Stream Hawk wrote:No way. Well, at least no way for a late round draft pick. They’re just being careful with him in preseason, and I think he will go nuts in the Kubiak system in the reg season. As someone on .net said, you can’t ever have too many RBs. Remember 2019? Also even 2015 where we lose our top RBs then become very 1 dimensional. I see K9’s ceiling as much higher than Charb’s. And I like Charb. We need that 1-2 punch to thrive in this system.
NorthHawk wrote:Maybe to Cincy as part of a package for Hendrickson who the Bengals are said to now be listening to offers.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Would anyone even give much for K9 in his contract year with injury issues? I say keep him, see how we're doing midseason, and if K9 raises his value by performing well, see if we can force higher value out of a contending team that needs a good runner. Get someone to overpay.
NorthHawk wrote:Hendrickson is 31 I believe and would only get about a 3 year contract but at top dollar. The Seahawk Cap space next year is supposed to be around $65M so going forward we could structure Hendrickson's contract such that he gets paid and we get some protection for future years. We also have to re-sign a couple of our own players like Cross (if he stands out this year), Witherspoon, and JSN a year later. But it can be done.
NorthHawk wrote:I've heard people talk about Parsons becoming the highest paid non QB in the league and that about $45M would be the range because of his youth relative to TJ Watt and Garrett along with his potential.
From a talent basis, he would be a real game wrecker in a MacDonald Defense, but the cost of getting Parsons would be huge. Maybe the biggest trade compensation ever.
River Dog wrote:I doubt that we could get more than a mid round draft pick for him straight across. But if we were to package it, we might be able to get a starting quality player who could contribute immediately. I'm beginning to get the feel that this team is a player or two away from being a legitimate contender, and a player like Hendrickson or Micha Parsons, who is also in a contract dispute with the Cowboys, could put us over the hump.
There's a couple of problems with waiting. For one, Hendrickson and Parsons most likely will be off the market. Secondly, there is a trading deadline in mid-season after which we're stuck with him, and thirdly, you're risking Walker sustaining yet another injury. He's currently being limited in practice due to a sore foot.
If we're going to trade him, I say do it now. Use him as a deal sweetener to get one of those elite pass rushers on our defense. If Schneider can pull off a trade to bring in Hendrickson or Parsons and not sell the farm in doing so, I'll have to set aside my doubts about him as our GM.
River Dog wrote:I doubt that we could get more than a mid round draft pick for him straight across. But if we were to package it, we might be able to get a starting quality player who could contribute immediately. I'm beginning to get the feel that this team is a player or two away from being a legitimate contender, and a player like Hendrickson or Micha Parsons, who is also in a contract dispute with the Cowboys, could put us over the hump.
There's a couple of problems with waiting. For one, Hendrickson and Parsons most likely will be off the market. Secondly, there is a trading deadline in mid-season after which we're stuck with him, and thirdly, you're risking Walker sustaining yet another injury. He's currently being limited in practice due to a sore foot.
If we're going to trade him, I say do it now. Use him as a deal sweetener to get one of those elite pass rushers on our defense. If Schneider can pull off a trade to bring in Hendrickson or Parsons and not sell the farm in doing so, I'll have to set aside my doubts about him as our GM.
Aseahawkfan wrote:What? This team is not a player or two away from contending. That is wishful thinking. I can't think of anywhere we're solid right now, not a single position. This team is still two or more drafts from contention and definitely a QB away from it with this unproven lot.
You are drinking some serious pre-season Kool-aid.
River Dog wrote:I said that I was beginning to get the feeling that we're one or two players away, but yeah, I'm uncharacteristically optimistic. I haven't felt this way in years.
River Dog wrote:I said that I was beginning to get the feeling that we're one or two players away, but yeah, I'm uncharacteristically optimistic. I haven't felt this way in years.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I feel the opposite or rather I feel like the Seahawks won't contend again until they are sold to a new owner that will make contention a priority using proven methods for contention.
The team looks lacking in any superstars, especially at the QB position. I'm waiting to see how JSN does with no help at the WR position like D.K. and Lockett. LBs are still weak. No high end pass rushers. Run game was still lacking last year. None of our QBs are proven. Our defense was ok last year, not great. 14th yard allowed and 12th points allowed.
I don't see it. Doesn't feel like when Pete Carroll arrived and was building a monster at all. Feels like nothing to me. The players aren't exciting to me. No one has become big time. We have a lot of holes.
At the moment, I'm not excited. Another building year where we watch middling QBs try to contend against high end QBs with a bunch of players still trying to prove themselves. There's no Kam. No Sherm. No Earl. No moves made to pick up a Cliff Avril and especially no Russell. I don't see much magic happening.
I hope they change my mind.
NorthHawk wrote:Most of the media is from the East and they don't care to know what's going on outside their sphere other than big names. So when DK was traded and Geno dealt to LV, all they see are to voids on Offense in Seattle before going back to endlessly repeating themselves about the Cowboys or other other mindless drivel about NFC/AFC East teams.
I think we might be seriously undervalued by most and could very well surprise many with a much better season than expected.
River Dog wrote:I read a good article that I'd like to pass along which describes what I've been claiming, that Charbonnet is a better fit for this offense than K9:
https://sports.mynorthwest.com/nfl/seat ... gEA86fALgw
River Dog wrote:I read a good article that I'd like to pass along which describes what I've been claiming, that Charbonnet is a better fit for this offense than K9:
https://sports.mynorthwest.com/nfl/seat ... gEA86fALgw
NorthHawk wrote:I said last year and still think Walker would do well in an I formation backfield where he gets more time to see the LoS and where the hole will be along with getting him a head of steam to hit that hole.
