Wednesday, August 28, 2013

SEAHAWKS MOVING FORWARD DESPITE SEVERAL INJURIES



Just like the rest of the NFL, the Seahawks are dealing with a variety of injuries to key players at key positions on the offense as well as the defense and special teams.  I've never seen so many preseason injuries in my history of watching football, which spans over 40 years.  It makes you wonder if the injuries are more frequent, and what is the reason or reasons for the increase?

Every week, the football news reads like a casualty report from a war battle.  The Seahawks were one of the teams recognized for their brilliant off-season moves in 2013 to bring in excellent players to fortify their team, which was already considered to be a Super Bowl contender.  They made perhaps the biggest off-season acquisition through a trade making a deal with the Minnesota Vikings to bring wide receiver, Percy Harvin, to Seattle in exchange for a first-round draft choice and a seventh from 2013, and a conditional third round selection in 2014.  In addition to the valuable draft selections, the Seahawks traded for Harvin, they also paid him handsomely.  Harvin signed a $67 million six-year deal to be a Seahawk that will make him one of the highest-paid players in the NFL, not counting quarterbacks.  Granted, Harvin is a thoroughbred of an athlete and one of the most dangerous players in the history of the NFL when he has the ball in his hands.  He is a legitimate threat to make a touchdown every time he touches the ball.  This is the kind of player the Seahawks traded for, but shortly after Harvin came to practice in Seattle, during one of the mini-camps over the league off-season program, he complained of some pain in his hip.  The Seahawks reported it to the press, believing it was a minor hip flexor injury and would heal through simply "rest and non-invasive therapy treatments."  However,  after going through a series of tests, including an ultrasound treatment, a CT scan and an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) it was determined by physicians that Harvin did indeed have a slight tear of the hip labrum tissue.  The Seahawks medical team believed that Harvin could play through the 2013 season with a small tear in his hip. Harvin had a league sanctioned right to seek medical advice independent of the Seahawks medical team, and he exercised that right, flying to New York City to see a highly regarded hip specialist (Dr. Brian Kelly) who examined Harvin, as well, performing many of the same tests as he went through with the Seahawks medical team.  However, it was Dr. Kelly's findings that the tear would need surgical intervention and that with a "Labrum arthroscopic procedure", Harvin would likely miss 3 to 4 months of the season, healing and rehabilitating before he could return to football activity with the Seahawks.  Harvin chose to have the surgery and started is rehabilitation process almost immediately.  The New York physician group examined Harvin "post-op" and evaluated the procedure a huge success.  Almost a month after the procedure, surgeons and special therapy physicians reported that Harvin's rehab was significantly ahead of the timetable they had originally anticipated..   This is primarily because his hip range of motion flexibility was unusually good, which is one of the most important yardmarkers to returning to athletic competition after the procedure had been performed.  In other words, instead of the late November or early December timeline that most of his medical team had anticipated, it looks as if Harvin could return to the team as soon as the beginning of November.  This is, of course, providing his rehabilitation assignment doesn't experience any "setbacks" while he is working the hip and during the time he continues to heal.  Dr. Brian Kelly said pre-surgery, "Percy has approximately 90% chance that he can return to his full potential if his rehabilitation assignment goes as we expect.  Regardless, this is not how Pete Carroll and the Seahawks wanted Percy Harvin's career to start in Seattle.  Many analysts throughout the NFL picked Seattle as the best team in the NFL after Harvin signed with the Seahawks.  Harvin was that deep threat and exciting offensive weapon that Pete Carroll lacked last year and really since taking the job Seattle 2010..  He's a special player and will be missed this year, but this Seattle team had a fantastic season in 2012 and Harvin was not a Seahawk then. Seattle returns all 11 offensive starters and nine of the 11 defensive starters for 2013.  There's no reason that this football team  can't be just as good or perhaps even better playing together for another year as a complete team.

Harvin isn't the only off-season acquisition that Seattle signed to be a Seahawk this year.  Originally, GM John Schneider, told the press not to expect a lot of aggressive signings of free agents once the market opened up for the unrestricted players around the NFL without contracts for the 2013 preseason.  So, as soon as the market opened, the Seahawks went out on a veritable shopping spree. Carroll and Schneider brought home some of the most highly sought after defensive players the league had to offer.  The first was sack specialist, Cliff Avril, a very good pass rushing defensive end formerly of the Detroit Lions.  He was the number one rated pass rusher available in free agency this year, and the Seahawks brought him in for a tryout..  Once Avril got a chance to meet the coaching staff, some of his potential teammates and tour the fantastic state-of-the-art Seahawks training facility… he didn't want to leave Seattle.  In fact, Avril wanted to stay badly enough, he accepted a much less lucrative deal with the Seahawks than he would have just to stay in Detroit.  Last season, the Lions offered Avril a franchise tag tendered at over $10 million, the going price for the best defensive pass rushers in the NFL.  He refused to sign the tag and decided to play out his contract.  After a very solid contract season in Detroit,  the Lions never offered Avril a deal once the season had concluded. No one's really certain why,  but  the relatively lean contract for Avril set the market  on pass rushing defensive ends so low,  that Dwight Freeney and John Abraham took deals  that were even  smaller than Avril.   It was considered a coup by Schneider and Carroll and gave Seattle another quality Leo End to fortify a defensive line that already included first-round draft selection Bruce Irvin and the Seahawks best quarterback sacking end, Chris Clemons.

After the signing of Percy Harvin and now Avril, the press was all over themselves, smitten and in love with the Seattle Seahawks, now adding one of the premier pass rushing defensive ends in football to go with their already "stingiest defense in the NFL" allowing just 15 points a game last season, an NFL best.  But Avril came to camp complaining of a foot injury he sustained while going through his personal conditioning program during the off-season.  Plantar fasciitis was the diagnosis  an injury that has only one solution;  Rest.  The Seahawks just started training camp and already two of their shiny new toys couldn't even be taken out of the box.  Once Avril healed the plantar  injury, he returned to practice, but then somehow sustained an injury to his hamstring.  Pete Carroll ordered more rest for Avril, but when he returned once again to practice, he apparently re-aggravated the hamstring strain.  Not only has Avril not been able to see any action preseason, now he is considered doubtful to start the regular-season.  Obviously, this is a great disappointment to the Seahawks, who released DT Alan Branch after last season, who subsequently signed with the Buffalo Bills.  Branch was a solid, but aging interior defensive lineman and  the Seahawks decided to go  younger and more athletic..  Unfortunately  Carroll's crystal ball didn't predict  the spattering of injuries that has,, at least in the short-term, decimated Seattle's D line for training camp, preseason and the early regular-season. To make things a little more difficult, DE/LB Bruce Irvin serving a four-game suspension and DE Chris Clemons still rehabilitating a surgically repaired ACL, the Seahawks are looking quite thin on the defensive line that was considered one of the best in football. Hopefully part recalled   the

The Seahawks signed another defensive pass rushing gem out of Tampa Bay, Michael Bennett, a double digits sack machine who actually started his career in Seattle before being traded to the Buccaneers.  For some unexplainable reason, Tampa decided not to offer a contract to Bennett.  He was the teams best pass rusher, and he was released.  Seattle decided to right the wrong and sign Bennett back in Seattle where they and he thought he belonged.  Just after the signing, the Seahawks released the information that Bennett was suffering from a partially torn shoulder labrum.  He played through the 2012 season with the same ailment, and still recorded 9 1/2 sacks for the Bucs.  Bennett will not have surgery during the season, and believe he can play through 2013 and have surgery once the season concludes.  Still, there is a potential for Bennett to worsen the condition and end up not helping Seattle at all.  Things that once looked so bright and so auspicious, began to have a great cloud hanging over training camp.

