How Shane Waldron’s Seahawks offense could be great for Russell Wilson

Russell Wilson could see a professional rebirth in Shane Waldron’s new Seahawks offense.

Whatever the schism was between the Seahawks and Russell Wilson this offseason — and Wilson did his level best to minimize the issues in a minicamp press conference this week — things appear to be back on track for the franchise and its franchise quarterback.

Wilson has long wanted to have more of a hand in play-calling and personnel, and based on his body of work, one could say that he’s earned it. Whether that has actually happened or not, Wilson seemed especially happy with the schemes installed by new offensive coordinator Shane Waldron.

“It’s super complex,” Wilson said Thursday, per Gregg Bell of the Tacoma News Tribune.

“We are going to be able to move people around. We are going to do everything that we want to… I really believe in him.”

What are the new wrinkles? Apparently, the Seahawks’ new passing game is less static and more expansive.

“We have some nuances across the board that really challenge the defense, using the whole field and really expanding the offense,” Wilson said. “Just using everybody as much as possible, in all different formations and different looks and different tempos.”

Up-tempo is something Wilson has wanted his team to implement more often, as he intimated after the 30-20 wild-card playoff loss to the Rams that ended Seattle’s 2020 season.

“I think that we started running it really well for a little bit there, and so I think that was part of it,” Wilson said back then. “And the games just — I think for us we were able to — early in the season we were able to get the deep shots and stuff like that early on. I think that as well as — I think our tempo, our pace and stuff, getting in and out and all that, we kind of lost that a little bit I think along the way.

“I think that’s something that we do really, really well, and so to keep that tempo and pace I think is something that’s — I’m going to really try to study a lot this offseason and see how do we continue to put our foot on the gas and everything else along the way. I think that’ll help us a little bit.”

Waldron, who was the passing game coordinator for Sean McVay’s Rams last season, could be ready to give Wilson more no-huddle and more pre-snap motion. Last season, per Sports Info Solutions, only Daniel Jones of the Giants and Kyler Murray of the Cardinals had more no-huddle dropbacks than Los Angeles’ Jared Goff (148), and while Goff didn’t do too well with it (94 completions in 144 attempts for 1,092 yards, 507 air yards, three touchdowns, and four interceptions), that’s more an indictment of Goff than anything about a more hurried passing game. Wilson had just 39 no-huddle dropbacks last season, but he completed 20 of 32 passes for 247 yards, 175 air yards, two touchdowns, and no interceptions.

As for the benefit of pre-snap motion, Wilson did have a lot of that to work with under former offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer in 2020, and he was pretty good with it, completing 206 passes on 298 attempts in 355 dropbacks for 2,310 yards, 1,219 air yards, 17 touchdowns, and five interceptions. And the shot plays off of pre-snap motion were certainly in evidence. On throws of 20 or more air yards with motion last season, Wilson completed 16 of 36 passes for 593 yards, 529 air yards, six touchdowns, and two interceptions.

Bell also points out in his piece that Wilson was particularly good against single-high coverage when defenses couldn’t just hang two safeties back and defend the run, and the numbers bear that out — against Cover-1 and Cover-3 last season, Wilson completed 193 of 284 passes for 2,356 yards, 1,444 air yards, 23 touchdowns, and four interceptions. Against Cover-2, 2-Man,  Cover-4, and Cover-6, Wilson completed 135 of 211 passes for 1,550 yards, 1,007 air yards, 11 touchdowns, and four interceptions. So, as Wilson has been saying for a while, a varied approach to the offense would provide greater dividends.

Seahawks fans have long wanted Pete Carroll and his staff to “Let Russ Cook,” and perhaps Waldron is the ideal guy to make that happen.

Attorney to file assault charges against Rams star Aaron Donald

An attorney says he is going to file assault charges against Rams star Aaron Donald

An attorney in Pittsburgh, Todd Hollis, told KDKA on Wednesday he is going to file assault charges against Los Angeles Rams star defensive lineman Aaron Donald.

Cameron DaSilva of TheRamswire adds information.

Hollis told KDKA that the alleged assault on Spriggs occurred over the weekend of April 10-11 between 3-4 a.m.

Donald is from Pittsburgh and often trains there during the offseason. The three-time Defensive Player of the Year attended the University of Pittsburgh and had the Aaron Donald Football Performance Center dedicated to him in 2019.

Donald was drafted by the Rams 13th overall in 2014 and has spent his entire career with the franchise, earning seven Pro Bowl selections and being named a first-team All-Pro six times.

The attorney provided an image of the person who he is alleging Donald assaulted.

Super Bowl LVI logo released via video featuring Snoop Dogg

The Super Bowl Committee in Los Angeles for the 2022 game at Los Angeles’ SoFi Stadium has been released

The Los Angeles Super Bowl committee wasted no time in starting the clock toward the kickoff of Super Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium in February 2022.

The committee on Tuesday released the logo for Super Bowl 56, which will be played at the home of the Los Angeles Rams and Chargers.

“Today more than ever the Super Bowl stands for hope and perseverance,” said Casey Wasserman, Chairman, Los Angeles Super Bowl Host Committee. “We are proud and excited that Los Angeles will once against host the nation’s biggest sporting event, however it’s the promise of recovery and opportunity that Super Bowl LVI brings to our City’s people and industries that reigns supreme.”

