RiverDog wrote:The Hawks obvious preference would have been to trade Russell to an AFC team. Cleveland was definitely in the market to upgrade their QB position, but would they have given Russell the type of control over the offense that the Broncos did? With the running attack that they have, I doubt that they would. Denver was by far the best option for both Russell and us. The Hawks had Russell under contract through 2022 plus they could have slapped the FT on him. They had significant leverage. Time would have been on the Hawks side. It had to be a mutually agreeable trade.
Cleveland would have given Russ whatever he wanted. That team is terrible. Russ isn't dumb enough to go to the graveyard for football careers known as Cleveland. Nobody with a half a brain wants to go there that has a choice or isn't doing it just for the money.
Both Russ and the team had options, but Russ had more options than the team with the no trade clause. By refusing a trade, who cares if he plays out his contract and the team pays him millions to do so as they would have had to pay. Russ wants to win and he patently does not think he can win playing Carroll's way.
You're thinking of the Hawks, but this isn't about them. Would time have been on Pete Carroll's side? Would he have outlasted Russell staying with Seattle for 3 more years? I doubt Pete would have lasted. Russell could have though. Could have just said no to the trade like he probably did with the Cleveland trade when asked if that was a possibility. The trade had to be mutually beneficial with Russell having ultimate control because all he had to do at the negotiating table is pull a Michael Scott where he says, "I don't have to outlast the Seahawks. The fans love me. If we keep losing, eventually the coach is going to take the blame. So what I'm betting is I only have to outlast Pete Carroll's time here and I'm not all in. So you either find a new coach here or you find a team I want to go to and I'll ok the trade."
The more I read on this, the more clear it becomes that Russell had no problem staying in Seattle. His problem was with Carroll and how he ran the team and offensive philosophy. He was only going to ok a trade with a team that was going to embrace his vision of how the team offense should run and give him input. That wasn't going to be Pete Carroll who plans to stick by his view of offense no matter what happens. That is why I chuckle at these people who think Russ was running his own offense. He was not. He was running the offense Pete wants to run. That's what drove Russell out of here because he was no longer some young pup QB happy to do whatever the head coach says. He was a developed QB who wanted to run a more complex passing offense that threw more. Pete wasn't going for that and he still had control.
John backed Pete because they're about as tight as a GM and coach can be. Russ was the odd man out and they found a place willing to pay well in draft picks that convinced Russ they were a good destination where he could be a winner again with a coach willing to let him have the organizational voice he wanted.
I don't know why fans don't realize Pete is every bit the control freak Holmgren or Bill B or any other head coach is. He's just not gruff and he likes to yap more than most. But people should make no mistake: Pete runs things on this team.
I even have a buddy high on Clint Hurtt because he thinks Ken Norton Jr was the reason for the bad defense. That's just BS. Pete did not sit by letting Kenny do whatever he wanted when things were not working. He oked every moved and probably suggested a lot of them in a desperate attempt to turn around a talent-depleted defense. When it didn't work, he sent Kenny packing to take the blame for Pete's failure to turn around the defense and now he's starting with another young guy in Clint Hurtt and bringing in Desai so he can implement a new Vic Fangio style 3-4 which seems to be the new flavor of the month defense in the NFL. We'll see how long Pete feels comfortable with this change which he has some understanding of from his days with Frisco.