Seattle wasn't through in free agency, though.  Just days after the Bennett signing, the Seahawks approached defensive tackle from the Miami Dolphins, Tony McDaniel, who was very active on the interior defensive line making tackles and stuffing the run.  His 6'7" frame was something that Seattle lacked and his ability to either knock down passes with his great height or bulrush offensive guards back into the passing pocket could make Seattle's defensive ends the recipient of quarterback sacks and tackles behind the line of scrimmage.  This is a move that Seattle may count on more than they had ever thought they would.  McDaniel is presently healthy and fighting for a job on the defensive line that once had so much potential, but now looks as if they will start the season a lot lighter than they had thought originally.

The Seahawks also wanted to bolster their defensive secondary after not offering a contract to longtime Seahawk, Marcus Trufant, they needed a slot corner to defend wide receivers in the middle of the field.  They took little time after landing that the Minnesota Vikings would not offer a contract extension to Antoine Winfield, a nine-year veteran of the Vikings and five years before that with the Bills in Buffalo.  Winfield is one of the most sure tacklers in open field and have logged over 100 tackles twice in his career and has never had less than 40.  Most of his years, Winfield logged an average of 80+ tackles.  While Winfield isn't the tallest player in Seattle's secondary, not by a lot, but he is a hitter and he will punish receivers in the middle of the field which is exactly what the Seahawks need after Marcus Trufant finally slowed down in Seattle.  Winfield hasn't given up a touchdown pass three years playing right corner for the Vikings, and in a conference with Aaron Rodgers, Jay Cutler and Matthew Stafford, that's saying a lot.  Recently, Winfield was held out of practice for what was reported a sore knee.  It will probably not mean any playing time once the regular-season begins, but it is something to watch.  Especially considering the fact that Seattle has the deepest secondary in the NFL and there are a lot of young, excellent second straight defensive backs just drooling at the opportunity of making this Seattle team.  However, Winfield will likely make the 53 man squad, and he is a monster in the middle and hits like a Mack truck, even considering his diminutive frame at just 5'9" 180 lbs.  Antoine Winfield is definitely a player to watch.

The Seahawks made some very aggressive moves during the off-season, trading for Harvin, signing free-agent like; Avril, Bennett, McDaniel and Winfield, and all of this was done before Seattle had even made their selections at the NFL draft.  The Seahawks had 11 selections, but had no first-round pick because of the Percy Harvin trade.  They also sacrificed one of their two seventh round picks, but this was no worry to Pete Carroll and John Schneider.  In the rounds between two and seven, they seem to thrive finding talent where other teams seemingly cannot:  Players like; Kam Chancellor, KJ Wright, Brandon Browner,  All-Pro Richard Sherman and Doug Baldwin,  all outstanding players selected in the middle to late rounds of the draft, and Browner and Baldwin weren't selected at all.  Carroll and Schneider found them as unrestricted undrafted free-agents.  The 2013 draft wasn't much different for the Seahawks.  Schneider and Carroll went wheeling and dealing picking up extra middle and late round selections.  In the second round, and Seattle's first pick in the draft, they selected an extremely athletic and talented running back named Christine Michael, an athletic freak of nature, an unheralded wide receiver Chris Harper, with the speed of receiver and a body of a running back, a defensive tackle behemoth in Jesse Williams and several more players who just might stick with this year's 53 man roster.  Some of these unheralded players could end up on the Seahawks practice squad, but there have been practice squad players that have bided their time just getting better learning the pro game and are moved up and activated sooner or later.  Some of these obscure, but talented and notable players who have stood out in practice and in the preseason, include; DE Benson Mayowa, LB John Lotulelei, and T Alvin Bailey, all players who were never selected in any of the seven rounds of the NFL college football draft.  It's players like these that set the Seahawks in a completely different, special category than the rest of the NFL teams.  The Seahawks are finding talent in the middle and late rounds, and even players never given a chance through the draft. It's things like that which truly creates a football team with something to prove and the Seattle Seahawks in embrace it.

Not all is wonderful down at the Virginia Mason athletic center.  The casualty list seems to grow daily, sometimes hourly.  Bumps and bruises and sometimes worse injuries are putting Seattle in a position where they have to regroup and utilize backup players to fill in while the first line players healed and rehab back to the point where they can be 100% healthy and effective.  Players who are currently ailing and one way or another include;
Zach Miller who has returned to practice and will likely suit up and play against the Oakland Raiders tomorrow night.
Cliff Avril who has re-aggravated his hamstring pull and it is reported that his ability to play in the first regular-season game in Carolina is now in jeopardy.
Brandon Mebane has an undisclosed injury and it is uncertain whether he will be ready for the first game of the regular-season.
Jesse Williams has been put on a season-long injured reserve and will not play in 2013.
Jordan Hill has been diagnosed with a bicep strain, preventing them from taking part in the Oakland Raiders preseason game in Seattle and also the first game of the regular-season.
Antoine Winfield has a sore knee, he is day-to-day and will not play in the final preseason game, but is expected to be ready for the regular-season opener in Carolina.
Korey Toomer is on the non-football related injury list and will likely not be with the team this year.
Chris Clemons is still listed as active, but will likely miss the first portion of the regular-season.  It's uncertain how many games Clemons will miss, but for now, the team has avoided putting him on the injured reserve list which would keep him out of action and practice for six weeks.
Bruce Irvin will miss the first four games of the season due to violation of the NFL's performance-enhancing drug policy.  He did not appeal.
Michael Bennett was kept out of practice today for an undisclosed injury.  Pete Carroll indicated the injury is not serious.
Sidney Rice has not played in any of them preseason games and is nursing a pre-existing the injury that took him to Switzerland to have a noninvasive procedure done on the knee and is expected to be ready for the regular-season, but will not play at all in the preseason.
Richard Sherman was reported to have a minor foot injury after getting it stepped on by Golden Tate in a passing drill at the teams training facility.
Tony McDaniel sat out most of training camp and missed the first two preseason games against San Diego and Denver.  He played against Green Bay and looked good, making several plays up the middle and putting pressure on the quarterback, something Seattle has needed now for two years.

