monkey wrote:I thought that may have been the case.
As I've said all along with Tate, he's redundant because of Percy Harvin.
There was just no reason for the Seahawks to offer him much since his role would have been greatly reduced with Harvin here anyway.
What this shows really is that Harvin is ready to go for us next year, and the Seahawks are really counting on him to play.
It also shows that they feel Kearse came on (as we all saw) and is also ready for a bigger role.
HumanCockroach wrote:Actually surprised how little they offered him. 2.5 a year is as Tate said a "joke" based on his production not just in the passing game but what he brought in the return game, as well as his truly superb downfield blocking. The guy was clutch, and explosive. That said, my guess would be in that 4 to 4.5 range, I just assumed that the Detroit offer was quite a bit more, plus being an opportunity to play in a passing offense. Obviously Seattle didn't feel he was one of those "core" players.
If there are 12's trashing him, I guess you can't help band wagon fans doing it, but if there are actual 12's, they need to get a fricken grip. The man did nothing to any of them. Seattle came in with a VERY low offer, he left, not a thing wrong with that. My concern is the absolute indifference to upgrading the receiving core, I mean, a couple late round draft picks, an UDFA, one trade, and one FA signing 5 years ago, Tate leaves and they don't immediately bring in every receiver in the NFL, and don't give em' whatever they want. What gives?
They were dead last in passing, so all starting receivers from every team are better, and yet they have the gall to have defensive lineman come in.........
LOL. Relax, just a little brevity...
Today, I am proud to announce that I am a New England Patriot. I am honored
that the Patriots are making me part of their legendary organization, and am
grateful for the opportunity Mr. Kraft, Coach Belichick, Nick Caserio and
the entire team have given me. I intend to diligently work with the same
passion and dedication that I have displayed since coming into the NFL to
uphold the great traditions and qualities that are embodied by the Patriots.
I would be remiss if I didn’t thank the Seattle Seahawks for giving a CFL
player the once in-a-lifetime opportunity to return to the NFL, making a
young boy's dream come true. To Coach Pete Carroll, GM John Schneider, John
Idzik, Coach Richard, Rocky Seto, the LOB, my teammates, the training staff, the equipment guys the Seahawks organization as a whole and most importantly the 12th Man, I say thank you for everything you have done for myself and my family.
I am a truly blessed person.
BB
c_hawkbob wrote:HumanCockroach wrote:Actually surprised how little they offered him. 2.5 a year is as Tate said a "joke" based on his production not just in the passing game but what he brought in the return game, as well as his truly superb downfield blocking. The guy was clutch, and explosive. That said, my guess would be in that 4 to 4.5 range, I just assumed that the Detroit offer was quite a bit more, plus being an opportunity to play in a passing offense. Obviously Seattle didn't feel he was one of those "core" players.
If there are 12's trashing him, I guess you can't help band wagon fans doing it, but if there are actual 12's, they need to get a fricken grip. The man did nothing to any of them. Seattle came in with a VERY low offer, he left, not a thing wrong with that. My concern is the absolute indifference to upgrading the receiving core, I mean, a couple late round draft picks, an UDFA, one trade, and one FA signing 5 years ago, Tate leaves and they don't immediately bring in every receiver in the NFL, and don't give em' whatever they want. What gives?
They were dead last in passing, so all starting receivers from every team are better, and yet they have the gall to have defensive lineman come in.........
LOL. Relax, just a little brevity...
Please substantiate this number. If that was our offer I side with Tater, but I've read elsewhere (also unsubstantiated) that it was $4M per ...
c_hawkbob wrote:I don't blame him for taking the Loins offer either, I just don't buy the "insulting" part and think he's exaggerated the whole deal.
Business is business, we couldn't offer him what he wanted and he took another offer elsewhere, if he'd left it at that there would be no issue, but he's the one that made it a social media circus.
Contrast Tate's exit with that of Brandon Browner:Today, I am proud to announce that I am a New England Patriot. I am honored
that the Patriots are making me part of their legendary organization, and am
grateful for the opportunity Mr. Kraft, Coach Belichick, Nick Caserio and
the entire team have given me. I intend to diligently work with the same
passion and dedication that I have displayed since coming into the NFL to
uphold the great traditions and qualities that are embodied by the Patriots.
