Category: Front Page News (Page 58 of 367)

How & why the Seahawks should prioritise the trenches

Corey Linsley — could’ve been a Seahawk, but isn’t

Off-season priority #1 — the trenches.

The key to future success, regardless of what changes occur in the off-season, is improving the O-line and D-line.

The Seahawks need to be honest about why the reset failed and they need to learn from their mistakes.

It’s time to be bold, ambitious and focused to make the offensive and defensive line a strength. Take a few financial risks there, instead of other positions.

No more quantity over quality

Too often the Seahawks have opted to spread their cap space out and they’ve just ended up with average players.

They’ve had money to spend in the last two off-seasons yet they’ve favoured cheap depth over proven ability.

They opted not to re-work Russell Wilson’s deal a year ago to open up cap space, when they started free agency with just under $20m (and created plenty more by cutting Jarran Reed).

In 2020, they squandered $58.25m for barely any return.

The following veteran offensive linemen were available last year. Their PFF grades for 2021 are in brackets:

Corey Linsley (85.5)
Joe Thuney (77.4)
David Andrews (77.3)
Kevin Zeitler (74.0)

Instead the Seahawks chose to bring back Ethan Pocic (injured for most of the year but now grading at 67.3) and traded for Gabe Jackson (63.6).

Let’s not forget that Jackson was being cut by the Raiders and the Seahawks quickly made a trade so he didn’t reach the open market.

That move also forced Damien Lewis to left guard to accommodate the new arrival. Lewis excelled at right guard at LSU and had a tremendous rookie season in Seattle, grading with a 70.2. He looked like a building block on the line for years to come.

Since moving to left guard, his performance has completely dropped off and he’s now grading at 57.3. It’s not clear if these are growing pains or whether they’ve messed up his promising young career by forcing him to the left side.

People often wonder why Russell Wilson is dissatisfied with the Seahawks yet one of the reasons was made abundantly clear. He started the off-season complaining about the O-line to Dan Patrick.

Had the Seahawks landed a Linsley or Thuney and then doubled down with Creed Humphrey in the draft (he’s grading at a 91.6 by the way…), that likely would’ve prevented a lot of drama.

Instead, Jackson and re-signing Pocic was deemed enough by the Seahawks.

It wasn’t and here we are. The next chapter of the saga has begun.

Go back a year earlier.

In 2020 they preferred to spread their cap space on three offensive linemen (B.J. Finney, Cedric Ogbuehi and Brandon Shell) instead of investing in all-pro right tackle Jack Conklin — who earned $8m last year in a starring role for Cleveland. His salary never tops $14m with the Browns.

Finney, Ogbuehi and Shell cost a combined $9.2m.

This plan simply hasn’t worked. It’s time to stop spending the cap on average or bad players. You can create depth with cheap veterans or draft picks (provided you stop giving them away).

It’s time to go and make a big investment on the line.

Terron Armstead, Brandon Scherff, Ryan Jensen, James Daniels and Brian Allen are arguably not on the same scale as Linsley or Thuney.

It’s what’s available this year though and it’s time to make something happen.

Meanwhile with the defensive line, it’s a similar story.

They announced at the 2020 combine that fixing the pass rush was a priority, as was retaining Jadeveon Clowney. They couldn’t convince Clowney to return and ended up settling for Bruce Irvin ($5.9m) and Benson Mayowa ($3.018m).

It wasn’t enough and the pass rush was an absolute disaster before the Carlos Dunlap trade at the deadline.

Rather than learn from the error, they were at it again in 2021.

Kerry Hyder, Carlos Dunlap, Benson Mayowa, Rasheem Green, Robert Nkemdiche, Darrell Taylor, Alton Robinson, L.J. Collier.

It’s a collection of journeymen, nearly-men and unproven younger players.

They haven’t been able to create enough pressure or get off the field. They have the fifth fewest sacks in the NFL and the sixth worst pressure percentage. Their sack percentage of 4.5% is the second worst in the league behind only the Falcons.

The group badly needs an injection of quality.

Chandler Jones, Von Miller, Jadeveon Clowney, Randy Gregory, Akiem Hicks, Harold Landry and Calais Campbell are all set to reach free agency.

Imagine snatching Jones away from Arizona and pairing him with Taylor.

Who cares if there’s a risk involved with paying him big bucks? If you’re willing to pay the Jets as much as you did for Jamal Adams, you can’t shirk away from paying a proven pass rusher two years later.

Look at recent free agent additions, currently occupying spots among the NFL’s sack leaders:

Robert Quinn — 18 sacks
Trey Hendrickson — 14 sacks
Matthew Judon — 12.5 sacks
Markus Golden — 11 sacks
Haason Reddick — 11 sacks
Shaquill Barrett — 10 sacks
Yannick Ngakoue — 10 sacks
Leonard Floyd — 9.5 sacks

That’s eight of the top-15 sack leaders — more than half the list.

Go and get your 10-15 sack specialist and make life hell for opponents, preventing these long, tiresome drives we keep seeing on defense every week.

You’ve tried thrifty bargain shopping and it didn’t work.

You’ve tried to ‘recruit’ players to play for cheaper and you’ve not had a hit since Avril and Bennett nine years ago.

Now it’s time for a splash. It’s time to shop for the NFL equivalent of a designer label.

They have money available

According to Over the Cap, the Seahawks have $43,508,768 to spend in 2022.

You can easily create more. Look at the potential savings:

Cutting Bobby Wagner saves $16,600,000

Cutting Jason Myers saves $4,000,000

Cutting Gabe Jackson saves $3,000,000

Cutting Chris Carson saves $3,425,000

Cutting Benson Mayowa saves $1,510,000

Cutting Kerry Hyder saves $2,000,000

Cutting Marquise Blair saves $1,345,452

Cutting Nick Bellore saves $2,150,000

Cutting LJ Collier saves $986,323

Cutting Carlos Dunlap saves $900,000

I’m not suggesting they make all of these moves — but if you need more than $43,508,768 to spend there a ways to increase it.

You also might be able to trade some players, rather than cut them.

There’s no excuse not to be big spenders in the off-season. Only five teams have more cap space than the Seahawks. If they cut or trade Bobby Wagner, that list shrinks from five teams to one team.

They need to be honest about the roster

The Seahawks can’t pretend the current group is close. They aren’t.

Yet we don’t have to go over the top and suggest they’re years away either.

If you can make impact signings on the O-line and D-line, you can make major improvements very quickly.

Too much has been invested at linebacker and safety while they’ve scrimped and saved up front. They need to be prepared to reverse that now.

That means moving on from Wagner and drafting a cheaper replacement in the middle rounds — such as Georgia’s Channing Tindall. You’ve already spent a first round pick on Jordyn Brooks. That’s quite enough high-end investment at linebacker.

It also means accepting that you’ve already made the ill-advised decision to pay Jamal Adams $17.5m a year having already given up two first round picks and a third rounder for him. Therefore, you cannot justify splashing out on Quandre Diggs if it means more bargain shopping in the trenches.

This is a decent draft at safety. You’ll be able to get one in the middle rounds — or do what you did with Diggs in the first place and add a veteran at a great price.

I’m not suggesting they shouldn’t re-sign Diggs. It needs to be for the right price, though. Ideally you retain him and Gerald Everett but you can’t overpay at the expense of more important positions.

What else can they do?

I’ve already mentioned Georgia’s Tindall at linebacker. They probably need another running back. Florida’s Dameon Pierce or UCLA’s Zach Charbonnet fit the bill.

Don’t waste resources there, look to the draft.

Try and be the poacher for once and look for value in the trade market. Mekhi Becton is supposedly on the way out in New York. Make a call.

On top of that, be willing to bring Duane Brown back on a one-year deal if needed. He might be getting up in age but he isn’t a liability who desperately needs to be replaced unless a clearly better solution emerges.

The Seahawks currently own pick #41. It has been possible to trade back into the late first with relative ease over the years:

2019 — Seattle went from #30 to #37 for a fourth and fifth round pick

2019 — Rams went from #31 to #45 for a third round pick

2017 — Packers went from #29 to #33 for a fourth round pick

2016 — Chiefs went from #28 to #37 for a fourth rounder and a swap of sixth and seventh rounders

There are players I really like in this draft and expect to go early. Yet just because I’m projecting them higher than a lot of other people doesn’t mean it’ll happen.

If a quality tackle prospect or defensive lineman lasts into the late first, Seattle should be aggressive and go and get them.

Here are some names to monitor:

Trevor Penning (T, Northern Iowa)
Bernhard Raimann (T, Central Michigan)
Abraham Lucas (T, Washington State)
Tyler Linderbaum (C, Iowa)
Logan Hall (DL, Houston)
Jermaine Johnson (DE, Florida State)
Devonte Wyatt (DT, Georgia)
Jordan Davis (DT, Georgia)

If the Seahawks go into next season strong in the trenches with Russell Wilson, the weapons they have and a revamped running game — the rest will take care of itself.

It’s very possible to go from bad to good in an off-season but you have to be honest about the roster and you have to target and sign the right players in the right areas.

The Seahawks have not used their resources well since the 2018 reset. If they’re willing to be frank about what’s gone wrong, they can avoid making the same mistakes in 2022.

They can get this team back on track and they can convince the quarterback his future remains in Seattle.

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The Pete Carroll debate, from my perspective

The debate over Pete Carroll’s future has become increasingly partisan and frustrating

As is usually the case with Seahawks Twitter — a big topic relating to the team has ended up becoming a fractious talking point.

With the season finally set to end on Sunday, things have ramped up recently. An exercise in ‘extreme confirming of priors’ is underway.

All sides are guilty of this. Yet I think those inclined to back the retention of Pete Carroll as Head Coach, while holding an indifferent opinion on Russell Wilson’s future, have started taking things to a new level.

Here’s a tweet from Mike Salk, posted after the Lions game:

The premise that Wilson’s dissatisfaction is limited to a supposed unwillingness to play a brand of football seen against Detroit feels like a take that can be deconstructed.

You don’t need intimate knowledge of the situation to come to the conclusion that Wilson’s issues with the Seahawks aren’t based around Pete Carroll’s desire to feature the running game.

The problems are much more likely to be about the fact they haven’t been able to do it consistently for years, despite setting out to make it a key aspect of the team.

How often, over the years, have the Seahawks actually played a game like they did on Sunday? With supreme balance, the ability to run with great success and get after an opponent on offense?

Now compare this to the occasions, particularly in the playoffs, where the Seahawks have tried to run the ball on offense — failed — conceded easy points on defense and then required the quarterback to dig them out of a huge hole.

This idea that Wilson isn’t interested in an offensive performance structured like the Lions game is plucked out of thin air and presented as a reasonable take. Salk’s tweet has nearly 900 likes, a healthy number.

Yet in truth, it doesn’t come close to properly analysing the situation.

Think how many times over the years the running game has collapsed as soon as Chris Carson got hurt and how much pressure it’s put on Wilson to be the be-all and end-all.

Think how often the offensive line has been pushed around up front, preventing the Seahawks from running effectively to provide balance — despite being set up to be a run-blocking unit first and foremost.

