Penticton Herald

Pass rush proving problemati­c for Seahawks

Seattle needs to put more pressure on quarterbac­k against Chicago in Week 2

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RENTON, Wash. (AP) — The biggest concern about the Seattle Seahawks’ overhauled defence entering the season was probably the pass rush.

The worries proved to be true in the season opener when Seattle generated just one sack and very little pressure against a quarterbac­k that mostly sat in the pocket.

The challenge in Week 2 will be different with the Seahawks facing the mobility of Bears quarterbac­k Mitchell Trubisky, but the need to wreak at least some havoc in the backfield remains the same.

“Anytime you play, you want to get the quarterbac­k off the spot. Anytime you end up with one sack, everyone would like to have three or four,” Seattle defensive co-ordinator Ken Norton Jr. said. “It’s something certainly we want to get better at . . . . No question, you want more pressure.”

Seattle’s pass rush was perhaps a bigger worry going into the season than any of the changes in its secondary. The Seahawks played most of last season without Cliff Avril due to a neck injury but still had Michael Bennett teaming with Frank Clark and finding success.

Seattle finished last season 13th in the league with 39 sacks and was middle of the pack in the league rankings on the percentage of dropbacks that resulted in a sack.

They were decent numbers considerin­g the changes Seattle went through midseason with the loss of one of their top pass rushers.

The overhaul in the off-season left most of the burden on Clark as the only proven pass rusher on the roster. Avril hasn’t completely shut the door on playing again, but it seems unlikely. Bennett was traded to Philadelph­ia as part of Seattle’s changes.

The opener against Denver showed there is still plenty to figure out.

Clark had Seattle’s lone sack, but just one of the five quarterbac­k hits on Case Keenum.

Seattle rarely brought pressure and the front four was unable to generate enough heat to make Keenum uncomforta­ble.

“We got stuck on the line of scrimmage on passing plays. That was really disappoint­ing, that we didn’t respond better to get into our pass-rush mode,” Seattle coach Pete Carroll said. “It just happened. That’s one phase of it and we would have liked to have got off on the edge a little better than we did. It’s just stuff we’ve got to keep working on.”

Getting Dion Jordan on the field more would be a big boost for Seattle. Jordan was limited to just 15 plays in the opener after missing all of training camp with a lower leg injury. Jordan was only activated to from the physically unable to perform list when Seattle made its final cuts, and his inclusion in Week 1 was a bit of a surprise considerin­g the time he missed.

“Not having those reps for a while, I was definitely a little rusty, but other than that, I physically felt really good,” Jordan said.

Jordan had four sacks in five games last season and was seen as a major piece of the pass rush moving forward.

“We’ve got to do a better job this week of sticking to our rush plan — sticking to it and executing,” Jordan said ahead of Monday night’s game in Chicago.

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