Zorn76 wrote:Correct me if I am wrong Zorn, but I thought Harvin missed the NFCCG last year? I think he got ruled after the concush against the Saints?
I stand corrected.
And it's nice to know somebody reads my posts from time to time, lol.
RiverDog wrote:The Stouffer trade is a real reach, HC. As I recollect, it only cost us the single first rounder, all that other smoke being complications from a multi player deal involving Kenny Easley that never materialized because he failed his physical. But it's closer to the worst in history than the Branch trade, I'll give you that. Stouffer was horrible, a much worse performer at his position than Branch was at his.
The fact that you're having to dig some 25 years back into our history to find something halfway comparable to the Harvin trade is a testament to this colossal bust of a deal.
savvyman wrote:It appears that besides the incidents that has been discussed that lead to Harvin's departure - There is a consistency in reports that the Seahawk's locker room was becoming split between the Harvin & Anti-Harvin factions.
http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/10/18/trading-problem-player-percy-may-create-a-problem-with-marshawn/
>>>>>>The Seahawks apparently traded Percy Harvin in large part because he became a problem in the locker room. But trading him may cause problems in the locker room.
Seahawks running back Marshawyn Lynch, a friend of Harvin’s, indicated on Twitter that he wasn’t happy about it, and according to one report, Lynch’s feelings go beyond just “unhappy.” Manish Mehta of the New York Daily News reports that Lynch almost didn’t get on the team bus for the trip to the airport for Sunday’s game at St. Louis because he was so upset about Harvin getting traded.
That’s a bit surprising considering that if anything, Lynch should be a beneficiary of Harvin leaving: Losing Harvin makes Lynch a more integral part of the Seahawks’ offense. But Lynch isn’t an easy person to keep happy, and his personal friendship with Harvin apparently trumps any benefit of getting the ball more. The Seahawks don’t want Lynch to be unhappy (and in fact just a couple months ago they restructured his contract to make him happy), but Lynch’s unhappiness could become the result of Harvin leaving.
And Lynch isn’t the only player who seems upset about it. Cliff Avril and Bruce Irvin both also indicated on Twitter that they weren’t happy about Harvin leaving.<<<<<<<<
Also:
https://twitter.com/mikefreemanNFL/status/523447999674859520
>>>>>What's becoming clear with Harvin and the Seahawks: there was almost a pro-Percy and anti-Percy rift developing in locker room.<<<<<
Hawk Sista wrote:While I'm disappointed that Percy is a loose cannon & and a locker-room cancer, the worries I have are on the team that remains. Marshawn, Bruce & Cliff tweeting pro Harvin tweets and almost not getting on the team bus???? I was not that freaked about the losses (though I was concerned about how they happened) - this ish right here has the potential to be season-ending stuff. Folks need to know who is signing their pay checks & get on the damn bus!
I don't know what is true and what's rumor, but the "junk" about pro-Harvin camps versus pro-Wilson camps (and apparently Marshawn is not in camp Wilson) has me worried.
Hawk Sista wrote:While I'm disappointed that Percy is a loose cannon & and a locker-room cancer, the worries I have are on the team that remains. Marshawn, Bruce & Cliff tweeting pro Harvin tweets and almost not getting on the team bus???? I was not that freaked about the losses (though I was concerned about how they happened) - this ish right here has the potential to be season-ending stuff. Folks need to know who is signing their pay checks & get on the damn bus!
I don't know what is true and what's rumor, but the "junk" about pro-Harvin camps versus pro-Wilson camps (and apparently Marshawn is not in camp Wilson) has me worried.
HumanCockroach wrote:Ultimately, I suspect these guys will come to the conclusion that this is a business, I mean those same guys watched them cut Red, Clem just this off season, and I seriously doubt they were all "happy" about it. The players knew things weren't working the way they should, and it's been only two days, takes a little time to come to grips with stuff like this. I'm not worried about some sort of huge rift tearing the team apart, at least not right now. Players appreciate talent, and for whatever reason people here can't agree with it, Percy had talent, and lots of it.
If they return to winning, and winning often, this will be forgotten, or at least, have less importance placed on it. Should the offense struggle mightily and lose it will be pointed to as not just a reason but THE reason ( which IMHO is silly and short sighted) we'll see if Kearse and Baldwin can return to their clutch ways, and if Lockette has the ability to expand his role, see what Norwood and Richardson can provide and move on from there. Personally as much as I liked the move at the time, I guess I saw an entirely different role for Harvin than it seems Harvin and Bevell saw for him ( a compliment to Lynch, Not the other way around). Should be interesting to see, if they can find that same magic they bottled last season, and how far it can take them.
I do find it strange that the people it seems Harvin should have gotten along with the best ( other receivers and his qb) were the ones receiving the brunt of his anger, and the ones most upset with his departure for the most part are those that did not work particularily closely with him.
“Believe everything you hear about Harvin and the Seahawks.” The reported fracas with former Seahawks receiver Golden Tate happened, we’re told, the night before Super Bowl XLVIII. The source said Harvin body slammed Tate at the team hotel, and that players initially feared Harvin broke Tate’s neck.