This isn’t about Wilson wanting to throw 50 times a game and not running the ball. It’s about several aspects, all working together to create a wider dissatisfaction:

— The lack of consistency on offense and too often the utter dependency on Wilson to bail the team out (which cannot be denied has happened many times over the years, even if it’s easy to forget these days)

— General poor team building — especially since the 2018 reset — with a particular focus on the fact that since 2012 the Seahawks have never delivered a top-tier offensive line for the quarterback (and barely really tried to)

— Playoff failure — one win in five seasons now — with many playoff exits following a familiar script of game-plan not working, big deficit at half-time and Wilson magic required to make it a game in the second half

— Seeing another quarterback change teams, have significant input in personnel and scheming, before immediately winning a Super Bowl

To limit Wilson’s complaints to ‘he doesn’t want to win with a running back running for 170 yards while he only throws 29 times’ is absurd. Especially when, a year ago, Aaron Rodgers won the MVP award with the Packers running the ball 32 more times than Seattle and having a higher yards-per-game average ranking in the running game than they did in the passing game.

Tom Brady also clearly benefitted from the running game and defense in Tampa Bay.

Not only that — Wilson has made it clear that what we saw in week one against Indianapolis and in week 17 against Detroit is the offense as it was intended to look. Yet so often this year, it hasn’t looked anything like that. Even prior to Wilson’s injury it felt like we were watching the late-2020 offense again against Tennessee, Minnesota, San Francisco and LA.

Some of the blame should be pointed at Wilson’s personal performances which have been well below par, to say the least. Yet it’s Seattle’s inability to recreate what was seen on Sunday consistently that is the broader issue — not that the performance happened and featured the running game as much as it did.

This is where we’re at though. Opinions shared on twitter, without a great deal of thought put into them.

Crafting an article takes time. Often you start writing about one thing and pivot to something else, because you go on a bit of a journey. You research, you think, you evolve your position.

On twitter a thought pops into your head and bang — it’s posted to thousands of people for approval. Once the opinion is uttered, it’s very hard to row back because the fear of losing face often outweighs the perception of being seen to be wrong.

Views spread like wildfire — and rarely there’s any counter arguments to read or hear.

The other problem that is happening, though, is valid arguments are being ignored or conveniently dismissed as this debate roars on.

I’m afraid it feels like the biggest culprits are again those minded to publicly back Carroll remaining in Seattle, with indifference on Wilson’s future.

Recently I saw Brian Nemhauser (Hawk Blogger) post a long twitter thread discussing the situation. He put a lot of weight into a quote from Matt Hasselbeck, who said on 710 ESPN, “They (the Seahawks) will not be successful if they move on from Pete.”

To me that felt like a comment that is easily challengeable. Are we saying that literally no other coach could be successful in Seattle if Carroll departs? That’s quite a claim to make and to me, needs to be explained in greater detail than Hasselbeck provided.

The comments received a lot of attention. Brian’s tweet received +220 likes. Yet similar comments from Brandon Marshall — who like Hasselbeck, spent a season with Carroll in Seattle — didn’t receive the same acknowledgement.

Marshall claimed recently that Carroll’s schemes have become predictable and that his experience was that opponents knew what was coming:

“Everyone knows their book. So now I’m going into the game knowing how to beat their defense. Defensively, it’s not what it used to be. It used to be hard, hard, hard back in the day to beat the Seattle Seahawks and get anything on them. It starts there with philosophy. He has to change his ways.”

Brian then went on to reference that broadcaster Gee Scott had interpreted Kam Chancellor’s recent tweet about wishing to speak to Jody Allen as supportive of Carroll. Yet there’s no acknowledgement that Chancellor liked the following reply in response to his tweet:

Of course, this equally isn’t a clear sign that Chancellor would march into Allen’s office and tell her to fire Pete Carroll. I just think it’s difficult to read anything into Chancellor’s tweet and it shouldn’t be assumed as pro or anti Carroll/Wilson.

In response to the thread, Paul Gallant (formerly of 710 ESPN) questioned why Tyler Lockett doesn’t attend Russell Wilson’s off-season workouts while stating, “All signs point to Russ being about himself.”

That’s quite the 2+2=5 on Lockett, who could have a myriad of reasons for not attending Wilson’s workouts. It’s also quite an accusation to place at Wilson’s door, given he hosts those workouts with teammates in the first place, is the reigning Walter Payton ‘Man of the Year’ and on Sunday, along with wife Ciara, presented a cheque for the $2.7m the ‘Why Not You Foundation’ raised in 2021 for the Immuno Heroes, Seattle Children’s hospital’s⁩ program to fight childhood cancer worldwide.

I’m not for a second saying Gallant is suggesting that Wilson is self-centered off the field because clearly the evidence suggests otherwise. Many people hold the opinion that Wilson has tunnel-vision for his own personal career, so it’s not a particularly ‘out-there’ claim.

I just don’t think it’s a take that chimes at all with Wilson the individual. At times it feels like the extreme ambition of Wilson, both personally and for the team, is viewed negatively. Are lofty goals really indicative of a self-centered person?

Brian finally noted that John Clayton had talked about “how he absolutely believes it’s harder to find a great head coach than a franchise QB”. Today another long-standing reporter, Peter King, said, “It’s a lot harder to find a top quarterback than it is to get a coach you can win with.”

Also on Sunday, Davis Hsu posted a lengthy twitter thread to amplify an opinion that Wilson should be dealt.

Among those takes was a tweet claiming: “OBJ (Odell Beckham Jr) knew to stay clear (of Wilson)”. I felt obliged to reply to the tweet, pointing out that this couldn’t be further from the truth. I’m not an insider — far from it. I’d never claim to be. I do know for a fact, however, that OBJ’s reasoning for not signing in Seattle had nothing to do with a lack of desire to play with Wilson.

There’s a pro-Carroll narrative developing that I think needs to be fleshed out more than we’re currently seeing. As more and more people take to Twitter, the radio and elsewhere to back Carroll and lean towards trading Wilson, quite a few flimsy points are being made while a lot of valid points are being ignored.

Here are a few…

Who replaces Wilson if he departs?

The quarterback situation in college football is decidedly poor and the free agent market is abysmal.

This issue is never really acknowledged.

I’ve seen and heard references to ‘drafting a quarterback every year until you find the answer’.

Sure — I suppose that’s an idea. It’s basically buying a lottery ticket every week until you win. Yet the odds are stacked against you ever succeeding — whether it’s the lottery or a quarterback.

The reality is 30 quarterbacks were drafted in rounds 1-2 between 2013-2020. Of that group, you can argue eight truly justified the picks used on them.

That’s a 26% success rate. Or in other words, history says you’ve got a 74% chance of making a bad investment at quarterback in the first two rounds.

Any plan that involves moving on from Wilson should include a clear path to the next signal caller. One is never given.

You never hear a case being made for Carson Strong, Kenny Pickett or any other rookie quarterback eligible in the draft.

Occasionally someone will mention a name like Trent Dilfer. ‘You don’t need a top passer to win a Championship’.

Yet there are thousands of other quarterbacks who were not top-level and didn’t win a playoff game, let alone a Super Bowl. The rare few who do are nearly always exceptionally backed by a generational defense or a complete roster — something that is almost as difficult to achieve as striking gold on a top quarterback.

How are you rebuilding this team if you get picks for Wilson?

This is the weakest draft at the top end in a long time.

The response to this is often, ‘I have read a mock draft or two and they say there’s a few linemen available so that works for me’.

There’s no acknowledgement that a lot of these linemen are being projected well above their talent-range due to the fact there’s a distinct lack of legit first round prospects in this draft.

I’ve reviewed this class in depth. Even the players I really like — such as Northern Iowa’s Trevor Penning — I’d suggest wouldn’t be top-10 picks most other years.

It’s going be a major challenge to launch the Seahawks into a new, exciting era with high picks in April.

People should look at this class and explain why trading your best asset for picks in this draft would be a better move than working to make things better with the quarterback you have.

Why are Pete Carroll and John Schneider the right men to oversee another rebuild?

They were the architects of the 2018-21 reset. They’ve squandered high picks on Rashaad Penny, LJ Collier and Marquise Blair. The 2017 draft was a disaster. They’ve not delivered later round gems to compensate and their record, as such, warrants a high degree of scrutiny. Particularly because they passed on so many talented players at positions of need (TJ Watt, Nick Chubb, Ryan Ramczyk, Jonathan Taylor, Trevon Diggs etc).

Carroll and Schneider spent $58.25m on the following list of players during the 2020 off-season:

Jarran Reed $9.35m
Greg Olsen $6.9m
Bruce Irvin $5.9m
Carlos Hyde $4m
B.J. Finney $3.5m
Brandon Shell $3.475m
Quinton Dunbar $3.421m
Jacob Hollister $3.259m
Benson Mayowa $3.018m
Mike Iupati $2.5m
Cedric Obuehi $2.237m
Joey Hunt $2.1m
Branden Jackson $2.1m
David Moore $2.1m
Geno Smith $887,500
Neiko Thorpe $887,500
Luke Willson $887,500
Phillip Dorsett $887,500
Chance Warmack $887,500

An opportunity to elevate the roster to the next level, blown.

Carroll once said you judge a trapper by his furs. Yet in free agency, has Carroll claimed a fur since Bennett and Avril? That was nine years ago.

The Seahawks have had numerous years where they’ve entered a training camp (or even a regular season) with gaping holes on the roster, then tried to fix the problem on the run. This was evident at cornerback and center this year and pass rush last year.

Then there’s the Jamal Adams trade. Do we really need to go into that again?

What possible justification is there for this pair getting another opportunity to rebuild this team, given their record?

No suitable answer, so far, has been provided.

Instead we hear a lot about the importance of ‘culture’, how difficult it is to replace a good Head Coach and any other convenient pointers that can be tweeted without any detail to form an online argument.

I’m not even sure the ‘culture’ argument is that strong, given it’s difficult to define how you’d describe ‘culture’ within a football team.

I think Carroll has tremendous strengths as a leader of men. I think his willingness to be open-minded and let individuals grow and develop is admirable. He’s taken risks during his Seahawks career that few other coaches would’ve done — and been rewarded emphatically for his boldness.

Yet we’ve also seen one play destroy a potential dynasty, amid a flurry of ridiculous locker-room conspiracy theories surrounding Carroll’s preference on who wins a Super Bowl MVP award. Players rushed to journalists to call the team ‘the Titanic’. Who could forget Richard Sherman ranting and raving at team mates and coaches on the sideline during an actual game — wildly out of control. We hear stories of team mates punching each other before the biggest game in franchise history. The relationship between key members of the defense and the franchise quarterback seemed to be all over the place, based on petty ‘you’re treating him differently’ arguments.

Do I need to go on?

It’s been a circus on multiple occasions.

Therefore, I think the ‘culture’ has been a mixed bag. There have been pro’s and con’s. The environment that tolerates Marshawn Lynch so he can become a living legend is also the environment that saw so much nonsense engulf the team and prevent it from maxing out one of the greatest roster’s in NFL history.

