quality starters and contributors in the making. That can shape the direction of the off-season in a major way.

Is the offense slowing down a bit a legit concern?

Heading into the MNF game in San Francisco, Seattle had be red hot offensively, and nobody had been hotter than Russell Wilson. Since then, Russell has looked a little more normal, but it is worth noting that he had to face top defenses on the road in back to back games.

Right now, I’m not overly concerned about this. I actually think he played a fairly decent game against the 49ers despite the overtime red zone interception he threw. I think it was the game in Philly that was much more of a clunker because of the missed easy touchdown toss to Jacob Hollister, but Tom Brady also didn’t look great against this Eagles defense, either. I fully expect Russ to bounce back, but even in that, I do have a few lingering concerns.

For one, I’m more than a bit concerned about the level of play Seattle can reasonably expect for center Joey Hunt. Personally, I think Hunt is a technically sound player who is very smart, but he is also a player with some glaring physical limitations. In back to back games, Philly and SF were both able to line up a much stronger defensive tackle directly over him and bull rush him on third downs for easy sacks on Russell. This is on tape, and if a team has a big powerful defensive tackle, they will surely look to emulate this. Of the games left on the schedule, all but the Cardinals have this type of player on their roster. Seattle will have to figure out a way to deal with this.

Secondly, for as good as the offensive line has been at times, veteran left guard Mike Iupati has had rough outings in the last couple games. Against the 49ers, he allowed the middle linebacker a free run at the QB twice, and against the Eagles, he had a couple false starts. With a limited athlete at center, Seattle needs its other veteran starters to play cleaner than this. Perhaps finally being at home this Monday night will help.

Thirdly, I think depth at receiver and tight end is legitimately being tested a bit. Seattle was down to one healthy starting caliber tight end against the Eagles in Jacob Hollister. When he limped off the field early in that match, my heart sank into my bowels. Hollister had been coming on strong, and Seattle can not afford losing him to injury. Fortunately, he came back in. Also, DK Metcalf had a rough outing against the Eagles, dropping three deep passes. At least two should have been relatively easy catches. This all didn’t help when Tyler Lockett didn’t look fully healthy. Seattle needs better play from Metcalf and they need to not lose more players at these positions if they want to keep this offense humming.

Lastly, Chris Carson has officially become a fumbling machine. This is honestly the thing that has me most nervous moving forward, and I suspect we are going to start seeing a lot more Rashaad Penny during this final stretch of games. I think the smart move is to mix in both players more. Carson has seen a lot of carries and catches, and I think it’s possible he’s a bit worn down. Personally, I think he might be more valuable on third downs because of his pass blocking and pass catching abilities. What I would like to see is more of a mixture of Penny on run downs because, frankly, he’s fresher, and even with both backs being equally healthy, Penny is probably more of the electric home run hitter.

In the end, I don’t want to make an overly big deal about all of this. As long as this team has a healthy Russell Wilson, I think this offense will still likely be one of the better ones in the league, but I do think they need to get better play out of the offensive line, they need to not lose the attrition battle at receiver/tight end, and they need to stop the fumbling. If these three things happen and the defense continues to improve, Seattle is a legitimate Super Bowl contending team this year. Book it.

Go Hawks.

Thoughts About the Seattle Seahawks’ Wild Wackly Weird Road Win Against the Philadelphia Eagles

NFL: Seattle Seahawks at Philadelphia Eagles

Rashaad Penny to the rescue!

Good lord in Heaven. I love football. I do. I’m addicted to the dynamics, the explosive plays on offense, and the bone crushing plays on defense. I love the drama, and in that, the straight up weirdness that can come out of that drama. Against these Eagles, Seattle had one of the weirdest games I’ve seen in a while. When their usual stars struggled, and other stars not playing at all, unlikely heroes stepped up and emerged. For me, this is what makes football fun.. as long as my team wins.

Let’s get into it.

The Good

For back to back games, the defense stepped up, and has outplayed the offense. Prior to the game against the 49ers, it had been a season’s long worth of the opposite. Yes, I know it was against the struggling Eagles offense, but lesser teams have given this defense fits earlier in the season. Also, this Seattle defense was without it’s best pass rusher in Jadeveon Clowney. I was heading into this game thinking I could be in for a bit of an offensive shootout between Carson Wentz and Russell Wilson, but the reality couldn’t have been more opposite. The Seahawk defense harassed Wentz all day, forced fumbles, and interceptions, and came up with sacks without Clowney, and after the first quarter, without their other top defensive lineman, Jarran Reed.

Ziggy Ansah finally had a strong game, generating 1.5 sacks.

Rasheem Green had a fantastic game getting a strip sack, dependable additional pressure on Wentz and a really nice tackle for a loss holding containment on a outside stretch play. It’s really important for this team to see contributions like this from Green moving forward. They need young defenders to emerge, and on this day, Green did that.

Other defensive linemen played big. Reed brought pressure and collected half a sack before he got injured. Al Woods was a monster inside, and Poona Ford was active. Quinton Jefferson had a strong game, and Shaquem Griffin forced a fumble rushing off the edge. This unit played really well together.

Seattle’s starting trio at linebacker all played strong, and Mychal Kendricks might have had his best game yet.

Seattle’s secondary had an awesome game, creating three turnovers. The starting safety  tandem of Quandre Diggs and Bradley McDougald played fierce.

Russell Wilson did not have his best game, but had a beautiful flea flicker deep touchdown pass to Malik Turner, and Turner is starting to look like one of his more dependable receivers.

Michael Dickson had a superb game punting the ball, and Ugo Amadi pairing with him downing it twice at the Eagle’s one yard line. Big underlined story in this tough road win.

All things being equal, though, the real star of the game was second year running back Rashaad Penny. He’s been a bit of a target for fan scorn lately, and I’ve always thought that was a bit unfair. Today, he was the spark that pretty much saved the game for Seattle. His electricity as an open field runner is undeniable. I have a sneaking suspicion that we are about to see more of him down this final stretch for five games. We will get into the reasons a bit more.

