Hawktawk wrote:Right now the Hawks have a statistical 38% chance of making the postseason and only a 1% chance of winning the SB.
Hawktawk wrote:But the light switch needs to come on next Sunday or we will be having a different conversation.
Seattle has played very badly at times this year and yet they are about 3 football plays from being undefeated.
They have lost the type of games they won last year, Texans, Tampa Bay, 9ers in the championship etc.
I told a buddy after last weeks debacle that they are the best 3 win team in the league.I guess we will put that to the test real quick eh?
Anthony wrote:http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/11751780/russell-wilson-seattle-seahawks-denies-report-locker-room-divided
""There's no division in our locker room," Wilson said Thursday. "There's none at all. If anything, I think's we've continued to build and continued to grow. I truly believe that."
"Other players agreed with Wilson when asked about a divided locker room.
"I hadn't heard that," said strong safety Kam Chancellor. "But if that's what people are saying, it's absolutely ridiculous."
Free safety Earl Thomas was asked if it offended him that anyone would insinuate the team had a locker-room schism.
"It doesn't offend me at all because they're not here and they don't know," Thomas said. "I think this team is headed in the right direction."
Enough said
c_hawkbob wrote:Well between a player, a reporter trying to sell copy and a guy on an internet forum, all of whom admittedly have their own agenda, I'll still buy what the player is selling most of the time. Depending on my level of trust in the player or reporter (Sando vs Harvin for instance) I could do with the reporter in some cases, but never the guy on the internet forum.
What do you expect them to say? That they all hate each other's guts?
burrrton wrote:Frankly, yes. If the locker room was really a train wreck, they might not be saying they *hated* each other, but I could envision snide comments flowing freely from at least a couple guys.
RiverDog wrote:
What do you expect them to say? That they all hate each other's guts?
The Hawks players/coaches were better than the craftiest politician in covering up the Harvin debacle. For 16 months, we never heard a word of any conflict whatsoever, then the minute Harvin was traded, all hell broke loose. As much as I respect them, I derive very little comfort from public statements made by players or coaches about the current state of their locker room.
RiverDog wrote: .
Good point, and I agree. There are certain reporters and players that I will trust vs others.
Nevertheless, your point does not alter the OP in that it contained nothing but canned, politically correct comments that contained nothing except that of which you would fully expect from any current players and coaches that are involved in these types of situations.
RiverDog wrote:
You think they'd freely make snide comments to an ESPN reporter when they knew that whatever they said was going to hit the national wire?
Those comments couldn't have been more politically correct if Pete Carroll wrote them out for them on queue cards.
Seahawks4Ever wrote:That's my thoughts exactly, we are 3-3 yet could very easily be 6-0. As mad as I am at some of the fiascos that have led to the loses we are still a better team than most 3-3 teams. I would have to say that losing to the Rams hurt the most because they are a weak team especially because of their injuries but it is always hard to win on the road and last week showed that. It doesn't get any easier this week against Carolina either, a play off team from last year who are looking to take the next step and whom we almost lost to in the opener last season.
We have had our share of injuries too so I didn't have any sympathy for the Rams and no one has any sympathy for us. That said, we have got to generate a pass rush and that will cure some ills. I think our offense is just about where we want them to be, they just need to develop some consistency.
The worst part of all of this is the first half of the season was supposed to be the "easier" half because the second half of the season is positively brutal. Oh, I loved to hear the announcers last night call the Broncos the one of the two best teams in the NFL along with the Cowboys. One team we beat and the other we could have defeated and probably should have so the season is not lost by any means.
I am still mad, but like they say, winning cures all ills.
Go Seahawks!!!
HumanCockroach wrote:"The worst part of all of this is the first half of the season was supposed to be the "easier" half"
Huh? By my count there were four playoff opponents in the first "half" with two on the road, and three the second half, with two on the road. The winning percentage of those playoff opponents in the first half exceeds that of the second half, and there were additional "improved" teams in the first half ( Dallas, SD) Seattle had three playoff opponents in their first three games. In the second half they have three against playoff opponents, two of which are the same team, and within the division ( Philly being the other).
The first half wasn't some creampuff schedule by any means ( nor is the second) however, claiming otherwise isn't very accurate. I understand being upset with a loss to the Rams, as IMHO there wasn't a really viable excuse for losing that game, unfortunately, the Rams played by far their "cleanest" game in two years ( first time they have been +60 in penalty yardage in a game under Fischer, firest time the have been +5 or more in number of penalties in over a DECADE, hmmmm, odd) they hit on acouple ST plays ( bully for them) but I could also point out Seattle ALWAYS has trouble with those Rams in STL. Other than them, name the Cream Puff teams Seattle has been flailing against to date?
They simply are NOT there.