As for the difficulty in replacing a Head Coach — nobody should ever assume this will be easy. Yet the Seahawks have benefitted from being ambitious with two of their last three appointments (Holmgren, Carroll) and they’ve seen first hand the problem with settling (Mora). There’s no reason why this franchise can’t make a great pitch to an exciting candidate for a third time to provide the platform for continued, future success.

After all — I’m sure plenty of people made the same argument for the post-Holmgren era in 2007/08. Yet by 2010, the best coach in franchise history was on board.

Let’s also remind ourselves what the Seahawks were with Carroll pre-Wilson. They were a 7-9 team. Minus Wilson for four games in 2021 — and with the lingering effects of a finger injury stretching over numerous other games — the Seahawks are now a 6-10 team.

With the Jets, Carroll went 6-10 before being fired. In New England, his overall record was 27-21.

This is why he stated a few weeks ago that without Wilson, he wouldn’t have lasted as long as he has in Seattle. So when people talk about replacing a Head Coach as a harder act than replacing a quarterback — I’m not entirely sure Carroll would agree.

Readers of this blog know my preference for the future (and I wrote about my Plan A, B and C here). I think Carroll and Schneider deserve the utmost respect and credit for what they’ve achieved in Seattle. I also think fresh leadership is required and a new era is necessary.

I would like to see an ambitious appointment made at Head Coach and I think the Seahawks should call New Orleans next week and ask them to name a price for Sean Payton. If that deal isn’t possible, call Doug Pederson.

At GM, I’d like to see a Seattle return for Ed Dodds, currently with the Colts.

Yet I recognise none of this is flawless or without risk. I also accept the possibility of a Wilson trade and that’s why we’ve discussed it so much.

I’m also willing to accept two key points that go against my preference:

1. A case can probably be made for retaining Carroll, I just don’t think anyone has made any kind of sufficient effort to establish what it is.

2. I personally have views on how Carroll can turn this around and be a thriving success in Seattle — with Russell Wilson.

On point #2 — I think it’s actually pretty straight forward.

If Carroll was willing to commit to creating a top class staff, I think he can still be a tremendous Head Coach for the Seattle Seahawks.

As mentioned, he is a strong leader and motivator. He could be a great figurehead.

If he was willing to embrace what I call ‘the Nick Saban approach’ — I still think he could enjoy years of success.

This isn’t a new thought either. Here’s what I wrote on October 6th, 2020:

Pete Carroll put together the bulk of his current staff in 2018. It was the start of the re-set with a number of high-profile players and coaches departing.

The Seahawks had completely lost their identity and in an attempt to regain control, Carroll appointed familiar faces and people who would run his system.

It was the right thing to do at the time. Seattle recaptured its identity, avoided a huge downturn in results despite the siphoning-off of talent and quickly got back on track.

Now that they’re three years in it might be time for a rejig. Arguably, they could do with some outsiders to come in and offer new ideas.

Carroll once remarked, “It’s never too late to reinvent yourself”.

I wish he would take his own advice.

Imagine a situation where the Seahawks went out and landed the best coordinators and positional staff money could buy? Carroll — rather than insisting on control of every aspect of the team, doing things the way he aggressively believes in — cedes some control and takes a position of master-motivator and leader.

The X’s and O’s are left up to other people, along with the fine-details of the game-planning and in-game adjustments.

That, to me, is an exciting prospect.

Saban has done it with Alabama. He’s adapted and evolved. He’s committed to bringing in first-rate coaches to make up his staff. Dare I say, along with a relentless recruiting drive, it’s one of the keys to Alabama’s seemingly never-ending run.

They are doing a better job of ‘winning forever’.

Instead of doing this, Carroll has persisted with his guys. Ken Norton as defensive coordinator. He employs one of his sons. Carl ‘Tater’ Smith is not only back in Seattle but Carroll referenced Smith, along with his son Nate, as the people he turns to for a dose of reality.

It was hard to take that seriously.

Carroll is so clear in his mind that he has to do things his way and the only person keeping him in check is ‘Tater’. That’s where we’re at.

Granted there have been times when he’s relented slightly. The first half of last season is a good example, with the ‘Let Russ Cook’ movement. Or, to an extent, the appointment of Shane Waldron (although he wasn’t ‘Wilson’s hand-picked guy’ as many try to suggest).

Yet when Carroll does deviate slightly, it always feels like it happens with a degree of awkwardness. When a tough stretch was experienced after an electric start in 2020, the solution wasn’t to try and become more creative and work a way out of it. It was to reign things in.

When Carroll was asked about the stalling and predictable offense a year ago, having wrestled back control, he refused to acknowledge it — pushing back on Joe Fann (who asked the question) while claiming it was a media creation.

A fortnight later, the same issues were hopelessly exposed in a playoff hammering at the hands of the Rams.

The truth is it doesn’t take much to knock Carroll away from a fresh idea or plan and revert to type.

He’s a control freak — which doesn’t have to be a bad thing. For a lot of his time in Seattle, it’s been to the benefit of the Seahawks that he’s so clear in his vision.

Right now, it feels like what would be best is to employ the best people available and trust them. It feels like Carroll still has a lot to offer, yet his stubbornness to do it his way feels restrictive. It hasn’t allowed the Seahawks to put together the best possible staff or create the best possible formula for success on the field and the results (one playoff win in five years) speak for themselves.

When an argument like this is made, often the pushback is what Salk was arguing at the start of the article. That ‘Carroll’s style’ is defined as ‘running the ball’ and those against it are accused of wanting the quarterback to throw 40-50 times a game.

Carroll’s philosophy goes beyond that. It’s the in-game decision making. Punting, for example, on the opponents 40-yard-line to try and play a field position game, when the modern NFL has clearly shown the benefits of being across situational football.

It’s about being open minded and prepared to trust the people around you and not feeling like you have to take control at the first sign of trouble. Or feeling that reverting to type is the right thing to do when there might be a way to persist with a plan, just by doing things slightly differently.

It’s about a team once considered exciting league-wide trendsetters now appearing stale and stuck in their ways.

I suspect this is another part of Wilson’s issue with the team — which is why it was revealed in an Athletic article last year that he’s often been ignored during game-planning meetings. He wants to have a say, which isn’t unreasonable (especially if you’ve chosen to pay the guy $35m a year). I don’t think he’s been listened to as much as he wants, if at all. I accept though, I can’t say that with any certainty.

It’s also about actually delivering your vision. We all know the kind of football Carroll wants to play. So why has so little been done to pump resources into the trenches and deliver a tremendous running game? Why has the D-line and O-line often been band-aided together, with a running game seemingly dependant on a player who has shown no ability to avoid injuries in a five-year career?

I don’t think Wilson’s concerns are unreasonable or indicative of a player so hopelessly self-centered that he’s lost a grip of reality. I simply think he sees a lot of the same concerns many of us see.

He doesn’t want to waste the second half of his career and live with regrets for the rest of his life. Is that so hard to understand?

Frankly, I think he’s got a point. The trajectory of the Seahawks isn’t trending upwards and what’s happened this year felt predictable.

I want to end with this thought. Carroll has made it clear he has no interest in a rebuild, or at least that he doesn’t think one is necessary. I think this is in part because Carroll, in his 71st year, doesn’t want to spend the last few years of his career trying to win the quarterback lottery again.

Whether you’re pro or anti-Carroll, or pro or anti-Wilson, does anyone benefit from a scenario where Carroll remains, minimal changes occur and they ultimately refuse any trade request from the quarterback?

Do you really want to see a repeat of a year ago? Endless media speculation, an unhappy quarterback and a team not really knowing whether it’s coming or going?

Without serious changes to Carroll’s approach, that’s what the future holds if the status quo remains.

That alone, for me, is why change of some kind is absolutely necessary.

Another off-season like the last one is neither a recipe for 2022 success or the start of an overhaul that many feel is needed.

Yet perhaps, ultimately, we’re all focusing on the wrong thing.

In this article about the Portland Trailblazers, it’s claimed ‘It was never his (Paul Allen’s) intention to gift the franchise to his sister and chairman Bert Kolde’.

Author John Canzano from the Oregonian adds:

Jody Allen sits in her brother’s old seat location, baseline near the basket, at games. She is often referred to as the “owner,” but former Blazers’ president Chris McGowan corrected me in a recent conversation and said, “Jody is the trustee. The team is owned by Paul’s estate.”

Time to sell.

The franchise needs an owner or ownership group that will love it, nurture it, and help it get back on its feet.

Paul Allen placed the NBA team in his estate amid his other assets and instructed that it be liquidated. The aim was to use the proceeds to fuel his life-long passion projects (brain research, space exploration, music, philanthropy). In no way should the Blazers’ remain adrift, future uncertain.

It’s time to honor Paul Allen’s wishes and sell the Blazers to someone who will love them again.

If this is an accurate reading of the situation in Portland, it should be extremely concerning for Seahawks fans too.

Especially when there’s potential for the franchise to similarly drift.

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Kentucky quarterback Will Levis is the real deal

Will Levis is a star in the making

I’ve spent a lot of time arguing that the quarterback picture in college football is something of a blackhole. So it’s only fair I make a slight correction.

Kentucky’s Will Levis is a legit NFL prospect.

He’s eligible for the 2022 draft but when I asked Tony Pauline about the likelihood of Levis declaring this year, he said the expectation is he will return for a second season at UK (having transferred from Penn State)

The likes of Alabama’s Bryce Young and Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud get a lot of hype. For me, Levis is the one with a chance to elevate his stock into a high grade whenever he turns pro.

He’s 6-3, 232lbs and a terrific athlete. He ran a 4.10 short shuttle at SPARQ and jumped a 36 inch vertical. His overall score was a 123.27 — which is seriously impressive for a quarterback who was already 224lbs in High School.

It shows on tape. As a runner, Levis is similar to Taysom Hill. He’s not going to break off dynamic, sudden runs like Lamar Jackson or Kyler Murray. He is more than capable of taking a read-option, scrambling for a decent gain and even making yards after contact.

In the red zone in particular, he could be like having another running back on the field. He’s a brilliantly sized, explosive athlete who registered nine rushing touchdowns in 2021.

All of this is just a bonus though.

Levis has excellent technique. He squares his shoulders off and positions himself to make accurate throws. His feet are planted on the ground, providing the necessary base to throw with consistent velocity. There’s evidence of touch throws and he has plenty of arm strength to drive the ball into tight windows. His release is compact and smooth.

I wouldn’t say he has the special qualities of a Carson Strong, or the ‘wow’ factor as a passer either. Yet what he shows is an ability to make throws on every level and keep an offense ticking with rhythm. Being able to mix things up with a few runs means opponents have to account for his legs. He’s a difficult quarterback to prepare for.

He spent three seasons as the backup to Trace McSorley and Sean Clifford and it never really worked out at Penn State. For that reason, as an older player, you might wonder if he’d consider turning pro this year. For purely selfish reasons, I hope it happens.

Anyone who can elevate this quarterback class would be welcome.