The Bad

Seattle did not get an MVP level performance from Russell Wilson today. He wasn’t helped by bad drops from DK Metcalf, and bad pass protection from Joey Hunt and others, but when he missed a WIDE OPEN Jacob Hollister in the end zone, I started to get a sinking feeling. That’s a pass he has got to make. No excuses. I will however, kind of almost excuse the interception he threw because it was punched out of the hands of David Moore, and floated up in the air for an easy grab, but even with that, one could easily argue that perhaps he forced that ball into coverage that he shouldn’t have.

DK Metcalf, as mentioned, had a rough day dropping a couple deep passes he should have grabbed. He’s young and will get better, but those are grabs he should make if his ceiling as a player is a high one.

At various times, the offensive line could not get out of the way of itself. Multiple false starts was the main culprit. At one point, veteran Left Tackle Duane Brown went ballistic on the sidelines after a horrendous series that featured two false starts, a delay of game and a Russell Wilson INT. As bad as that all was, it was fun to see Brown take leadership, and chew tail. Go Hawks.

Chris Carson had an awful day running the ball.. again. It’s hard to criticize this guy because he offers so much as a tough guy fighting for yards and making circus catches, but folks, I think it is safe to say that he has a fumbling issue. After today, I think we can say this. In all my years of following football, I don’t think I’ve ever seen a player fumble like that on back to back plays. It could have cost us this game. If I am Pete Carroll, I’m not taking the ball away from him, but I am going to the well with Penny more in these final five games. Is it possible that Carson is just too taxed out in all the ways he has been used?

The Ugly

Jarran Reed was having a great game, but got his ankle rolled on by Ziggy Ansah. My fingers are massively crossed that he is not seriously injured. His strong play at defensive tackle is a huge benefit to the defenders around him, and the defense noticeably started to struggle against the run when he was no longer on the field.

Moving Forward

Seattle is 9-2 with this win, and are still firmly in a dog fight for the division title with San Francisco. In the end, that is really what we can take away from this game, and honestly, it is fantastic news. Yes, this was an ugly and weird game that Seattle won 17-9, but it should also be noted that New England also had a rather ugly weird match against these Eagles last week which they barely won.

I actually think Seattle played the Eagles a bit better than the Pats. Had Russell connected with Hollister for that easy touchdown, and had DK Metcalf managed to haul in that long bomb from Russell, Seattle probably would have more easily handled this desperate Eagle team.

So, from this perspective, I actually see more signs of encouragement about Seattle as a playoff team moving forward. Today they needed to find ways to win when their best player was not at his best, and they did. Three games ago, against Tampa, this would probably not have been the case. Good teams find ways to win when their best players aren’t at their best.

Seattle is feeling more and more like a pretty darn good team. Are there still issues? Yes, but every team has it warts, and Seattle is no different.

I also think it is really cool that Seattle is now 6-0 on the road this year. This is a pretty important stat to keep in mind.

A win is a win is a win is a win.

A win is a win.

Go Hawks.

Thoughts About the Seattle Seahawks Coming Out of Their Bye Week

We are now a few days before Seattle travels on the road to Philadelphia, and I thought it would be a great time to reflect on this team and ponder what might lay ahead for them down the final stretch run. Here are a lot of the things I have been thinking about lately.

Are the Seahawks a Legitimate 2019 Super Bowl Contender?

Before the season began, I predicted that the Seahawks would be a playoff team with a likely 11-5 record. While the team is sitting fairly comfortably at 8-2, a big part of me wants to stick to that. During this final six game run, Seattle will be playing four teams that will be desperate in their play hopes with the Eagles, Vikings, Panthers, and Rams. They will only play one of those teams at home. They will also be playing a home rematch against the 49ers for potentially the division title, and they will play the Cardinals team that will likely want to play spoiler. From this perspective, that appears to be a potentially tough stretch, and should Seattle split, that would put them directly at a 11-5, and a likely wildcard playoff team. If all this happens, I will look much smarter than I actually am.

However, all that said, I can also easily see Seattle getting really hot down that stretch, especially if their defense continues to trend upwards, and in that, I can even see the potential for Seattle winning out. Outside of the 49ers and maybe the Vikings, none of the remaining teams left on the schedule feel like true contenders, and should Russell Wilson continue is MVP campaign, and if the defense starts to really come together, Seattle could morph into a very dangerous club.

If that happens, that December 29th home game against the 49ers will be gigantic. It could not only decide the division, it could decide home field advantage throughout the playoffs, and should Seattle come out on top, a Super Bowl appearance then becomes very possible.

Imagine that.

Will Russell Wilson win MVP?

Be prepared for this to become the topic being constantly talked about over these final six games, especially if Seattle stays hot. Right now it feels like a two way battle between Wilson and Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson.

I think it is fair to say that Jackson has the edge simply because his team has beaten Wilson’s and they have won more decisively in most of their matches. However, should Seattle catch fire coming out of their bye week, and start compiling more impressive wins, this could be the year Wilson finally wins it.

For me, I don’t greatly care whether Wilson wins MVP, or not. It would be exciting for the team if he did because that would means that they finished with a strong record, but I already know Wilson’s value. He is one of the very best quarterbacks in the league, and I am incredibly grateful he is quarterbacking my team. Every game is practically must see television largely because of his play, and it’s been an exiting year watching him elevate his level of play.

In my mind, he already is MVP. Whether the league votes him as that or not, won’t change that opinion.

Which players have the most to gain down this final stretch run?

