Pete Carroll says he and his staff aren't doing enough to help his Seahawks win. / Drew McKenzie, Sportspress Northwest

STEVE: The 24-0 crusher Sunday has to rank among the lamest performances in franchise history. At least it had the benefit of being a quick kill: 2 hours, 44 minutes.

ART: The only surprising thing was that nothing surprising happened. This outcome was visible to anyone from 50 miles away. But usually in the NFL, the underdog pops with at least something unexpected — turnover, big return, stealing home, something. But no — nothing.

STEVE: At this risk of offering this thought prematurely (just two games), the trend is not only not looking good, it’s smacking of historically inept. The Seahawks are averaging 186.5 total yards per game. In 1992, when they went 2-14, that offense averaged a franchise-low 210.9 yards per game.

ART: Not only that, the last time they played the Steelers, the Seahawks lost 21-0, meaning the Seahawks’ only touchdown in the last three meetings was in the 21-10 loss in Super Bowl XL.

STEVE: Not sure what Pete Carroll can do to get his offense — mainly his running game — untracked. There are so many new  — and young — parts on the line that he may just have to let them play and hope for improvement.

ART: In his post-game remarks, Carroll said, “I told the guys in the locker room that I’m not helping them enough. We (the coaching staff) have to give them the confidence to play faster and more aggressively. We have to force it. We feel like the season hasn’t started for us yet. We have to find our way. We can’t live with this.” All true, and all predictable. The coaches chose this course, with so many new starters. They took the risk of letting go an experienced QB in Matt Hasselbeck for unproven Tarvaris Jackson, and Jackson is not yet close to being even an average NFL QB.

STEVE: Jackson certainly played faster, and a little more aggressively, than he did last week against San Francisco. But you’re right about him. On the other hand, the first time I saw Hasselbeck play for the Seahawks, he looked far worse than Jackson has so far. When Carroll says,  “We feel like the season hasn’t started for us yet,” that seems to suggest that one of these days it will, in fact, start. Right now, I doubt it. And when he says, “we can’t live with this,” the fact is, that he may have no other choice — just as Tom Flores had no other choice in 1992.

ART: It’s unfair to lay so much on Jackson.  The rap on him in Minnesota was that he doesn’t make good pocket decisions under pressure. That hasn’t changed in Seattle. The problem is compounded, however, when the new O-line can’t take any pressure off him with either pass protection or a running game. I get Carroll’s point that the season doesn’t seem to have started, but after another five-sack day that doesn’t include other Steel Curtain hits, Jackson soon won’t be available when the season does “start.”

STEVE: The Seahawks have turned over 81 percent of their roster since 2009, when Jim Mora (now a TV analyst) departed. I wonder how many hundreds — maybe thousands — of transactions the Seahawks need to make before Carroll has a team that can crack 40 rushing yards in a game (31 on Sunday after 33 last week).

ART: Except for injury, any more offensive roster shuffling is regressive. These five linemen and TE Zach Miller are the guys they want. The only real hope for an immediate difference is in opponent and location. They open at home next week against an Arizona team that gave up more than 400 yards passing in the Cardinals’ opener against Carolina and more than 300 Sunday in losing to Washington. When you’re stuck in a fight between mongrels, the only hope is the other mongrel is missing a leg or two.

STEVE: Question is, which is the most hobbled mongrel? The Seahawks went 2-for-12 on third-down attempts and even seemed listless.

ART: The biggest risk in the relentless personnel turnover is upon Carroll and GM John Schneider: A bad start slips quickly into non-belief. The Steelers still have 17 players remaining from the Super Bowl team that beat Seattle, and won another SB after that. The Seahawks have two left from 2006 — defenders Marcus Trufant and Leroy Hill. After the Steelers lost their opener 35-7 to Baltimore, the easy criticism was they were too old. Didn’t look like it to me Sunday. Coaches and players knew what they were doing in nearly every situation; the Seahawks have no such safety net, because they neither know each other, nor have they had success together. Another lousy  game against the Cardinals, and Carroll’s cred starts to slip fast.

STEVE: Lots of internet chat today — call it “Charley Chants” — about Carroll turning to Charlie Whitehurst next week, or at least soon. I’m not sure that will happen because Jackson received the starting job without a preseason battle, and Carroll seems intent on keeping him in there. But many fans sure don’t like it.

