The Guardian (USA)

For years the Seahawks didn't trust Russell Wilson's brilliance. Why?

- Melissa Jacobs

new If think with you sensation precision Russell didn’t know able Wilson and to better, ease air was throughout a the you a ball bright, might out game, marvel not at just his the gorgeous fourth quarter. deep throws. You’d

You’d take comfort that he plays under a head coach and coordinato­r savvy enough to let him cook. After all, why wouldn’t they? Except the Seahawks were a run-first team for the first eight years of Wilson’s NFL career.

Wilson again showcased Sunday what the Seahawks may have been missing all along in a dramatic 38-31 win over the Cowboys. The clear frontrunne­r for MVP threw for 315 yards, five touchdowns and no intercepti­ons

Wilson is a juggernaut­S this season. He’s now thrown 14 touchdowns to one intercepti­on and is averaging 308 passing yards per game. If Wilson has any faults, he sometimes struggles with the short passing game as he did for a sliver of the third quarter Sunday. But mostly .17. he’ s been a machine whose rainbow, needle-threading deep passes can compete with anyone’s in NFL history. Yet, up until this year, the Seahawks under Pete Carroll have emphasized the run whether their running back was Marshawn Lynch, Chris Carson or a committee. It’s as if Wilson’s mastery has been a secret–except we know it’ s not. We’ve seen his heroics on a consistent basis over his career because team so often had to come from behind to mitigate the first-half conservati­sm. Padlocking Wilson for so long is even more baffling given that since 2012 the

Seahawks are 57-0 when holding a fourpoint lead at halftime. Playing it safe on offense made sense in the early years when the team fielded the Legion of Boom. Like most dominant defenses, the Seahawks were focused on a strong run game and controllin­g time of possession. Who’s to argue with their success winning Super Bowl XLVIII and almost winning Super Bowl XLIX (ironically by not handling the ball to Lynch). But as members of the Boom parted ways, Carroll’s coordinato­rs never fully adjusted their offenses in dramatic enough fashion. The Seahawks have remained a perennial playoff contender, largely based on “Russell Wilson doing Russell Wilson things” late in regular-season games. But they haven’ t advanced past the divisional round since the 2014 season. the Even with Wilson’s talents right under their noses, the Seahawks still emphasized the run the past couple of seasons. Wilson, who has never received last downs season an and MVP with no vote, intercepti­ons seven came passing out in touch- rolling the team’s first three games. He threw for over 300 yards in two of those contests. Then the Seahawks reverted back to their conservati­ve ways and Wilson only had one 300+ yard game in Weeks 4- omething shifted this offseason. Maybe the Let Russ Cook movement finally made an impact. Perhaps it was

DK Metcalf’s maturation (despite one crucial lapse on Sunday). Or as admitted by offensive coordinato­r Brian Schottenhe­imer this summer, it was throwing away stereotype­s, opening his eyes, and finally coordinati­ng an offense around the team’s best player.

“When I first got out here, I thought Russ was a good player. I had never obviously done anything with him in terms of really watching him work. And I thought he was a good player, I thought he was a guy who was going to scramble around and make plays, improvise and all those things that he does,” Schottenhe­imer told the Pick Six Podcast back in May. “But when I got here and I saw his ability to throw the football not just down the field, but accurately – we call it ball placement – he’s able to put the ball exactly where you want it.”

“And I was quite honestly blown away, I was surprised. I think unless you really love the Seahawks and you watch the Seahawks, what he does just come so naturally and easy that people underestim­ate him.”

Wilson’s command of the passing game this season has been masterful but it’s also been there all along, Seeing Russ finally cook, it’s hard not to wonder how deep in the playoffs the Seahawks could have gone these past five years had his coaches emphasized his incredible arm all along.

MVP of the week

Josh Allen, Buffalo Bills. It wasn’t all pretty for Allen in the Bills’ dramatic win over the Rams. After taking a 28-3 lead (ahem) in the second half, Allen lost his cool, racking up a second 15-yard unsportsma­nlike penalty after an Aaron Donald sack forced a fumble. The Rams would eventually take the lead in the final minutes. But leaders are built on adversity and Allen drove the Bills to a game-winning touchdown after a pass interferen­ce call on fourth down. Aside from the late heroics, Allen finished with 311 yards and four touchdowns. Even his first intercepti­on of the year was a beautiful pass and unfortunat­e call.

Stat of the week

15 and 16. That’s the number of points the Falcons led by in the fourth quarter last week and this week respective­ly.

Losing massive leads is hardly new for the Falcons, but this trend has defined their 0-3 season to date. After succumbing to the Cowboys in the fourth quarter last week, thanks in part to the most embarrassi­ng of special teams plays, the Falcons got steamrolle­d late again. St Nick Foles, brought in for an ineffectiv­e Mitch Trubisky, torched the Falcons with three fourth-quarter touchdowns including a 28-yard beauty to Anthony Miller for the go-ahead score. It’s hard to see where Atlanta or Dan Quinn go from here. Losing in less humiliatin­g fashion would be a good start.

Video of the week

This is how not to showboat. A bone-headed play by DK Metcalf and heads-up work by Trevon Diggs turned an easy Seattle touchdown into a Cowboys touchback. Oof.

Quote of the week

“Thank you to everyone who has reached out. Scary situation, but thankful that everybody is doing well” – What did hall of famer Joe Montana do this weekend? He saved his grandchild from a kidnapping.

Elsewhere around the league

-- How is the Houston Texans’ decision to trade away All-Pro DeAndre Hopkins looking now? Well, the Texans are 0-3 and Hopkins had 137 yards for the Arizona Cardinals in their loss to the Detroit Lions to go with the 219 yards he notched up in his first two games of the season.

-- If there’s one man who can rival Russell Wilson for beautiful deep throws, it’s Aaron Rodgers. He showed off at least two classics during the Green Bay Packers-New Orleans Saints on Sunday Night Football as his team won 37-30.

-- Perhaps the NFL should place a temporary on ban on the New York teams that play in New Jersey. The Giants and Jets are now a collective 0-6, with the Giants getting blown out by a 49ers squad that was largely manned by injury replacemen­ts. The Jets were in Indianapol­is later in the day and were duly blown out by the Colts.

-- If we had a category for eye sores, the Cincinnati Bengals-Philadelph­ia Eagles affair would have won in a landslide. The game ended in a tie which is more than either team deserved, especially the Eagles. Both teams committed a collection of mistakes in overtime but none as perplexing as the Eagles’ final seconds. As Philly lined up for a 59-yard field goal with, they were called for a false start. Instead of letting Jake Elliott attempt a 64-yarder – he’s made a 61-yarder in the past – Doug Pederson chose to punt it away and accept the tie. A regressing Carson Wentz threw two more intercepti­ons making his grand total this season six, a league high.

-- Washington-Cleveland was a herstoric affair. Each team had a female coach on the sideline, coupled with a female official for a trifecta the NFL had never before seen in its 100-year history.

 ??  ?? Russell Wilson waits in the tunnel before the Seattle Seahawks’ game against the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday. Photograph: Elaine Thompson/AP
Russell Wilson waits in the tunnel before the Seattle Seahawks’ game against the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday. Photograph: Elaine Thompson/AP
 ??  ?? Josh Allen’s Bills look set for the playoffs after an impressive start to the season. Photograph: Timothy T Ludwig/ Getty Images
Josh Allen’s Bills look set for the playoffs after an impressive start to the season. Photograph: Timothy T Ludwig/ Getty Images

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