This is a question that I’ve been asking myself a lot lately because I feel it has a carryover effect into 2020. So, I thought now would be a great time to start looking at this

We know what we have in such players as Russell Wilson, Tyler Lockett, Duane Brown, Chris Carson, Jadeveon Clowney, Jarran Reed, Bobby Wagner, and Shaquill Griffin. These are impact players on both sides of the ball, and probably players that the team will continue building around (yes, I fully expect Seattle to re-sign both Clowney and Reed). What we really would like to see down this stretch is younger players and other veterans stepping up and making the kind of impact that might lay foundational pieces going into next season.

Right now, the player that jumps out the most is obviously wide receiver DK Metcalf. I feel like sometimes his play as a rookie gets down played just a bit. Personally, I think every fan should be looking at his potential and they should be getting pretty darn excited. Through ten games, he has shown the makings of a generational talent, in my opinion, but really, we need other youngsters to also step up.

I think the other two youngsters that are also standing out are tight end Jacob Hollister, and rookie free safety Marquise Blair. Barring injury, I suspect we are going to see both of these players trend upwards during these pivotal games, and that could be really exciting moving forward.

Blair seems like a classic Pete Carroll defensive back, instinctive and aggressive. I don’t expect him to necessarily start, but I do think he plays a lot in nickle packages, and I think with Quandre Diggs and Bradley McDougald playing with him, fans are going to feel a lot better about the secondary by the end of the season than they have at any point up to now.

With Hollister, I see a sneaky diamond in the rough type. I think he could end up being one of the most interesting story lines the 2019 Seattle Seahawk season. He’s a really athletic player with naturally soft hands, but what I find most interesting about him is his former quarterback background. I think it helps him feel the game the way Russell Wilson wants him to, and I think the combination of him on the field with Tyler Lockett, DK Metcalf and Josh Gordon is really interesting stuff.  If his game continues to trend upwards, he could be a legit X factor in this offense heading into the post season. The more I peal things back, the more excited I am about this guy, and his future in Seattle.

I would also give honorable mentions to center Joey Hunt, and defensive tackles Poona Ford and Quinton Jefferson.

Poona is a youngster finally starting to emerge as after a low start to the season. He was heavily hyped heading into the season, but I think we are finally starting to see why. He has a really interesting knack for making plays in the backfield.

Hunt and Jefferson are different stories, however. Both players are in contract years, and both are being heavily relied on in ways that they haven’t experienced to this point. This team needs both of these guys to play great ball, if they want a title, and they are in great positions to make cases for themselves as to why Seattle should look to re-sign them.

Jefferson, especially, considering how well he looked at the beginning of the season before he got injured, and how he came back and played against the 49ers. If he continues his solid play, I can see the potential of a 2020 Seattle defensive line featuring Clowney, Reed, Poona, and Jefferson and I’d actually feel pretty good about that. I think Jefferson is a really underrated player.

Can the defense realistically catch up to the offense?

As of right now, the Seattle defense is 26th in total defense. They are 24th in points allowed (meh), 29th in sacks (which is pretty bad), but they are 5th in the league for creating turnovers (which is actually pretty darn good).

The realist in me says that this defense won’t suddenly become dominant, but the optimist in me says that they can get A LOT better during these final six game, and if that happens, this team probably is a legitimate Super Bowl contender this year.

The reason why I am optimistic is that, I suspect the coaches have finally figured out how to use Clowney while mixing in with Jefferson and Reed in the pass rush department. Chemistry takes time to build on a defensive line and Seattle was dealt with having to insert a lot of new pieces to it last minute this year. As that chemistry grows, it is also going to help the linebackers a lot.

I also think that they finally got the safety situation figured out adding Quandre Diggs in with Bradley McDougald, and frankly, that is huge. With Clowney, Reed, Jefferson, Bobby Wagner, KJ Wright, Mychal Kendricks and Diggs and McDougald all on the field together, Pete Carroll finally has quality veteran experience at all three levels of the defense to help down the stretch. I know they probably want to mix in the youngsters like Blair, and maybe a couple other rookies, but I think these are a players Carroll wants to lean into. These are the guys who can properly adjust as the game goes on, these are the guys who are going to really understand the opponent’s tendencies, and these are the guys who can help translate that all to the younger players.

I get the philosophy that it is good to get younger on defense, but you have to be smart about it. If Seattle’s defense trends upwards, it will because of the veterans finally gelling together more so than rookies taking charge.

Do I honestly think that the Seahawks could win the Super Bowl this year?

Honestly, I think they could, but I also think, for that to happen, A LOT of things have got to go right. They can’t lose too many key players because depth is an issue across the board. Young players are going to have to continue to step forward. Russell Wilson is going to have to continue playing at an MVP level. Chris Carson and Rashaad Penny are going to have to stop fumbling. The coaches are going to have to continue making the right adjustments.

Simply put, this team is capable of winning a title, but they are no way near as talented and deep as the team that won it playing the 2013 season. That roster was ridiculously deep and that team could afford making mistakes because they had the talent to overcome them. This team can’t really do that.

I will say this, though; if this team does win the whole damn thing this year, it will be more impressive than in 2013. The prime reason for that is because, in my eyes, they will have done it with less talent, and they will have done it by really coming together down the stretch. They might not be the more talented Seattle Super Bowl winning team, but they might be the better Seattle Super Bowl winning one, if that makes sense.

I think it does.

Go Hawks.

 

 

 

A Letter To Jeff Bezos From A Diehard Twelve

Dear Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos,

Please buy that NFL team in Washington,  but not this Washington. Please purchase that sad franchise in the District of Columbia.

The Seattle Seahawks are not for sale, and that is perfectly fine with me. Even though Paul Allen is no longer with us, his sister Jody Allen is, and word on the street is that she’s gather pumped to be steering that ship. So, as much as Jerry Jones might like you to be the team’s owner, I don’t think she’s going to sell, and to be perfectly honest, I don’t want her to, either. Not to you, or anyone else.

Here’s the deal. Paul Allen saved professional football in Seattle. He didn’t have to do that, and football wasn’t even his first sport love (see basketball and Portland Trailblazers), but he did. Paul did that because of his love of the area, and he wanted the fan base to experience championships.

