RB Marshawn Lynch, hanging with WR Sidney Rice, was an observer at Seahawks practice Tuesday. / Art Thiel, Sportspress Northwest

Marshawn Lynch is no fun at all. It would be much more entertaining to speculate on his absence rather than report that he was at practice.  But there he was Tuesday afternoon, standing there. Not practicing, but standing. Indications of the Seahawks star running back’s financial dismay were not apparent.

“We’re just taking care of it, making sure it’s OK,” Carroll said said of the previously undisclosed injury. “There’s enough there that we don’t want to mess with it.”

Whether the ankle was a cover story is unknown, just as were the claims Lynch told people he wants to rework the final two years of his contract. But the fact was he showed up, meeting his contractual obligation that averted a fine of up to $70,000 if he skipped out on all three days of this week’s mini-camp.

Since he already missed the team’s optional 10 organized team activities, it might have helped if he were to join in on the week’s rehearsals. But that’s not how he rolls. The Seahawks are fine with it.

“It’s unique, but he is a unique player and he has a unique role on our football team,” Carroll said. “So we have to do what we have to do to take care of him.”

Since Lynch, as per custom, was unavailable to media, we’ll have to let stand Carroll’s definition of the situation, also because Carroll has never discussed contract issues.

He said he has talked regularly with Lynch, and nothing has come up about money.

“I’ve talked to him a number of times,” Carroll said. “Everybody (among Seahawks personnel) at one time or another has been in contact with him. He’s made it very easy on us to do that. He’s got a great relationship with our club and our teammates and the coaches.

“We have rested him a lot in the off-season. He takes a big pounding during the year. It takes him a long time to get his body back to where he doesn’t feel the rigors of the season. You won’t see him get the ball a lot in the preseason. We will work all the way to the opening day and see if we can him right right there.”

Because Lynch avoids interviews as if they were tornadoes, we’re unlikely to find out whether he’s going to try to leverage more money. He’s got a legitimate concern that the Seahawks, who have him for two more years, might decline the last one since it will cost the club $9 million against the salary cap.

But Lynch also has a legitimate contract that the Seahawks are reluctant to re-do because of precedent.

The Seahawks ratcheted up the speculation themselves when offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell said recently the running back spot would be done by committee, a statement from which he later backed away. While Carroll acknowledged that backups Robert Turbin and Christine Michael were have good offseasons, there was nothing said Tuesday that indicated anything was changing regarding Lynch.

“Marshawn has really been the guy for us,” Carroll said. “We love everything about the way he plays and what he brings to this team. He has never taken a step backwards at any time for us in all the time that we’ve been here.”

The fact is that the Seahawks have nearly all the leverage on their side, and Lynch and his agent know it. It’s possible the Seahawks might fight some wiggle room under the cap to advance some money owed to him in 2015 into 2014, as they did with DE Chris Clemons in 2012. But the collective bargaining agreement in the NFL is much more player-unfriendly than in any other sport.

If a small sweetener makes for some kind of precedent, the Seahawks will live with it, as will the rest of players. As was mentioned here before, unique players in all sports, such as the Sonics’ Gary Payton and the Mariners’ Ken Griffey Jr., end up getting unique treatment.

As Carroll said, Lynch qualifies as unique. Unlike 90 percent of his teammates, he’s a difference-maker. He rates different treatment.

As Lynch often recommends in his business dealings: Stop freakin’.

 

 

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6 Comments

  1. The Hawks hold all the cards on Beastmode’s situation. He can do all he wants to get more money but they hold the leverage. The best he can do is to shoot for a high YPC average, shoot for more than 1300 rushing yards (might be hard with Turbin and Michael behind him) and get in double figures for TD’s. Make it so it’s hard for the Hawks to let him go.

    Agreed that unique players get unique treatment. Just look at how the Lakers rewarded Kobe even though he had been showing signs of decline in his game.

  2. Its onlySports(DavidWakefield) on

    Its obvious by the comments PC made that he expects an elite level of play from Lynch for 2014 and maybe even skyrocket production. He is paid like the top 5~6 backs in the league already but we do have a multi~Billionaire signing the checks so moving a few dollars forward from 2015 is probably the no brainer way of getting Lynch to think they were willing to appease the Beast in throwing him a thanks for the “super bowl trophy”nugget.
    A happy beast is a productive beast might be the monicker they are shooting for.
    Maybe the man of mystery appeases us back with his best yardage total of his Hawk career this year. With all of the attention that will be garnered in “the Harvin effect” he may have a huge number of chances to really bust out some obscene runs this year. Lets hope so.The result? Everybody will be happy and this thing will be long long forgotten.