Yet it’s clear what his impact has been on Kentucky. They finished the season 10-3 and defeated Iowa in the Citrus Bowl. Another strong year in the SEC could really promote Levis into the high first round discussion. The sky’s the limit too, given the position he plays.

Kentucky just had an impressive recruiting cycle, ranking 10th in the nation according to Rivals. So they’re a team trending in the right direction.

One key decision will be that of star receiver Wan’Dale Robinson. He’s considering turning pro after a 1334, seven touchdown 2021 season. He’s a terrific prospect in his own right and could be a high pick if he turns pro. If he bolts for the NFL — it’ll impact Levis’ stock, as he’ll lose his best playmaking target.

Either way, Levis is the name to have etched on your brains for 2023 — short of an unexpected decision that sees him turn pro this year.

There is one thing you should know though — he has some strange eating habits. He puts mayonnaise in his coffee, eats bananas with the skin still on and when UK won the Citrus Bowl, he ate an orange with the skin on too.

It’s not clear if this will impact his draft grade…

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Curtis Allen’s week seventeen watch points (vs Detroit)

Note: This is a guest post by Curtis Allen and the latest piece in a weekly series. Curtis looks at the Seahawks and their opponents and discusses key factors.

With two games left in the season and nothing to fight for but pride, there is very little at stake this week. While Pete Carroll and the players are saying the right things publicly about being competitive and giving their full effort, the fog of a lost season and major changes coming for 2022 has now fully enveloped the franchise.

It is arguable that the Detroit Lions, not unlike the Bears, are possibly the worst choice to play the Seahawks for Sunday’s game. What initially looked like a cakewalk to secure a better playoff spot (or even a division title) before the season started now looks like a no-win situation.

The Lions stand at 2-12-1 as a lock for a top-5 pick in the draft as their seemingly never-ending rebuilding process continues. Unfortunately, they are not playing a brand of football that their record indicates. They are on a bit of an upswing compared to earlier in the season and Dan Campbell has the team playing with heart and grit through this wreck of a season.

So a win against this team does nothing. Whereas a loss just drives another nail further into the coffin of the season and continues to punctuate just how horrid this Seahawks team has been.

Still, with this game perhaps being Russell Wilson’s final one in a Seahawks uniform in Seattle (his words) and with the opportunity to see some exciting young talent on the Lions’ roster to stoke the fires of building the Seahawks back up through the 2022 draft, it will be hard to simply shrug off.

Here are some brief thoughts on what to look for…

Get off the field, defense

The Lions have the 15th ranked rushing offense, the 24th ranked passing offense and the 29th scoring offense. In a normal year, Seahawks fans would be scoffing at this and licking their chops for the defense to control this game and give the offense good field position all day.

But as you know, this is not a normal year. The defense just has not been able to get off the field. Last week they surrendered a 15-play, 8-minute monster of a drive to the Chicago Bears and their listless offense last week. When the defense held at the goal line to avoid conceding any points, commentator Aqib Talib bellowed into the mic ‘this defense doesn’t care about yards! Only points…’ as the players danced off the field.

Of course, that was a Pyrrhic Victory, as the offense could not put any distance between them and their own end zone, they punted and six plays later the Bears scored a touchdown. Not unpredictably, late in the game the defense could not make a seven point lead with three minutes to play hold up at the Bears’ 20-yard line because they had spent so much of the game on the field already.

The Lions are going to present a similar challenge to this defense on Sunday.

They have a pair of good running backs in Jamaal Williams and D’Andre Swift who are capable of running inside and around the edges with speed and toughness. Rookie Penei Sewell has played like a top-10 pick, garnering a 78 PFF rating in his rookie season.

Amon-Ra St. Brown has burst onto the NFL stage the last month in particular with 35 catches for sixteen first downs and three touchdowns in just the last four games. He is just one of a very impressive rookie class of wide receivers.

Have a look at his play last week against the Falcons – note how the Lions are using him all over the field (and imagine Dee Eskridge being used this way):

Tell me those simple ‘run seven yards and curl to beat a soft zone’ plays aren’t the exact thing that the Seahawks defense has had trouble with this season. He also does all those little things good wide receivers do, like having body control and awareness to get the ball past the first-down marker.

St. Brown will probably have as many touches and targets as he can handle Sunday, with the Lions’ other top receivers in COVID protocols at this very moment. The Seahawks will need to play him far better than the Falcons did.

Dan Campbell is also taking swashbuckling to new heights this year, leading the NFL on fourth down attempts with 36 (for the record, the Seahawks are the polar opposite, last in the NFL with 10 attempts). The Lions have made 18 of them for a 50% conversion rate. That spells trouble for this defense.

Add to that this Lions offense has averaged 341 yards of offense in their last four games and it could be another lopsided time of possession day.

The defense needs to find a way to string together a combination of four plays that do not gain ten yards more than once. We can talk all day about Russell Wilson and his uncharacteristic play but that discussion would be far more effective if the defense was regularly doing its job and giving the offense more chances than they are.

Attack this defense

This Lions defense has nothing to hang their hats on. They are 27th in rushing defense, 24th in passing defense and 25th in scoring defense.

They have recorded only 25 sacks this season – second worst in the NFL only to the Falcons’ 16 sacks.

Their pressure rate of 20.1% is 29th in NFL.

The closest thing they have to a bright spot on defense is cornerback Amani Oruwariye. He is their most frequently targeted player but is only conceding a 61% completion rate and a passer rating of only 74.

Still, PFF has him rated at 59, as he has 10 missed tackles and has conceded four touchdown passes this year. He also has been flagged for pass interference five times, one of the highest in the league (paging Tyler Lockett…_).

Blog favorite Alim McNeill has provided some nice play this year as an interior presence and appears to be a nice player the Lions can build around.

Yet this is truly one of the worst defenses the Seahawks will face all season. The only thing keeping them from moving the ball at will on this defense will be themselves.

Who knew that we were watching the best this offense would offer all season in Week One? It has been a sad state of affairs.

This game stands as an opportunity to use all that talk of staying competitive and not just running the season out to make a statement about what they can do and how they can control this game and still deliver wins.

That all starts with the quarterback.

The team must get a return to form for Russell Wilson

Wilson has rightly not escaped his share of blame for woes the team has had this season. Unable to fully recover from a serious finger injury, to not being able to make throws we have all seen him make hundreds of times before, to pressing too hard to try and deliver a win, not much has gone right for him this year.

Wilson laid down a gauntlet that Sunday may be his last game in a Seahawks uniform in Seattle and intentionally qualified it by adding ‘but not my last game in the NFL’, to make clear to the media that he means playing for another team and not retirement.

As meaningless as this game is, he knows this could be the end of an era. It would be fitting to go out with an efficient, occasionally brilliant game that takes this team to a victory.

It could serve many purposes, other than just winning a grey December game with no playoff implication:

– It would be a nice goodbye and thank you to fans in Seattle

– It would certainly give notice of what the Seahawks would be missing should they decide to trade him

– It would be a strong demonstration to any team considering trading for him that he has not lost his form

– If anything, it would slow the roll that a lot of the media have taken up that he is the main cause of all the troubles in recent times

And lastly, it would be something he can grasp and hold onto going into the offseason. After jousting with the Seahawks’ management and coming to a truce this last offseason, the hopes of giving it one more shot in Pete Carroll’s system have been absolutely dashed.

Dashed by losing his mental coach and friend early in the year. Dashed by a bad injury and a difficult recovery played out right in front of our eyes. Dashed by another year of poor defense, poor coaching, poor personnel decisions and poor in-game decision-making.

Strong play in this game could propel him to playing a spoiler against the Cardinals next week and would really provide a spark that could light the way through a very turbulent offseason.

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A start of 2022 status check for the Seahawks

Happy New Year to everyone.

I think it’s important to review your opinions. I don’t think spending considerable time confirming your priors, under the pretence of ‘context’ or ‘balance’ is the right way to go about things. That’s why, despite being opposed to a ground-zero rebuild, I’ve written so much about it as a possibility — including delving into the top-end of the 2022 draft and the quarterback class.

My opinion on Seattle’s future has changed over the last few days. So here’s my latest reading of the situation…

In a recent interview, Pete Carroll stated he didn’t think a major rebuild was necessary. My interpretation of this is it says a lot about how his future could play out.

I maintain I don’t think he has any interest in overseeing a major, substantial rebuild. Not enough people have discussed how unrealistic that is. The idea of a 70-year-old coach entering a period where he spends an indefinite amount of time looking for a new franchise quarterback is beyond fanciful. That’s the reality of a rebuild.

It could be years until a solution is found. Is Carroll seriously going to go through the prospect of another 5-7 win season for potentially the next couple of years at least? Or, if nothing else, embrace the kind of 7-9 seasons he had in 2010 and 2011? All the while hoping to strike gold at quarterback, with the current situation in college football?

It simply doesn’t make any sense.

My opinion has changed on Carroll though. I sensed a few weeks ago that he would walk away at the end of this season regardless. I no longer think that.

I get the sense, listening to his words, that he doesn’t want to quit. He wants to see if he can turn this around. But he’ll want to do that with Russell Wilson. He won’t want to replace the quarterback.

Think about it. He would probably acknowledge, unlike many fans, that the prospect of Wilson returning to form isn’t all that preposterous. We’re 14 months removed from him looking like the best player in the league.

I think Carroll would be fully prepared to continue in the job, working to put things right, albeit with his franchise quarterback on board.

As he acknowledged recently, unprovoked, he wouldn’t have been in Seattle as long as he has without Wilson. I think Carroll sees his tenure tied to Wilson. And that’s probably why he has remained as steadfastly loyal to him as he has.

I also believe John Schneider would’ve been willing to trade Wilson a year ago and Carroll blocked it. Again, in part because he has little or no interest in a major rebuild. He’s in ‘win now’ mode as a coach. He’s at the extreme end of that, given his age.

When he said he didn’t think a rebuild was necessary — I think he was expressing his own personal lack of interest in the prospect.

The problem is — I suspect that while Wilson and Carroll retain a strong bond and have mutual respect, Wilson is also mindful of his own age and career prospects. He is an obscenely ambitious individual with lofty personal and team goals. I think in his middle-ages he will struggle to reconcile not reaching certain goals in his career, should he fail.

As has been spelled out to us all — he doesn’t believe Carroll’s philosophy is the right approach. He wants to play a different brand of football. He wants more of a say in personnel.

You personally may not agree with those things but that’s how Wilson feels. And frankly, who’s to deny him his right to feel that way?

A lot of fans are content to point out a run of winning seasons. To Wilson, he likely just focuses on one playoff win in five years. And so often in the playoffs, the Seahawks come out flat and unprepared. They’d suddenly be two or three scores down. And then Wilson would be left to mount an improbable comeback.

He’s also seen the wasted resource over the years and bad drafts. Again, whether you agree or not — I can see why Wilson has lost faith. Even while we can all admit he has not played anywhere near well enough post-injury this season or at the end of last season. I think his concerns are still valid and you have to work really hard to try and suggest they aren’t.

