Russell deserves some of the blame. He doesn’t demonstrate the ability to throw with anticipation.
The POPE wrote:Russell deserves some of the blame. He doesn’t demonstrate the ability to throw with anticipation. Thus he holds on to the ball and takes sacks that elite QB’s don’t. The o-line sucks, but sometimes Russ needs to help them out. Every passing play can not be a Chinese fire drill (excuse the popes political incorrectness there). Russ does not throw receivers open that often. Lack of anticipation is his flaw. Thought it might have been Bevel who was responsible for some of Russell’s performance with game planning in the past, after week one the jury is still out. We will see what Schottenheimer comes up with, but if the short quick passing game never developes it may be because Russ can’t get it done. Time will tell in the end, but for now the Hawks are definitely better with him than without him. Russell needs to develop all of his game, not just the scramble drill. Waiting patiently to see How the season and Russell’s development unfolds this year.
The Pope
obiken wrote:Pete Carroll said that RW needs to do better. Ok, I haven't really flipped out in a long time, but this one just pisses me off. Lets blame the Franchise QB for a bad OL! What a great cover for any QB play. Lets put a QB behind a piece of Crap line and then blame him for the problem! Maybe if PC had expended some draft choices for some lineman, RW wouldn't have to run for his life back there. IF PC or any fans want to see how bad it get, keep demotivating RW, trade him, and see how that works out! When Russell goes down this year, and we have to go to the back up, just see how it goes for us!
At least Russell after all the hits he has taken doesn’t get that Deer in the headlights look that Carr had last night in the 2nd half, but I do think he definitely hears footsteps that cause him to evacuate prematurely.
burrrton wrote:
Agree with the first sentence (and so does Russell), disagree a bit with the second.
He's demonstrated the ability to perform as well as (or better than) any QB in the league when the pocket holds up on a consistent basis.
burrrton wrote:No disagreement there- my point was just that I think his unwillingness to stay in the pocket is rooted in the complete collapse of the o-line's consistency, not an inherent deficiency in his ability.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Given all the talk, you would have thought Russell didn't throw 3 TDs and pass for nearly 300 yards. I'm not sure what Russell is supposed to do. This is what we consider a bad game for Russel now? Damn.
I'm sorry our defense sucks now and we can't hold even a Case Keenum under 27 points. But if Russell has to do much more than what he did this game to win, then we're in for a bad time. His stats were very good and about on par with almost any QB in the league. Not sure how much more he can do than he's doing. Some of seem like you've come up with impossible standards for Russell and it's kind of ridiculous.
Before if he had a QB throw for 298 yards and 3 Tds, we'd be happy and consider that a great game. But now it's a problem game? Unreal.
Ha! Its the NFL, that doesn't happen even for Brady.
RiverDog wrote:You left out some stats. 2 interceptions, 1 fumble, 6 sacks, 2-12 on 3rd down. Plus the biggest stat of all: 27-24.
We do not have the league's best defense anymore. Get used to it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Given all the talk, you would have thought Russell didn't throw 3 TDs and pass for nearly 300 yards. I'm not sure what Russell is supposed to do. This is what we consider a bad game for Russel now? Damn.
I'm sorry our defense sucks now and we can't hold even a Case Keenum under 27 points. But if Russell has to do much more than what he did this game to win, then we're in for a bad time. His stats were very good and about on par with almost any QB in the league. Not sure how much more he can do than he's doing. Some of seem like you've come up with impossible standards for Russell and it's kind of ridiculous.
Before if he had a QB throw for 298 yards and 3 Tds, we'd be happy and consider that a great game. But now it's a problem game? Unreal.
RiverDog wrote:
You left out some stats. 2 interceptions, 1 fumble, 6 sacks, 2-12 on 3rd down. Plus the biggest stat of all: 27-24.
We do not have the league's best defense anymore. Get used to it.
burrrton wrote:
Dude, I have literally saved entire games on Tivo showing Brady not being pressured more than twice. Not sacked. Not hit. *Pressured*.
Over the years, you've been able to watch half a season of Brady without seeing him look like anything but a statue in the pocket. We can talk about play-calling if you want, wherin the receivers break open regardless of the defensive call, but that's reality.
Yes, pressure/sacks/etd are things QBs need to deal with, but when they spend an entire season literally not being able to take a 2-step drop without getting buried, I start shifting the blame.
Maybe that's just me.
Aseahawkfan wrote:
And one of those ints was a desperation garbage int.
You apparently need to get used to it. Because when you don't have a great defense, even good play by your QB isn't enough. A defense that gives up 27 points on an opponent's homefield is usually a loss, regardless of the QB.