All in all, the Seahawks are probably not in any worse condition than any other NFL team suffering with players injuries. In fact, they might be in a better condition than most.  Seattle has had their share of nagging injuries, bumps and bruises and some of the most serious, but because the Seahawks enjoy more depth at each position than most teams they will likely be able to survive the time that their starters are healing or rehabilitating or coming back from suspension relatively unscathed.  Starting the season against the Carolina Panthers is probably about as good as Seattle could hope for, matching up well against the Panthers and knowing their style of play after matching up against them just a year ago.  However, in week two they will have one of their hardest test against the 49ers, but their first matchup will be at CenturyLink field and I believe that the 12th man will be the deciding factor between two teams who are both fighting against injury bugs, but the Seattle Seahawks will tip the scales, hopefully causing as many problems for the 49ers offense as possible.  Last year's visit to the C'Link, showed quarterback Colin Kaepernick firsthand what a living hell looks and sounds like.  He acted accordingly, often appearing rattled and shaken and above all, completely confused and irritated by the searing crowd noise cascading down the concourses and right into the ear holes of his helmet.  I think it's fair to say Kaepernick doesn't like our little, cozy 68,000 person cottage. Another problem for the 49ers is that they don't have particularly good corners or safeties.  They lost their best defensive back, Deshon Goldson, and now he has been replaced by a rookie Eric Wright.  Also, Nnamdi Asomugha is returning to the Bay Area, but this time not in a Raider uniform, he's going to don 49ers duds and attempt to resurrect his disappointing career since traveling across the nation to the Philadelphia Eagles organization.  On the other hand, Russell Wilson, does have a full complement of wide receivers to utilize at the beginning of the season, a luxury which is something that the 49ers cannot boast about.  Michael Crabtree was their hot hand last season, and he will not be available until perhaps the end of the season after having a terrible Achilles tendon tear.  The only other wide receivers that San Francisco has are Mario Manningham, who won't return until midseason and rookie Quinton Patton who hasn't played particularly well in preseason, the rest are relative unknowns.  Their failed first-round experiment, WR AJ Jenkins, ended this month as the 49ers swapped their failure first-round WR for the Kansas City Chiefs first-round first-round failure at wide receiver.  Jenkins was traded straight across with the Chiefs for Jonathan Baldwin, another player that won't exactly strike fear into the hearts of the Legion of Boom.  In fact, the 49ers best wide receiver isn't even a wideout at all; Vernon Davis is a true tight-end, and a good one, but he's not a wide receiver and doesn't have the skills necessary to to run the deep routes, stretching the top of Seattle's defense like wide receiver Michael Crabtree would try.  There's no doubt that the 49ers best true wide receiver is newly acquired possession receiver, Anquan Boldin, the same player who, at least in part, ended the dreams of the 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII. Boldin was supposed to be the 49ers answered to the Seahawks signing Percy Harvin.  That's not a fair comparison at all, though some of the talking heads on television would tell you differently.  Boldin was one of the up-and-coming wide receivers in the NFL while he played with the Arizona Cardinals opposite of Larry Fitzgerald.  However, once Fitzgerald wasn't on the other end drawing double and sometimes triple coverage, Boldin's numbers would slide when he wasn't able to draw single coverage anymore.  This is exactly what's going to happen when Seattle plays the 49ers in September.  Anquan Boldin will draw doubles sometimes, even though the Legion would rather man up and go "Mano y Mano" bumping and pushing at the line of scrimmage and let the best man win.  The Seahawks talented secondary rarely loses this battle to the best wide receivers in the business. Boldin is a mere shadow of his former self and the Seahawks will exploit his age and a lost step or two.  This is not to say that Sherman, Browner, Chancellor or Thomas will take him lightly, but they will be ready to play and there will be a lot said before the game, definitely during the game, and don't be surprised if there isn't some jawing at the end.  To the victors go the spoils and the Seahawks would sincerely love to tear that ridiculous logo off of the size of the 49ers helmets.  All in good fun, of course…

 Boldin is a formidable receiver and has had a very productive  career throughout his illustrious11 seasons as a pro, but he is not even close to having the speed and physicality he once had when he was considered an elite receiver, and he's entering his 12th season a little beat up and a lot less fuel in the tank or trade on the tires.  A good possession receiver, Boldin will give Colin Kaepernick a big target outside numbers and even perhaps shallow and intermediate routes across the middle; he's a possession receiver. However, this is a place where few receivers dare enter when they are young and ignorant. Seattle's linebackers and  huge secondary are going to make him pay dearly  for making catches in their territory, particularly between the numbers and around the hashmarks.  This is what the Legion of boom does to players who dare catch passes over the middle.  They punish with vicious and physical collisions and they are the ones initiating the contact..  In the game of baseball, which hurts worse?   The baseball bat or the ball?  If you look back at the Seahawks game at CenturyLink Field vs. the Cowboys, you'll see some of the best  possession receivers  completely lose confidence and concentration dropping passes and completely running short routes because of the expected contact by Seattle's linebackers, corners and hard-hitting safeties.  With the addition of Antoine Winfield, one of the hardest hitting corners in football,  don't look for the Seahawks to take it easy on the 49ers wide receivers just because they're shorthanded.

The Seahawks will go into their final preseason game at CenturyLink Field without the services of; Brandon Mebane, Cliff Avril, Jordan Hill, Sidney Rice, Tony McDaniel, Michael Bennett, Chris Clemons, Michael Robinson, Antoine Winfield, Richard Sherman. Players that will be held out for different reasons will likely be; Russell Wilson, Marshawn Lynch, Golden Tate, Christine Michael, Robert Turbin and Bobby Wagner.  These players will likely be held out because it's the last preseason game and all of these players are ready for the season, some of them have little dings and bruises that need not be re-aggravated.

I will be excited to watch the game, simply because I'm curious which players will perform well with all of them struggling and fighting to earn a position after the final cuts next week bringing the team down to the regulation 53 man roster.

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

STOP THE PRESSES. BROWN'S VOID MOFFITT-SANFORD TRADE. DEAL WITH BRONCOS INSTEAD.


Sealver Siliga                                           John Moffitt

The day after the Seahawks traded third year offensive guard John Moffitt to the Cleveland Browns in exchange for defensive tackle  Brian Sanford, the Browns void the trade after Moffitt fails his physical which was continued on the trade.   Sanford will return to the Browns and the Seahawks automatically regain the rights to Moffitt.

However, it didn't take the Seahawks long to deal the former Wisconsin Badger to another team.  The Denver Broncos have reportedly accepted a trade for Moffitt in exchange for defensive lineman Sealver Siliga, a huge, imposing interior run stopping tackle from University of Utah.  

A 2011 third-round draft pick, Moffitt started nine games as a rookie and six games last year. Siliga entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent in 2011 and has played in just one regular-season game. Siliga is just 23 years old and at 6'2", 330 lbs. he could be a project for the Seahawks to fill the interior defensive line with a run stopping player in the mold of Jesse Williams.  Williams is experiencing problems with his surgically repaired knee and might be causing Pete Carroll some anxiety as to whether the rookie from Alabama can get on the field this season and be effective.

It's not clear whether or not the Broncos are aware of John Moffitt's health status or perhaps they are not as concerned as the Cleveland Browns were.  It is also possible that Moffitt could fail the Broncos' physical as well and end up back in Seattle once again.

Moffitt was in competition with guard JR Sweezy, Alvin Bailey, rookie Michael Bowie and Paul McQuiston for the right guard position. However, he apparently wasn't showing enough positive development for Pete Carroll.  Moffitt was a very popular player in the locker room, noted for his lighthearted humor and oddball idiosyncrasies.  Unfortunately for him and the Seahawks, he just didn't progress at the level or speed that Carroll and GM Schneider hoped he would be their third round selection in 2011.

Monday, August 19, 2013

SEAHAWKS MAKE ROSTER MOVES DEAL MOFFITT FOR D LINE DEPTH

 The Seattle Seahawks have made a couple of roster moves and they may be tipping their hand at what's going on inside the organization,  personnel--wise.

Pete Carroll and GM John Schneider announced today that they had traded offensive guard John Moffitt to the Cleveland Browns in exchange for Brian Sanford, a 6’2” 280 lb. defensive lineman who can play up and down the line making him versatile and perhaps valuable to the Seahawks who clearly made this move in an attempt to shore up the defensive line, a line that is currently suffering from a bevy of health issues.

Moffitt was the 75th pick overall in the 2011 NFL Draft by the Seahawks and started the first nine games that season before getting a season-ending knee injury. He played in eight games last season, starting six.  Moffitt was a team favorite in the locker room and also a favorite of local radio hosts, mostly for his sense of humor and lighthearted honesty and humility.  Unfortunately, those characteristics are typically valued by players who can perform on the field in contrast to their easy going, funny man persona in the locker room and with the press.  He will be missed by the guys at ESPN Seattle and KJR 950 AM; however he never really got into a groove of consistency, despite his high draft position and high expectations coming out of Wisconsin and a very respectable college career.

Seahawks trade G John Moffitt to the Browns for DE Brian Sanford.

The trade was really a need for need type of transaction has Pete Carroll was uneasy with his defensive line and their injury problems, as the Cleveland Browns were suffering in their offensive line after leaving Brandon Weeden out to get mugged too many times in a collapsing pocket that never really gave the rookie quarterback a chance to throw in a rhythm the way he did at Oklahoma State as a 28-year-old senior.  If Moffitt can stay healthy, he has a good shot at starting in Cleveland and Sanford might be able to contribute if he can beat out a couple of other Seahawks hopefuls, and there is also the injuries that might make Sanford’s chances better as camp progresses.  It will all depend on whether or not Sanford can learn the system and whether or not he is a polished player after three years in the NFL.  Dan Quinn’s defensive line schemes are somewhat complicated with a lot of stunting, requiring players to develop a sense of chemistry so that confusion doesn’t open up holes in the line allowing ball-carriers to knife through the line of scrimmage without pressure.