The problem for the Seahawks is how this all plays out at the end of the season.

Jody Allen taking decisive action is for the absolute best — regardless of her final decision. At least then everyone knows where they stand.

If she doesn’t do that and if she speaks to the ‘power three’ individually, things could get tricky.

I think Carroll would likely ‘compete’ to give it another go. He would either suggest he can get Wilson back on side or that the team should simply ignore any trade requests or deny any trade offers.

That sounds plausible but it’s not realistic.

It’s plainly obvious that while Wilson is open to staying in Seattle, he wants to see significant changes at the top. To me that means a new GM and Head Coach. If that doesn’t happen, I wouldn’t expect him to wait until the Super Bowl to make his dissatisfaction known this year. I think it’ll happen very quickly, possibly resulting in an official trade request.

It might’ve worked in Green Bay following Aaron Rodgers’ threat to retire last year — but I don’t see any reasonable scenario where the Seahawks go from 5-10 today and become a thriving, successful football team in 2022 if the quarterback requests a trade and you simply say ‘no’ and retain the status quo.

A decision would need to be made.

It could potentially lead to a massive stalemate if such a situation isn’t resolved. And that won’t do anyone any good.

My fear, based on how Carroll and John Schneider reacted a year ago, is if they’re permitted to just ‘carry on’ — they’ll ignore Wilson’s dissatisfaction and simply do nothing. I get the sense they thought that was a really clever move a year ago. It wasn’t. The cardboard cutouts at the press conference might’ve felt funny at the time. Denying the Wilson saga was a story could’ve been a bunker approach to a challenging situation. The story, which was legit, cast a cloud over the franchise and needed resolving one way or another.

It wasn’t, it predictably lingered and this can’t keep going year after year.

I’m not convinced Allen will be so passive. Yet I also accept none of us have any idea what she’ll do next. I don’t think her actions relating to the Portland Trailblazers are much indication and neither are the long contract extensions given to Carroll and Schneider a year ago. A lot has changed since then and the situation with Wilson completely changes the dynamic.

The positive side of this is I don’t think Wilson will allow the situation to drag on. We’ve seen he’s willing to operate through the media. The Adam Schefter tweet was gobsmacking a year ago and a sign of how aggressive Mark Rodgers is willing to be.

Within days of the final game — I think all parties will have had their say and Allen, if she hasn’t taken affirmative action, will be left with a clear picture as to what her options are. From that position, it should be possible to pick a path — although personally I hope she already has clarity and is simply waiting for the season to end before she enacts her plan.

I don’t know what she’ll decide but I do think a decision will be made and acted upon.

I still have no idea or good guess as to what happens with John Schneider but I don’t think there’s a future with Schneider and Wilson together minus Carroll. I think that relationship was seriously impacted last off-season. I think Schneider took it badly when Wilson spoke publicly in the way that he did and then with the infamous Schefter tweet. I think the relationship between Schneider and Mark Rodgers is poor to say the least. As I’ve said, I think Schneider would’ve dealt Wilson a year ago and that’s why he went to North Dakota to have a meeting with Chicago GM Ryan Pace.

If Carroll retired but the other two members of the ‘power three’ remained, both Schneider and Wilson would probably share mutual interest in a trade.

This to me is a fairly reasonable projection of the lay of the land. I also think it’s fair to say it isn’t influenced by an agenda, which has driven so much of the discourse — especially on Seahawks Twitter — in recent weeks.

You all know my preference and I don’t try and portray myself as not having a horse in the race. You know where I stand — but I also hope you feel like we’ve covered a lot of bases and tried to review what’s going on with a critical eye — without emotion or attempting to confirm priors.

I will stress again that I think the wheels were falling off this franchise in 2019 and despite the winning records that year and in 2020, what has happened in 2021 hasn’t felt the least bit surprising. It has felt entirely predictable.

I don’t think this team has been close to being a serious contender for a long time. The quality of the quarterback has enabled them to consistently qualify for the playoffs but go no further. I want to be in the mix for Super Bowls and I think this team, for too long, has only been good enough to win a Wild Card game at best. With Wilson playing well below his best, the issues have been exposed both during individual games and in the team record.

I think money and picks have been wasted to an unforgivable extent.

I don’t want to watch an offense led and/or influenced by Pete Carroll, Darrell Bevell, Brian Schottenheimer or Shane Waldron any more. I don’t want to watch a defense led by Carroll and Ken Norton Jr. I don’t want Carl ‘Tater’ Smith or the Head Coach’s son to be go-to-guys for home truths. I don’t want the architects of the 2018-21 reset, or the Jamal Adams trade, to be in charge of the resources over the next few years — especially if the prime asset is traded to produce extra stock.

Nothing lasts forever. I want the Seahawks to be bold and ambitious to find the next great Seahawks leader and move forwards. I want to remember the Carroll era fondly, not look back on it as something that went on longer than it should and became really crap — like ‘Friends’.

You know what I think the next move should be because I put it in writing. I’ve argued, in numerous pieces, why I think change is necessary.

I simply don’t think a quote from Matt Hasselbeck, who played one season for Carroll 11 years ago, is of equal merit. Especially when the quote isn’t fleshed out. Or that interpreting a Kam Chancellor tweet (when he liked another Tweet complaining about the extent of Carroll’s power in Seattle) or speculating on why Tyler Lockett doesn’t attend Wilson’s summer camp is in any way ‘context’ or a valid argument for ownership sitting tight.

Any argument in favour of retaining Carroll should be able to explain, in detail, the following things:

1. Why he is the right man to oversee a rebuild potentially more challenging than the 2010 one he inherited.

2. Why he will be able to install the right coaching staff to properly elevate this team to the next level.

3. Why he is schematically the right person to drive this team forward.

This is all that really matters. And in each instance there’s a key point that needs to be acknowledged and debated. He’s already overseen the 2018 reset and how has that gone? His coaching staff appointments have been getting progressively worse. And schematically, where do we begin? The defense can’t get off the field and the offense can’t stay on the field.

They don’t do anything ‘well’ on offense, can’t feature their best players, can’t run the ball consistently and they’ve never been able to build a really good O-line.

On defense they’ve had pass rush issues for three straight seasons, at times it feels like the NFL installed a rule to say Seattle cornerbacks can’t intercept the ball any more and the areas where they’ve succeeded — such as the ‘bend but don’t break’ red zone defense — feel somewhat unsustainable, as we saw when it mattered against the Bears.

I don’t think these are ‘gotcha’ questions for a Carroll backer, either. I think some people are capable of offering a compelling argument in favour of keeping Carroll. I’m yet to see it though.

Too often these issues are unexplained — just as alternative plans to Carroll are brushed off, as are concerns about the 2022 draft class or the quarterback situation in college football.

In place of these arguments are the Hasselbeck quote, vague talk of the importance of ‘culture’ and this trendy argument that ‘it’s harder to replace a Head Coach than a franchise quarterback’.

People will listen to any argument that confirms their priors, if we’re being honest. My appeal to fans, though, would be to try and park that at least for one evening and just have a serious think about what’s best for the team. There’s not one right answer to this and I think increasingly the argument around this situation is turning into a typical Twitter row.

Pick a side, argue endlessly to confirm your priors, rinse and repeat.

We’ve been here with ‘pro or anti running game’, ‘Let Russ Cook’ and now the future of Carroll and Wilson. Seahawks Twitter is peerless in the amount of crap arguments it has, that never seem to end, often led by the same people.

And I speak as someone who is often incapable of avoiding wading in. The first step to recovery is admitting you have a problem… I guess.

Other notes

— College Football is on its knees. The most recent season was boring. The SEC has become too powerful and that won’t change with new teams being added, transfer portals and the introduction of money into the game. The playoffs are only interesting when the Clemson and Ohio State types are capable of competing with the SEC’s best. There are too many Bowl games. It’s sad to see what’s happening.

— Desmond Ridder had a big chance to make a statement against Alabama but he didn’t really show anything. Granted, I never expected Ridder to take on Alabama or win the game. Equally, Cincinnati’s game plan felt very conservative. I didn’t feel like I was watching a difference maker though. This was a legit chance to show what he can do against NFL-level talent. I could easily imagine what we saw last night in a NFL game — just a lack of anything to get excited about. I wouldn’t write him off but even if he’d just shown a few flashes, there would’ve been that. He showed virtually nothing and it validates my thought that he is more mid-round flier than anything more substantial.

— I know I talk about it a lot but it’s remarkable how poor this quarterback class is. It feels like a two-way battle now between a 24-year-old rookie with 8 1/4 inch hands (Kenny Pickett) and a player with a serious knee issue who already lacks any kind of mobility (Carson Strong). On the periphery, you have a 6-0 200lbs signal caller who excels in the nice and easy Lane Kiffin scheme, when he isn’t pressured. You have a Liberty quarterback whose throwing technique is all over the place (but he’s a great athlete). And you have Ridder. Do you know how many times I’ve heard any of these names mentioned when people discuss moving on from Wilson? Zero.

— Unless you get a green light on Strong’s knee and you’re prepared to build a scheme for a talented albeit statuesque passer — I’d be inclined to take a flier on UCLA’s Dorian Thompson-Robinson. He has as much upside as anyone and he’ll be available later. I like him. Stanford’s Tanner McKee is another intriguing name. I’d rate them both higher than some of the ‘big name’ quarterbacks in this class. Keep an eye on Kentucky’s Will Levis too. He’s a player we talked about last year as one for the future. He’s a Penn State transfer and could declare as a junior. We’ll see. He’s only had one year as a starter. But while he hasn’t got a lot of publicity in the media, he has more upside than most and has the tools to be a very interesting pro-prospect. If he declared, I’d probably consider him as a candidate to be the best QB eligible. Tony Pauline says he’s very likely to return to Kentucky so one for 2023.

— Two years ago it felt vital to tap into any aspect of LSU’s Championship team when the draft came around. They were that good. This year, I think every team should be targeting players in Georgia’s front seven on defense. It is full of impact talent. If you draft a defensive lineman or linebacker from Georgia this year, you’ve probably made a good pick.

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Thoughts on Russell Wilson’s interesting comments

I, for one, hope Sunday isn’t Russell Wilson’s final game in Seattle

Without any prompting by the media, Russell Wilson delivered the following line in his press conference today:

“I know for me personally, I hope it’s not my last game (in Seattle). But at the same time, I know it won’t be my last game in the NFL. I’m just focused on today and getting better today. That’s my goal. I love this city and I love this moment. I love these guys and we gotta make sure we get better today. That’s all that matters.”

Wilson looked somewhat uncomfortable after this answer, I thought. But then that’s no surprise. It’s an uncomfortable situation.

I don’t think any of this is a personal issue between Pete Carroll and Wilson. I think the pair share a significant amount of mutual respect.

I think this is purely down to a difference in philosophy — with Wilson determined to max-out the second half of his career and believing a different approach to Carroll’s is the only way he will achieve that.

Thus, we’re set up for a big call to be made almost as soon as the season ends.