In what world is Russell's stat line not usually good enough to win much less a great stat line? Years ago that would have been one of Hass or Krieg's best games on an opposing field for the year. Now to you and apparently far too many other Seattle fans think it's a bad game by Russ. That crap is ridiculous. It's like you want him to win the game alone regardless of what the defense or other players do and that's just not going to happen very often on opposing fields or at home.
I'm sorry. The fans bitching about Russ are flat out wrong and are setting ridiculous standards. We used to pray to have a Seattle QB that could throw 3 TDs and put up almost 300 yards missing his best receiver early with new starting TEs. Now you think it's some kind of bad game? Talk about a group of spoiled fans where Russ's stat line is somehow a bad game.
I wish you guys would stop targeting the one guy that gives us a chance to win every week and let this team develop.
idhawkman wrote:Don't forget the TOP stat. That has a huge impact on the defense. I think two plays also skew the stats regarding passing yards. TD to Lockett and the 66 yard catch by Dissley that we couldn't convert into a td. I think the stats are a bit decieving for RW in this game. Rushing stats also make it so that the offense needed more yards by air to win the game.
In those games you taped, how many passes come out of Brady's hands within 2 seconds?
In those games you taped, how many passes come out of Brady's hands within 2 seconds?
burrrton wrote:
Within two seconds? Not many (although I'll grant that NE's passing attack strikes me as quicker, only occasionally going for homeruns).
And QBs don't generally stand out as 'statues' in the pocket if they've already gotten rid of the ball.
obiken wrote:IDH you have to remember Brady is 6-4! Our guy, 5-10 5/8. Vast difference for a pocket passer. One play I Like is a WC hike to a HB and a pitch to RW wide. Problem is it wouldn't work with good teams, as it takes too long to develop. Brady is much better at audiblizing out of blitzes than anyone of ALL time. Watt and Clowney didn't lay a hand on him.
obiken wrote:IDH you have to remember Brady is 6-4! Our guy, 5-10 5/8. Vast difference for a pocket passer. One play I Like is a WC hike to a HB and a pitch to RW wide. Problem is it wouldn't work with good teams, as it takes too long to develop. Brady is much better at audiblizing out of blitzes than anyone of ALL time. Watt and Clowney didn't lay a hand on him.
idhawkman wrote:Don't forget the TOP stat. That has a huge impact on the defense. I think two plays also skew the stats regarding passing yards. TD to Lockett and the 66 yard catch by Dissley that we couldn't convert into a td. I think the stats are a bit decieving for RW in this game. Rushing stats also make it so that the offense needed more yards by air to win the game.
idhawkman wrote:Asea, I know what you are saying but it is not just the fans. Its the coaches, too. Maybe they know more about what plays were called and the errors that were made.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The coaches are saying he needs to get better? Pete, after an article where he gets questioned for not calling out his QB.
Sorry, Russ is the last guy I'm questioning on the team. Pete and John haven't given him an O-line. They change his receivers nearly yearly. The run game is not rebuilt. And the defense is a shadow of its former self. Coaches need to look in the mirror because the 3 point loss would have been much, much, much bigger without Russ due to what they've done with the team.
Did you read the article where we had the worst pass rush in the entire league on Sunday? And you're spending time criticizing the QB that three for 3 TDS, while overlooking all the other more important factors. If you were business owner, you'd be criticizing and talking about firing your best employee while the lazy, inexperienced, untalented workers were being ignored so you could grandstand for reasons I don't even comprehend.
Russell is literally last on my list of what needs to improve with this team to make us better. Russell will work to improve himself. I don't need to tell him.
Oly wrote:My frustration with Wilson--and don't get me wrong, I love that he's a Hawk--is that after about 2 seconds he seems almost intentionally avoid the mid-range timing pass. There are times, just before the pocket breaks down, that there are open receivers and he doesn't pass it. This fanpost at FieldGulls is an interesting breakdown of times this happened in the Broncos game: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2018/9/10/17 ... -5-seconds.
One possibility for why he does this is that he can't see the receiver because of his height and the collapsing pocket. And that certainly is true sometimes. But there are other times when he seems to choose his backwards run/roll out instead of uncorking a pass, and that's my frustration.
One other possibility that hasn't been discussed is that he's actually trying to follow Carroll's instructions to avoid turnovers at all costs. I wonder if there are times he avoids a 90% throw out of fear of the 10% possibility of a pick or other bad outcome, and whether that hesitation ultimately comes from Carroll's coaching.
Russ does not, this system is not built for him
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