Dewayne Cherrington makes a tackle while playing for Mississippi

In addition to the trade for Brian Sanford, John Schneider and Pete Carroll were busy trying to bring in more talent to challenge for a spot in the defensive line rotation. Dewayne Cherrington was signed yesterday, a defensive tackle who will probably play the three technique and the five technique.  Dewayne Cherrington is a very large man at 6’3” 335 lbs.  He was picked up by the New England Patriots as an undrafted unrestricted free-agent.  Cherrington is massive and has the strength to match his enormous frame.  At the NFL combine, Cherrington managed 36 reps of 225 lbs. and bench presses 525 lbs and squats 675 lbs.  Both Cherrington and Sanford are beasts on the defensive line, Cherrington is one of the strongest players in the NFL, and what’s better is that both of them have the quickness and frame to fill in to the Seahawks defensive line and perhaps provide help at both the running game and the interior push to force quarterbacks out of the pocket where the edge rushers like Cliff Avril, Michael Bennett and O’Brien Schofield can pursue at the edge.

Saturday, August 17, 2013

2013 NFL PRESEASON MARRED WITH LEAGUE WIDE INJURIES


Seattle Seahawks Team Surgical Specialties Physicians 2013
So, just where do the Seahawks stand with their 90 man roster and which players are most likely to stay and which players will likely be released before August 31, the date when all NFL teams must reduce their rosters number to 53?  One thing is for certain… The players that get cut from this talented football team won't be out of work for long.  Particularly considering the fact that former defensive coordinator Gus Bradley, who is now the Jacksonville Jaguars rookie head coach, will be waiting in the wings for the Seahawks to make their cuts.  The Jaguars are number two on the waiver list and will have an early opportunity to make Seattle's trash their treasure.  Bradley is intimately invested in many of the players that the Seahawks might cut and with a team that is in a rebuilding mode, it would be very natural to see Gus pickup talented football players who just weren't enough to make one of the best rosters in the NFL.  This is going to be one of the most difficult seasons in Pete Carroll's career in making player cut before the season starts.  Seattle is extremely deep at; defensive  line, wide receiver, running back and their deepest talent, defensive corner.  Several of the players that will be released by Seattle could start for several teams throughout the NFL, and they will.

Throughout the National Football League team trainers and doctors are working around the clock to help mend the bumps, bruises and various injuries to rookie players and veterans alike.  In over 40 years watching NFL football, I've never seen so many preseason injuries to players, and at all positions; quarterback to kicker.  It's difficult, without access to each teams medical history, to determine if there are more injuries occurring during the 2013 preseason [comparatively], or if there are simply more injuries being reported to the media than ever before.  Technology has certainly changed the way the media covers football and it has drastically increased the way that fans follow the intricacies of the pro-football experience. The advent of the Internet, combined with the various communication systems, available to practically every football fan, has opened up a new awareness of what is happening inside the game.  The National Football League has continued to be the  pioneers in making pro-football the most exciting, enjoyable and watchable sport in America. Decade after decade, and every step of the way the NFL has attempted to bring the fans closer to the field in every way possible.  Where we once marveled at the fantastic camerawork the NFL used for its Super Bowl coverage, now you see that kind of attention to detail in every single game played today.  It used to be common for a regular-season game to have eight fixed standard definition cameras stationed at various positions around the stadium… and the fans were satisfied.  However, the NFL was not satisfied, and now there are dozens of cameras all over the stadium; in the crowd, up and down the sidelines, in the end zones, and now even above the field, giving viewers the ability to see plays develop from the perspective of the actual players on the field.  The motorized and remotely operated "Sky-Cam," is suspended by cables high above the gridiron and is able to cover every inch of the football field.

Along with all this amazing camerawork and press coverage of the games, practices and training preparation, we are also seeing some of the more intimate details of the lives of players, coaches and other people involved in the game… and with it, we are seeing aspects of their lives that are not at all exciting or entertaining.  I am speaking specifically of player and their injuries.  Injuries are naturally a part of tackle football, a game that features; huge, strong, fast, and powerful athletes who purposely crash and colliding with one another with the goal often winning by attrition.  The question isn't "IF" a player it might get injured, but when and the level of severity.  Because of the violent nature of football, most players will admit that they never play 100% healthy.  There is always some nagging ache or pain that goes along with playing the game.

Because of the public's steadily increasing access to the NFL game in America, the players health and conditioning have become an open forum to the press and therefore to the public.  We are hearing about every groin pull, stubbed toe, sprained ankle, torn ACL or any other health complication that jeopardizes the player's ability to take the field at practice or a game.  I wonder if this is why we are hearing so much about player injuries.  Is it just increased awareness Or is there something more troubling for the NFL to investigate, perhaps even the NFL players Association.  Is it just a coincidence that player injuries have escalated since the signing of the new collective bargaining agreement?  Are players coming into camp not prepared for football related drill?  The question needs to be asked and answered and any solution would benefit both the owners and the NFLPA. Strength and conditioning coaches are typically held responsible for keeping players fit and ready to play.  However, all players presumably have their own off-season workout regimen to keep themselves physically fit and ready to play once they join their respective teams at the OTA's,  minicamps and especially the preseason training camp.



The NFL has continued to try and bring football fans closer to the game, filming portions of training camp practices that are also open to the press and to the public for the first two weeks of the season. Fans can now witness their performance in practice and in training camp and even learning of players sustaining injuries in almost real-time. Any way you look at it, I think America is becoming more educated about the common and not so common injuries occurring to some of the most supremely conditioned athletes in the world.  Words that you may have never heard or thought about before have now become commonplace in the discussions going on concerning football teams and their players; Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) injuries, Medial Collateral Ligament (MCL) injuries, Patella Tendinitis, Lisfranc injuries, Plantar Fasciitis, Rotator Cuff Tears, Hip Flexor injuries, Hip and Shoulder Labrum Tears, Spinal Stenosis and all sorts of other medical terms have found their way into common football vernacular.  For sure, football fans are learning about human anatomy whether they planned to or not.

The Seahawks coaching staff and medical staff have probably never worked so closely together and probably wished it was never necessary.  Each day Pete Carroll ends his training camp practice with a rather lengthy press conference going over the teams infirmary report.  Prior to the first preseason game in San Diego, the Seahawks reported eight players being held out of action due to injury.  Some of those injuries were considered minor, some were relatively severe and some of them included players rehabilitating from off-season surgery.  However, after the Seahawks' preseason game against the Chargers, Seattle's infirmary report shot up to 18 players.

As the seasons pass, it seems that more and more coaches find less and less use for preseason games.  Too many pointless injuries occur and because of the odd brand of coaching during these insignificant scrimmages, it's difficult to determine whether a player is performing at a high enough level to be worthy of the 53 man roster, or not.  Since the team owners and the NFL players Association stipulated on a new collective bargaining agreement (CBA), it has drastically reduced the amount of time players are on a practice field competing for their jobs, and even more limited opportunity to see them making any real contact.  The CBA eliminated the long-standing "two a days" which required players to take part in a morning practice session and an afternoon session.  Players objected to the grueling nature of these long practices and negotiated to have them not only reduced to once a day, but the number of hours they are on the field was also limited.  In addition, players are rarely in full contact drills, handicapping the coaches ability to see them in real time, real speed and real contact situations.  Much of the practice drills are referred to as "walk-through drills" further frustrating coaches and making it particularly hard to see players create separation between themselves and those competing for the same position.  With the current state of injuries in the NFL preseason, it's even making things more difficult.

