briwas101 wrote:The problem with drafting Richardson is that it appears the Hawks wanted a replacement for Harvin if he gets hurt, but the Hawks had no evidence that an offense with Harvin is very good. I would say we're better off with Harvin on the sideline with an injury.
So we drafted Richardson so he can come in and hopefully be as ineffective as Harvin...poor use of a draft pick when we need some traditional wr talent.
We have Michael sitting on the bench when we could've used a top offensive lineman instead.
The hawks have had needs, and Pete and John neglected them. They ignored the team's needs and we are seeing the results.
HumanCockroach wrote:There is no set time frame for a player to be considered a good pick, sometimes, it takes a while ( and honestly the whole Receiver thing shocks me over and over again. ALL receivers take a few years to hit their stride, even guys named Jeffrey,Brown, Thomas, Tate, Nelson, Jackson, Johnson, Marshall name them,all the receivers you guys are constantly clamoring for, and it took them a full season or THREE to become what they became. It's just a ridiculous thought process to claim otherwise, or think that a rookie receiver should be fully polished day one. It doesn't happen).
As for Micheal, his ability with the ball in his hands isn't really debateable, watch him in the Falcons game last season if you don't want to believe his pre season rushes. I'm not entirely sure why he hasn't seen the field, but I know it isn't talent maybe it is study related, maybe it is pass blocking deficiencies not really sure, but I do find it fascinating how quickly people want to start lambasting the BEST FO in the NFL over the last five years. Schneider and Carroll have blown up and rebuilt a SB Champion, faster than I have ever witnessed, and did so in the salary cap, FA timeframe, and now there is some huge issue with judgement??
Carroll and Schneider identified and procurred almost EVERY player on this team, every skill player currently residing in Seattle came from them. Is Lynch a bust as well? Wilson? Baldwin? Kearse? Miller? Sherman? Thomas? Chancellor? how many "hits" on "skill position" players is needed, to pass your guys bar?
INSANE.
HumanCockroach wrote:I could almost accept the Schneider and Carroll whiff on lineman thing, skill players though? That is laughable. They continue as always to invest in that line, not much you can do with players that continually are injured, teams aren't spending first and second round picks on guys they expect to be backups there, so you get stuck with exactly what Seattle has, several early draft picks with talent ( four of five) with "their" guys backing them up, it isn't unique to Seattle, Santa Clara is in the same boat right now as we type, name a team with a great or good line, and I'll be happy to discuss the value of the guys behind them ( none, or so little as to be irrelevant to what you are wanting) every team in the NFL has backup caliber lineman, behind their starters , after all that IS what makes them backups. Seattle unfortunately, happens to have a LOT of injuries amongst their starters, just part of life in the NFL.
Long Time Fan wrote:Wow a thread about Schnieder's failures.
One would think this would be a very short subject matter.
Just taking a small shot at the negativity this week. I expect views will change after the upcoming game vs. the Rams. I almost feel sorry for the Rams with what I expect is in store for them. A very focused Seahawks team.
RiverDog wrote: Something has to change.
BelizeHawk wrote:Michael can't even get on the field? What is going on there?
It is early for p rich and Norwood but they can't even get on the field over guys like lockette and Walters?
I honestly don't understand what is going on with our offensive personnel these days.
Give these guys a chance.
Zorn76 wrote:Something's up here (with Michael).
Whether it's a nagging injury, his understanding of the playbook, or stories of him needing to work on his blocking technique in practice that I read here or elsewhere.
Regardless, the team can not afford to bank on this guy for the future. While RB's have become more or less a penny stock in April, the Seahawks would do well to find a legit replacement for Lynch next spring. We're a run first team by nature, and will continue to be in part because the pass protection is still a work in progress. To simply plug n play an adequate back won't be good enough.
I'm rooting for Michael to be the guy, but it's clear that he hasn't earned PT from Carroll, despite glowing reviews coming out of August. A pass rusher and OL prospects will likely get higher priority, and rightfully so. But running back can't be ignored as a late round afterthought, either.
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