How his time with Rams was beneficial for Seahawks LB Bobby Wagner

Seahawks linebacker Bobby Wagner looks to fit right into Seattle’s defense under coordinator Clint Hurtt after his year away with the Rams.

Seahawks linebacker Bobby Wagner spent just one year in Los Angeles with the Rams before re-signing with Seattle as a free agent this offseason. As it turns out, the time in LA was beneficial to his return to the Seahawks.

Wagner had much to explain during his Seattle Sports radio interview on Wednesday.

“The scheme that I went to with the Rams was the scheme that Seattle was transitioning to, so I was able to play in that system for a year, get a little bit of an understanding,” Wagner told the Brock and Salk Show. “The biggest thing that will be an adjustment for me will be learning the terminology that they use and the different intricacies to how they do it, but they’re still going to be running some of the stuff they ran when I was here before.”

Things did indeed change over the last year with Seattle’s defense under the tutelage of defensive coordinator Clint Hurtt. Wagner, who is not sure of his exact role yet this season, is looking forward to doing his part.

“I’m just excited to compete and find my way on the field and keep playing at a high level, ” Wagner said.

Welcome back, Bobby.

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Seahawks ‘bracing’ for Sean Desai to get Eagles defensive coordinator job

According to a report by Jeremy Fowler at ESPN, folks in both Seattle and Philadelphia are “bracing” for Desai to get the job.

Seahawks coach Pete Carroll will be addressing the media in a few minutes at the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis. No doubt he will be asked about his most popular assistant, associate head coach Sean Desai. In recent days he earned a second interview for the Eagles’ defensive coordinator job and emerged as a finalist. Now it seems like he’s the odds-on favorite.

According to a report by Jeremy Fowler at ESPN, folks in both Seattle and Philadelphia are “bracing” for Desai to get the job.

Desai joined Carroll’s staff last year and has been working closely with defensive coordinator Clint Hurtt gameplanning each week. He spent the previous nine seasons working as a defensive assistant for the Bears in a variety of roles, including defensive coordinator in 2021.

Losing Desai would represent a significant blow for Seattle’s staff. He is one of the most highly-regarded young coaches in the NFL and certainly appears to be on-track for a head coach job some day.

Update:

Carroll has confirmed that Desai is on his way to Philly.

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Vikings request to interview Sean Desai for defensive coordinator

The Vikings are bringing Desai back for an interview for the second-consecutive year

After relieving Ed Donatell of his duties this past Thursday afternoon, the Minnesota Vikings have already requested to interview Brian Flores and Ryan Nielsen. According to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, the Vikings have added a third name to that list by requesting to interview Seattle Seahawks associate head coach and defensive assistant Sean Desai.

Desai interviewed for the Vikings defensive coordinator job last year before it went to Donatell. He is a protege of Vic Fangio and runs his style of defense. Desai was the defensive coordinator for the Bears in 2021 but was not retained by Matt Eberflus who changed the style of defense that the Bears ran.

Desai’s defense in Chicago was 22nd in points allowed at 23.94 point per game but ranked sixth in total defense. That is somewhat the opposite of what the scheme is designed for but it makes sense when you consider the Bears offense was 24th in the league in total offense and 27th in scoring, averaging a paltry 18.29 points per game. The defense was also put in negative situations often, as the Bears were tied for 30th with a -13 turnover differential.

This season, he spent it with the Seahawks, where head coach Pete Carroll and defensive coordinator Clint Hurtt have specialized in cover 3/cover-7 but wanted to incorporate elements of the Fangio scheme into their system. What Desai will run here is likely the Fangio defense, but his exposure to Carroll and Hurt could make him more variable as a play caller.

How the Seahawks engineered a shocking defensive turnaround

The Seattle Seahawks have taken their defense from near-worst to near-first in the last month. How did everything turn around so quickly?