The Seahawks made key acquisitions during the off-season including, Percy Harvin, the player that Seattle and almost every other football analyst believed was going to be the player to take the Seahawks to another level and perhaps to their second Super Bowl appearance.  Harvin was signed to a lucrative deal in Seattle, but almost immediately he reported that he was experiencing discomfort in his hip.  Seahawks doctors and trainers believed it was a hip flexor strain, but after all of the off-season training sessions concluded, he reported to training camp with much more serious news.  He was taken in to have his hip scanned with an MRI, and Seahawks physicians reported that he had a possible small hip labrum tear, but could possibly play through it.  As the NFL CBA provides, players have the right to seek another opinion independent of the Seahawks franchise.  Harvin flew to Germany to be examined by a highly regarded hip specialist who advised Harvin to have it surgically repaired immediately.  Harvin decided to take his advice and went through a arthroscopic procedure to have a hip repaired.  Percy Harvin's expected return is estimated to be mid-November or early December.  If everything goes as expected during his rehabilitation assignment, Pete Carroll and the Seahawks are hoping to have their newest and most dangerous weapon in uniform for the New Orleans Saints game on December 2.  However, Carroll was careful to point out that they have no reason to hurry up his rehab if he's not completely ready to play.  It's important to remember, this Seahawks offense was one of the most prolific scoring teams in the NFL over the second half of the 2012 season scoring 150 points total in three games (50 point average) This was all done without Percy Harvin on the roster.  The point is Seattle has plenty of play-makers to be just as dangerous, if not more, than last season.  Sidney Rice remained healthy all season long, Golden Tate proved to be the play-maker everyone new him to be out of Notre Dame, and they have a healthy slot receiver, Doug Baldwin, returning to the lineup this year.  Baldwin led the entire team in receptions as a rookie coming out of Stanford an undrafted free-agent.  In addition, new acquisition, 6'5" WR Stephen Williams, has looked outstanding in camp and also in the first preseason game against the Chargers, playing the X receiver.  Jermaine Kearse has had a terrific camp and could be another dangerous weapon for Russell Wilson.  Kearse has also been an outstanding special teams player, which could be a determining factor as the coaching staff evaluates the entire package offered by each receiver.  The Seahawks also drafted Chris Harper, a 6'1" torpedo of muscles, weighing 235 lbs. and running the 40 in just 4.47 seconds.  Carroll and the Seahawks are expecting a lot from this talented rookie receiver.  The wide receiver Corps for the Seahawks is alive and well and to add to that, the Seahawks have Zach Miller returned and new draft selection Luke Willson, of the University of Rice, who is 6'5" and has 4.5 speed to go with his large frame. This Willson with two  L's in his name, is a tremendous pass receiving tightend and could make dynamic matchup advantages for their quarterback to hit deep and intermediate passes outside the pocket.  This could be an incredible value for the Seahawks to have a dangerous weapon downfield with size, speed and great hands.

Pete Carroll's defense has unlimited potential, but until he can get them all on the field at the same time healthy, all that potential will remain on paper.  The Seahawks were far more aggressive than anyone believed they would be during the free-agent market of available players.  The top defensive prize was Cliff Avril who became an unrestricted free agent after the Detroit Lions failed to offer him a deal.  No one really knows why Detroit allowed one of their best pass rushing defensive ends to hit the open market, but it likely happened because of a lack of available money in their salary cap.  Nevertheless, Seattle became the recipient of this experienced pass rushing phenom.  Unfortunately, Avril came with a few bumps and bruises.  Immediately when the minicamps began, Avril complained of a foot injury.  Plantar fasciitis was the diagnosis and it would mean that Seattle's new play toy would sit and watch the off-season drills as he waited for his foot condition to heal.  Not long after his foot injury seemed to heal, Avril sustained a minor pull of his hamstring.  This also kept Avril from training camp drills, but most of it was primarily decided on as a form of insurance that he would not exacerbate the problems.  Avril is a seasoned veteran and the layoff shouldn't slow him down.  In fact, this week (Thursday) the great defensive  end joined the rest of the team in full speed training camp activity.  To add to some of the less than encouraging news about Percy Harvin and Cliff Avril, the Seahawks learned that Michael Bennett has been suffering from a torn labrum on his right shoulder.  He played through the entire season with the injury and is expected to play through 2013 and address the shoulder injury after the season has concluded.  Pete Carroll is encouraged by the rehabilitation process of Seattle's top sack specialist, Chris Clemons, and said that he is hopeful that he could be ready for the beginning of the season.  They're not going to hurry him back, being 32 years old, and the fact that there are other players who can shore up the defensive line while he continues to get into game-playing shape.  Seattle signed Tony McDaniel shortly after acquiring Avril and Bennett, and he is a player who can provide pass rushing pressure on the interior of the defensive line, something the Seahawks lacked in 2012.  Bruce Irvin was going to be part of a major overhaul to his responsibilities for the upcoming year, but during the off-season Irvin tested positive for a performance-enhancing drug of some time, plus he sustained a groin injury just prior to the first preseason game.  Irvin will miss the first four games of the season due to a suspension for the PED's, and looks to be absent from the second preseason game as well.

Other nagging injuries affecting the Seahawks defensive squad include; Bobby Wagner (shoulder), Jesse Williams (knee), Tony McDaniel (ankle) and  Korey Toomer who has again injured his knee and may be out of the lineup in the first half of the regular-season.  The offense has its own nagging health issues, but none of them are particularly severe, Percy Harvin notwithstanding.    Oft injured lineman, James Carpenter, is again suffering a knee injury and of course Seattle has lost the services of tight end Anthony McCoy for the entire 2013 season.

It's a wonder why they are so many injuries in the NFL this off-season.  The NFLPA got what it wanted in the CBA regarding work-related issues, reducing the amount of time the players are required to be on the practice field, the number of training sessions per day and the contact drills have been reduced to the point where there is little hitting, blocking and tackling going on during training camp drills.

So why so many injuries you might ask?  Yes?  Well, for now, nobody really understands why the injury report has been so littered with players from all team and all positions.  It's likely an in-depth study will be done once the season concludes.  In the meantime, all NFL players will be required to wear; shoulder, hip, thigh and knee pads, no matter what position an athlete might play and when they play.  In theory, NFL officials are hoping to see less abrasions, lacerations and contusions than during the years when many players chose to omit these protective pads. The argument goes on as to whether players avoided these pieces of protective padding because they believed it limited their  performance oon the field, or if it was complete ego driven vanity.  The reaction by NFL players has been mixed. Wide receivers  and  defensive backs, like;  WR DeShawn Jackson and DB Dominique Rodgers Cromartie,, seemed to agree that pads limit their movement and slow them down, while other players like RB Adrian Peterson and RB Marshawn Lynch, think all the whining is all  for nothing.

Plenty of NFL players are griping about the looming requirement that they wear leg pads in 2013.  The reigning league MVP doesn’t want to hear that leg pads reduce player speed.

“I’ll call BS on that,” Peterson told Mike Garafolo of FOXSports.com.  ”It’s like, ‘You’re a National Football League player.  If a pad that doesn’t weigh but a couple of ounces slows you down, you don’t need to be playing in this league.’  Like, come on now.  Seriously.”

So what’s the real reason for the resistance?

“Guys like to be pretty, not wear the thigh pads and knee pads, but it protects you,” Peterson said.  ”There have been plenty of times I got hit in my knee and when I had my pants pulled up too high and that pad wasn’t there to protect it.  It didn’t feel good.  So I make sure I keep my pads pulled down and covering my knee just to be able to protect my body.”


Sunday, August 4, 2013

NFC WEST COPING WITH INJURIES AND HIGH HOPES IN THE TOUGHEST DIVISION IN FOOTBALL



What is happening in the National Football League?  Every day the infirmary report seems to include dozens of casualties and some of the most high profile players are standing around the training camp practice fields in street clothes or jogging suits with ballcaps.  The Seahawks have been no exception, nor has division rivals San Francisco been able to avoid the injury bug to several players and at key positions.

