NorthHawk wrote:The scheme doesn't fit the talent - or the other way around.
This is Pete's defense and his scheme. His DC's just run it like Pete wants. That's why it hasn't changed much
all through his tenure here. Norton might not be a good DC on his own, but he's just a pawn in Seattle.
I think the real problem starts with the DL and not being able to create pressure. In the LoB years, the
CB opposite Sherman didn't have to be very good - but got a lot of chances to make plays on the ball
because of the pressure up front. Today, our DBs don't have that advantage and they are exposed on a
regular basis. Everyone talks about Flowers, but he would have thrived opposite Sherman if he played
here in 2012 and onward because of the talent around him and pressure up front. Now our average
CB's are forced to cover top talent WR's while the QB waits comfortably for them to get open. Unfortunately
there is no talent in the drawer to help with the pass rush and if history is any indication, no hope of drafting
someone who can develop into a dominating DL.
Right now this looks a lot like that . And I always like reading I-5 but did you say it “wasn’t a blowout “ bro? From about 5 minutes left in the first half till the final gun it was a blowout . Seattle was utterly hapless in every phase . It was as nauseating a regular season loss as I’ve seen since 2010 , right up there with last week. I see a disturbing trend . Better stock up on beer and Maalox
Right now this looks a lot like that . And I always like reading I-5 but did you say it “wasn’t a blowout “ bro? From about 5 minutes left in the first half till the final gun it was a blowout . Seattle was utterly hapless in every phase . It was as nauseating a regular season loss as I’ve seen since 2010 , right up there with last week. I see a disturbing trend . Better stock up on beer and Maalox
I-5 wrote:Ok fine it was a blowout lol. More like a beating I’d say, since 2 scores is not impossible to come back from. But it was definitely the most helpless and clueless Seahawks team I’vr seen since Pete arrived. I guess it took me longer to smell the coffee!
I-5 wrote:I’ll say it again: I believe this might be Pete’s final year (regardless of contract). Something drastic has to change in the near future - everyone can see we have big problems, and not just on defense. For example, why don’t we have an effective screen game the way Cousins schooled us? We still live or die on big plays. I was hoping we would be more balanced with Waldron, but so far its been sporadic at best.
Pete signed a contract last year that carries him through 2025. Unless he has had a change of heart....and a train wreck of a season with near mutinous players could push him in that direction...I don't think he willingly steps aside. He still looks like he enjoys what he's doing.
But I do agree that these past two games were Gawd awful. I just want a little larger sample size, which is why I'm keeping my powder dry to some degree and waiting a couple more weeks.
I-5 wrote:Yes train wreck scenario (or SB appearance) is what I meant. Unless something changes drastically to our approach esp defense, the former looks like a possibility - similar to how Holmgren finished here.
I-5 wrote:Totally agree with sample size, which is why the next 2 games with division foes will be a big indicator of exactly where we are. I'm not counting them out yet, but...
Either he retires or he's fired.
Either he retires or he's fired.
I-5 wrote:That's exactly what I said in the OP, and in my response to the comment about it.
I-5 wrote:Can it be both a scheme and personnel thing at the same time?
I rewatched the second half again, and what I saw was that 1) our corners were giving at least 7 yards cushion at the LOS almost every play outside of the red zone and they couldn't stay with Jefferson and Thielen in the open field, and 2) the defense never ever disguises its looks before the snap. You can do that when you have LOB, but with a mediocre defense, smoke and mirrors is all you have...why not use it?
Hawk Sista wrote:Legion of Room.![]()
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I think the legion of bloom (flowers) may be benched in favor of the rookie soon. Just a hunch.
c_hawkbob wrote:It's always a scheme thing and a personnel thing at the same time. It takes the right personnel for any scheme to make that scheme work properly. Conversely, it takes proper scheming for the personnel that you have to get the most out of their capabilities.
In the offseason you try to draft and acquire talent that fits the scheme you want to run but once that is done you need to be able to adapt your playbook to best suit the people you have once your roster is set.
I've seen the same thing, and it's something we've talked about in another thread. IMO the difference between the LOB and the LOR has to do with two things: We do not get a consistent pass rush from our front 4, so we're having to send LB's and safeties in order to get pressure, leaving the corners vulnerable. The other big difference is that there is no Earl Thomas, a safety that can cover the field from sideline to sideline and giving the corners confidence that they don't have to worry about a receiver getting behind them because Earl will be there to bail them out.
c_hawkbob wrote:It's always a scheme thing and a personnel thing at the same time. It takes the right personnel for any scheme to make that scheme work properly. Conversely, it takes proper scheming for the personnel that you have to get the most out of their capabilities.