HumanCockroach wrote:"The worst part of all of this is the first half of the season was supposed to be the "easier" half"
Huh? By my count there were four playoff opponents in the first "half" with two on the road, and three the second half, with two on the road. The winning percentage of those playoff opponents in the first half exceeds that of the second half, and there were additional "improved" teams in the first half ( Dallas, SD) Seattle had three playoff opponents in their first three games. In the second half they have three against playoff opponents, two of which are the same team, and within the division ( Philly being the other).
The first half wasn't some creampuff schedule by any means ( nor is the second) however, claiming otherwise isn't very accurate. I understand being upset with a loss to the Rams, as IMHO there wasn't a really viable excuse for losing that game, unfortunately, the Rams played by far their "cleanest" game in two years ( first time they have been +60 in penalty yardage in a game under Fischer, firest time the have been +5 or more in number of penalties in over a DECADE, hmmmm, odd) they hit on acouple ST plays ( bully for them) but I could also point out Seattle ALWAYS has trouble with those Rams in STL. Other than them, name the Cream Puff teams Seattle has been flailing against to date?
They simply are NOT there.
You think they'd freely make snide comments to an ESPN reporter when they knew that whatever they said was going to hit the national wire?
c_hawkbob wrote:Other than the level of media interest in this particular locker room there's nothing there that goes beyond typical locker room dynamics. Just like any ship's crew or Army troop or large remote site construction crew.
monkey wrote:
Seems to me that Pete may not have been expecting this sort of nonsense in the Seahawks locker room (though it probably didn't come as a huge surprise, if this rumor is in fact true), but he knew EXACTLY how to deal with it; send a very clear VERY loud message...send someone packing.
Long Time Fan wrote:
Interesting story, rings true on many levels. These experiences are played out in most workplaces, whereas clubs, churches, organizations and the like see less of this dynamic because most of these non work environments are largely homogeneous groupings of people with similiar interests and backgrounds. However, a locker room is hardly a melting pot of assimilation. The different backgrounds converge into a team, but the differences hold forth in the social dynamic.
I realize that my opinion might be unique, and I preface it with the fact that I love him as our qb, but I see RW as a bit of an odd duck; at least in the realm of sports. He seems a little too good, a little too scripted, a little too squeaky clean.
Many of us were shocked to hear of his marital break-up. How could RW be subject to such human frailty? I have wondered at the fact that NCS basically didn't want Russell back to finish his college career. The fact that he was named captain so quickly at Wisconsin suggests that his first impression leadership is so strong; does the fact that NCS was willing to let him go (I realize that his back up was an up and comer) suggest that his style of leadership wears thin over time?
Again, I love RW as the seahawks qb and I hope that he retires as a seahawk in about 15 years with multiple championships, but I don't see RW as "one of the guys". However this is not an unmanageable or unique situation, many qbs operate on a different wavelength than their teammates. Those that can't deal with it often find themselves on another team with a different qb to be put off by.
I believe that the real locker room issues were and are with Percy and ML. ML is not happy with the handwriting on the wall.
burrrton wrote:
Again, if the locker room was in the shape the accusations indicate, yes, I do.
mykc14 wrote:At NC State he played both football and baseball. After his junior season (athletically, he actually was graduated academically) he was drafted by the Rockies. His father's health was failing and he wanted to be a professional athlete before his dad died so he wanted to try his hand at Minor League baseball. He went the NC State coach and asked if he could play minor league baseball that summer and the coach basically told him we would love to have you back here at NC State but we only want you if you are wholly devoted to football, as they had another NFL caliber qb (Mike Glennon) on their roster that they wanted to get some experience. He had felt like he had already made a commitment to his dad to try baseball so that was that. After playing baseball he still wanted to come back to NC State, they had already turned the page so he sent out letters to other schools, finally choosing Wisconsin. He wasn't ushered out of NC State for any reason relating to anything like this.
RiverDog wrote:It's a minor point, but I hadn't heard that the reason he wanted to give baseball a shot was to become a pro athlete before his dad passed. I thought it was simply a matter of him wanting to give baseball his best shot before fully committing to football like NCS wanted him to. His dad was living on the east coast, not sure why he'd come all the way out west in some totally obscure dusty little town if it was a matter of his dad seeing him as a pro.
Ironically, Russell ended up here in the Tri Cities for that short stint in professional baseball, and just prior to the SB, the local newspaper ran a neat article about a home run he hit and the guy that returned the ball to him.
http://www.tri-cityherald.com/2014/01/3 ... .html?rh=1
Yeah riv, I have read it in a couple of places but he also discussed it in an interview on CNN. He was drafted by the Rockies on one day and his dad died the next:
NICHOLS (voice-over): Russell Wilson spent two seasons playing single-A baseball, trying his best to make his late father proud.
(on camera): Michael Jordan took a break from his basketball career to play baseball and part of it was this dream he and his dad had. And he wanted to see it out.
For you, seeing out your baseball career, at least testing out how good it could be, was that part of something you felt you wanted to do for your dad?
WILSON: I think it was part of it. Dad always thought I'd plays shortstop for New York Yankees or something crazy like that.
NorthHawk wrote:Who is RW3?
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