The Seattle Seahawks are the kings of unexpected excellence so far in the 2022 NFL season. If you expected Geno Smith to play exactly like an NFL MVP candidate, raise your hand.

Okay, put it back down, because you’re lying.

Now, let’s move to Seattle’s defense, which started the season out very young, and with linebacker Bobby Wagner, the last player left from the legendary Legion of Boom defense that terrorized the league in the early aughts, cast away to the Los Angeles Rams. The Seahawks were going with a new defensive coordinator in Clint Hurtt (elevated from defensive line coach and assistant head coach), all the new attendant concepts with a new coaching staff, and a group of new players and young veterans. Again, nobody expected anything special from a team seemingly rebuilding from the studs.

It started out pretty roughly on the defensive side of the ball. Through the first five weeks of the 2022 season, Seattle ranked 31st in Football Outsiders’ Defensive DVOA metric (opponent-adjusted efficiency) — 29th against the pass, and 26th against the run. Overall, only the Detroit Lions were worse.

Then, starting with Seattle’s 19-9 Week 6 win over the Arizona Cardinals, that same defense became an entirely different animal. Over the last four weeks, the Seahawks rank second in Defensive DVOA behind only the New England Patriots — fifth against the pass, and third against the run. Early Sunday, Seattle will take on Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Germany, and while that offense doesn’t present the same challenges it did over the last two seasons, Brady is still capable of creating explosive plays out of very little.

The Buccaneers’ offense has several problems, but Tom Brady isn’t one of them

No matter who the Seahawks have faced over the last four weeks and four straight wins, they’ve created serious problems for each opponent offense.

Seahawks’ surging defense now ranks well in these 7 categories

Here are seven key defensive categories where this team is now ranked on the higher end of the league.

The Seahawks defense started the 2022 season as the worst in the league outside of the Lions – and do they even really count? Seattle really couldn’t fit the run, they couldn’t tackle, couldn’t get to the quarterback and couldn’t cover on the back end. After a few weeks, they were on pace for a historically-bad defense in some ways (again).

However, for the third year in a row Pete Carroll and his staff have gotten the defense back on track by midseason. Heading into Week 9, this group is performing well at all three levels – especially over the last four games.

The team’s scoring and yardage allowed averages for the season are still pretty rough, but those numbers are not anywhere near reflective of the level this unit is playing at right now.

Here are seven key defensive categories where this team is now ranked on the higher end of the league.

Seahawks DC Clint Hurtt on missed tackles: ‘We’re missing the critical ones’

The most frustrating element od watching the Seahawks this season has been missed tackles.

The most frustrating element od watching the Seahawks this season has been missed tackles. This has been an issue early in the season for three straight years now and it’s the primary reason why this team has a losing record and we’re not talking about Geno Smith in the early MVP conversation.

Yesterday defensive coordinator Clint Hurt spoke with the media and explained that it’s not just the missed tackles – but missing critical ones that’s the problem. Here’s what he said, per Brady Henderson at ESPN.

“There’s going to be some of those during the course of a football game., but the ones we’re missing are critical ones. They’re leading to explosive plays and the explosive plays are leading to points.”

According to PFF, for the season Seattle has now missed 46 tackles. Josh Jones is the leader with nine, followed by Jordyn Brooks with seven and Coby Bryant with six.

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Seahawks defense ranks at or near the bottom in these 12 categories

Here are 12 categories where they rank at or near the bottom of the NFL.

The Seahawks defense is desperate. Yesterday, the team tried to ignite a spark by bringing back Bruce Irvin, who’s been signed to their practice squad. At the rate this unit has been playing Irvin will be promoted to the active roster, named defensive captain for life and the new starting outside linebacker all by 12-noon local time today.

Here are 12 categories where they rank at or near the bottom of the NFL.

Seahawks defense ranks at or near the bottom in these 12 categories

Here are 12 categories where they rank at or near the bottom of the NFL.