Will ownership make changes at the top and replace the Head Coach and General Manager? Will they seek a new approach, with a more offensive-minded coach leading the charge?

Or will they fall in behind Carroll and John Schneider, inevitably leading to Wilson requesting a trade?

There’s no running this back. Running it back in 2021 was the ‘one more go’ year. They’re 5-10 and out of the playoffs. It’s the worst season in both Carroll’s tenure and Wilson’s career.

Change is coming, it’s just a case of what that change looks like.

Despite all the statements from people about what will or won’t happen — the truth is nobody knows. We don’t know anything about Jody Allen or her opinion. She certainly isn’t the type, it seems, to ring Adam Schefter or Jay Glazer and fill them in.

So all we can do is wait, while acknowledging what the two scenarios are.

Change at the top, or change at quarterback.

I won’t waste your time with a prediction.

I can only tell you what I think would be best…

— I think the 2022 draft class is so poor at the top, it would be a titanic risk to trade Wilson during the next off-season. Your chances of using that stock to acquire blue-chip talent are incredibly slim. The quarterback situation in college football may never have been uglier. This is the worst time, in my opinion, to consider a ground-zero rebuild.

— As poorly as Wilson has played this year, after suffering a finger injury, we are about 14 months removed from a stretch of games where he looked like the best player in the NFL. I think it’s more plausible than some people would have you believe that he can return to performing at the highest level. And that, for me, should be Seattle’s priority over the next five years. Returning Wilson to his best and enjoying the benefits of that over the next few seasons.

— I think there are two ways to enable this to happen. Firstly, I think the person leading this franchise as Head Coach should be a proven offensive mastermind who is flexible and creative to tailor a system around Seattle’s best players. This is why I think Jody Allen — one of the richest people on the planet — should use her clout to bring Sean Payton to Seattle and sell him on the project. He would coach Wilson hard, be demanding — but he’s also shown he can win games with different quarterbacks — from Drew Brees to Taysom Hill and most recently, he beat the Super Bowl champs with Trevor Siemian.

— If Payton simply isn’t attainable, Doug Pederson would be a perfectly logical Plan B.

— A fresh set of eyes at GM should be sought. My proposal remains Ed Dodds — who spent 10 years in Seattle before being poached by Chris Ballard to be his right-hand-man with the Colts. He is a highly respected talent evaluator and the Seahawks need to get back to drafting well. The Seahawks under Carroll and Schneider lost their mojo there a long time ago.

— I see a lot of people saying you can’t transform a roster quickly. I don’t agree. The Seahawks have approximately $43m to spend in the off-season and can easily create another $20m by cutting Bobby Wagner and Chris Carson. Prioritising the lines and adding talent to the O-line and D-line will enable this team to move forward quickly. With the weapons Seattle has at receiver — and with a properly schemed and effective offense — you will win a lot of games if you can also win the battle in the trenches.

— The next Head Coach should be challenged to build a top-level staff — something I’d argue Carroll has failed to do in recent years.

These changes would give the franchise a jolt. I think the Seahawks would benefit from fresh ideas, a new set of eyes looking at the roster and a refresh behind the scenes.

I genuinely believe the Seahawks can return quickly to a position from which they can compete at the top end of the NFC.

Look at the Cowboys. Six wins a year ago, now 11-4. Green Bay won six games in 2018. They’re on track for three successive 13-win seasons after that. Tampa Bay went from six wins in 2019 to Super Bowl Champs in 2020.

The common factor is all had capable, experienced quarterbacks, all three have drafted well and all made the necessary changes to be competitive.

That, to me, is the potential for Seattle.

I don’t think this is a black-hole situation. I simply think the current regime has reached a natural conclusion to their tenure and a fresh start is needed. From that fresh start, an opportunity to get better quickly is plausible.

Like Wilson, I hope this isn’t his last game in Seattle. I think he can return to his best form because his very best form was witnessed by all of us just over a year ago. With the necessary changes and cap space to spend — this franchise can return, quite quickly, to contention. I truly believe that.

New leadership, new ideas, renewed commitment to the trenches. That’s the plan.

It’s going to take some painful decisions being made regarding individuals who will always deserve to be considered Seahawks greats.

I hope ownership is prepared to make those difficult decisions and that they channel the ambition and vision Paul Allen showed when he landed Mike Holmgren and Pete Carroll — as he transformed this franchise forever.

If you missed my segment on 710 ESPN yesterday with Jake & Stacy, check it out here:

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My Plan A, B & C for the next era of the Seahawks

Russell Wilson & Sean Payton, together at a Pro Bowl

Plan A

— Trade for Sean Payton

Your Plan A should always be overly ambitious.

Hear me out on this one.

Paul Allen revolutionised the Seahawks by appointing Mike Holmgren and Pete Carroll.

My Plan A would see Jody Allen taking inspiration from her brother and going for the hat-trick.

I would target a proven winner and one of the best coaches in the NFL. I would contact the New Orleans Saints and discuss a trade for their Head Coach.

There’s increasing chatter about his future amid rumours linking him with the Chicago Bears. Payton has talked to the Colts and Rams in recent years about a switch. Getting him out of New Orleans might not be as improbable as some people think.

It would be daring, it would shake up the franchise and give it a fresh direction with an established, respected leader at the helm.

— What it means for Russell Wilson

I have studied the 2022 draft class and the quarterbacks in college football extensively. A lot of the people calling for a complete refresh haven’t done this.

To me, saying you want a big change at quarterback or want to blow things up for stock in the 2022 draft without studying what that actually means is a bit like saying you’re going to sell your house without looking at the next property you intend to buy.

In a different scenario — with a rich draft class forthcoming and a talented crop of quarterbacks set to enter the league over the next couple of years, I’d probably have a different Plan A.

That isn’t the case though. This is a really troubling draft class at the top end. Players are going to be selected in the top-10 who would be late first round or second round picks in other years. We might not see a quarterback drafted until day two and for some players, even that might be a reach.

Don’t take my word for it though. Here’s a quote, courtesy of NFL.com, from an unnamed NFC GM:

“The problem is this: Good luck finding a better option at the position. It’s not likely coming through the draft this season, as far as immediate returns. This class reminds me of that 2013 year (when EJ Manuel was the only quarterback selected in the first round). Moving a franchise quarterback usually only works when you’re in a position to grab another can’t-miss prospect at the position in a deep draft, like when the Colts got Andrew Luck after Peyton Manning’s injury or the Packers got Aaron Rodgers in anticipation of replacing Brett Favre. You can’t even create a situation like the Chiefs had with Patrick Mahomes and Alex Smith (in 2017), because the talent just isn’t there in this class. It’s not even like it was in 2018, when you had unfinished products with rare physical skills like Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson available.”

Wilson hasn’t played close to his best since returning from injury and I’m not ignorant of his frustrating end to the 2020 season either. The finger issue has had a significant effect on him, in my opinion, but he still needs to play better irrespective of that.

However, I still want to at least see if his career can be given a new lease of life with a different, offensive-minded Head Coach.

Payton has shown to be adaptable in the past — adjusting to different quarterbacks and despite what happened yesterday with Ian Book, he’s been able to win games with Teddy Bridgewater, Taysom Hill, Trevor Siemian and Jameis Winston.

I don’t think Payton and Wilson are a good fit because Wilson happens to be a shorter passer like Drew Brees. I appreciate they are different players. I think it’s a good fit because I believe Payton will create an offensive structure and game-plan tailored for Wilson.

I’d be prepared, as ownership in Seattle, to take a chance on this partnership working.

— Shift resources to the trenches

According to OverTheCap.com the Seahawks have a projected $43,426,337 to spend in the off-season.

I would create another $16.6m by cutting Bobby Wagner, with the intention of re-investing that money in the lines. I would also save another $3.4m by cutting Chris Carson.

That would leave you with a healthy $63m to spend in the off-season.

I would look at the draft to replace Wagner and Carson by targeting Georgia’s Channing Tindall and Florida’s Dameon Pierce, should both players be available in the middle rounds.

I would prioritise the offensive line in the veteran market. Terron Armstead, Brandon Scherff and Ryan Jensen are all free agents.

If possible, I would look into the possibility of trading back into the late first round if there was a chance to draft one of Trevor Penning, Bernhard Raimann or Abraham Lucas (who I think will rise during the process). Or, I’d be looking at Tyler Linderbaum (who I think is overrated by draft media).

I think there are quality defensive linemen who could also be worth moving up for — such as edge rusher Jermaine Johnson or Houston’s inside/out rusher Logan Hall.

If you start the 2022 season with reinforcements to the O-line, Sean Payton calling offensive plays and you give Russell Wilson a running game and targets like D.K. Metcalf, Tyler Lockett, Gerald Everett and Dee Eskridge — I think you can win a lot of football games.

I’m not for a second saying it’s a flawless plan. I know a lot of people will just dismiss this outright as unrealistic. Yet the more you think about it, the more plausible I think it is. And at the end of the day — your Plan A should be ambitious. You should aim high. Even if, ultimately, you can’t pull it off.

Plan B

— Attempt to emulate the Green Bay Packers

I’ve written in the past about the Packers providing a blueprint for a possible way forward. I still believe it holds some merit.

Plenty of people have poo-poo’d this idea but never seem to offer much of a rebuttal other than ‘Wilson isn’t Aaron Rodgers’.

I don’t think anyone has ever tried to argue that he is. Rodgers might be the most naturally gifted quarterback to ever play the game.

However, there are comparisons to be made in terms of statistics and the fact they both won Super Bowls and then hit a challenging stretch.

I think some people pretend to be open-minded about Wilson when in reality, they’re anything but. At times it feels like the idea that Wilson could return to his best form, or enjoy a purple patch over the next few years, is virtually dismissed.

There’s also a lot of recency bias about Rodgers. He missed nine games through injury in 2017. He struggled in 2018 and didn’t take to Matt LaFleur’s system in 2019 with arguments about how much control the quarterback should have pre-snap. There’s a reason why the Packers drafted a quarterback in the first round in 2020 and it goes well beyond Rodgers being ‘challenging’ to manage.

It’s easy to sit here today, with one MVP in the bag, three great Packers seasons in a row and two NFC Championship game appearances and act like Green Bay’s return to success can’t be achieved in Seattle.

I think it’s convenient for people to dismiss this suggestion as folly. It warrants consideration. Wilson doesn’t need to be 2020-21 Aaron Rodgers to justify the plan. If you shift resource to the trenches and create the environment Green Bay have done — an effective quarterback can win you a lot of games.

— Structural changes at the top

My Plan B involves moving on from Pete Carroll and John Schneider. You introduce a new GM — such as Ed Dodds with the Colts — with the intention of drafting better over the next two years while investing in the trenches and producing a much improved running game.

Brian Gutekunst hasn’t got everything right as Packers GM. The decision to draft Jordan Love, after all, almost created a mutiny.

However — he’s spent draft picks wisely on the offensive line. He’s revamped Green Bay’s secondary. He pumped resources into the pass rush. He’s delivered Rodgers a proper running game and invested in talented running backs.

The Seahawks should look at what they’ve done in Green Bay with their roster and try to learn from it.

