Aseahawkfan wrote:I don't believe Russell Wilson was trying to dictate. Anyone can see this team is not what it used to be and the HC and GM aren't replenishing lost talent. If Russ lost faith in the HC's and GM's ability to build the team to win and Pete and John still have the power to decide they're more right than the QB, then the parting was mutual. Right now Pete and John still have the power even though they have been the ones losing year after year after year and Pete is the one approved the call that lost them the second Super Bowl and has to sign off on all the trades. Pete runs the team. It's what he had placed in his contract as part of his agreement to come back to the NFL. No one but the owner can override Pete.
Not the GM. Not the QB. Not anyone in the Seattle organization. The power structure in Seattle is Owner then Pete Carroll.
So this idea that Russ was trying to dictate is not accurate. Pete runs the show, top to bottom. It's why when John Schneider doesn't agree, they have to meet the owner because the owner is the only one who can say no to Pete Carroll, the GM John Schneider cannot say no without the owner's approval.
I don't know why anyone at this point doesn't understand the Seahawks power structure when Pete talked about it when he first signed his contract with Seattle. He is the Seahawks right now. He signs off on everything with no one but the owner over him.
When are the fans going to set the failure where it belongs? That is with the head coach and Executive VP of Football Operations Pete Carroll. The show starts and stops with Pete.
I don't know man; Russel hasn't been the same either. I've taken to the saying he's more about the fame and less about the game now. I feel like we haven't seen the same Russ over the last few years that we saw over the first half of his career. He wants a championship again? Then maybe he shouldn't have thrown that pass to Lockette the way he did. Maybe he shouldn't hold the ball so long. Maybe he shouldn't ignore the open short to middle routes or telegraph wide receiver screens that become pick sixes.
No, I'm not denying the level of play and success he's brought to the Seahawks, but something has been off, and he seems to be refusing to recapture his earlier form, and he is becoming more and more about what he wants. That is what happens with top tier QBs, but the early playoff exits can be attributed to his lack of clutch play. I think he's of a mind that a team owned by a Hall of Fame QB will give him the say that he wants in the offense, so he can achieve what he wants without being held back by what the Seahawks wanted. I wish him well, but he can't keep up his style of play in Denver. If he doesn't start buying into to a balance offense that works all parts of the field, he'll struggle in Denver too.