Vancouver Sun

Wilson trade speculatio­n is getting more serious

Series of reports since Super Bowl Sunday has painted QB as frustrated in Seattle

- JOHN KRYK jokryk@postmedia.com

Who'd have predicted a month ago that Russell Wilson might really want out of Seattle and, furthermor­e, that the Seahawks might go ahead and trade him?

As of Thursday, neither fire seemed a certainty or even likely but, boy, there's a lot of smoke.

Particular­ly, Cowboys, Saints, Raiders and Bears smoke.

On first glance, it's difficult to let sink in the idea of Russell Wilson not in Seattle. In today's NFL, however, that's not far-fetched at all. Nothing is. Not after Tom Brady relocated a year ago to Tampa Bay after 20 seasons in New England, or after Philip Rivers jumped to the Indianapol­is Colts after 17 years with the L.A. Chargers, or with Deshaun Watson desperatel­y wanting out of Houston.

In that light, none of us should be surprised if Seattle ships out Wilson. Even after nine success-soaked seasons that have included eight playoff appearance­s, nine playoff wins, two Super Bowl berths and one Super Bowl championsh­ip.

Fact is, enough buzz has been put out there — significan­tly, without public denials of any kind from either party — as to make a trade a real possibilit­y. How'd we get here?

A series of reports since Super Bowl Sunday have painted Wilson as a frustrated young man in Seattle — sure of his place as an elite NFL passer on a hall of fame trajectory, but feeling he's doing so without a front office that protects him with much more than a spare-parts offensive line, and without a coaching staff willing to bend enough to construct a pass-centric offence around his unique, top-shelf abilities.

News stories late this week from TheAthleti­c.com and ESPN constitute the largest globs of grease yet thrown on the bearings of these spinning wheels.

TheAthleti­c.com cited sources in recounting an incident in November in which Wilson allegedly “stormed out” of a team meeting, after his suggestion­s for fixing the Seahawks' offence were “dismissed.”

Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll believes in a run-based attack, and over the final two months of the season, he underscore­d that with reporters.

One former Wilson teammate, Brandon Marshall, told TheAthleti­c.com that Wilson is “beyond frustrated” with the Seahawks and “is trying to figure out how to move on in a classy way.”

Others quoted in the article said, conversely, that the 32-year-old is merely engaging in a PR campaign after his production and effectiven­ess began cratering at midseason.

“He's finally catching heat,” an unnamed source said. “He's trying to protect himself.” Another source said Wilson is merely trying to “save face.” If that's true, then why did Wilson's agent tell ESPN that although the QB wants to remain in Seattle, he'd lift his no-trade clause to be dealt to Dallas, New Orleans, Las Vegas or Chicago?

Would it still constitute the shock of the 2021 off-season if the Seahawks were to trade Wilson? A month ago, yes. Now? No.

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