The rushing of Russell Wilson has become less effective as defenders gear up to stop him. / Drew McKenzie, Sportspress Northwest

One for the books: A highly regarded professional athlete who didn’t perform well said simply, “Sometimes, you just have a bad day.”

Is it legal to say that? I mean, I know it’s Washington state, where most everything is legal, but still, isn’t candor a violation of some law, or public policy, or code, or manners? And especially when Russell Wilson says it about himself, that can’t be allowed — can it?

In his short, spectacular sports career in Seattle, Wilson never had a bad day on the field, until Sunday. When the Seahawks quarterback completed only 11 of 27 passes in an entirely unexpected home loss to Arizona, fans and analysts blamed the offensive line, the receivers, Marshawn Lynch, Pete Carroll, offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell, even the defense after playing 59, but not 60, minutes of stellar ball.

The Mariners were blamed, which is what happens after becoming the civic punching bag.

But to blame Wilson, the precocious 100-year-old quarterback in a 25-year-old’s body . . . the idea was so unfamiliar as to border on the inconceivable.

Apparently, Wilson decided Thursday to walk reporters through their temporary incomprehension by admitting his shortcomings. No pun intended.

“Sometimes you just have a bad day,” he said. “Sometimes, your days are great, sometimes they’re good, and sometimes you have one or two bad days in there. Hopefully, you can get rid of those days.”

Well, gee. Guess so. It’s just that . . . you know, he’s been on this upward arc, unfazed by behemoth meanies, blindside blitzes, blundering teammates, injuries, distractions and silly media questions. After 23 wins, more than any quarterback in his first two NFL years, it seemed as if he would just, you know, keep going.

Which is exactly what he said his intentions were for Sunday’s regular season finale at home against St. Louis, a game that swings the NFC’s entire playoff lineup.

“The biggest thing for me,” Wilson said, “is just continue to do what I’ve done all year — be consistent and be clutch when we need it. Be the calm in the storm. I’m not going to waver, I never will. Never have, never will.”

Wilson is so convincing, he has persuaded his immediate boss, offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell. Asked Tuesday if he was concerned about Wilson’s recent play, Bevell said, “Not at all. He plays well all of the time, he puts forth great effort, he works hard, he communicates with our guys really well. There is no doubt that he’ll get it done.”

Then again, if something were wrong with him physically, or within the offense, it’s unlikely Wilson or Bevell would say so publicly. Not that it would be much help to Rams coach Jeff Fisher.

He already had his team so dialed into to the Seahawks offense that in the Oct. 28 meeting in St. Louis, Seattle had season lows in yards (135), first downs (seven), third-down conversions (two) and a season-high seven sacks. The Seahawks won 14-9 only because the Rams defense broke down one time when Wilson found Golden Tate for an 80-yard touchdown. Otherwise, they gained 55 yards.

Wilson was quick to point out that in the first game, the Seahawks were missing starting linemen Russell Okung, Max Unger and Breno Giacomini. Chaos was inevitable.

While that’s true, it was also true that all three were healthy for the past two games against the Giants and Cardinals. Combined in those games, the Seahawks converted five of 26 third downs.

Something is definitely going on. Again, Wilson puts the responsibility on himself, as opposed to crediting a defense for solving Seattle’s offense.

“What it really comes down to is being little bit more accurate,” he said. “That’s  just making the plays. I’m normally pretty high, percentage-wise, in terms of that. You just move on.”

It’s true that Wilson’s accuracy is off some, which is erasing Seattle’s room for error. The best example was the final offensive play of the Arizona game. It will be remembered by Seahawks fans as a poor call by officials who somehow did not see on replay what others did: That a pass intended for a diving Baldwin hit his arm and the ground simultaneously, creating an incompletion instead of the high-bounce interception that ended the Seahawks’ chances.

But if Wilson had thrown the ball to Baldwin instead of near Baldwin, there would have been no debate, and the drive would have continued.

The game was not lost on that play. The roots of the defeat go back to Fisher’s game plan in St. Louis that created a template that gets copied, with varying degrees of success, by every opposing defense.

Robert Quinn, the maniacal Rams defensive end who leads the NFL in sacks with 18 and will draw votes for defensive player of the year, sacked Wilson three times that Monday night. He explained how some of the plan works.

“You definitely want to keep him in the pocket,” Quinn said of Wilson. “Force him to become a pocket quarterback, because he’s definitely dangerous if he gets out the pocket. He can make all of the throws when he’s outside the pocket, or take off running.

“So we definitely want to keep him in the pocket. He’s a shorter guy, so knocking the offensive linemen back makes it hard for him to see who to throw to.”

Wilson knows the strategy, and isn’t buying its effectiveness.

“Not really, to be honest with you,” he said. “That’s usually always the case, always has been. Ever since I started playing football, most people try to keep me inside the pocket.  They don’t want me to get outside. But they haven’t really done anything in particular that has really stopped us, or stopped me, from running.

“I try to look down field and try to throw it to the right guy at the right time. If it’s not there, try to run it and get the first down.”

Yet, if third-down conversion numbers are added from the most recent games against the three division foes, plus the Giants, who have a good defense, the Seahawks are 13 for 49, a ghastly 26.5 percent. Third down had been where Wilson did his best work, since teams were having a hard time guessing his options.

