NorthHawk wrote:Luck at #3? That's just projecting what they think he could be, not what he has done.
I also think Wilson is better than Ryan, Roethlisberger, and Wentz.
And I think Mahomes might be overrated considering he's only started for 1 year. I thnk it
takes a couple or more years to get a feel of how good a QB is.
Hawk Sista wrote:When Luck and Wentz stay healthy and make it to the playoffs repeatedly, I’ll be happy to consider them on a top 10 list. Until such time, they aren’t and they certainly aren’t better that RW to date. Not even close.
Hawk Sista wrote:I like Seahawks football, so I’m not complaining or excuse making, but our brand of football is simply not gonna produce the yardage that makes one’s eyes pop out unless they are crafty enough to really pay attention. He was 3rd in TDS last year w/ way fewer attempts than those ahead of and behind him (he had 427 and the dudes just before and after him were in the 600s). He was 3rd in passer rating last year & 2nd all time.
Hawk Sista wrote:One cannot argue that Drew & Tom (& Aaron though I sports hate that guy) are cream of the crop along with RW. If we crowned the best of the NFL based off of a single season or potential, RG3 & Kaepernick (& others) would’ve still been playing & been better than RW too according to these myopic all-knowing sports writers. Mahomes looks fantastic & likely will be - we shall see. But so too have others who have regressed to the mean before long.
Hawk Sista wrote:Lists like this start debates, which is the goal, I guess. But so many sheeple take them at face value. If I got to take any QB moving forward, I’d stick with RW. Father Time is gonna get Brees, Rivers, & Brady soon. Big Ben too. So are they saying who had the best 2018 campaign, who will have the best 2019 season, or who is better? The answers are different to each question.
Hawk Sista wrote:I agree on all points - Mahomes included. IMHO, RW is easily top 3-5 in the league and top 2 for this team. Top ONE iffin’ You’re asking this homer.
Hawktawk wrote:...although one can only wonder what might have been if McCormack and Patera had guaranteed Moons contract instead of Houston and paired him with Steve Largent and those salty defenses of the 80s.
jshawaii22 wrote:Wouldn't the hiring of Chuck Knox, in itself, be a negative to a FA QB? Ground Chuck vs passing offense in Houston.
idhawkman wrote:I think Russ has the potential to be the #1 QB in our history but I'm hesitant to give him that label until he proves he can win without a ground game. Russ and a passing offense can't carry this team as we've seen since Beast left. He's good and has gotten us to the playoffs with mediocre RBs at best since then but he hasn't carried us to the top level.
That all said, the only other QB to get us to the top level was Hass and he only proved it in one game without a top tier RB. So that one game is the only sliver of difference between the two top QBs in franchise history for me.
idhawkman wrote:I think Russ has the potential to be the #1 QB in our history but I'm hesitant to give him that label until he proves he can win without a ground game. Russ and a passing offense can't carry this team as we've seen since Beast left. He's good and has gotten us to the playoffs with mediocre RBs at best since then but he hasn't carried us to the top level.
That all said, the only other QB to get us to the top level was Hass and he only proved it in one game without a top tier RB. So that one game is the only sliver of difference between the two top QBs in franchise history for me.
NorthHawk wrote:I think you might be underrating him to a large degree. A couple of years ago he was near the top in QB rankings, if not leading some all the while having an OL that couldn't pass block, nor run block.
That's a lot for one person to do on his own in a pass happy league.
The "ground Chuck" moniker was a bit over done. In 1983, the year before Moon became a free agent, the Seahawks passed the ball roughly 45% of the time. The league average was only 50%, so it's not as if Knox's offense was "3 yards and a cloud of dust." Additionally, the most successful teams in the league in that era, ie the Redskins, Steelers, and Raiders, all ran the ball more than the Hawks did. Even Dan Marino's Dolphins ran the ball more than the Hawks did.
It's important to note that in 1983, the Seahawk offense ranked 6th in the league while Houston's was ranked 22nd. The Oilers were one of the worst teams in the league, finishing at 2-12 while the Hawks had advanced to the conference championship game. The Oilers were in full rebuild mode while the Hawks were already being talked about as SB contenders. I would think that a QB that was in the middle of his career, given a chance to play for a rebuilding team vs. a legitimate SB contender, would have jumped at the chance to come to Seattle, especially given that Moon played his college ball at UW.