While there’s a theory making the rounds that the Seahawks feared Harvin would launch a mutiny against quarterback Russell Wilson, there’s a separate theory that Harvin was in danger of being on the wrong end of a Code Red from teammates who had enough of his angry, moody, erratic ways.
monkey wrote:I just wanted to post some random thoughts I have about all of this, in no discernible order, maybe to change the direction of this conversation a bit.
* The original trade for Harvin is clearly one of the worst ever, of that there can be little doubt; yet at the same time, it was a move that made perfect sense in many ways, and wasn't really a total bust either...all those Seahawks players walking around with Super Bowl rings can attest to that. Sure, we may have won the Super Bowl without him, I would say we probably would have, but there is no doubt that his impact (the jet sweeps and the kick return touchdown etc..) helped greatly!
Point is, yes we overpaid, BUT we overpaid in an effort to get a Super Bowl victory. One which we did in fact get.
* I am still blown away by the fact that NO ONE knew what was going on all this time. With the round-the-clock NFL media coverage, I find it amazing that not one person on the team or working with the team let the cat out of the bag.
Sure, the reports are leaking out all over the place NOW, but this thing blindsided EVERYONE..all the so called NFL insiders, all the other players and coaches around the league EVERYONE.
What that tells me, or more precisely, reconfirms is that, Pete and John put a premium on keeping things in the family, and that the players, and people who work for the team, are professional enough, and have enough loyalty to actually be trusted to do just that.
If this had happened in Dallas or New York or, as we are currently seeing in San Francisco, the media would have had a field day with this story LONG before the trade ever actually went down. I'm greatly encouraged by that!
* No doubt there is a strong possibility that the loss of such a legitimate play maker will be a big negative, but it's my belief that the exact opposite is at least equally likely, if not more likely to occur. Let me explain.
Last season, mostly without the aid of Percy Harvin, our offenses identity was all about establishing the run, then using play action to loosen defenses up. You know...smash mouth football. So far this season, we've gone mostly away from that, and instead tried numerous bubble screens, jet weeps, and other types of trickeration. You know...college plays.
It's my belief that the offense will be far better off returning to it's personality; it should help by restoring the tough, attacking mentality Pete wants to team to have, and it should also help cure some of what has been ailing the offensive line as well.
The simple truth is, our offense was better last year WITHOUT Harvin than it has been so far this year. I realize that there could be, and probably are all kinds of mitigating reasons for that, and that there were stretches towards the end of last season where there offense was pretty bad, but the bottom line is, whatever we were doing with Harvin LOOKED better than it actually was.
It certainly didn't help that Harvin kept taking himself out of the game (including on that final drive against Dallas), so that he really was only on the field 60% of the time, but the Harvin experiment just wasn't working.
*There is actually a really good reason that it didn't work. Harvin, for all of his speed, is NOT a deep threat, and not really a great route running true wide either for that matter. If Harvin were able to stretch a defense horizontally the same way that he can vertically, he'd be the hands down, best player in the game...but he cannot. So defenses, once given a little time to game plan, were able to figure out ways to minimize his actual impact, to the point where he actually had more of an impact as a DECOY than as a hybrid WR/RB with the ball in his hands. His ability to stretch the field sideline to sideline did help Lynch find running room in the middle...trouble is,the trade off was that Lynch was getting fewer carries.
*I am REALLY looking forward to seeing the two rookies contribute! I am also really looking forward to, and hoping that, Baldwin gets moved back to the slot where he belongs.
I realize that, the media wants to constantly tell us all that the receiving corps without Harvin is below average, but I completely disagree! I think they are very underrated. I fully expect that Baldwin and Kearse in particular, but Lockette, and the two rookies as well, will outplay the medias expectations by a long ways. I think the value of the speed of Richardson and Lockette in stretching the field horizontally will outweigh the value of Harvin stretching it vertically. I think the value of Kearse and Norwood being strong, big bodied possession receivers will outweigh the value of Percy's ability to break a big gain on a bubble screen. I think that Baldwin's sure handedness, sideline toe tapping, and chemistry with Wilson while playing the slot, will outweigh Harvin's big play potential.
We won't know whether I turn out to be right or not until the season is over of course, but if I had to bet real money, that's where I would bet it. Leaving aside the obvious locker room/chemistry problems, I think that this may turn out to be addition by subtraction. By subtracting the need for Bevell to constantly scheme creative ways to get the ball into Harvin's hands, we can now let Wilson do what he does best...ball distribute! Be the point guard QB he is, and find the open receiver WHOEVER that may be.
No more trying to force the ball into Harvin, no more cutesy offenseive schemes, it's back to tough guy football, and I for one, like this MUCH better, and think that we will probably be much better off!
monkey wrote:I just wanted to post some random thoughts I have about all of this, in no discernible order, maybe to change the direction of this conversation a bit.
