4XPIPS wrote:Well I might as well start this now. I am off on a 14 hr flight to the LAX. Taking a flight up to SeaTac and going to the home game. Hopefully I can bring some luck and they can pull this win off. Last time I went to a home Seahawks game is when Terrell Owen’s pulled off the famous sharpie act. It was a MNF game, many years ago.
Spohawk5092 wrote:if we perform anywhere near as bad as last Sunday, this could be HIDEOUS. 49ers have owned us for the past 2 years.
Aseahawkfan wrote:That sucked. Our talent is a long ways off and it shows.
Spohawk5092 wrote:that, and after playing 3 easy teams, with good results, when it came to the better teams, we are still learning the new systems, and have fallen back to earth
Spohawk5092 wrote:that, and after playing 3 easy teams, with good results, when it came to the better teams, we are still learning the new systems, and have fallen back to earth.
NorthHawk wrote:This is a transition year and as expected, players are making mistakes. Talent may trump systems but when systems are not well ingrained, even more talented players are either slow off the mark or make mistakes. It took the Ravens players the better part of the first year to be comfortable with the new Defense and I would expect a less talented team to take at least as long.
c_hawkbob wrote:The offenses problem are still primarily the O-line. Can't run block, can't pass block (as a unit anyway). Until we fix that everyone is going to look bad.
NorthHawk wrote:Injuries aren't an excuse, they are a fact.
Players that are 2nd or 3rd string are that because they aren't good enough to be starters. Add to that the limited depth compared to the best teams and we are playing on thin ice.
It's going to take a couple of years to get the players (especially on Defense) that fit what MacDonald wants to do. On Offense, we have to shore up the IOL but I doubt Schneider ever will. If he hasn't done it in 14 years there's no reason to expect him to do it now.
c_hawkbob wrote:The offenses problem are still primarily the O-line. Can't run block, can't pass block (as a unit anyway). Until we fix that everyone is going to look bad.
NorthHawk wrote:Pete had final say, but with the history of the OL personnel changes and JS's stated disdain for IOL, it seems to me he's more than agreeable with that philosophy.
Aseahawkfan wrote:We haven't drafted too many high guards. Wasn't Carpenter a guard that we drafted and converted to tackle, then back to guard when he failed at tackle? We usually do 3rd round or lower guards. Not sure if that is a pretty standard position for a guard. Holmgren tended to like O-line. Our left side was at least high round draft picks under Holmgren. We also had a generational talent at LT and another Hall of Fame talent at LG. We got very used to that.
The Pete and John regime have never been great at drafting along the lines. Not a single Hall of Fame talent along either line with 14 years of drafting. Legendary secondary. Hall of Fame LB and great LB corps. Great QB. Good WRs. But no matter how many high picks they used, the lines were lacking and they had to find outside talent to bolster the line or retain a talent drafted from the previous regime like Mebane. Our best O-line guys were Okung and Unger. Okung they let walk after his rookie contract. Unger they traded.
Not sure if Schneider has a blind spot for D and O-line talent.
Stream Hawk wrote:Britt and Pocic were both kind of guards. I’m really hoping Schneider has learned his lesson and we begin to build from the trenches. Haynes blossoming into a legit starter this season would be huge. Or possibly trading DK for the KC guard. If not, I think he’ll be fired at the end of the season.
NorthHawk wrote:Forsythe is a player I can forgive because he’s the third option but I wonder why they aren’t using a TE along side him almost every play as he’s not up to the task. The others just show how bad the talent on the IOL is.
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