If anyone actually stays in Seattle given that situation they probably represent less than a percent of the overall population.
As I said, I agree- of course any sane person would take that.
The point, though, is that you don't tell everyone you *won't* do that then expect them to continue to admire you when you (expectedly) go back on it.
Now the tag is where the motivation came from for the poison pill. If he plays under the transition tag he gets paid well under market value.
He was asking for a contract that blew up the scale for offensive guards. We can debate how dedicated Ruskell was to resigning him, and we can debate whether Ruskell should have just caved and blown up the scale himself, but I don't think it's unreasonable to say "We're going to make you the highest paid OG in the league, but we can't give you money that makes the best left tackles in the league jealous."
Ruskell, according to reports, applied the transition tag to allow Hutch to see what other teams were willing to pay, something he insisted on doing at that point, with the understanding that the Hawks would then match it. He *didn't* F-tag him because that would have eliminated the possibility of exploring other teams' offers (and there was no guarantee he was going to suddenly become Mr. HappyGoLucky with it anyway).
Again, not that unreasonable, although your point about the PP being necessary for the Vikes to make a true offer is reasonable.
Again, I'm not going to say Ruskell did everything perfectly, and he certainly f'd up not consulting Holmgren, but Hutch left because he felt insulted like a jilted girlfriend, not because Ruskell gave him the finger.
But he made a foolish bet that no other teams would be willing to pay a premium for a Guard.
It wasn't just a premium. It was more like a flanker asking for QB money IIRC.