In the offseason you try to draft and acquire talent that fits the scheme you want to run but once that is done you need to be able to adapt your playbook to best suit the people you have once your roster is set.
I've seen the same thing, and it's something we've talked about in another thread. IMO the difference between the LOB and the LOR has to do with two things: We do not get a consistent pass rush from our front 4, so we're having to send LB's and safeties in order to get pressure, leaving the corners vulnerable. The other big difference is that there is no Earl Thomas, a safety that can cover the field from sideline to sideline and giving the corners confidence that they don't have to worry about a receiver getting behind them because Earl will be there to bail them out.
I-5 wrote:What I saw Riv is that Cousins consistently got rid of the ball quickly before pressure could get to him, and his receivers did a good job giving him open looks. He also threw the ball before the receivers got open, the sign of a good QB. The problem I saw - besides all the social distancing as HT put it - was an inability to do anything about their screen passes. It didn't help that we don't try to disguise any of our pass rushes like the Vikes did to our O line. Mind-boggling.
I-5 wrote:What I saw Riv is that Cousins consistently got rid of the ball quickly before pressure could get to him, and his receivers did a good job giving him open looks. He also threw the ball before the receivers got open, the sign of a good QB. The problem I saw - besides all the social distancing as HT put it - was an inability to do anything about their screen passes. It didn't help that we don't try to disguise any of our pass rushes like the Vikes did to our O line. Mind-boggling.
NorthHawk wrote:As well, Pete preaches not to let a WR get behind them, so it’s natural for a young or not confident DB
to play off against fast WRs. So last week we saw a lot of underneath throws for completions.
NorthHawk wrote:As well, Pete preaches not to let a WR get behind them, so it’s natural for a young or not confident DB
to play off against fast WRs. So last week we saw a lot of underneath throws for completions.
TriCitySam wrote:Perhaps, but this a road to nowhere. They have to be more aggressive, while a risk, I agree with those who say I'd rather give up a big play TD than a 9 minute one. We don't get enough snaps.
Perhaps, but this a road to nowhere. They have to be more aggresive, while a risk, I agree with those who say I'd rather give up a big play TD than a 9 minute one. We don't get enough snaps
tarlhawk wrote:Anybody watching our last two games witnessed how the NFL has systematically destroyed great defences that play conservative. The hardest area on the field to protect is the middle. By manipulating what actually constitutes a "catch" (basically the receiver is allowed to tuck it in and head upfield) You used to be able to HIT the receiver and pop the ball loose or just "pop" the WR/TE who dared to cross the middle. He was often "defenseless" because crossing patterns carried the high risk of injury/turnovers. The enforcement of "defenseless" player rules that basically protect the receiver before and after the catch until he "transforms" into a running status just capped it all off.
A strong pass rush and tight coverage complement each others success...but quick passes to the middle negate both. Tennessee and more so Cousins and the Vikes exploited this to no end carving up our defense as it tired and wilted in frustration. Middle routes especially when "picks interfere with a DB covering the QB target" lend major advantage to the opponents WR...shorter routes allow quick breaks into the open unless a DB "jumps the route" ...but successfully jumping routes require experience at play recognition to even have a chance. In Baseball a pitchers will throw high and inside to keep the batter from crowding the plate. Football treated the middle for crossing routes the same way because it is so hard to defend...so you declared it as protected turf and PUNISHED anyone bold enough to cross there. Without this ability...the middle crossing patterns can make even a "pedestrian" QB a success.
This opening of the middle has negated the need to draft RB high in the draft...a quick toss to the middle to an opponents "playmaker" almost demands a safety respond immediately. Has College Football suddenly spawned an endless supply of playmaking receivers throughout the draft? ...or has manipulation of rules to open up the middle elevated their position/skill set?
Time and again Cousins used the middle routes to make long drives possible without even using play-action. To add insult they negated our aggressive team with well executed screens in both games. Our defense has excellent skilled players but the modern NFL requires experience at play recognition and a heavy dose of film study. Bobby and KJ would snuff out screens because an offensive scheme can't take out two experienced LB's
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