Carroll, like Mike McCarthy in Green Bay, would be replaced by a progressive offensive-minded Head Coach. I believe coaches have a shelf-life. McCarthy reached his in Green Bay in 2018 and I think Carroll has reached his in Seattle.

Replacements could include Nathaniel Hackett, Kellen Moore, Doug Pederson or Eric Bienemy. Pair them with an experienced defensive coordinator. If the Broncos fire Vic Fangio, as many people expect, he would be an ideal candidate.

Some of the ideas included in Plan A such as creating cap space, investing in the trenches, replacing the likes of Wagner and Carson in the draft, would remain.

The skill position talent at receiver — and I think it’s worth retaining Gerald Everett — would provide a foundation for your passing game.

And if you’re willing to make difficult decisions on players such as Wagner, you will have the money to attack the key areas of your team (OL/DL).

Plan C

— The total rebuild

I’m not opposed to a complete restart for this franchise. I have written many articles discussing what a Wilson trade would look like, who could be interested, what the consequences are and I’ve written in detail about the quarterbacks in the draft.

While my preference might be to place some faith in a new start for the quarterback — I’m not against the alternatives.

If Wilson is to move on — I would seek clarity on that situation within a week of the season ending. I would then communicate to the rest of the league that if you’re interested in doing a deal, you need to send your best offer before the end of January.

That way, the Seahawks know whether they’re planning around the Senior Bowl and combine with high first round picks and no quarterback — or whether they’re continuing with Wilson after all. The situation can’t drag on into March and April.

If you’re going down this route — I think you need to change the decision makers in Seattle. The reset since 2018 has been a disaster. Wasted draft picks, squandered resources in free agency and a Jamal Adams trade that has been a horror-story.

Again, I think Ed Dodds with the Colts would be a good choice moving forward at GM. He knows the franchise well, having spent 10 years in Seattle. Chris Ballard, one of the best GM’s in the NFL, trusts him enough to be his right-hand-man. He has a reputation for being a top talent evaluator. That’s what the Seahawks need if they’re embarking on a huge rebuild with draft stock to spend.

If you’re restarting from ground zero I’m open-minded about the next Head Coach. I think it would need to be someone with experience as a Head Coach, with a clear vision on what the next era should look like on the field. They need to be able to set out a clear plan for both sides of the ball and put together a top-notch coaching staff.

Doug Pederson, Todd Bowles, Josh McDaniels and Dan Quinn could be options. Pederson and McDaniels both have had success developing young quarterbacks who start quickly. They have won Super Bowls — as a coach (Pederson) and a coordinator (McDaniels). Bowles has a history with Jamal Adams and could help salvage that trade. Quinn has enjoyed a renaissance in Dallas but I think he’s a bit of a lucky coach — benefitting from the Cowboys’ and Seahawks’ defensive talent as a coordinator and Kyle Shanahan and Matt Ryan’s working relationship as a Head Coach in 2016.

I would be trying to work a deal with the New York Giants for Wilson. The Mara’s run their franchise like the Jones’ run the Cowboys. They are the key decision makers and are under increasing pressure to make a splash. It appears they might promote their next GM from within, meaning ownership will likely dictate whether they trade for a veteran quarterback in the off-season.

If that trade can be completed, the priority would be to add a blue-chip player with your top pick in the draft. That would mean hoping LSU cornerback Derek Stingley Jr or Alabama offensive lineman Evan Neal are available. From there — you build through the trenches the rest of the way and try to just add talent, acknowledging it’s year one of what is likely a 2-3 year process.

I would try to add a quarterback in the draft every year until you have ‘your guy’. In this class I would consider Carson Strong, Kenny Pickett or Desmond Ridder — with UCLA’s Dorian Thompson-Robinson someone I think could provide real value on day three as a superb little project.

I am completely comfortable with Plan C. I would argue for it just as strongly as A & B, if they aren’t possible.

The extent of the change isn’t the issue for me — provided change actually happens.

The one thing that can’t occur is the status quo remaining.

Carroll and Schneider deserve to be recognised as Seahawks legends who built, together, one of the greatest rosters in NFL history. They delivered the first Championship in franchise history and gave us unforgettable moments along the way.

They thoroughly deserved the opportunity to rebuild this team in 2018 and try to recreate the magic.

It simply hasn’t worked, however. They’ve made too many bad decisions and the second iteration of their roster has turned into one of the worst in the league.

It’s time for a new direction.

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Monday notes: Four big Seahawks talking points

Pete Carroll was either dodging a key question today, or he’s delusional

Today I want to get into what I think are the key topics that we should be discussing.

1. Pete Carroll’s comments today are hard to digest

Speaking on 710 ESPN, Carroll rejected the need for significant changes with the team after another hugely disappointing home loss:

“Not for one reason at all do I think we have to restart this thing.”

Part of the problem in Seattle is this complete unwillingness to take a much needed reality check.

As Larry Stone noted in his post-game piece yesterday — the Seahawks have become one of the worst teams in the NFL.

They aren’t good enough. The current team is not even close to contending at the business end of the season. You can make major changes within one or two off-seasons to return to contention. Other teams have shown that. But you actually have to acknowledge that change is required.

This isn’t one hard-luck season. The reset has been a mess. Bad draft picks. Wasted money in free agency. An absolute disaster of a trade, acquiring Jamal Adams.

They’ve now won one playoff game in five years — against a rudderless Eagles team featuring a 40-year-old backup quarterback.

The Seahawks have been in a steady decline for some time and it’s finally caught up with them. They just aren’t as good as Carroll thinks they are.

They once set league-wide trends, built one of the best rosters in NFL history and reached the summit by winning a Super Bowl. It’s easy to imagine how that makes you feel like you can do no wrong. Yet those days are very much in the past. The Seahawks have increasingly become stale and jaded.

Yet rather than accept this, they seem to be living off former glories. And while nobody should deny Carroll the glory of that initial wave of success — the rebuild from 2018 has been mistake riddled and increasingly desperate.

The inability to acknowledge this has done as much damage as anything and will go on creating major damage going forward. Nothing will hold the Seahawks back more than leadership clinging to the idea that they’re close when they aren’t.

The delusion that this team is better than it is has led to major short-term thinking and a distinct lack of long-term planning. There have been too many band-aids, too much misplaced confidence.

There’s been a hubris and arrogance about this regime for too long. They give the impression they think they’re the smartest guys in the room, when the rest of the league is having a chuckle in the background.

That, combined with an ageing coach needing to win right now, is helping to create the situation we see today.

I sincerely hope that Carroll was saying what he thought needed to be said in a live interview to avoid making headlines, when he spoke to 710 ESPN today. Because if he genuinely thinks this team is good enough, then that alone is all the evidence anyone needs to know change is required.

I’ve long thought Carroll won’t have the stomach for a major rebuild and that he would embrace the inevitable and walk away at the end of this season.

I never imagined he’d actually think this team is still… good.

If he genuinely believes the best thing is to simply have another go in 2022 — that’s staggering. And that cannot be acceptable to ownership.

They have to make a change — regardless of whatever other moves follow regarding the quarterback and/or GM.

2. What should the next era look like?

Increasingly this has become the big talking point. After all — if you’re going to pitch change, like many are, you’re duty bound to at least suggest a few alternatives.

That’s why I take issue in part with the more vociferous members of the ‘trade Wilson’ group. They don’t have a plan at quarterback. They haven’t studied the QB’s in college football. They just want change. Yet these same people often push back against criticism of Carroll, because they’re not entirely satisfied with the alternatives.

None of the suggestions below are perfect. Yet I’m not sure what would constitute a ‘perfect’ idea. After all — Carroll worked out wonderfully well. I’m pretty sure if someone suggested appointing Carroll a few weeks before the end of the 2009 season as a replacement for Jim Mora, the response would’ve been a mix of for and against. Justifiably so, too — given his prior NFL record and the way things were turning at USC.

Personally I would like to see the current ownership group take inspiration from Paul Allen. He was able to land two of the biggest names in coaching to lead his franchise. He sold both Holmgren and Carroll a vision and they delivered for him.

If Paul was around today, I doubt he’d be settling for anything less than another impact coach with a big reputation and a track record of success.

This is why I’ve made the case for going after Sean Payton. I sense some fans roll their eyes every time I mention this. Yet there’s smoke around his future in New Orleans. Only this week there was talk of Ryan Pace and the Chicago Bears going after him. He’s actively held confirmed talks with the Rams and Colts in recent years.

I’ve seen some people bemoan the idea of Payton working with Russell Wilson because Wilson, despite his similar stature, is a very different quarterback to Drew Brees. I think people forget that Payton has won games with Teddy Bridgewater, Jameis Winston, Trevor Siemian and Taysom Hill.

He’s shown he’s adaptable. I’d back him to come up with a system that works for Wilson, regardless of how similar or not he is to Brees.

That would be my ideal scenario. I think it would create a needed buzz. Payton has been adept in the past at building a strong coaching staff — something that I think has let Carroll down badly in recent seasons.

I appreciate, however, that even if this is perhaps more likely than some are prepared to acknowledge — the odds are stacked against it. If for no other reason than other teams potentially being interested and the need to initiate some form of trade to make it happen (although Chicago has no more draft stock than Seattle).

Let’s run through some alternatives.

I mentioned recently that I like the idea of cleaning house and installing Ed Dodds as GM. He is Chris Ballard’s hand-picked right-hand-man in Indianapolis. He has a reputation as a superb talent evaluator. Tapping into the Colts front office, to me, would be a sound plan. They have managed the Andrew Luck retirement admirably and remained competitive. They draft, trade and sign well.

I also think the Seahawks, if they are reaching a point where a major rebuild is needed, could do with an executive to lead the rebuild with an expertise in scouting. They need to start hitting on high picks and find a quarterback. It’s pretty much a ground-zero rebuild if you move on from Carroll, Schneider and Wilson.

Dodds spent 10 years in Seattle so he knows the franchise. He’s seen what building a winner looks like in two different jobs. If Ballard respects him enough to hand-pick him to be his number #2, then that’s a good enough recommendation for me. Ballard has shown himself to be an astute, talented GM.

I actually prefer a situation where Jody Allen appoints a new franchise ‘leader’, having removed Carroll and Schneider, and then gives that person the opportunity to decide what to do with Wilson.

I don’t think a new ‘head of the franchise’ should be told what to do at quarterback. It should be their choice. I think that makes the job more appealing — you can choose to rebuild around Wilson or acquire stock to go in a different direction.

Even so, I think Dodds should be a name the Seahawks are having internal conversations about.

Here are some Head Coaching names I also want to bring to the table. Feel free to add your own suggestions in the comments section.

Matt Eberflus (DC, Colts)
I wouldn’t be against appointing Dodds as GM and bringing Indy’s defensive coordinator with him. The Colts are a well coached team across the board. If the idea is for Wilson to stay, then you likely need an offensive-minded leader. If he moves on, I don’t think it matters as much. Eberflus has put together a top-10 unit per DVOA. The Colts’ turnover percentage is 17.9% — second only to prolific Dallas (18%). Frank Reich is a fantastic Head Coach and anyone who’s worked alongside him, for me, warrants consideration. I’d only be for a move like this if Eberflus was able to bring in a first-rate offensive coordinator. No more Bevell, Schottenheimer or Waldron types.

