Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

‘Unicorn event’ allows Grubb to stay in Seattle as new OC

- By Tim Booth

RENTON, WASH. >> Ryan Grubb said he was all-in on making the move to Alabama and being the offensive coordinato­r for the Crimson Tide.

That was until someone Grubb connected with a year ago at the NFL combine reached out to gauge his interest in an opportunit­y that allowed him the chance to stay put in the Pacific Northwest and fulfill a desire to coach in the NFL.

“This is like the unicorn event in coaching,” Grubb said during his first availabili­ty after being named the Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinato­r. “So the fact I get to stay right here and do it in a city and in a place that I already love and I’ve had two years to kind of let it marinate as far as what (GM) John Schneider does here, and the ownership with the Seahawks and just how classy an organizati­on this is and how driven they are to success it makes it really special.”

Grubb, along with new defensive coordinato­r Aden Durde and special teams coordinato­r Jay Harbaugh all had their first introducti­ons on Thursday. Seattle will be full of firsts at the NFL level next season — a first-time head coach in Mike Macdonald, along with first-time coordinato­rs in all the key position of the coaching staff.

“You get together and you communicat­e, and you think about things, and I think Mike is very good at creating a vision,” Durde said. “One thing that I come in here and I really understand what we’re trying to achieve from a defensive aspect, and I think he’s created that vision. So now it’s kind of creating that mission mindset of let’s go get it.”

Grubb was the main attraction because of spending the past two years nearby as the offensive coordinato­r at Washington. But his relationsh­ip with Macdonald went back 12 months, when the pair first met at the combine and grew from there.

“I got to know him throughout a couple of different conversati­ons and just kind of built that relationsh­ip over time,” Grubb said. “Kind of knew that potentiall­y there’d be an opportunit­y like this down the line. Didn’t necessaril­y think it’d happen in the very first year but that was really the first part.”

One of the big remaining unknowns is how well Grubb’s system that led to 14 wins and a spot

in the national championsh­ip game at Washington translates to the NFL. The quarterbac­k could play a big role in that.

And for now, the quarterbac­k appears likely to remain Geno Smith. Seattle doesn’t intend on making any moves with Smith ahead of Friday’s deadline when $12.7 million in base salary of his contract for next season becomes guaranteed.

Seattle could still make a trade involving with Smith — especially with another $9 million due next month — but for now one of Grubb’s main priorities is having the initial basic conversati­ons with Smith and last year’s

backup Drew Lock.

“That’s all it is, just getting to know him as people,” Grubb said. “So no scheme or anything like that, but he’s a great competitor. He wants to be coached. He wants to be the best. It means a lot to him. Just hearing his story and his growth as a player and a person is inspiring honestly.”

While Grubb first connected with Macdonald and year ago, and Durde had no previously relationsh­ip with the head coach, Harbaugh and Macdonald go back to when both were on staff as young coaches with Baltimore about a decade ago.

Harbaugh worked under his dad, Jim, at Michigan since 2015, but rather than follow his father to Los Angeles opted for the chance to work with Macdonald.

 ?? STEPHEN BRASHEAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Seattle Seahawks NFL football offensive coordinato­r Ryan Grubb speaks to reporters during an introducto­ry press conference, on Thursday, Feb. 15, 2024, in Renton.
STEPHEN BRASHEAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Seattle Seahawks NFL football offensive coordinato­r Ryan Grubb speaks to reporters during an introducto­ry press conference, on Thursday, Feb. 15, 2024, in Renton.

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