Now, however, they simply deny him the run and dare him to beat the defense over the top. Lately, he hasn’t been so good. Nor has he had the services of either Sidney Rice or Percy Harvin, receivers who could erase a few of Wilson’s inaccuracies with either length or speed.

Wilson also could be helped by improvement in an area that only fullback Michael Robinson is honest enough to offer up.

“We’re not blocking well enough as a group up front to have the success we’re accustomed to having,” he said. “That’s what’s gotta happen this week.

“I don’t worry about Russell, he’s fine. He’s a vet now. To be good in this league in general, he has to be his own biggest critic. If somebody says he did great, he’ll point to not carrying out a fake, or throwing too low. That’s the biggest thing in his success so far.”

So if Robinson reputation for honesty is well-earned, Wilson probably didn’t have a bad day. He’s just part of an offense that needs to get smarter and more clever Sunday, now that the league has caught up.

 

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20 Comments

      • An example of what I meant by “stupid ones” would be when Tony McDaniel shoved an AZ player, resulting in a PF, which changed a fourth down punting situation for AZ into a first down. This is a lot different than, say, a false start or an off-sides, caused by a hard count.

  1. It’s not Russell’s fault. The coaches have to come up with a counter to this defensive strategy, or it’s over. And use the off-season to get rid of every moron who can’t keep from causing penalties.

  2. I’m no expert, but to me it seems like more short or intermediate passes on first or 2nd down would help. More screens or crossing patterns. More comeback routes. Let’s get to third-and-short where every option is open instead of facing all these 3rd-and-longs that kill our drives.

    The deep shots that Bevell loves are great, but with this offense it seems like it’s either hand the ball to Lynch, or chuck it deep. A little more variety to keep the D honest could help…

    • What you’re describing sounds a lot like the West Coast Offense, which is predicated on short routes and getting yards a chunk at a time. What Bevell seems to prefer is the Lamonica Offense, which was basically chucking the ball as far downfield as possible and hoping Wells or Biletnikoff would be under it when it landed. The Seahawks unfortunately don’t have an offensive line capable of holding blocks long enough for the Lamonica Offense to work.

      If anything, maybe the Run & Shoot would be best because you hardly need any blocking at all…that one’s predicated on getting rid of the ball as quickly as possible before you end up on your back identifying cloud formations.

      • I’m not saying go entirely with the West Coast short-but-safe strategy, just add some variety to the playcalling. Bevell knows a million times more football than I ever will, but to the untrained eye it just seems like there’s a lot of the field being unused. Let’s force the D to cover it all — deep, intermediate, and short.

    • Seahawks offense is at its best when TEs, RBs and FBs have catches. But Bevell has kept them in often to block for a substandard OL. It all begins up front.

  3. At least I feel comfortable with his emotional stability. I don’t think it will get in his head and then snowball. It’s not his style. I expect him to bounce back just like he did in the game itself really. He drove us down for a touchdown at the end and I fully believe he would have driven us down for another if they referees hadn’t decided to award the ball wrongly to the Cardinals.

    My prediction for 2014 is that Snyder in Washington is going to try for Darrel Bevell as a replacement for Shanahan. He’ll want somebody new rather than a grizzelled veteran like Shananan who isn’t going to take any guff from RG3-10. I expect that RG3 will be all for it as well for the same reason. But the number one reason is because he’s hoping that Bevell can turn RG3-10 into Russel Wilson.

    • Not a bad guess. But RW and RG3 play fairly different games. The biggest problem is RG3 thinks he’s Superman and takes too many shots and risks. Wilson knows better. That has little to do with coaching.

      • I don’t think a million magic wands could change that horses patoot RG3-10 into Wilson but I think that Snyder might believe it. This is the same guy that thought RG3-10 was worth mortgaging Washington’s future for and the same guy who thinks that the team name “Redskins” is completely inoffensive to everybody.

        • RG3 is talented but immature (as opposed to Wilson). The price of that trade has crippled that team. Maybe by the time that Washington team is done paying for that silly exchange he’ll have grown up. The worst thing Snyder that has done is given the Rams a top pick. The rest of this division will be paying for that move.

          • Another reason to dislike Snyder. We don’t need the Rams to get any tougher. They’re well coached already.

  4. Wilson did not have his best that day. But on watching the game a second time (with teeth clenched) a number of his throws went off receivers hands. Tightly covered receivers true. They would have been tough catches, they couldn’t be called drops, but they were the only place they could be to give the receivers a chance. Two of them would have been inside the 5 yard line, the other the third down pass that Baldwin couldn’t control on hitting the ground out of bounds. Make one or two of those and that game wind up looking a lot different.
    Wilson’s the guy for me. There is no other QB I’d rather have leading this team. He’d have to play a lot worse to convince me otherwise.

    • The other guys deserve some credit. Arizona’s D is excellent, and the DBs were surprisingly effective. But the reason Carroll wanted Harvin was because they need a fast guy to occupy 1-2 defenders deep.

  5. IIRC, Breno left last weeks game before halftime? I don’t think Breno has been healthy all season. Big problem is that with Rice and Harvin gone if you take away the run the Hawks don’t have many options. Especially since Carroll doesn’t employ the TE in the passing game consistently.