The Seahawks defense is desperate. Yesterday, the team tried to ignite a spark by bringing back Bruce Irvin, who’s been signed to their practice squad. At the rate this unit has been playing Irvin will be promoted to the active roster, named defensive captain for life and the new starting outside linebacker all by 12-noon local time today.

Here are 12 categories where they rank at or near the bottom of the NFL.

Anatomy of a Play: Seahawks LB Cody Barton forced Nathaniel Hackett’s hand

Seahawks linebacker Cody Barton’s tackle for loss changed Monday Night Football completely, leading to Denver’s weird field goal decision.

The 2022 Seattle Seahawks are putting the very definition of a new-look defense on the field. When they cast future Hall of Fame linebacker Bobby Wagner to the side this past offseason, it marked the exit of the last member of the legendary Legion of Boom defense, one of the greatest such units in NFL history. That defense led the NFL in points allowed four straight seasons from 2012-2015; the new group isn’t quite at that level, but showed a lot of spark in Seattle’s surprising 17-16 win over Russell Wilson’s Denver Broncos on Monday night.

The most important play of that game might have been a tackle for loss by linebacker Cody Barton, selected in the third round of the 2019 draft out of Utah. The Utes have put quite a few top-tier defensive players in the NFL of late, and while Barton was a nice bit player in his first three professional seasons, one wouldn’t yet put him on the level of an Eric Weddle, Marcus Williams, or Star Lotulelei.

Monday night’s game may represent Barton’s claim to a higher status. He had eight solo tackles, a sack, a quarterback hit, and two tackles for loss. One of those tackles for loss may have saved the upset for Seattle on Monday night.

With 1:24 left in the game, the Broncos had the ball with first-and-10 at their own 49-yard line. Wilson threw the ball to running back Javonte Williams on a quick cross-action pass. Williams might have been able to beat Barton to the sideline were all things equal, but Barton read the play perfectly, and nuked Williams — one of the league’s best backs — for a four-yard loss.

On Wednesday, Barton explained what he saw, and why he took off for Williams with no hesitation whatsoever.

The Broncos now had second-and-14 from their own 45, and after a Wilson incompletion, Denver’s quarterback hit Williams for a nine-yard gain. That put the ball on the Seattle 46-yard line, and its possible that the first-down TFL was going through Broncos head coach Nathaniel Hackett’s mind as he chose between going for it on fourth-and-5, or allowing kicker Brandon McManus to attempt a 64-yard field goal in vain.

Broncos coaches, players react to final missed 64-yard field goal

In fact, it was absolutely going through Hackett’s mind, as he explained on Tuesday.

“Looking back at it, we definitely should have gone for it. It’s one of those things where you look back at it and you say, ‘Of course we should go for it.’ We missed the field goal. But in that situation, we had a plan. We knew that [the] 46-[yard line] was the mark. We were third-and-15, I think, third-and-13. I’m more upset about that play before, to lose yards. Getting that there would have definitely been better able to call that same play and get extra yards, but he dumps it out to [RB] Javonte [Williams]. Javonte makes a move, goes a lot farther than I think we had anticipated.

“We were expecting to go for it on fourth down and then you hit the mark. The mark that we had all set before we started. We said 46-yard line was where we wanted to be, and we got there so we had to make a decision.  We wanted to give it to Brandon, and we did. It didn’t work, it sucks but that a part of it.”

So, had Barton not made that play, the Broncos might well have gone for it on fourth down, and we may be dealing with an entirely different game story.

Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll was suitably impressed by Barton’s shot, namechecking K.J. Wright, a key member of that legendary LOB.

“The play he makes, that’s totally coming from the gut. That’s a K.J. Wright play. He sees it and knows what it is, a screen. He’s got to beat the lineman and he can feel the lineman coming out and he dipped him and made a great tackle on a great back in a crucial time for a big loss. It was a great indicator for things to come.”