Just prior to the NFL draft, national sporting news sources picked up on the so-called arms race between the Seahawks and the 49ers.  Each of their moves seemed to be connected in some way to the transactions of both teams.  Early in the off-season, the Seahawks made a blockbuster trade to bring the highly sought after, multi dimensional wide receiver, Percy Harvin, to Seattle.  Almost immediately, Jim Harbaugh's Niners made a trade with the Baltimore Ravens to acquire wide receiver Anquan Boldin.  Not exactly a tit-for-tat equal with the Harvin pickup, but it was clearly a move to keep up with the Seahawks potentially superior aerial attack.  Boldin provides a big bodied receiver that San Francisco didn't have on the roster last year except for perhaps Vernon Davis, their tight end. With big hands and the ability to physically take the ball away from defenders, Boldin added a new dimension to a defense that featured primarily speedy, but shorter wide receivers.  Because the Seahawks have such unusually tall, physical defensive backs, it's presumed that Harbaugh needed players who could match up with the press, man-to-man style coverage that Richard Sherman and Brandon Browner present.  Boldin had an outstanding 2012 season with the Ravens, showing exactly the kind of physicality that the 49ers needed to counter the tough corner play of the Seahawks huge DBs known from the Pacific to the Atlantic as "The Legion of Boom." 

Next, Seahawks GM John Schneider worked some magic to bring sack-master, free-agent defensive end, Cliff Avril, to Seattle to shore up the Seahawks pass rush.  Last season, the Seahawks improved their pressure on the quarterback, but only by four sacks did they improve from the previous season 32/36.  That wasn't satisfactory to the Seahawks organization and they meant to do something about it.  Avril was a free agent, having several successful seasons with the Detroit Lions, but the Lions requisitioned most of their salary cap reserves toward their offense to improve the rushing attack acquiring Reggie Bush from the Dolphins and to pay Calvin Johnson who recently signed a $135 million contract for seven years, with $60 million of that guaranteed.  This made Avril a numbers game for them and because the Seahawks had such a promising season, Seattle has become a destination for veteran players looking for a chance to get on with the team that could possibly challenge for Super Bowl.  Schneider negotiated a two-year deal for Avril, for approximately $7 million a year  Before the 2012 season, the Lions offered Avril a franchise tag of over $10 million for one season and he turned it down.  Avril was asked whether or not he regretted turning down the offer, but he said that he believed everything happens for a reason and he was glad to be in Seattle to show his talent and help the Seahawks compete for a division title and perhaps a lot more.

Almost immediately after signing Avril, Schneider parlayed his luck going after former Seahawks Michael Bennett, who was a free agent and left for Tampa Bay.  The Buccaneers released Bennett and the Seahawks were fortunate enough to be able to sign him to a one-year deal in Seattle.  The Buccaneers fan base was furious to see their best pass rushing defensive end leave.  Bennett is familiar with Seattle's system and should fit right in without much in terms of growing pains learning Seattle's defensive sets.  This gave the Seahawks the best  two of three defensive pass rushing free agents on the market.  San Francisco answered by signing first-round draft pick from 2008, Glenn Dorsey, who became a free agent after a disappointing four seasons with the Chiefs who released him leaving him an unrestricted free agent.  He was expected to be a standout defensive end, and San Francisco is hoping that a change of scenery will improve his play on the field.

The Seahawks continued their gluttony of good defensive line free agents by signing defensive tackle, Tony McDaniel, a 6'7" 305lb. earth-mover from the Miami Dolphins. McDaniel is an interior pass rushing tackle who ironically uses all of his 6'7" to get down and develop leverage on offensive lineman.  It is extremely rare for such a tall defensive tackle to be effective in the interior defensive line, but McDaniel has been a great run stopper with the Miami Dolphins and should be able to help Seattle replace Alan Branch who had a subpar season particularly against the run last year.

The Niners, suffering in their defensive secondary, due to the casualties of pro-bowl safety, Deshon Goldson, to free agency and the inconsistent play of Carlos Rogers, Chris Cullinver and Dante Whitner, made a move to pick up free-agent, Nnamdi Asomugha, the former standout from the Oakland Raiders. Asomugha played three years in Philadelphia first, where he drastically underperformed his huge contract, forcing the Eagles to release him.  Again, the 49ers are hoping that another veteran underachieving will come closer to achieving their potential in the Bay Area.

The Seahawks appeared to react to the Asomugha deal in San Francisco by signing the best available slot corner, Antoine Winfield, who was released by the Vikings for financial reasons.  Winfield will nicely fill out an already ridiculously talented defensive secondary in Seattle.  At 36 years old and entering his 15th season, Winfield still has a lot in the tank, but he will be a nickel and dime back on primarily passing downs allowing him to rest so that he's fresh on every down.  Winfield is a masterful open field tackler and in coverage, hasn't given up a touchdown pass in three years.  Although, even older than Marcus Trufant, Winfield doesn't have a litany of injuries slowing him down.  Trufant was released and acquired immediately on waivers by Gus Bradley, the Jacksonville Jaguars new head coach, after Bradley left Seattle's defensive coordinator job.

Since the slew of new acquisitions by both the Hawks and Niners, things have slowed down somewhat in terms of veteran free-agent acquisitions.  However, the Seahawks acquired Brett Swain, a WR dropped by the Niners and San Francisco acquired Charly Martin and Ricardo Lockett formerly wide receivers with the Seahawks earlier in the year. 

There's definitely something going on between the Seahawks and the Niners, but most of it really couldn't be categorized by good or bad.  What can be categorized is the injury onslaught on both teams and throughout the NFL.  Ironically, before the 2011 season when the NFLPA and the league officials came to terms on the new collective bargaining agreement, the stipulation on work conditions restricted coaches from continuing several traditional agendas developed over the decades since the NFL AFL merger in 1970.  Gone are the days of the grueling two-a-day practices sessions and full pads and helmets contact drills throughout training camp.  Now, coaches are limited to one training session per day and the number of hours are limited.  Also limited, are the number of minicamps and OTA's leading up to the summer training camp.  With nearly no real game like player contact during drills and scrimmages and limited hours on the practice field, it's astonishing how many moderate and serious injuries have been reported even before contact drills commenced.  Reports of; concussions, ACL tears, Achilles tears, hamstringing injuries, Hip and shoulder injuries and ankle and foot injuries have dominated the training camp headlines and many of them are season ending injuries or at least injuries that will preclude players from practicing or taking part in preseason games.  It's difficult to evaluate the difference between coaches and trainers being extra sensitive to nagging but insignificant injuries or if players are just getting injured at an alarming rate.  Even before teams began engaging in serious player contact drills, there there have been reports of several notable players ruled out for the season already;

TE Dennis Pitta, Ravens
CB Chris Cullinver,  49ers
WR Santonio Holmes, Jets
WR Jeremy Maclin, Eagles
TE Anthony McCoy, Seahawks
WR Michael Crabtree, 49ers
DL Tyrone Crawford, Cowboys
C Dan Koppen, Broncos
WR Armon Binns, Dolphins
DL Jason Pierre Paul, Giants
 LB Jason Phillips,Eagles

There are far more than this list injured, but some have indefinite return predictions and some are held out for minor injuries without explanation by the teams doctors or trainers.Regardless of the severity of each of their injuries, it's not debatable on how much precious time they're missing to prepare for the upcoming regular-season, particularly the rookies and younger players as well as players new to the system.