In addition to the logo release, a video debuted featuring rap icon Snoop Dogg.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cfjJGrc70Og

“Since Los Angeles hosted the first Super Bowl back in 1967, the Super Bowl has become a spectacle larger than the league could have ever imagined,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said.

“… I don’t know what the environment is going to be like by next year; we’ll be prepared for that. We hope it will be filled with fans, and not just in the stadium, but around the stadium and enjoying the facility, and we will be back to more of a normal cadence. But safety’s driven everything we’ve done this year and safety will drive that decision as we approach it, making sure that we keep, obviously, the participants, as well as our fans and others, safe through that process.”

Aaron Rodgers earns PFWA NFL MVP honors

Aaron Rodgers, Aaron Donald and Derrick Henry have been honored by the PFWA

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers was selected as the NFL MVP for the 2020 season by the Professional Football Writers of America it was announced Wednesday.

Rodgers, who will lead the Packers against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Sunday’s NFC Championship Game, earned the honor for the third time. He has previously won in 2011 and ’14.

Rodgers completed 372-of-526 passes (NFL-leading and club-record 70.7 completion percentage) for 4,299 yards with a league-leading and club-record 48 TD passes and only five interceptions

The Offensive Player of the Year goes to Derrick Henry of the Tennessee Titans. Henry led the league in rushing for the second straight season and led the NFL in touchdowns.

Henry is the 12th running back to earn the award and the first since the Rams’ Todd Gurley in 2017.

Henry rushed 378 times for a league-leading and franchise-record 2,027 yards and an NFL-best 17 touchdowns. He became the eighth player in NFL history to rush for more than 2,000 yards.

Los Angeles Rams defensive tackle Aaron Donald was named the Defensive Player of the Year. Donald, in his seventh season, is the PFWA’s Defensive Player of the Year for the second time in three seasons (2018 and ’20).

Donald started all 16 games and had 45 total tackles (27 solo), 14 tackles for loss, a team-leading 13.5 sacks for minus-86 yards, 26 quarterback hits, four forced fumbles and one fumble recovery.

Rodgers is the eighth consecutive quarterback to be selected MVP by the PFWA and the 31st QB to win the award.

Jamal Adams takes shots at Rams after loss to Packers

A week later, Jamal Adams of the Seahawks claps back at the Rams

The Los Angeles Rams and Seattle Seahawks’ rivalry is continuing. Matters not that both their seasons are done.

The Rams’ players jabbed Jamal Adams after they ended Seattle’s season in the Wild-Card round. They wished him well in Cabo.

Now that the Rams’ season is done, by virtue of a 32-18 loss to the Green Bay Packers on Saturday, Adams has struck back.

Watch: Aaron Rodgers with perfect pass to Allen Lazard for 58-yard touchdown

Aaron Rodgers connected with Allen Lazard for a 58-yard touchdown

Aaron Rodgers is crafting another masterpiece. This one at the expense of the Los Angeles Rams in Saturday’s NFC Divisional round game at Lambeau Field.

Rodgers gave Green Bay breathing room midway through the fourth quarter as he found Allen Lazard with a gorgeous pass for a 58-yard touchdown play to make it 32-18 after the PAT.

Play-action made the design work and it should be no surprise by now has Rodgers has 21 play-action TD passes against no interceptions on such plays.

 

Watch: Cam Akers discards Za’Darius Smith with stiff-arm

Cam Akers with a show of strength against Za’Darius Smith

Cam Akers has been a force for the Los Angeles Rams in the playoffs.

Whether running past or over opponents, the running back has been fantastic.

After scoring a touchdown and taking the 2-point conversion in on a hook-and-ladder Saturday, he showed strength, too.

Watch as the second-round pick out of Florida State in 2020 discards 6-foot-4, 272-pound Za’Darius Smith with a stiff-arm.

Classic.

Watch: Aaron Jones’ 60-yard run sets up his touchdown

Aaron Jones with a 60-yard run to set up the Green Bay Packers for another touchdown

If one Aaron doesn’t beat you, another one will. All Aaron Rodgers had to do on the opening drive of the second half Saturday was give the ball to Aaron Jones.

The Green Bay Packers’ star running back took the ball and went 60 yards to set up his own one-yard touchdown run in the third quarter that gave Green Bay a 25-10 lead over the Los Angeles Rams in the NFC Divisional round game.

The two-point conversion failed and that could be a concern for the Packers as Mason Crosby appeared to injure a shoulder on an earlier conversion that went bad.

Watch: Jared Goff finds Van Jefferson for Los Angeles Rams’ TD

Jared Goff has looked sharp in the first half for the Rams

The Los Angeles Rams needed a score before halftime and they got one.

With 29 seconds left, Jared Goff found Van Jefferson with a short pass that brought LA within 16-10.

Jefferson had seen the first-team reps in practice this week because Cooper Kupp was nursing a knee injury. Kupp was unable to go and Jefferson delivered in his absence.

Watch: Rams have no answer for Aaron Rodgers’ fakes on TD run

Aaron Rodgers with the moves on a TD run

Will he pass or will he run?

The Los Angeles Rams had no idea and wound up watching Aaron Rodgers saunter into the end zone in the second quarter Saturday of the NFL Divisional round game.

Rodgers faked like he was going to throw but didn’t sense the receiver would be open. So, he kept the play alive by moving and finally turned it into a smart TD run.

The PAT was botched so it was a 16-3 advantage for Green Bay.

Good luck to anyone trying to stop Rodgers and if you can’t stop the quarterback, you are going to have issues stopping the Packers.