In his near twenty years as the owner, the Seahawks made the Super Bowl three times, winning one, have won the division eight times, and have made the playoffs thirteen times. They have missed the playoffs only seven times in that span. Outside of the New England fans, no other fan base has enjoyed as much success.

Jody Allen has stated that she intends to keep with her brother’s vision, and so far, so good. The 2019 Seattle Seahawks are 8-2 right now, and I believe Jody has had a big hand in that. She pushed for extending head coach Pete Carroll, and she signed off on the long term extensions of MVP candidate Russell Wilson and All Pro middle linebacker Bobby Wagner. She also allowed the team to use her personal jet to fly in Jadeveon Clowney when they traded for him at the start of the season. Like her brother, Jody just seems to get it, and I feel great about that.

However, I’m just not that sure about you. Maybe you would be a great NFL owner, I don’t know, it’s nothing personal, but I just trust Jody. You haven’t earned my trust yet, and to be honest, a lot of my more left leaning friends seem to believe that you’ve made Seattle a mess with the influx of Amazon employees that have come out here, and jacked up the cost of living.

Without getting into all that, if you were to hypothetically end up the owner of the Seahawks, not only would I have to dwell in the uncertainty of how you would act as team owner, but my Facebook feed would likely be filled with outrage from those who like to remind me that I am in love with a blood sport that is run by billionaire white dudes who won’t give Colin Kaepernick a job. Honestly, I don’t want to deal with that.

So, if you really want to get into the league, go buy that team in Washington DC, instead. I know that the owner has said that the team isn’t for sale, either, but as a lot of people say, money talks, and you have a lot of it. Plus, you already own the Washington Post, and word on the street is that you are moving to the area, as Amazon is setting up its second headquarter over there. So, why not just make it a DC trifecta?

Make Daniel Snyder an offer he can’t refuse, and get that team out of his hands. That poor pathetic franchise has sucked cow turds under his rule for decades now. He doesn’t  deserve to own it, and I’m confident that you couldn’t do any worse as the new owner.

One more thing, if and when you do purchase that team in DC, please change that awful name. I suspect that a big part of the reason that franchise struggles so much is that millions of Native American souls are willing that team to suck from beyond the veil each and every football season. I’m not joking about this. I know bad juju when I see it, and keeping that name intact is simply bad juju.

So, be a hero, and buy that team from Dan, and change its fricking gawd awful name. It would be the right thing to do, and maybe then, my ultra progressive friends will be more likely to say, “you know, that Bezos guy, he’s kinda almost alright. Now I don’t feel so conflicted about my Post and Prime subscriptions.”

Go Hawks, and sincerely yours,

Curtis Eastwood

 

 

A Letter To Seattle Seahawk Offensive Coordinator Brian Schottenheimer

Dear Coach Brian Schottenheimer

Thank you for everything you are doing for my Seattle Seahawks. Largely because of you, my favorite team on the planet is enjoying a 8-2 start to the 2019 NFL Season, and my favorite football player on the planet is firmly in MVP consideration. Some fans will likely mock me for thanking you, but smarter fans that play close attention to this team will know better. You are the man.

Before you came to Seattle, this team’s offense had become a broken mess. For an offense that had Russell Wilson, Doug Baldwin, Tyler Lockett, and Duane Brown, there was absolutely no excuse for it, but sadly they had finished the 2017 season 9-7 and they just missed the playoffs.

That worn out offense couldn’t effectively run, and my favorite football player on the planet had regressed as a passer. His mechanics had become way off, and he started to do horrendously silly things that you would typically see from an uncertain rookie (running around in circles, turning his back from receivers and pass rushers, throwing off the back of his foot under pressure, hanging onto the ball WAY too long).

In a painful game against the Cowboys, I watched him run around in circles taking a ridiculous thirty yard sack for a loss. I had always been the biggest defender of Russ, but even I couldn’t defend that play. It was utterly un-defendable, and for the first time, I had concerns about what direction he was heading towards as a passer.

Fortunately, the late great Seahawk owner Paul Allen shared my concerns and mandated that head coach Pete Carroll make swift coaching changes. That was a wonderful gift he gave Seattle fans before he sadly passed away, and I am so grateful Pete chose you to fix this offense, and more specifically, to fix Russell Wilson. You have done an awesome job.

I’m sure, in some regards, it hasn’t been an easy process for you. There were sexier names on the offensive coordinator market that Seahawk fans were clamoring for. One of those guys went from the Eagles to the Vikings, and yet found himself fired before the 2018 season even finished, but you kept doing your yeoman work in Seattle, and it helped this club reclaim their spot in the NFL playoffs.

Yet that playoff appearance was short lived, and you took a blasting on sports radio and Seahawks Twitter when you seemingly stubbornly called run plays on third and short when the Dallas D had all but stole away your playbook, and stuffed those plays out. Russell was moving the ball through the air, and yet it seemed you were taking the ball out of his hands and not giving him a chance to win it on the road. This is what sports journalists and Seahawks Twitter were saying.

But I sensed a deeper reality likely at play here.

This is just me, but I think Pete Carroll isn’t the easiest head coach to be an offensive coordinator for. Even during the Super Bowl seasons, he had this odd idea that the offensive coordinator should call pass plays and the offensive line coach should can run plays, and that always just seemed strange to me. Also, while he is fundamentally a defensive minded coach, I think he can’t help but getting involved in the offensive plays during the game, and when the matches appear close, I think he has a tendency to want to dumb down the play calls a bit because he doesn’t want to risk turnovers.

It’s understandable, because defensive minded coaches don’t want take risks on the offense in tight matches, and they tend to believe running the ball is less riskier than passing. That can be a tough pill to swallow as a caller, I am sure.