In one of the games we showed it a couple of times, but the point they are making about Charbonnet being a better fit might be right because he doesn't hunt the line looking for an opening and he's big enough that if a smaller crease opens he has the power to push through it better than Walker.
River Dog wrote:What superstar quarterback did the Eagles have? Jalen Hurts? He ranked 20th in the league in passing yards. I wouldn't call Brock Purdy a superstar quarterback, yet two years ago, he took his team to a Super Bowl and nearly won a Lombardi.
We'll see how Darnold pans out. He had what was by far the best season of his career last year, so maybe he's turned a corner. Besides, this team looks to run the ball more than in past seasons, so the quarterback isn't going to have to carry this team.
I'm not stupid enough to rely solely on our preseason performance as a means for my optimism. Maybe it's the new coaching staff, that this isn't Pete Carroll's show anymore. Maybe it's that I just got tired of being a constant pessimist. I just feel like this season is going to be different, that we'll be legitimate contenders.
Aseahawkfan wrote:You seem hyped on the preseason.
Eagles are stacked at other positions. Jalen Hurts has a special talent for running the ball and operating that offense. They have one of the strongest defenses and O-lines in the game. Eagles had the number one defense in the NFL in 2024 for yards allowed and number two points allowed.
Now we're back to the Brock Purdy argument even thought that SF team was stacked. Deebo, McCaffery, Bosa, their star LB Fred Warner, Kittle, Trent Williams, and so on. That SF team is absolutely stacked with superstar talent and yet couldn't win a Super Bowl with Brock Purdy.
Who are our superstars on the Seahawks? Who we got that stacks up to the Eagles or Chiefs or Baltimore or any of the real contenders? We are not stacked like any of the contenders, which is why I'm wondering why you're saying we're a player or two away.
NorthHawk wrote:I don't expect to be SB contenders, either but I do want to see progress. Last year we saw the Defense play pretty well at the end of the year and the team almost made the playoffs even with an Offense that was a mess.
This year the Offense looks much more potent even without DK and so far in the pre-season looks like it's playing much more like a unit and not just a collection of players.
So, given the weaker schedule based on last years records, it's quite possible to make the playoffs and maybe knock another team out of them, but I doubt we get past the 2nd round if we do win the first game.
But we will see how far the team has progressed when the season starts and how much quality depth it has as the season unfolds.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The division is weak right now. We could win the division. I don't consider making the playoffs a contender. If you're not consistently making it to the Conference Championship or playing the conference champions in close games, you're not contending. You're one of those 14 of 32 teams punching a ticket in a weak division acting as filler game for real contenders.
Some of these drafted players need to become superstars like Earl and Sherm and Marshawn and Russell did when we were contending. Teams that contend have superstar players that are amongst the best in the league. I don't see that in Seattle yet.
The last years of Carroll were getting hyped over these drafts built up by local media coverage that turned out to be not very good drafts. Our GM wasn't drafting superstars at all. It was why we weren't contending.
If Schneider's drafts don't start showing up on the field, the man has to go. Local media talking up players that don't rate on the national level with performance or amongst the top in the league means we're overhyping average to good players that aren't real contending superstars. That gets old as it did in the latter years of Carroll.
I still remember listening to local media talking up Geno like he was a real contending QB. He wasn't. He wasn't ever gonna be. I know their job is to get the fans hyped for the season believing they got a chance, but most people who are realists about the NFL knew Geno wasn't ever contending for a Lombardi unless they built the Legion of Boom again and even then, only maybe. At least I never have to compare a great defense to any other team because we had our legendary defense in Seattle. That will always be my barometer for greatness from now on.
I want to see some players like we had during that era. Beastmode, Sherm, Earl, Bam Bam, and Russell the Robot. That's when you know you're contending, and your team is hot.
River Dog wrote:Yeah, as big as the playoffs are nowadays with 14 out of the 32 teams qualifying, simply making the playoffs doesn't make you a SB contender. IMO you have to at least make it past the first round where you're 1 out of 8 teams or in the top 25%. But I wouldn't necessarily demand that you regularly make it to the championship game in order to be considered a contender.
Agreed about Geno. The problem in Pete's last 6-8 seasons was that he was under the illusion that his team was just a player or two away from being a contender when the reality was that he was fielding very mediocre teams. Even in the 2020 season where we won our division with a very good 12-4 record, it was a case of Fool's Gold as we got routed in the wild card game at home by a team that we had beaten soundly just two weeks earlier. In particular, the Jamal Adams trade was one made by a HC and GM who thought that they were just one player away from being a legitimate contender.
Whether my optimism is unfounded or not is irrelevant. I can't help how I feel. I'm genuinely excited about this team.
NorthHawk wrote:MacDonald said Milroe will play the entire final pre-season game on Saturday.
The Offense should be a lot better. It's in a way similar to Holmgren's Office with a major part of the WCO but updated with today's types of plays including more motion and more plays where the formation is the same but there are multiple plays off of it and some of where they have different formations but the same plays. It's not at all like the old Peteball Offenses we have seen for the last 14 years where they would line up and just try to out execute the opposing Defenses and they knew for a large part what was coming.
Not all of it is going to work, of course and we may still have a problem on short yardage because of the OL - but maybe the success rate will increase with Milroe under Center or the better blocking schemes.
River Dog wrote:10 carries, 20 yards in the first game against the Niners. But wait! What about his receiving? 3 receptions, 4 yards. 24 yards in 13 touches.
Zach didn't have a great game, but he looked one helluva lot better than K9.
Anyone change their mind about trading him?
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