Defensive coordinator Clint Hurtt, asked about it Wednesday, was similarly struck by Barton’s effect on the game.

“On the screen? That was an unbelievable play. Those are the ones for a guy that’s not really a young guy anymore. Now he’s in year four, I believe it is if I’m not mistaken, so those are the ones that you want to start seeing that guy make. The recognition, identifying certain things, whether it’s recognizing a formation, a backfield set, something a guy does pre-snap for him to be able to go trigger and make a play that fast. That’s really encouraging, so he did a lot of positive things in that game, but he also has things that he knows that he wants to clean up to play better, which excites you for his future.”

The future may be now for Cody Barton, and the most recent past is quite enlightening. Without Barton’s efforts, Seattle might have allowed Russell Wilson to have his revenge game, after all.

Seahawks OLB Uchenna Nwosu eager for 2022 season to start: ‘I’m ready’

For his part, No. 10 can’t wait to get started.

The Seattle Seahawks are either going to be an unmitigated dumpster fire or a pleasant surprise this coming season, depending on who you ask. While nobody is expecting them to make a deep playoff run, there’s not much consensus on just how good (or bad) they’re going to be without Russell Wilson and Bobby Wagner serving as their two centerpieces.

Many analysts are predicting a poor 2022 campaign – with some projections having them only winning four games. Others see this as a sleeper team that will be more competitive than most people believe. If Seattle is going to prove the latter right, the x-factor will likely be how effective their new defensive scheme is. There’s cause to believe it’ll be sneaky-tough.

For one thing, this group is headed in the right direction. The first half of the 2021 season was dismal for this unit – at one point early in the season they were on pace to allow more yards than any team in NFL history. However, the defense got on solid footing in the second half of the season – thanks in part to adjustments by former defensive coordinator Ken Norton. While it wasn’t enough to save his job, Norton deserves credit for turning the unit around and setting a stable foundation for this coming campaign.

New defensive coordinator Clint Hurtt and associate head coach Sean Desai are tasked with continuing the transition away from what had become an outdated zone-heavy, cover 3 model to more of a two-high, aggressive scheme inspired more by Vic Fangio than Pete Carroll.

One of the major changes they’ve implemented is a switch from a 4-3 base up front to a 3-4 base. Coinciding with that, the front office turned over the top of the edge rotation in a significant way, cutting ties with traditional 4-3 defensive ends Carlos Dunlap and Rasheem Green, who combined for 15 of the team’s 34 sacks last year. Replacing their pass-rush disruption for what was already a lackluster area of the game will be critical, to say the lesat.

While he’s not a double-digit-sacks kind of threat, a major component of this new front line will be outside linebacker Uchenna Nwosu – a free agent pickup coming off a breakout year with the Chargers.

Nwosu will be at the top of the team’s new-look depth chart at the EDGE position and will likely be employed in a variety of ways befitting his well-rounded skillset. Seattle fans who are unfamiliar with Nwosu’s talents are likely in for a nice surprise when they see all the different ways he impacts the game.

Nwosu is one of the most important individual pieces in determining where this team ranks defensively and was the team’s biggest salary cap investment of the offseason outside of DK Metcalf’s contract extension. They’ll need him to live up to that investment if they’re going to have any hope of fielding anything close to a dominant unit.

For his part, No. 10 can’t wait to get started. Here’s what Nwosu tweeted last night about the start of the season:

A well-rounded defender is always welcome, but what decides Nwosu’s success will be what he does on third down.

Nwosu has proven he can consistently make plays around the ball. However, his pass rushing production to date hasn’t exactly stood out. Last season he totaled five sacks, 17 quarterback hits and 30 pressures. Pro Football Focus gave him a solid 68.5 pass rush grade for the year.

Nwosu has the gifts he needs to blossom into a real QB threat, including plus closing speed. Unlocking this element should be a high priority for Hurtt. If it works, this unit’s ceiling could rise dramatically.

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