As a result, this can force you to look like a buffoon of a play caller in the eyes of a national audience. This was the case when you were in New York coordinating for defensive minded coach Rex Ryan. This was also the case when you were with the Rams under defensive minded coach Jeff Fisher, and this was certainly the case last year here under Carroll.

Yet, that was then, and this is now, and it appears to me now that you and Coach Carroll must have sat down over the off season and had a bit of a heart to heart because surprisingly Coach Carroll has allowed you to open up the playbook more for Russell. I’m so glad you and Coach Pete had this heart to heart, and good for Pete to come around on this. Go Hawks.

Through ten games on the year, your offense is top five overall in yards. It is also third overall in scoring, tenth in passing, and sixth in rushing, and it is fourth in DVOA. Simply put, this is the best offense I have seen in a Pete Carroll coached Seahawk team, and it isn’t close. It might be the best offense since the team Mike Holmgren coached to the Super Bowl, and it might be better than even that one.

More importantly, you have completely fixed Russell Wilson. He has never looked this good as a passer. In ten games, his stat line is ridiculous with 2,737 yards, 23 TDs, 2 INTs, a 68.5 completion percentage, and a stellar 114.3 passer rating. He is on pace to pass for about 4,000 yards, 40 TDs, and 3 INTs at this rate. Will, he do it? I don’t know, and I’m not sure I even care because the simple truth is that he finally looks like the complete quarterback he was always capable of being.

You have fixed his passing mechanics. Now when he scrambles, he is concise with his footwork, and he keeps his shoulders square to the field. Since he came into the league, old school fans have always drawn the Fran Tarkenton comparisons. It was easy to do because he is short like Tark, and he is a scrambler, but now when I see him move and manipulate in and out of the pocket, I see vintage Joe Namath, and I will fight anyone on this.

In my mind, Russ is the clear MVP of this season, thus far. This isn’t the homer Twelve in me saying this. This is just what I see, and now many national football minds are seeing it and saying it. This is largely on you for this.

Thank you for this, Brian. You fixed Russell. From the bottom of my Twelve heart, thank you.

One final thing that I want to say in all this is this. Please don’t leave for a head coaching gig after this season. Team owners love to hire the hot flavor of the month in the offensive coordinator realms, and if all these trends continue, I fear your name is going to be top on the list in 2020. Please, just stay in Seattle.

Stay here and keep your chemistry brewing with Russell. Pete Carroll isn’t going to coach here forever. While I hope he sticks it out for another five years or so, he might only keep it going for another three.

Wouldn’t it be cool if your first head coaching gig is eventually in Seattle?

You would have the quarterback in place, a devoted fan base behind you, and your hands wouldn’t be tied by an old school defensive coach. These are all things to consider. I hope you take this all to heart. I don’t want you to leave.

Sincerely,

Curtis Eastwood

 

 

Thoughts About The Seahawks Thrilling Monday Night Road Win Against The 49ers In Overtime

WireAP_6cc09049f8c644059115a41569376ec2_16x9_992

Run Russell run. (Thearon W. Henderson / Getty Images)

 

This was not a game Seattle was supposed to win. The well rested undefeated San Francisco 49ers were the dominant team not just in the division, but arguably in all of football. They had a defensive line loaded with former first round picks, and an extremely fast defense playing behind them. Offensively, San Francisco boasted a powerful run game and a young quarterback who could make you pay.

Seattle, on the other hand, had a struggling defense and special teams unit that were riding a hot quarterback. Before this game, many were considering this team fortunate to even be 7-2. If Seattle was going to win, it would likely have to lean into its quarterback, the defense would just have to do it’s best to hold down an explosive 49er offense, and even still, the game might come down to making a critical field goal kick.

It felt bleak for Seattle at the start, but all three of these things happened. This was a great game, and Seattle is now 8-2.

The Good

The defense found itself. Last week, I wrote a piece about what Seattle might do to fix its ailing defense. I noted that there were players not playing that they needed to get on the field. I also noted they could adjust their scheme a bit to try different looks. Both of these things happened in this one. Credit newly acquired safety Quandre Diggs for hauling in a key interception and return, and credit defensive coordinator Ken Norton Jr for adjusting his scheme, mixing up coverages and pressures.

The pass rush came alive. I also wrote in the piece that current players could play better, and an effective pass rush often comes with chemistry, and chemistry takes time. In this match, the chemistry that Jadeveon Clowney was finally cooking with Jarran Reed was almost X rated. Clowney had been a pressure force all reason long, but this was Reed’s official welcome back as a pass rusher getting 1.5 sacks and the strip sack of Jimmy Garoppolo that Clowney turned into a touchdown. It feels like the best way for Seattle’s defense to get back to being closer towards the top is to lock up these two players together long term.

Defensive tackle Poona Ford also had a great game. Poona, Poona, Poona.

Defensive tackle Al Woods also had a great game. Go Big Al!

Seattle’s secondary also played huge. Shaquill Griffin’s diving pass defense late in the match was nothing short of sensational. He’s consistently been Seattle’s best defender.

Russell Wilson was poised and effective against a scary 49er defense that was getting theirs on him early and often. He rolled out of pressures and found receivers down field, and he got key yards on the ground when Seattle needed it most. His impromptu touchdown lob to Jacob Hollister was fun to watch. Yes, he tossed an interception in overtime that could have cost Seattle the game, but he led them back on the final scoring drive. Russ is still very much in the driver’s seat for league MVP.

Tight end Jacob Hollister followed a big game last week against the Bucs with an even bigger game against the 49ers. This is huge for Seattle moving forward, as it looks like they found the answer to not having Will Dissly. Hollister looks like the most athletic tight end that Seattle has had in a while and that includes the Jimmy Graham era.

Little known receiver Malik Turner had a couple huge catches when needed.

Widely known receiver Josh Gordon also had a couple huge grabs and one against former Seahawk Richard Sherman.