RiverDog" wrote:The "ground Chuck" moniker was a bit over done. In 1983, the year before Moon became a free agent, the Seahawks passed the ball roughly 45% of the time. The league average was only 50%, so it's not as if Knox's offense was "3 yards and a cloud of dust." Additionally, the most successful teams in the league in that era, ie the Redskins, Steelers, and Raiders, all ran the ball more than the Hawks did. Even Dan Marino's Dolphins ran the ball more than the Hawks did.
It's important to note that in 1983, the Seahawk offense ranked 6th in the league while Houston's was ranked 22nd. The Oilers were one of the worst teams in the league, finishing at 2-12 while the Hawks had advanced to the conference championship game. The Oilers were in full rebuild mode while the Hawks were already being talked about as SB contenders. I would think that a QB that was in the middle of his career, given a chance to play for a rebuilding team vs. a legitimate SB contender, would have jumped at the chance to come to Seattle, especially given that Moon played his college ball at UW.
Idahawkman wrote:Out of curiosity, would Moon of been coming in as the presumed starter? RD, I have to admit, i don't have your knowledge base for the 80's.
... let me finish that for you. Goff at least #2 for worst performance by a starting QB in the history of the Super Bowl.Rambo2014 wrote:Goff at least #2
Rambo2014 wrote:Goff at least #2
jshawaii22 wrote:... let me finish that for you. Goff at least #2 for worst performance by a starting QB in the history of the Super Bowl.
Idahawkman wrote:Out of curiosity, would Moon of been coming in as the presumed starter? RD, I have to admit, i don't have your knowledge base for the 80's.
RiverDog wrote:
Probably. You don't sign a FA quarterback to a big contract then sit them on the bench.
Jim Zorn was the starter at the beginning of 1983 and was replaced by Dave Krieg in mid-season and played well, eventually leading the Hawks to the AFC Championship game but he was both younger, and less experienced than Moon. Especially since Moon played his college ball at UW and led them to a Rose Bowl victory, Moon would have been an immediate fan favorite.
As it was, the Hawks started 1984 like gangbusters even though they lost Curt Warner for the year in their season opener. Although they lost their last regular season game vs. Denver, a game I saw in person, and lost in the playoffs, they finished the season 12-4, a regular season Hawks record that stood for 21 years. Krieg played well that season and people generally forgot about the proposed Moon deal. It's only been since after Krieg retired that some have engaged in the "what if" scenarios. It wasn't a controversy back then.
idhawkman wrote:I think Russ has the potential to be the #1 QB in our history but I'm hesitant to give him that label until he proves he can win without a ground game. Russ and a passing offense can't carry this team as we've seen since Beast left. He's good and has gotten us to the playoffs with mediocre RBs at best since then but he hasn't carried us to the top level.
That all said, the only other QB to get us to the top level was Hass and he only proved it in one game without a top tier RB. So that one game is the only sliver of difference between the two top QBs in franchise history for me.
NorthHawk wrote:I think you might be underrating him to a large degree.
A couple of years ago he was near the top in QB rankings, if not leading some all the while having an OL that couldn't pass block, nor run block.
That's a lot for one person to do on his own in a pass happy league.
idhawkman wrote:FYI - this is JSHawaii's quote not mine.
RiverDog wrote:
My apologies. We can't embed more than one quote so sometimes I don't pay attention when I copy and paste.
RiverDog wrote:
I don't think there's any question that Russell is the best QB in Seahawk history. It's not even worth debating IMO.
RiverDog wrote:I don't think there's any question that Russell is the best QB in Seahawk history. It's not even worth debating IMO.
idhawkman wrote:Aren't you the one in your original post say that you wanted a hearty debate?
RiverDog wrote:
What's the thread title? It doesn't say best QB in Seahawk history.
idhawkman wrote:What's the thread title? It doesn't say best QB in Seahawk history.
RiverDog wrote:Is that part of a robust QB discussion as per your post?
idhawkman wrote:What's the thread title? It doesn't say best QB in Seahawk history.