So, the questions beg; "What is making the injury statistics skyrocket during the NFL off-season and preseason camp activities? With the shorter camp sessions and decreased amount of player contact with pads and helmets, why are so many players getting injured? How severe are these injuries that are landing scores of players on physically unable to perform lists and the non-football injury category before the big hitting even starts?  One thing is for certain, it's time to revisit the idea that shorter training camps and shorter fitness training before the season is helping players stay uninjured and ready for the regular-season.  Something isn't working,

Thursday, August 1, 2013

COMPETE! SEAHAWKS RESERVES HAVE TRUE REASON TO BELIEVE


Golden Tate speaks for reserves: "Don't you forget about me"

It's not just a coincidence that Pete Carroll's name is half of his motto in life and in football; Com-pete, Com-pete, Always Compete!  But, this isn't just lip-service from some rah-rah, high-energy coach trying to excite and motivate his players.  "Always Compete" has always been Carroll's solemn belief in a system that continually renews itself simply on the premise that each position on his football team is a competition, not just a slogan, but a real promise.  The head coach of the Seahawks has promised his players, "If you outplay another player on the team consistently at his position in training camp, on the practice field, and in the classroom, you Will get playing time and you Will have your opportunity to be great.  The cornerstone of this belief system, however, requires that each player earns his playing time, unaffected by his draft position, the size of his contract or by any other status level based on something other than performance.  This has been promised and like any other leader in any situation, the system collapses and has no meaning unless the promises are honored.

There's no greater illustration of Pete Carroll's "Always Compete" mantra than the story of Russell Wilson, the 2012 third round selection by the Seahawks, from the University of Wisconsin… all 5'10 5/8" of him.  Most of us already know the story; how free-agent veteran, Matt Flynn from Green Bay, was signed with Seattle during the off-season with a multi-year multi-million dollar contract, and universally believed to be the heir apparent to the starting quarterback position with the Seahawks.  Flynn chose to sign with the Seahawks despite the fact that Pete Carroll wasn't willing to promise him the starting job.  He was promised, just like every other Seahawks player, that he would be given a legitimate chance to compete for a starting position, but that he would have to earn it.  It's important to mention that the Seahawks signed Flynn before the NFL draft, and before Russell Wilson was selected 75th overall to perhaps become the future signal caller in Seattle.  It was said that the team would go into training camp with a three-way competition for quarterback between incumbent Tavaris Jackson, veteran Matt Flynn and rookie Russell Wilson.  Practically every one of the Seahawks fans or NFL analysts on television and radio believed the job was Matt Flynn's to lose.  Even as the preseason wore on, it was clear that Wilson was outplaying both Jackson and Flynn, but still most believed it was a good idea to sit Wilson for a season, or perhaps part of the season, and start Flynn.  However, Pete Carroll was there during training camp and every practice between each of the four preseason exhibition games, and saw something in Wilson that the rest of us weren't lucky enough to see.  It is said that Russell Wilson had intangibles off the charts and a level of maturity and intelligence that made him stand out above everyone interviewed at the NFL scouting combine in Indianapolis over a year ago.  Unfortunately for the rest of the NFL, most saw his lack of height as a deterrent from him finding success at the professional level and 74 selections past without his name being called.  "He's too short" they all said, even though each of them noted his intangible qualities and maturity beyond his years.  In fact, Wilson showed excellent to above average on every other category used to evaluate a college quarterback for the NFL.  Wilson had a strong arm, and long arms for his size, and 10 inch hands, equivalent to a player as tall as 6'7".  Wilson has always been extremely athletic, running 4.5 seconds in the 40 and a 34 inch vertical leap.  However, the combine results don't tell even a fraction of the story when evaluating Wilson's ability as a quarterback.  His straight-line speed is pretty good, but when he starts changing direction and evading defenders and extending plays, then he's in his natural realm.  Wilson made scores of great defensive pass rushers look bad, and they would be the first to admit it.  Wilson has an innate ability to feel pocket pressure and he's only going to get better in his second season in the NFL.

Russell Wilson is only one example of Pete Carroll's system and his honor as an honest coach who is asking his players to trust him and the only way to get trust, is to show that you are trustworthy.

Richard Sherman grew up in the rough neighborhoods of Compton California.  He excelled in football and track, but football was his biggest love and he was rewarded after becoming a high school standout, at Dominguez High, as a wide receiver.  He began receiving offers from many esteemed colleges for a full academic scholarship.  Several great coaches from excellent programs around the nation came knocking for the lanky (6'3" 185 lb.), but athletic Sherman.  Pete Carroll of USC, Urban Meyer of Florida were among two of the most powerful programs that saw his potential, but it was Sherman himself who decided that "He, a kid from the rough streets of Compton, would be a Stanford graduate someday and the next big thing in college football.  You could say that Sherman was practically born with a chip on his shoulder and believe it or not, it's a welcome chip to him, primarily because it has been the central story of his entire career, it has become the motivating factor that keeps him revved up, motor running and goals reached one after another.  What's interesting is that no matter what he seems to do, he doesn't really get the credit for what he has accomplished on and off the field.  He is arguably the best defensive back on the team, (Earl Thomas might argue that), but is the only starting DB on the team not to be invited to the Pro bowl.  Simultaneously, he was picked All Pro at the cornerback position for the 2012 season, and snubbed at the Pro bowl again.  Yet, nothing seems to drag him down, in fact, quite the opposite.  He continually feeds from neglect and oversight and tops his performance in practically each game or season he plays.  When Sherman was drafted by the Seahawks, it might have looked as if he was excited and grateful to be picked by the Seahawks to play professional football, but that excitement would be disingenuous.  He believed he was worthy of a much higher draft position, and ever since that day, it has become fuel for his craft.  Sherman reported to the Seahawks training camp, a tall, lanky corner that had only one year experience at the collegiate level at the cornerback position.  Coach Carroll saw his competitive nature and his hard-working and intellectual approach to the game.  Sherman was in a backup position behind a standout of his own, out of Oregon; Walter Thurmond was starting at left corner for Seattle.  However, Pete Carroll is always looking for a player who is hungry and wants the limelight, the responsibility and the opportunity to show his talent.  Thurmond went down with an injury and Sherman was called into action.  The rest, as they say, is history… Carroll doesn't live by the adage "A player cannot lose his job to an injury."  He believes, the most capable player who has proved his worth on the practice field and all other opportunities to prove their ability, will be given playing time.  Thurmond has had an injury riddled career thus far in the NFL, and Richard Sherman made good on every opportunity he was afforded by the Seahawks and has become the best cover corner in football.

Brandon Browner and Kam Chancellor have similar stories of rising to the occasion of opportunity.  Browner was playing in the Canadian football league after being passed over in the NFL draft by all 32 teams.  Chancellor's story is similar to that of Richard Sherman.  Both were excellent players in college, and both were passed over until the fifth round.  While both Sherman and Chancellor appreciate the Seahawks giving them the opportunity to play in Seattle, both of them are still very salty about being disrespected.  Carroll loves finding players who have interesting and inspiring stories, stories that incite special motivation and unique reasons for a tireless preparation and a motor that runs on high, no matter what the reason.  He also likes to find players who possess certain unique athletic ability, sometimes completely bypassing any traditional benchmarks or trends for evaluating talent.  This is why players who truly believe in themselves and their talent love playing in his system, his program and with his fundamental approach to competition and equal opportunity for everyone despite any other predetermination or status level that precedes them.  He literally couldn't care less how much money you're being paid, what draft position you may have been selected in or your reputation with your previous team or college achievement.  Competition can only be competition if it's a real and if the competitors believe that they have a chance to succeed.  Carroll wouldn't give a second thought to a player on his team just because they might be related to an NFL legend, or if they happened to play for a small Division II or Division III school or if they were awarded a Heisman Trophy, and Outland Award or a Butkus Award.  He has proven time and time again, that he is genuinely focused on filling each position on the roster with players who give his football team the best chance of fielding a winner… and that's that.

