Houston Chronicle Sunday

Controvers­y or not, Clowney is a force

Ex-Texans player was criticized for hit that injured Wentz

- By Matt Calkins

When Jadeveon Clowney is healthy, he has had more impact on the Seahawks’ success than anybody not named Russell Wilson.

The most nationally discussed storyline out of Seattle’s 17-9 playoff win over Philadelph­ia on Sunday was Clowney concussing Philadelph­ia quarterbac­k Carson Wentz on the Eagles’ second drive. It appeared Clowney led with his helmet, which many think should have warranted a targeting penalty and/or an ejection, but because Wentz didn’t give himself up, referee Shawn Smith deemed it incidental contact.

The Eagles, unsurprisi­ngly, didn’t buy this ruling. Neither did former NFL vice president of officiatin­g Mike Pereira, who called the hit a “cheap shot” during which Clowney was trying to “needlessly punish” Wentz, who left the game and didn’t return. This has been debated on every sports-talk show you can think of, and some analysts concluded that Philly would have won had Wentz been healthy.

Maybe. Backup Josh McCown still went 18 for 24 for 174 yards with no turnovers, and the Eagles scored just as many points as the previous time they played Seattle. So you’d need a deity to tell you if the outcome would actually have been different, and none have responded to requests for comment.

But all of that detracts from the larger point: That Clowney — as Sunday’s game reinforced — has been borderline mythical when on the field for Seattle since being acquired from the Texans before the season.

Seahawks coach Pete Carroll was asked who stood out in the pass rush on Sunday.

“Jadeveon Clowney was really a factor,” he said. “You saw everybody was active. If there’s one thing, though, I think his impact was really noticeable.”

His impact was pretty noticeable the second he arrived in Seattle.

He had a batted ball two minutes into the Seahawks’ Week 1 win over the Bengals and added a sack. He returned an intercepti­on for a touchdown against the Cardinals three weeks later, and after that, forced a fumble and recovered it against the Rams.

He had a highlight reel reminiscen­t of his SEC days in the Seahawks’ first game against San Francisco, when he tallied a sack, five quarterbac­k hits, a forced fumble and a recovery. It was that night when it became apparent the move to acquire him had clearly paid off, and as a pending free agent, the night that guaranteed Clowney will get paid.

But perhaps the best measure of his influence comes in the games in which he didn’t play or was limited. Is it a coincidenc­e the Cardinals smashed the Seahawks in Seattle when Clowney was out because of an injury? How about the losses to the Rams and 49ers, when he played just 59 percent and 66 percent of snaps, respective­ly?

Next Gen Stats shows that with Clowney in the game, Seattle’s defense pressures quarterbac­ks at a rate of 24.6 percent, with a 4.8 percent sack rate. Without him, it pressures QBs at a 17.5 percent rate with a 3.9 percent sack rate.

Perhaps you see the mere three sacks he had in the regular season and think he isn’t driving offensive linemen bonkers. But Clowney also is constantly drawing double-teams while making plays on the ball in a manner that makes him one of the most distinct defensive forces in the NFL.

Is he the best in the league at his position like Seahawks linebacker Bobby Wagner? No. But considerin­g how critical having a monster on the edge is to winning in today’s game, there is nobody on that side of the ball more crucial for Seattle than Clowney.

We don’t yet know if there will be a fine from the NFL for Clowney’s hit, but there will not be a suspension. And given the nature of the modern-day news cycle, that play on Wentz should be out of it by Sunday.

But Clowney likely will make headlines again for what he achieves on the field against the Packers. Whether it comes with controvers­y or not, he has been a nightmare for opposing teams.

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