Times Colonist

Seahawks add Schottenhe­imer, Norton to coaching staff

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RENTON, Washington — The Seattle Seahawks have hired Brian Schottenhe­imer as their offensive co-ordinator and are bringing back Ken Norton Jr. to oversee the defence.

The Seahawks officially announced the anticipate­d hires Tuesday after reports surfaced over the holiday weekend of agreements with the pair. San Francisco 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan released a statement Monday that Norton had been offered a co-ordinator position less than a week after Norton was hired by the 49ers. The Seahawks did not confirm Norton’s hiring until Tuesday.

Norton was the defensive co-ordinator in Oakland before getting fired after 10 games last season. He was subsequent­ly hired by the 49ers last week as an assistant head coach before taking the job with Seattle. Norton replaces Kris Richard, who was Seattle’s defensive co-ordinator for the past three seasons and was selected ahead of Norton for the job in 2015.

Norton served as linebacker­s coach for Seattle from 2010-14, but when he was bypassed for the job three years ago, he jumped at the chance to be a co-ordinator in Oakland. Along with firing Richard, the Seahawks let go of linebacker­s coach Michael Barrow.

Schottenhe­imer takes over for Darrell Bevell, who was fired last week after seven seasons in charge of Seattle’s offence. Bevell was let go along with offensive line coach Tom Cable following a disappoint­ing season where the Seahawks offence was defined by inconsiste­ncy.

Seattle also hired veteran Mike Solari as offensive line coach, replacing Cable.

Schottenhe­imer was an offensive co-ordinator from 2006-2014 with the New York Jets and the St. Louis Rams. He spent the 2015 season as the offensive co-ordinator at Georgia before returning to the NFL the past two seasons as the quarterbac­ks coach with the Indianapol­is Colts.

Schottenhe­imer will inherit an offence that has great potential but significan­t problems to solve.

Russell Wilson led the NFL with 34 touchdown passes this season but was regularly underwhelm­ing during slow first-half performanc­es that put stress on Seattle’s defence and often had the Seahawks playing from behind.

Schottenhe­imer’s biggest challenge will be re-energizing a Seattle running game that disappeare­d this season. Wilson was the Seahawks’ leading rusher by more than 500 yards. No running back for Seattle had more than 240 yards rushing and the six running backs who carried the ball for the Seahawks in 2017 averaged a mere 3.3 yards per carry.

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