Now, the Seahawks are in the news again, but not for the reasons they would like.  After trading a boatload of precious draft picks and signing a player to the most lucrative contract in Seahawks history; it has been reported that Percy Harvin will miss the majority of the 2013 season before he ever catches a football in the game for the Seattle Seahawks.  Percy Harvin reported to training camp, but it is believed that he did so after talking to the coaching staff about some discomfort in his hip.  During the minicamps and OTA's, Harvin complained of hip pain, but it was believed to be a simple case of a hip flexor strain, a condition that only gets better with rest and time.  He practiced sparingly during the OTA's, but the pain in his hip began to progress and before the training camp began, the Seahawks doctors took him in to have a CAT scan and an MRI to get a better look at the hip and determine if there was any structural damage and if a surgical procedure was necessary.  The Seahawks medical staff allegedly reported that the damage to the hip labrum was minimal and that it could be played on and repaired after the upcoming season had ended.  Like every NFL player is entitled to, Harvin elected to get a second opinion from a private physician outside the Seahawks program.  Harvin chose hip specialist, Dr. Brian Kelly, in New York City, and flew across the country to get his opinion of the injury and his assessment on whether or not the injury required immediate surgery, and if so, what procedure would be necessary to repair the damage and more importantly, prevent any further damage from ignoring the injury that was already present.  Nevertheless, Percy took the advice of his independent physician to repair it surgically now.  Some Seahawks players, coaches and fans look at this is a bad thing, but I can almost guarantee you that not everyone is morning the loss of Percy Harvin to the year 2013.

Percy Harvin was a huge asset for the Seahawks to take into the upcoming season, but he is in no way the end-all for the Seahawks chances to compete for an NFL title.  I believe that Pete Carroll would have rather had Percy play through the pain and address the problem after the season, but I'll bet he wasn't disappointed very long.  Yes, the Seahawks gave up a lot to get Harvin in a Seahawks uniform.  They gave up the 25th pick in this year's draft, a seventh round pick and a third round conditional selection next year.  So, at least, the Seahawks are without a first-round player they would have chosen at the number 25 spot.  It could have been one of the draft's talented wide receivers; Tennessee's WR Cordarrelle Patterson, Clemson's WR DeAndre Hopkins or USC's WR Robert woods; all were talented college receivers.  It could have been an outside linebacker where the Seahawks had an obvious need for after the team chose not to re-sign Leroy Hill from last year.  It could have been Arthur Brown of Kansas State, Sio Moore of Connecticut, or Khaseem Greene of Rutgers.  It also could have been used to fortify the offensive line with more depth, or perhaps more depth at the safety position.  However, the truth of it is that GM Jon Schneider and Pete Carroll thought enough of Percy Harvin that they were willing to take a chance on such a dominant player, a player that comes along available only every great once in a while.  Analysts graded the 2013 draft as "deep, but no real playmakers are game changers."  The biggest problem right now is that many people are using perfect hindsight to grade whether or not the Seahawks made the right decision with the draft and with Percy Harvin.  It's too late, and to rehash this is ridiculous because no one has a crystal ball on the time and place for an injury to occur in perhaps the world's most dangerous team sport.  Players get hurt, and the injury bug is not biased or prejudiced.  High profile players like RGIII get injured and players that most people wouldn't be able to recognize if they walked right up to and shook your hand and told you there name.  I believe Schneider and Carroll, along with their boss, Paul Allen, made the right decision for their football team with the information they had at the time.  Harvin is a supreme athlete with athletic ability unmatched in the NFL.  He's a threat to take the ball to the end zone every time he touches it and defenses are forced to create special defensive packages simply to stop number 11.  He was the kind of player that immediately makes a good team, a great team overnight.  In Seattle's case, it was taking a great team and launching their expectations into the stratosphere and beyond.  There were no such players in the draft this year, and the closest player to do the kind of things that Percy can do is Tavon Austin.  He ran a legitimate 4.35 40 yard dash and has the change of direction abilities like few players in college football.  However, Austin is just a generous 5'9" tall and 173 lbs.  I don't believe football players should be valued by their height and weight, just like I don't believe the final word on an athlete is connected to his 40 yard dash time.  However, Percy Harvin has every bit of speed that Austin has, plus he carries nearly 20 lbs. more and 3 inches of height over this year's rookie Speedster from West Virginia.  What's more important is that Percy Harvin has proven his value on the biggest stage in football.  He won the NFL rookie of the year and last year, he was the early favorite to win NFL MVP at the midway point with the Vikings.  However, Percy is made of muscle, bones and everything that holds them together, just like the rest of us.  He has had several injuries, but not necessarily caused because he's injury prone, but perhaps because of the passion and determination that he plays with every time he takes the field.  The Seahawks made the right decision, but unfortunately we're all going to have to wait until next year to see what he can do in a season with a healthy body and a sensational football team to support him.

It's human nature for fans to panic a little when one of their star players falls to an injury.  It's even more worrisome when it happens to a player who hasn't even taken the field yet.  However, this Seahawks team isn't just any old team looking for identity and the players to build around.  This football team has a very sturdy nucleus of leaders on and off the field and a deep enough roster to absorb bad fortune, whenever it happens.  Percy Harvin has never suited up for the Seahawks in a regular game, though Russell Wilson led them to a 12-6 season including the first road playoff victory in nearly 3 decades.  Pete Carroll returns all 11 offensive starters and 9 of 11 defensive starters from 2012 to take into the new season, plus a very successful bevy of veteran free agents to fortify an already dominant defense.  As usual, Schneider and Carroll had a very productive draft board and 11 selections to use to reinforce an already impressive roster of football talent.  In fact, if Seattle made no changes to their roster, this would still be a contender for a Lombardi trophy.  Seattle averaged nearly 35 points per game in the second half of the season and a three-game stretch where they scored 150 points, giving up just 30 to their opponent.

The Percy Harvin news is hard to take for the Seahawks players, the coaching staff and of course for the 12th man.  However, the opportunity for several wide receivers trying to make the roster has skyrocketed into high gear and the excitement of competition.  Golden Tate is on a contract year and played sensationally in the second half of the season.  He has all kinds of talent and he has also developed a game chemistry with Russell Wilson and that relationship is more important than any other with one position player to another.  Sidney Rice is also in prime territory to rack up some great statistics and performances now that Wilson is one year smarter, one year smarter and one year more confident.  Wilson has never been a player lacking in confidence, but it's a quiet confidence that becomes contagious throughout the entire team.  His belief, all by himself, is enough for a team to win a championship, but his demeanor and leadership inspire his teammates to follow him into any challenge or any circumstance to make the team succeed.  Doug Baldwin sustained a nasty injury in the beginning of the 2012 season, but without uttering a sound about his grisly shoulder dislocation, he rehabilitated himself back into the lineup and immediately began to produce and build the trust of his quarterback.  Coming into the new season completely healthy, look for Baldwin to have a fantastic season with this fortified offense.

Perhaps the players most affected by Percy Harvin's injury are; fourth round draft selection, wide receiver Chris Harper, and fifth-round tight end Luke Willson.  Both will have the opportunity to produce early and be given the chance to be great and they have all the talent in the world to get it done.  It is said by many coaches and analysts, that "It's God that gives you the talent.  The rest is up to the athlete to achieve and it requires; a strong work ethic,  a belief in self, superior study habits, a mentor, ability to accept criticism, goals and dreams (with a plan) and most important… a genuine love of the game.  Chris Harper and Luke Willson have the characteristics that Pete Carroll looks for in a player and each of them have unique, specialized skill sets that fit the blueprint for his football team.

Lastly, I return to the main point of my column:

Pete Carroll has created a level of trust with his players and backed up their trust by continually giving opportunity to players who perform when given the opportunity and afforded more playing time as they progress in the preseason and on the practice field.  This is all you could ever hope to get from a coach as a young player or reserve player and exactly what every player wants when they get to the NFL.  The Percy Harvin injury appears at first like a disaster when you consider his extraordinary athletic skill set, but it's also important to remember that in his absence, great players just waiting for an opportunity now have a chance to shine on the biggest stage in football.  Sidney Rice, Golden Tate, Doug Baldwin, Chris Harper, Stephen Williams and Jermaine Kearse are all on deck and the preseason will be there stage.  Now, it's time to perform…