RiverDog wrote:Is that part of a robust QB discussion as per your post?
RiverDog wrote:
Not really. IMO there's very little "robustness" in a best qb in Seahawk history proposition as you have just three viable choices, and even that's being generous.
I'm not sure why you're badgering me about this. All I said was that RW was the best QB in Hawks history and it wasn't worth debating, but if you feel differently and that it merits a more in depth discussion, then fine, start a thread about it and I'll participate. Perhaps start a poll and ask that question and see how many votes Rick Mirer gets.
Can you be more specific which year? RW is only effective when he has a run game to pull the DBs closer to the LOS. IN all fairness that could be an indictment against his WRs but to me with as many under throws and overthrows that RW has to wide open receivers I put it more on him.
obiken wrote:My list!
Brady
Wilson
Breez
Rothy
Rogers
Rivers
Patty child, really? give him another year folks.
What makes you heroes think that Rogers is better than our guy? 4th quarter comebacks, Check. Doing more with less, check. Head to head, check.
RiverDog wrote:
One of the "checks" is a league MVP, which Rodgers has but Russell doesn't. That's no slam on Russell, just one of the things that I took into consideration.
I probably over rated Mahomes more than I did any other QB, but I have a feeling he's going to be a true star.
Now that people have had a chance to see Mahomes and game plan for him, this will be the year that tells us more about his star ability.
Now that people have had a chance to see Mahomes and game plan for him, this will be the year that tells us more about his star ability. I think about RG3 and how the first year his star was rising fast just to have it come crashing down to earth in year 2. That said, you may be right about Mahomes.
idhawkman wrote:I think Russ has the potential to be the #1 QB in our history but I'm hesitant to give him that label until he proves he can win without a ground game. Russ and a passing offense can't carry this team as we've seen since Beast left. He's good and has gotten us to the playoffs with mediocre RBs at best since then but he hasn't carried us to the top level.
That all said, the only other QB to get us to the top level was Hass and he only proved it in one game without a top tier RB. So that one game is the only sliver of difference between the two top QBs in franchise history for me.
idhawkman wrote:Can you be more specific which year? RW is only effective when he has a run game to pull the DBs closer to the LOS. IN all fairness that could be an indictment against his WRs but to me with as many under throws and overthrows that RW has to wide open receivers I put it more on him.
That all said, with this current OL and the RBs of Carson, Penny and McKissic (still not a believer in Prosice), I'm excited about this year since RW will probably benefit greatly from the best run game in the league.
Anthony wrote:In fact I can't remember the last time a team won a SB with at least a productive run game or better.
RiverDog wrote:
Not sure what you are calling "productive" (top half maybe?), but Denver and Peyton Manning won it 4 years ago with the 17th ranked rushing offense. The Packers and Aaron Rodgers won it a few years before that with the 24th ranked rushing offense, and a few years before that, Worthlessburger won a title with the 23rd ranked rushing offense...and Eli Manning won SB 46 with the worst rushing offense in the league.
Not saying you're wrong as more times than not the SB winner has a top 10 running game, but not always.
BTW, glad to see you posting again!
Anthony wrote:Now as to those run games. For me a run game can be measures several ways.
Yards
YPA
TDs
DVOA
then PLayoff specific
Hwn denver won it they were 17th in total yards but 13th in ypa at 4.2, since 4 ypa is this goal they had a good enough run game to make people have to
watch it. They also had the 6th most Rushing TDs. they makes them a formidable running team. Now was it top of the line....no but it was more than enough to make people think about it. Also in the post Season they ran the ball well and were 2nd of al the teams in the playoffs
Now Greenbay was interesting as during the regular season they did do well in any Rushing category.
Pitt I need to know which Sb or year as they did have a run of 3 out of 5 in there
Now as to NY ahh they had the #4 ranked Run defense in 2007 which is the year they won the SB last and is the 46th https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Super_Bowl_champions.
All that aside though even in the GB team while they did not have a great run game, they did have a great defense, and while I know we are not talking defense, but we need to address it as people are now judging Russ saying he cant win without a great run game, which he already has, but are forgetting he also does not have a great defense either. Yet he is constantly leading us to winning records' ad other than one year the playoffs.
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