I would be remiss if I didn’t thank the Seattle Seahawks for giving a CFL
player the once in-a-lifetime opportunity to return to the NFL, making a
young boy's dream come true. To Coach Pete Carroll, GM John Schneider, John
Idzik, Coach Richard, Rocky Seto, the LOB, my teammates, the training staff, the equipment guys the Seahawks organization as a whole and most importantly the 12th Man, I say thank you for everything you have done for myself and my family.
I am a truly blessed person.
BB
Now that's how to bid farewell to the 12th man!
Zorn76 wrote:Hardly surprised Tate ended up elsewhere, and for the contract he got, who can blame him.
I guess one ring is enough.
He's not going to win any in Detroit.
He's a playmaker that took awhile to develop, but became a good WR and excellent punt returner. Best of luck to Golden as a Lion.
kalibane wrote:There are three things that Tate does better than Harvin. Blocking, Jump Balls and staying healthy. Harvin even matches Tate's vaunted drop rate. In the first half of 2012 before getting hurt with the Vikings Harvin had 62 catches and zero drops.
Aside from those three things, Harvin does everything that Tate does and mostly does it better.
RiverDog wrote:kalibane wrote:There are three things that Tate does better than Harvin. Blocking, Jump Balls and staying healthy. Harvin even matches Tate's vaunted drop rate. In the first half of 2012 before getting hurt with the Vikings Harvin had 62 catches and zero drops.
Aside from those three things, Harvin does everything that Tate does and mostly does it better.
You can't forget about Tate's punt returns, understanding that Harvin is obviously one of the better KO returnees. But I'd rather have a good punt returner than a good KO returner, and Tate was one of the best punt returners we've had in decades IMO.
Hawktawk wrote:Tate is gone, no sense crying over spilled milk.He's upset and so am I but its set in stone. But I also think that expecting Harvin to be an every down player, return kickoffs and punts and not break down at some point is simply whistling in the graveyard. He has played in 3 games in the last year and a half and was knocked out of one of them. It really doesn't matter, he justified the trade with a couple of huge plays that helped Seattle win a SB, something that some teams have never had and maybe never will.
The receiving corps could probably use some bolstering but then again with 3 nice tight ends in McCoy, Miller, and Willson that's a unique set of targets in the NE mold. Kearse was going ballistic towards the end of the season. Baldwin is terrific.And why is it set in stone that Lockette with his world class speed and good size cant emerge?
The wild card is Russel Wilson. He will be coaching these guys up and throwing with them and they will be better. Pretty tough to make a case against Seattle being successful when they are holding a Lombardi they won handily with a "pedestrian" group last season.
Big Blue is going to be on a roll.....
I'd rather have a good punt returner than a good KO returner
Hawk Sista wrote:It is always disappointing to me to hear fans rip players like GT. Social media gives idiots a direct shot, too. Whether or not it made fottball sense to keep him is a discussion we can have, but lots of fans take his decision to follow the money personally. He stated he would give a discount, but dang - if he can make the cheddar he can get from Detroit - go for it. You have a ring, now set yourself up for the future. I would have respected wither decision and recognize it was hard on him as he wanted to be a Hawk; just not more than he wanted 6 million dollars.
All that said - GT would be well served to realize that the majority of fans don't get on twitter to say thank you. He needs thicker skin or it's gonna be a long life. Unfortunately, the NFL is a "What have you done for me lately" league, and the Seattle FO did not prioritize him at 6 million a year for 5 years. He needs to realize he's got to worry about the Detroit fans now - I might be a little irritated if our new guy was still grousing about his old team's fans comments on social media. Grow up man, and move on. #dude-itstwitter #youmadeyourselflooksmall
PS - I enjoyed watching him and wish we coulda kept him. Too bad it's a business and building a bad ass defense is job #1.
burrrton wrote:I'd rather have a good punt returner than a good KO returner
Hm. I think I'd say the opposite for me. You can kick away from punt returners pretty easily, and the majority of punts are fair-caught anyway, aren't they?
PasadenaHawk wrote:I just watched my Road to the Superbowl dvd for the first time last night and I have to say, we will miss GT's play. He is a great punt returner and made some spectacular catches in his time here. Having said that, I don't think the sky is falling but he will surely be missed.
Besides, if your kickoff returner is getting a lot of opportunities, you're probably in a lot of trouble anyway. The opposite is true with your punt returner.
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