Here’s a cool fun fact; the 2019 Seattle Seahawks are a perfect 5-0 on the road this year now, thus far. Knowing how to win close games on the road can help in the playoffs.

Jason Meyers was the hero making critical field goals down the stretch, including the game winner.

The Bad

Turnovers by the offense were hard to watch in this match. Seattle arguably could have won this game more handily if Russell had not had a strip sack turned into a touchdown done dirty on him in the second half. His red zone INT in overtime also sucked. Rashaad Penny and DK Metcalf both fumbled the ball away to the 49ers that killed likely scoring drives. Chris Carson also fumbled but Seattle was fortunate to recover. Turning the ball away against the top defense in the league is not a great recipe to winning on the road.

KJ Wright and Bobby Wagner both had would be interceptions bounce out of their hands at critical drives down the stretch. Got to come away with those, boys.

Tyler Lockett got hurt towards the end of this match. Hopefully, he is okay. Fingers massively crossed here.

The refs sucked cow terds all game long.

The Ugly

A friend of texted me early into the first quarter that he was “not going to watch another game until Schotty gets fired. Period.”

This turned into an odd exchange between us, as I responded by pointing out that offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer had been play calling for the number three overall offense heading into this game. Apparently this did not settle his nerves, and eventually he started texting in ALL CAPS.

Finally, I started asking him if he was on drugs.

I realize this might be a dick move calling him out on this in this silly blog, but really, fire Schotty? Brian Schottenheimer is a big reason why Seattle is 8-2 and is a main reason why Russell is playing at an MVP level, in my humble opinion. For fans that doubt this, be prepared for a piece coming that will expand all of my thoughts on this.

Moving Forward

Seattle is heading into a much needed bye week, and at 8-2, they are very much in play for the division title. Under Pete Carroll, it is practically automatic that Seattle plays it’s best ball heading down the stretch.

This bye week comes at a great time to get players rested, but more importantly, it allows the team to self scout and make adjustments. I think this game against the 49ers gave us a glimmer of how the defense might adjust, and if it continues playing like it did in this match, the 2019 Seattle Seahawks could very well be in for a special season.

It’s going to be fun to watch.

Enjoy every breathing minute being a Seahawk fan today.

Go Hawks.

Can the Seattle Seahawks’ Defense Be Fixed This Season?

bobby-wagner

Bobby can’t do it all, ya’ll. Players and coaches need to step up. (Getty Images)

If you are anything like me as a Twelve, you’ve probably been pulling your hair out a bit the last month. While you’ve been amazed at how well your star quarterback and his merry band of receivers and runners have been in the offense, you’ve been probably equally appalled at the lack of pass rush, the missed tackles, and blown coverages on the defensive side (let’s not even get into special teams). Presently, this team feels incomplete. They have an offense led by a quarterback who is hot enough to take them to a championship, but they have paired that with a defense that doesn’t feel like they can stop anybody.

In two weeks, they couldn’t stop Matt Schaub, and Jameis Winston; two quarterbacks nobody thinks about then thinking about how to start a franchise, yet they both put up numbers that would make you go “yowza” when looking at them on paper. This is troubling for any Seattle Seahawk fan who has followed this team for about the last ten years. This does not feel like a Pete Carroll defense, not anything close, and it feels like this club is destined, at best, for a short lived playoff appearance because of it.

This doubly stings because that would be a waste of potentially a historic season from Russell Wilson and company. It’s a shame simply because if this defense could just get to middle of the pack, or something closer towards, that could be enough for Seattle to capture the division, and make a deep playoff run.

So, as we sit here through nine games, my question is “can this defense be fixed enough this season with seven games left to go?”

My short answer is one of pure optimism. It’s possible.  Here are my thoughts.

Possible Fix Number 1. Players on the Roster stepping in and stepping up.

As of right now, Seattle’s defense ranks 25th in total defense out of 32 teams. That’s bad, but I have to be honest, when I was looking into these rankings, I was expecting worse. A lot worse. So, for me, this is at least a bit of a positive.

They are 5th in the league in creating turnovers, and that’s pretty darn good. However, they are 25th in sacks, and that isn’t great at all. They’ve given up a bunch of yards through the air and have been somewhat middle of the pack in yards given up on the ground. They have actually been a fairly decent red zone defense. That all feels about right. They have been classically “bend don’t break” all season long, at best.

Here’s the thing that I think is the long and the short of it. There has only been one player that has consistently brought pressures on the quarterback and that is Jadeveon Clowney, and that’s been a big problem.

Prior to trading for him, this team was likely banking on Ziggy Ansah to help mitigate the loss of Frank Clark, and they were counting on the continual positive growth of defensive tackle Jarran Reed. The fact that neither has contributed much has been a massive problem. With Reed, we can kind of excuse it because he was dealt a six game suspension, and is now just working himself back into the rotation. However, with Ansah, when he has been playing (either because of injury or age, or both) has been a vast shadow of himself.

It’s also pretty fair to note that the much hyped defensive tackle Poona Ford hasn’t factored into the pass rush, rookie first round pick LJ Collier has come in injured and raw and thus ineffective, and second year player Rasheem Green as been spotty, at best.

Here is a bit of good news. Before being injured, defensive lineman Quinton Jefferson had actually been playing pretty good ball. If we can remember back a few games, he was the one guy that had been getting pretty good inside and outside pressures along with Clowney. If he wasn’t getting to the quarterback, he was hurrying them and he was swatting down passes. Through seven games, Q Jeff had acquired 17 tackles, 2 sacks and 3 passes defensed. Those are pretty encouraging numbers. Seattle needs him back, like desperately.

It’s also worth noting just how impactful chemistry is for the pass rush, and how hard it is to generate it with a bunch of new faces. The only legit carry overs from last year are Reed and Q Jeff, and they have yet to play much together, and I think it is safe to say that Clowney and Reed are still figuring each other out. It is entirely possible that their chemistry grows in the second half where we start seeing more pressures and sacks.

