Aseahawkfan wrote:If it were me, I'd trade Geno for the most value I could get, let the season play out as it will play out with Howell, the draft the future. I don't think Geno is a Super Bowl caliber QB, not even a great playoff QB. He's a bridge QB, so if we can squeeze some trade value out of a bridge QB, I'd do it.
I'm not interested in mediocre contention this year. I want to build a strong team in the next few years and I don't see Geno as part of that equation. Dropping his contract would help us sign some other quality players while we develop a cheap QB.
That's how I'd do it. Maybe if Geno has a good year, they make the trade or some contending team loses their QB and we can get a quality trade for Geno.
River Dog wrote:I don't want to tie up a bunch of money in a 34 year old QB. Geno is a good bridge quarterback and is OK if all you want to be is a .500ish, one and done playoff team, but he's not our future. If he doesn't want to play under his current contract, of which was just extended last season, then to hell with him, trade him and let's roll the dice with Sam Howell.
NorthHawk wrote:According to Spotrac, the Seahawks will be about $14.7 M over the Cap. If they cut Lockett, they could save about $26.9 M and they could re-sign DK for a much lower Cap hit (currently his 2025 Cap hit is $29.5 M). So they have some options to reduce the Cap and give some flexibility.
Regarding Howell, I heard Mike Lombardi touch on Howell and said he’s still recovering from the beating he took last year when he was the most sacked and 2nd most hurried QB in the league. Apparently according to Lombardi, Howell’s eyes are still lowered when passing instead of looking downfield. It may take a while for him to get past that.
NorthHawk wrote:According to Spotrac, the Seahawks will be about $14.7 M over the Cap. If they cut Lockett, they could save about $26.9 M and they could re-sign DK for a much lower Cap hit (currently his 2025 Cap hit is $29.5 M). So they have some options to reduce the Cap and give some flexibility.
Regarding Howell, I heard Mike Lombardi touch on Howell and said he’s still recovering from the beating he took last year when he was the most sacked and 2nd most hurried QB in the league. Apparently according to Lombardi, Howell’s eyes are still lowered when passing instead of looking downfield. It may take a while for him to get past that.
4XPIPS wrote:I wouldn't trust anything that comes out of Mike Lombardi mouth. He has been a failed project everywhere he has worked, and he famously shamed the Eagles for hiring Doug Pederson, and staking his wasn't an NFL Coach, and shortly after Pederson won a SB. I am shocked anyone would still hire him to comment on football.
His analysis on Howell is very poor, has he not watched Howell this preseason? Maybe he is right that being sacked that many times has taught a few lessons, but Howell has looked pretty solid downfield. Again, I am not advocating that Howell is QBOTF but the potential might be there.
NorthHawk wrote:He's not just a sportswriter, he's a former GM, Assistant Coach, and Executive with 3 SB rings.
The comment was made when discussing the young QBs and possibly having their careers derailed if they aren't ready for the NFL or as in the case with the Commanders last year having a terrible OL and no run game to help.
I know who Mike Lombardi is. My comment was more about how anyone not associated with the team can make the observations that he claims to have made.
NorthHawk wrote:He's not just a sportswriter, he's a former GM, Assistant Coach, and Executive with 3 SB rings.
The comment was made when discussing the young QBs and possibly having their careers derailed if they aren't ready for the NFL or as in the case with the Commanders last year having a terrible OL and no run game to help.
River Dog wrote: I know who Mike Lombardi is. My comment was more about how anyone not associated with the team can make the observations that he claims to have made.
NorthHawk wrote:We saw it with Wilson in his time here when the OL play was particularly bad, so it would be fairly easy for someone who has spent his career evaluating players to watch film and see things we might not.
He might be wrong about Howell, but I think it’s unwise to summarily dismiss his comments.
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