* The original trade for Harvin is clearly one of the worst ever, of that there can be little doubt; yet at the same time, it was a move that made perfect sense in many ways, and wasn't really a total bust either...all those Seahawks players walking around with Super Bowl rings can attest to that. Sure, we may have won the Super Bowl without him, I would say we probably would have, but there is no doubt that his impact (the jet sweeps and the kick return touchdown etc..) helped greatly!
Point is, yes we overpaid, BUT we overpaid in an effort to get a Super Bowl victory. One which we did in fact get.
* I am still blown away by the fact that NO ONE knew what was going on all this time. With the round-the-clock NFL media coverage, I find it amazing that not one person on the team or working with the team let the cat out of the bag.
Sure, the reports are leaking out all over the place NOW, but this thing blindsided EVERYONE..all the so called NFL insiders, all the other players and coaches around the league EVERYONE.
What that tells me, or more precisely, reconfirms is that, Pete and John put a premium on keeping things in the family, and that the players, and people who work for the team, are professional enough, and have enough loyalty to actually be trusted to do just that.
If this had happened in Dallas or New York or, as we are currently seeing in San Francisco, the media would have had a field day with this story LONG before the trade ever actually went down. I'm greatly encouraged by that!
* No doubt there is a strong possibility that the loss of such a legitimate play maker will be a big negative, but it's my belief that the exact opposite is at least equally likely, if not more likely to occur. Let me explain.
Last season, mostly without the aid of Percy Harvin, our offenses identity was all about establishing the run, then using play action to loosen defenses up. You know...smash mouth football. So far this season, we've gone mostly away from that, and instead tried numerous bubble screens, jet weeps, and other types of trickeration. You know...college plays.
It's my belief that the offense will be far better off returning to it's personality; it should help by restoring the tough, attacking mentality Pete wants to team to have, and it should also help cure some of what has been ailing the offensive line as well.
The simple truth is, our offense was better last year WITHOUT Harvin than it has been so far this year. I realize that there could be, and probably are all kinds of mitigating reasons for that, and that there were stretches towards the end of last season where there offense was pretty bad, but the bottom line is, whatever we were doing with Harvin LOOKED better than it actually was.
It certainly didn't help that Harvin kept taking himself out of the game (including on that final drive against Dallas), so that he really was only on the field 60% of the time, but the Harvin experiment just wasn't working.
*There is actually a really good reason that it didn't work. Harvin, for all of his speed, is NOT a deep threat, and not really a great route running true wide either for that matter. If Harvin were able to stretch a defense horizontally the same way that he can vertically, he'd be the hands down, best player in the game...but he cannot. So defenses, once given a little time to game plan, were able to figure out ways to minimize his actual impact, to the point where he actually had more of an impact as a DECOY than as a hybrid WR/RB with the ball in his hands. His ability to stretch the field sideline to sideline did help Lynch find running room in the middle...trouble is,the trade off was that Lynch was getting fewer carries.
*I am REALLY looking forward to seeing the two rookies contribute! I am also really looking forward to, and hoping that, Baldwin gets moved back to the slot where he belongs.
I realize that, the media wants to constantly tell us all that the receiving corps without Harvin is below average, but I completely disagree! I think they are very underrated. I fully expect that Baldwin and Kearse in particular, but Lockette, and the two rookies as well, will outplay the medias expectations by a long ways. I think the value of the speed of Richardson and Lockette in stretching the field horizontally will outweigh the value of Harvin stretching it vertically. I think the value of Kearse and Norwood being strong, big bodied possession receivers will outweigh the value of Percy's ability to break a big gain on a bubble screen. I think that Baldwin's sure handedness, sideline toe tapping, and chemistry with Wilson while playing the slot, will outweigh Harvin's big play potential.
We won't know whether I turn out to be right or not until the season is over of course, but if I had to bet real money, that's where I would bet it. Leaving aside the obvious locker room/chemistry problems, I think that this may turn out to be addition by subtraction. By subtracting the need for Bevell to constantly scheme creative ways to get the ball into Harvin's hands, we can now let Wilson do what he does best...ball distribute! Be the point guard QB he is, and find the open receiver WHOEVER that may be.
No more trying to force the ball into Harvin, no more cutesy offenseive schemes, it's back to tough guy football, and I for one, like this MUCH better, and think that we will probably be much better off!
obiken wrote:That was an awesome post, That's why they went after Richardson, is get that KIND of a WR.
HumanCockroach wrote:http://www.nytimes.com/1988/04/23/sports/sports-people-seahawks-sign-stouffer.html
Worse trade here ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki_Ahman_Green
And here ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Seahawks4Ever wrote:One way or another I hope this leads to Darrell Bevell leaving the team at the end of the season. Why? Because DB is the one who lobbied heavily for the Seahawks to first sign Rice and then Harvin. Especially the Harvin trade I blame on Bevell because he knew first hand what a jerk PH was and yet went all giggles at the prospect of redesigning our offense all around Percy.
HumanCockroach wrote:LOL. They spent more money on Stouffer, nice try though. You can add in the multiple high draft picks spent to fix that problem while he was still ON the team. Not even close.
briwas101 wrote:You are absolutely 100% retarded if you think Stouffer cost more.
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