Further in the back of the defense, is the other area where Seattle has also not been playing with all their horses yet. The newly acquired safety Quandre Diggs has been resting a sore hamstring that he had been playing on in Detroit, and even though rookie free safety Marquise Blair playing well enough with Bradley McDougald, Diggs is a hard hitting play maker that I’m sure the coaches want to utilize.

There is a reasonable thought that with a healthy adding of Diggs, he perhaps takes over the nickel corner spot and they play with three quality safeties on the field in many match ups. Diggs came into the league as a corner from Texas. A healthy Quandre Diggs, who was a pro bowl alternate last season, just gives this defense more quality dimension. This leads to the next part.

Possible Fix 2. Adjust the Scheme

Right now the Seattle defense is playing pretty predictably, at practically a ridiculous level. The cornerbacks aren’t pressing receivers at the line of scrimmage, and that is allowing receivers to basically do whatever they want to underneath. They can run digs, curls, and slants, and whatever else because there is usually three linebackers in coverage, there are almost always zones available to them because of that.

I believe the main reason why they have simplified these coverages to this extreme is due to the overemphasis of the coaches not wanting defenders to get beat over the top. If we go back to the first game of the season against the Bengals, and recall how John Ross was able to easily slip past Tedric Thompson for a long touchdown bomb, and then recall just how often Thompson repeatedly allowed long pass completions throughout the season until he found himself on injured reverse (was this a Rodney Dangerfield Caddyshack thing?), it’s pretty understandable.

Pete Carroll had probably seen enough, and had mandated these soft zone coverages that would invite quarterbacks to make the easy completions, instead of testing the back end coverage. However, with three weeks of Marquise Blair now starting, maybe the coach will get comfortable enough to start making some adjustments because he feels like he has a player on the back end who will not so easily be beaten over the top.

Another reason for the soft coverage is because they are playing with three linebackers on the field most of the time. Because of this, they are almost always in zone, and even when they blitz, they send the same linebackers from the same spots. It’s way too predictable. Any competent quarterback can pick up on these tendencies and pick apart what Seattle is doing. I think the reason why they’ve accepted this fate is because they don’t feel good at all about their nickel corner situation, and they think linebacker Mychal Kendricks is a better option, but this ties their hands to play zone because they don’t want to force Kendricks to play man against the smaller quicker receiver.

Coming out of the bye week, Seattle could try pressing receivers more, and throwing off their timing. This could give the linebackers a better chance in coverage. They have the big physical outside corners to do this, and with a healthy Diggs, they could utilize more nickel defense, and this would allow for more man coverage. They don’t have to radically change what they have been doing, but they can certainly add more to it, and I think they will.

It is entirely probable that Seattle will have self scouted themselves during the bye week and with the extra week of practice, they will adjust many of these overly predictable  tendencies. Just how much remains to be seen, but I am sure adjustments are coming.

It also wouldn’t surprise me at all if they become even more a blitzing team, and look to blitz from a lot of different angles with different players at linebacker, corner and safety. They might look at this defensive line and determine that they simply do not have the horses to consistently rush with four.  I wouldn’t expect them to always be sending someone extra, but they can be more exotic when they do. They did this last year with Justin Coleman blitzing at nickel. If they feel Diggs can provide that juice, why wouldn’t they revisit that?

Possible Fix 3. Players Step Up and They Adjust Scheme.

It’s entirely possible that Jadeveon Clowney and Jarran Reed develop better chemistry up front, and Quinton Jefferson comes back and makes up for the lack of production from others. Will that make them a decent rushing front four? Possibly not, but at this point, they just need to be better because they almost can’t be any worse.

It is also possible that Ziggy Ansah has still been feeling the effects of the twisted ankle he received in Cleveland and has been favoring it on the field, and through the bye week, he will have rested it to the point that he comes back with more pass rush twitch. It’s also possible that Rasheem Green and maybe LJ Collier will start to pick up their games a bit more. These are all possible.

What might be more probable is that Seattle will adjust the scheme more and will become less predictable. Pete Carroll always uses the bye week to self scout his roster and coaches. It would be shocking to me if they come out of the bye and have not made key adjustments. That is why I think the safe bet is that adjustments are coming.

Closing Thoughts

Even with players playing better and coaching adjustments coming in that will make this unit less predictable, this still is probably not going to be a very good defense. However, if they can just get closer to middle of the pack and by that, I would even take the 20th ranked defense over the 25th, that could be enough for Seattle to have a special season if the offense continues to do what they have been doing.

I think that is why the team went out and brought in wide receiver Josh Gordon. They likely know what they have with this defense, and they need to ride Russell Wilson and the offense. They might even consider bringing in Antonio Brown, even if Gordon works out just fine. At this point, why not?

Presently, Russell Wilson has been enjoying a career year, and Pete Carroll’s dream vision of a perfectly balanced offense has never looked this realized in Seattle with the way Chris Carson and Rashaad Penny have been running, along with how Wilson has been throwing to Tyler Lockett and DK Metcalf. Maybe this is the season to simply go all in on the offense. It’s interesting to note that last year the New England Patriots won the Super Bowl with the 20th ranked overall defense in the league.

As for next season, I think it’s probably the safest bet in all things Seattle Seahawks that we are going to see some sort of major defensive overhaul. We will surely get more into that later as Jadeveon Clowney, Jarran Reed, Quinton Jefferson, Ziggy Ansah, and Mychal Kendricks are all set to be free agents.

But this is now, and that will be then, and as for now, there is still a lot of football left to be played against some tough opponents, but Seattle is still very much in the driver’s seat for their playoff chances and even a division title. So let’s just fix what we got.

Doesn’t have to be great. Doesn’t even have to be very good. Just needs to bend and not break on a dependable level.

Do they have the horses for this? Can they make these adjustments?

Golly, I hope so. I think they can. We shall see soon enough.