Kellen Moore (OC, Cowboys)
Moore has had a meteoric rise from backup quarterback to coach to offensive coordinator. The Cowboys are loaded with talent to make life easier for a play-caller. It’s also hard to know whether Moore is even Head Coach material. It’s one thing to call a good offensive game, it’s another to be responsible for an entire roster. If they wanted to go in this direction, I would look to bring in Chris Peterson as a football tsar. He has a relationship with Moore and might warm to the idea of a job in football that doesn’t necessarily require the exhausting schedule of a college coach. He could be a mentor for Moore and a figurehead for the franchise to consult ownership, with a GM brought in to handle recruitment.

Nathaniel Hackett (OC, Packers)
If Carroll departs and Schneider stays, it won’t be a surprise if Hackett is on Seattle’s radar. If you are wanting Seattle to trade Wilson and then go after Aaron Rodgers, this is what you should root for. Rodgers and Hackett are very close, with huge mutual respect. Schneider is said to have a connection with Rodgers due to his time in Green Bay. There’s no chance Rodgers would come to play for Carroll in Seattle — but I suspect he’d be open to joining Hackett and Schneider. It’d be expensive — but as someone who has lobbied for teams being able to turn things around quickly if you spend your resources wisely, I do think it’s possible for this plan to work. Provided the Seahawks stop wasting picks and money at positions like ‘box safety’ and ‘linebacker’ and start spending money on the trenches.

Josh McDaniels (OC, Patriots)
If you’re planning to trade Wilson and bring in a rookie quarterback, I think this would make sense. It’s 10 years since McDaniels crashed and burned in Denver. He’s spent the last few years flirting with a return to a top-job, famously reneging on the Colts gig. However, he’s shown with Mac Jones this year that he can do a lot with the right kind of passer. For me, Carson Strong is the most talented quarterback eligible for 2022. Strong is also an ideal fit for the type of offense McDaniels operates. If you wanted to go in that direction, I think you can do a lot worse. Belichick disciples have not had success when they venture off on their own. Yet few have put themselves in the position to deserve a second chance. McDaniels has done that.

Doug Pederson (unemployed)
Pederson’s spell in Philadelphia is quite strange. He turned around a flailing franchise and won Philly’s first ever Super Bowl. He did so despite losing his franchise quarterback during the season. That Eagles season is one of the best coach-jobs in living memory. Yet as Carson Wentz’s world collapsed, so did the Eagles. The fact Nick Foles was so popular in Philly seemed to impact Wentz as much as the injuries. By the time they were drafting Jalen Hurts in round two, the situation began to implode. Pederson was out and yet he’s still a Super Bowl winning coach who did a tremendous job. I think he would thrive in Seattle. He’d get to work with an established quarterback or move in a different direction. He’s shown he can build a staff. It’s an appointment that might not blow anyone away but it’d make a lot of sense.

Todd Bowles (DC, Tampa Bay)
I’ve always liked what Bowles has been able to do as a coordinator. Give him talent and he produces results. I can’t blame him for not succeeding with the Jets. It feels like a cursed franchise with problems at the very top festering down. Provided he was able to bring a top play-caller with him, it’d be intriguing to see what he could do in Seattle. He’s also worked with, and had success with, Jamal Adams in New York. It’s the kind of hire that might give you a shot at getting something out of that trade.

Three names I suspect will get mentioned that I haven’t included are Eric Bienemy, Dan Quinn and Brian Darboll.

In Bienemy’s case, I’m just not sure how much he personally has contributed to the Chiefs offense rather than Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes. He’s been passed over for many previous jobs with people citing disappointing interviews and some character baggage from his past.

With Quinn, I think he’s landed on his feet with the Cowboys — at the time they acquired Trevon Diggs and Micah Parsons. Yes he deserves credit for putting them in a position to succeed. Yet in Seattle he had the benefit of working with the LOB era Seahawks and now he’s inherited a fantastic situation in Dallas. He took Atlanta to a Super Bowl largely thanks to Kyle Shanahan creating a MVP season for Matt Ryan. Once Shanahan departed, the wheels fell off.

I thought Darboll did a fantastic job elevating Josh Allen last year and expected big things again this season. Buffalo coming out throwing against Seattle again and again last season will stick long in the memory. Hearing Carroll say he expected a heavy dose of run, only for Darboll to do the exact opposite, showed a coach willing to adapt to his opponent. Too often Carroll has been left wanting in that regard.

Yet Allen and the Bills have endured some tough moments this year. They’re still set to win the AFC East. I’m just not sure we’ve seen enough to really invest in a coach who has been something of a journeyman over the years. And let’s be right here — Allen is a physical phenom who covers a lot of warts.

3. Russell Wilson and the Giants

We’ve discussed this connection a lot for obvious reasons. With a trade feeling increasingly likely, the Giants stand out as a strong contender for Wilson.

Firstly, they were linked heavily with him in 2019 before he signed his most recent contract. Secondly, Jordan Schultz — and then Ian Rapoport — reported that Wilson had extended his list of potential destinations to include the Giants. Then, Albert Breer casually predicted Wilson would be New York’s next quarterback in a social media Q&A.

Adam Schefter reported yesterday that both Head Coach Joe Judge and quarterback Daniel Jones would be back with the Giants in 2022.

It’s time to read the tea leaves here.

If I’m the Giants, I’d be wary of all the sudden Wilson talk. If you plan to make a splash, it’s not a good thing that the media is whipping things up into a frenzy. It does nothing for your bargaining position and sets people up for disappointment if it doesn’t happen.

Let’s remember how the sausage is made in the NFL media world. I suspect Schefter is doing the Giants a solid here. His report yesterday lowers expectations and provides at least some minor bargaining power. I’m not sure anyone buys their faith in Daniel Jones — but that’s the line they have to stick to in negotiations.

It won’t be a major shock if Schefter gets a nice juicy Giants scoop down the line. It’s the way the NFL world turns.

Here’s the thing though — momentum is building and the Giants are more desperate than Sunday’s report implied.

As we’ve been discussing — John Mara the owner is under immense pressure. The Giants have now suffered five straight double-digit loss seasons. Mara is being booed at ceremonies to celebrate Eli Manning and Michael Strahan. The franchise has become a PR disaster.

They are the definition of a desperate team needing something — anything — to create positive headlines.

And while the team might want to play things down, here’s the New York Post’s back page today:

Inside the paper, Ian O’Connor wrote an article stating: ‘Giants should do everything they can to trade for Russell Wilson

Whatever your opinion of Wilson — he’s one of the biggest names in the NFL. At a time when both New York teams are proving to be utterly hopeless, the media are clamouring for a big name to cover.

They’re not going to be writing articles about how the Giants find value or whether Wilson’s finger injury will linger. They’re only going to want a big story to cover. They’ll focus on the positives — Wilson’s best form, what he’s capable of, what he could bring.

Furthermore, the Giants are one of the few teams with the draft stock to make a really tempting offer. I wrote on Christmas Eve about how fans who want a Wilson trade should root for the Jets and Texans. Both won yesterday. If this is the direction you wish to go in, hope for a top-four pick courtesy of the Giants (who need to leapfrog the Jets and Texans to get into that range). It’s the best shot to draft a potential blue-chip player.

And for what it’s worth — I think the Seahawks need to listen to what offers are out there for Wilson as soon as the season ends. My preference is for a Green Bay-style rebuild and I’ve made my case for that. I think my argument is logical, even if some disagree.

But I also accept that with each passing week, with each disappointing performance, it may well be best for Wilson and the Seahawks to both have a fresh start.

This can’t be a situation that drags on and on into the off-season. It would be wise for other teams to be alerted and be instructed to make their best offer before the end of January.

The Seahawks need to know what they’re planning for in 2022. They won’t receive that clarity until Wilson’s future is fully addressed.

Has his stock dipped based on the way he’s playing currently? Maybe. But let’s also note that Carson Wentz, clinging to one final chance to stick in the NFL, cost a first round pick. Sam Bradford cost multiple high picks over his bang average career. Matt Stafford, with none of Wilson’s back-catalogue, cost two first round picks.

Heck — even Jamal Adams cost two firsts and a third.

Desperate teams will make big offers. They will focus on what adding Wilson will mean. They’ll discuss the economic benefit as well as the football benefit.

And they’ll look at this quarterback draft class and see no obvious solutions. As much as this weak class is a motivation for certain teams entering the veteran market, it’s also a good bargaining chip for the Seahawks.

‘If you want our guy, you better compensate us for inheriting your situation’.

4. People need to be honest about Bobby Wagner

I’ve voiced concern about Wagner’s performances and, at times, his effort in games this season. I’ve also received some flack for that.

Yet it’s increasingly clear that we need to have a proper, serious conversation about Wagner and his future.

In the last two games he’s received a 46.8 grade against Chicago and a 37.0 grade against LA, per PFF. While he’s collecting a high number of tackles — no real context is being provided to whether this is actually a good thing or not.

With Jordyn Brooks third on the list too — it seems indicative of the way Seattle is playing, more than anything.

I’ve specifically watched Wagner in numerous games this year, using all-22 via GamePass. I’m not for a second saying it’s all bad. It isn’t. Wagner hasn’t turned into a useless player. Yet there are concerning trends that simply aren’t being talked about and for the cost and reputation of the player in question, I think a wider discussion is important.

Too often he is hesitant to make contact and appears passive. It’s unclear why. I think a classic example was last week against the Rams. He had an angle on the ball-carrier in space but seemed to stand and watch as Darrell Taylor came flying in from distance to make a crushing hit. I’ve seen him riding blocks downfield when defending screens. He’ll peak at ball-carriers when he has an open lane, refusing to engage blocks or go and attack the man with the ball.

At times you watch him and wonder what’s going on. Is he hurt? Nothing is ever reported by the team. He seems out of it at times, like he’s going through the motions.

It’s almost blasphemy in Seattle to criticise Wagner. He’s a legendary player who will likely be a future Hall of Famer. There’s every chance #54 will be retired in the future. He deserves to be remembered as one of the all-time great Seahawks.

Yet there’s simply no way they can justify his $20m cap hit next season. He’s practically untradable due to his contract so there’s no other choice but to cut him.

That has to happen and while so much attention is focused on Wilson’s contract, future and performances, it’s important to discuss Wagner too.

I’m afraid there’s no getting away from the reality that his play has really dropped off, he isn’t playing with anything like the intensity you might think and his contract cannot be justified.

It’s time to put Jordyn Brooks at the heart of the second level defense and shift Wagner’s massive salary to the trenches for 2022.

I spent the last off-season arguing that the Seahawks should trade Wagner and Adams and use the money saved to rebuild the lines. It wasn’t an opinion widely shared or encouraged.

Yet sitting here today, it’s exactly what should’ve happened.

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