ART: Same thing happened between Jim Zorn and Dave Krieg, and between Hasselbeck — who went 30 for 42 for 358 yards Sunday in the Titans’ upset of Baltimore — and Trent Dilfer. The fans’ quick fix is always the backup QB. Sometimes it’s worth a try. But fergawdsakes, let the starter have a couple of home games and a month under fire with the same teammates. What happens when Whitehurst, who obviously doesn’t have the coaching staff’s confidence — starts and is no better? Then the Seahawks turn back to Jackson and say, “We were wrong — you go, T.J.?”

STEVE: Backup quarterback is always the most popular guy in town.

ART: A more immediate decision needs to be made on defense, in the secondary. As much as Carroll likes size, the early returns on starting 6-4 Brandon Browner at right corner an 6-3 Kam Chancellor at safety aren’t good. As the TV broadcasters pointed out regularly, they aren’t using their size to advantage in press coverage, and aren’t fast enough to cover smaller receivers. In the Steelers’ opening series, Browner’s pass-interference call at the goal line told a sorry tale.

STEVE: Agreed. But this fact may be sorrier:.The Seahawks are paying TE Zach Miller $16 million and they targeted him twice Sunday. And finally, which offense is more dithering — Seahawks or Mariners?

ART: Think of it this way: The Sounders earlier in the summer were outscoring the Mariners, and this weekend the Sounders outscored the Seahawks. Let’s vote wild-and-crazy Sigi Schmid for commissioner of Seattle sports.

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19 Comments

  1.  The Seahawks looked like an expansion team — only they didn’t have guys like Zorn trying to make plays on offense.  Their defenses’ body language said defeat half way through the first quarter.  No matter how good they played, they knew that the offense would be putting them right back on the field.  The Steelers looked bored. It was a gloomy game if you were a Seahawk fan.
    Fire Everybody.

  2.  The Seahawks looked like an expansion team — only they didn’t have guys like Zorn trying to make plays on offense.  Their defenses’ body language said defeat half way through the first quarter.  No matter how good they played, they knew that the offense would be putting them right back on the field.  The Steelers looked bored. It was a gloomy game if you were a Seahawk fan.
    Fire Everybody.

  3. Jackson is not good enough, never was. He takes to long to make a decision. He needs to dump it quick or run to keep the D off balance. It is painful to watch! If you don’t have the horses you need to turn to deception. The Hawks are predictably inept.

  4. Jackson is not good enough, never was. He takes to long to make a decision. He needs to dump it quick or run to keep the D off balance. It is painful to watch! If you don’t have the horses you need to turn to deception. The Hawks are predictably inept.

  5. Steve in Surprise Arizona on

    I think that Darrell Bevell needs to drop the traditional style of offense he likes to run, because the line isn’t far enough along to run it.  He needs a heavy dose of play action and roll outs to fully utilize his “highly mobile quarterback).  Trying to put a square peg in a round hole might works in a few weeks, but right now he needs to allow T-Jak time to throw and the receivers to get open.  The run game will come along eventually, but right now he needs to make the passing game more proficient by rolling T-Jak out.  The pocket just breaks down too fast for him to find his receivers.  Bevell, must adjust his game plan.  If he doesn’t, I don’t see my beloved Hawks winning a game.

  6. Steve in Surprise Arizona on

    I think that Darrell Bevell needs to drop the traditional style of offense he likes to run, because the line isn’t far enough along to run it.  He needs a heavy dose of play action and roll outs to fully utilize his “highly mobile quarterback).  Trying to put a square peg in a round hole might works in a few weeks, but right now he needs to allow T-Jak time to throw and the receivers to get open.  The run game will come along eventually, but right now he needs to make the passing game more proficient by rolling T-Jak out.  The pocket just breaks down too fast for him to find his receivers.  Bevell, must adjust his game plan.  If he doesn’t, I don’t see my beloved Hawks winning a game.