Go Hawks.

Thoughts About the Seattle Seahawks’ Whackadoodle Overtime Win Over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Good Lord in Heaven. Where do I frigging begin with these notes? I’m gonna keep this really simple, y’all.

The Good

Russell Wilson is the best football player in the league right now, and his numbers today completely backed that up: 29/43 passes, 378 yards, 5 touchdowns, and 0 INTs. Russell Wilson willed this team that was down 13-21 at halftime to this win. Period.

Tyler Lockett was also unbelievable hauling in 13 grabs for 152 and 2 touchdown grabs. If he is not in the pro bowl this year, the NFL is a total joke.

Rookie phenom DK Metcalf had a massive break out game with 6 catches for a 123 yards and a touchdown, but the bigger story for me was backup tight end Jacob Hollister catching 4 passes for 37 yards and 2 touchdowns. This team has missed Will Dissly’s pass catching at tight end, and slowly, Hollister is looking like the guy who can adequately replace his production. This is a big plus for Seattle’s passing offense.

Chris Carson ran well against the top run stopping defense in the league, although he fumbled twice.

The Bad

The defense. I quit taking notes on this because, by halftime, I didn’t really understand what the point was anymore. That was the worst first half performance I have ever seen out of a Pete Carroll Seattle Seahawk coached team. I can credit them some for slowing Tampa’s offense down more in the second half, but there were still broken coverages, missed tackles, and a general overall lack of consistent pass rush.

This is getting really hard to watch week in and week out. I don’t know what the answers are for this season. I think it is just something fans might have to learn to live with. However, I think there might be some hard choices for Pete Carroll to make heading into the offseason, whether it is coaching or players, or both. My initial thought is that it’s players. Seattle needs a lot of help on that side of the ball right now.

The Ugly

Jason Meyers missed two field goals and an extra point. Both field goals were easy. If Seattle would have lost this game, that would have been the story. Why can’t Seattle get right at kicker?

Moving Forward

Seattle is 7-2 and they are riding an extremely hot quarterback. It’s going to be exciting how they add incoming big play receiver Josh Gordon into this mix.

Russell Wilson is the clearly a league MVP player right now. I think the Seahawks will most likely make the playoffs because of that, but if Gordon becomes a good fit in Seattle, they can still have a pretty special season by catching even more fire offensively. That’s exciting.

What’s troubling is that the defense has yet to get out of it’s own way. They haven’t fixed all the missed tackle issues, and today there were blown coverages galore. That’s troubling.

If Seattle can just be average on defense, then we can talk about maybe being a genuine contender. It’s certainly possible between now and the end of the regular season they do clean it all up, but presently they are clearly testing our patience.

Hang in there, Twelves.

Go Hawks.

Thoughts on the Seattle Seahawks claiming Josh Gordon off of Wavers

a7cb34d0-fcea-11e9-9f7d-86c713dc8b46

The man they call Flash offers a no risk potentially high reward situation for the 2019 Seattle Seahawks. Go Hawks!

 

When the Seattle Seahawks claimed wide receiver Josh Gordon off of the waver wire on Friday November 1st, it was quite the surprise to the hoards of Twelves. Reactions on the local sports radio and on social media seemed pretty varied. Many were excited about his potential paired with Russell Wilson, while others took a more pessimistic view.

Personally, I don’t think there is any right or wrong way to look at this. If you are looking at his immense athletic profile on the field and are day dreaming about what that could mean mixing him with Tyler Lockett and DK Metcalf, there is legitimate reason for your optimism. But if you are looking at his track record of off the field issues, and why maybe New England decided to let him go, and why it took twenty seven other teams to pass on him through the waver wire before he landed in Seattle, it’s totally valid for you to be pumping the breaks on this move.

From my perspective, I think it’s is a pretty exciting for Seattle. When they lost tight end Will Dissly to a season ending injury in week six, they lost Russell Wilson’s seemingly second favorite target. Yes, rookie receiver DK Metcalf had been an exciting addition to the team, but it just seemed like Wilson was favoring Dissly, and his ability to get open in the inside zones and seams.

It also just felt to me like, as we were approaching the trade deadline, Seattle was going to try to make a move to land another target, whether it was another tight end or receiver. I was actually pretty surprised when the trade deadline past and Seattle didn’t make this kind of move. My thought was that they had probably tried, but given the fact other teams saw them as tight end/receiver needy, those potential trading partners were likely jacking up the asking price to the point where Seattle elected to stay pat. Sometimes the best trades are the ones that you don’t make.

Three days later Seattle landed Josh Gordon, a huge receiver with immense athleticism, but one who also comes with truck loads of personal baggage. The great news is that it cost nothing in the way of draft picks or players for Seattle to acquire him. If he isn’t working out, for whatever reason, Seattle can cut him, and they are off the hook, but if he does come in focused and stays clean, well, Seattle, at the very least, has added a player that defenses have got to account for.

Seattle already has a pretty effective power trio of quarterback Russell Wilson, running back Chris Carson, and wide receiver Tyler Lockett. They also having what looks like a major talent in DK Metcalf. If Gordon fits into the mix, what is a defensive coordinator going to look at to take away? If you sell out on the run, how do you cover three dynamic pass catching weapons? If you play the pass, who are you doubling?

This move is a no brainer for Seattle to make. They needed a legit weapon for the pass game, and they got one, baggage and all, and if all he does is push other receivers on the roster to raise their game, that’s also a big win. As former Seattle corner and current 49er Richard Sherman used to love to say, “iron sharpens iron.”

This is also a very Pete Carroll thing to do. He loves to get unique physical talents on his roster, and seemingly especially ones that other teams have rejected. From Mike Williams, to Marshawn Lynch, to Dion Jordan, and now Josh Gordon, Pete loves a good reclamation project, and this is how I mostly see this move.

It’s going to be really interesting to see exactly how this one plays out.

Go Hawks.