  7. Seattle really NEEDS to be awful this year folks. The coaching staff told us everything we needed to know by taking a wrecking ball to the roster and letting Hasselbeck walk out of town, an act of benevolence if ever there was. They’re gonna let the kids develop and watch a LOT of college football. So spare your sanity and focus on player development this year, record be damned. That’s how the coaching staff sees things regardless of what spin Carroll puts on it. And you know, it’s the right thing to do. Who could look at Carolina’s 0-2 versus our 0-2 and not be a little jealous?

    It’s almost impossible to move forward when you’re perpetually stuck in that 7 to 9 win purgatory Seattle’s been in since winning the NFC. You need transcendent talent somewhere on your roster to win in the NFL; preferably at QB, but the QB has to at least be good. The best way to find transcendent talent (playmakers, or whatever else you wanna call them) is to draft early in every round–not just the first. Suck 4 Luck oversimplifies things, but it’s basically the right approach. This roster has 4-5 win talent with a handful of guys who look like good, up-and-coming playmakers. We need to let them take their lumps, get better, and then go get some more.

  8. Seattle really NEEDS to be awful this year folks. The coaching staff told us everything we needed to know by taking a wrecking ball to the roster and letting Hasselbeck walk out of town, an act of benevolence if ever there was. They’re gonna let the kids develop and watch a LOT of college football. So spare your sanity and focus on player development this year, record be damned. That’s how the coaching staff sees things regardless of what spin Carroll puts on it. And you know, it’s the right thing to do. Who could look at Carolina’s 0-2 versus our 0-2 and not be a little jealous?

    It’s almost impossible to move forward when you’re perpetually stuck in that 7 to 9 win purgatory Seattle’s been in since winning the NFC. You need transcendent talent somewhere on your roster to win in the NFL; preferably at QB, but the QB has to at least be good. The best way to find transcendent talent (playmakers, or whatever else you wanna call them) is to draft early in every round–not just the first. Suck 4 Luck oversimplifies things, but it’s basically the right approach. This roster has 4-5 win talent with a handful of guys who look like good, up-and-coming playmakers. We need to let them take their lumps, get better, and then go get some more.

  9. I’m usually on the positive side of things but after Sundays’ game, I can’t see anything positive about the  Hawks. I really feel sorry for all the poor stiffs who have shelled out for Season tickets – OUCH!

  10. I’m usually on the positive side of things but after Sundays’ game, I can’t see anything positive about the  Hawks. I really feel sorry for all the poor stiffs who have shelled out for Season tickets – OUCH!

  11. My sympathies go out to Mr Yamauchi and his family.  To love someone for so long is a blessing not granted a lot of us.
    I want to thank Mr Yamauchi for his willingness to help Seattle keep its MLB baseball team.  Without him Seattle would not have a team!  A truly magnanimous gesture to our city since he has not shown the interest of owners like Steinbrenner in micromanaging his team.  Baseball CAN be enjoyed as just a baseball game.  The current generation of owners/fans/media wants everything right now!  I am dissatisfied too, by the current state of the franchise but in my heart I am still happy we have a team to be dissatisfied with!
    Thank you Mr Yamauchi

    •  Whatever the Mariners’  current state of affairs, no one locally in Seattle in 1991 had the stones to be the 51 percenter to keep Smulyan and the MLB cabal from absconding to Tampa with the Mariners. And then take six months of public abuse from MLB for his nationality. 

  12. Not the time and place for that, S45d14.  If not for Yamauchi, there might be no Seattle Mariners.  My respect and sympathy to Yamauchi-san.

  13. Thoughts and prayers to the Yamauchi family.  Nice to have an update on them as well.  Personally, I’d love to see them remain as owners of the club.  I say that remembering the George Argyos days.

      • Agreed.  Might be time for a change but not in the way that the Sonics went from Ackerley to Schultz.  Or when the Seahawks went from Nordstrom to Behring.  However I would love to see Lincoln step down as priniciple owner and have Larson step in his place.  Not sure that’s gonna happen though.

        • Sad news, but it’s defnitely time for a change.  The Mariners are much more locked in than either the early 90s Seahawks or recently departed/deceased Sonics.  The Relocation Boogeyman doesn’t scare me at all.  We thank the ownership for keeping the Mariners here 20 years ago, but there’s a lot of room for improvement, esepcially when compared with our AL West competitors.