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 Week 3 injury report: Quandre Diggs, Cody Barton upgraded

Here is the updated injury report for this week.

The Seahawks got some good news today. Both free safety Quandre Diggs and linebacker Cody Barton were upgraded from non-participants to “limited” on today’s injury report. However, defensive tackle Shelby Harris and nickelback Justin Coleman remain out.

Here is the updated injury report for this week.

Player Injury Wed Thu Fri Status
G Gabe Jackson Knee/Resting veteran DNP Full
G Damien Lewis Thigh DNP Full
CB Justin Coleman Calf DNP DNP
FS Quandre Diggs Knee DNP Limited
DL Shelby Harris Glute/Personal matter DNP DNP
LB Cody Barton Shoulder/Hip DNP Limited
S Joey Blount Hamstring DNP DNP
C Austin Blythe Shoulder Limited DNP
CB Artie Burns Groin Limited Full
LB Uchenna Nwosu Shoulder/Knee Limited Full
DT Al Woods Knee Limited Full
RB DeeJay Dallas Knee Full

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Dan Orlovsky calls this clutch stop by Cody Barton the ‘reason the Seahawks won’

Watch.

Truth be told, the Seahawks had a little help on Monday night from their opponents. To recap, the Broncos committed 12 penalties, costing themselves 106 yards in the process. They also fumbled twice at Seattle’s goal line and finished off by choosing to kick a 64-yard field goal rather than trusting their $245 million star quarterback.

That said, the Seahawks made the plays they had to make – just enough to escape with a one-point win, anyway. One of the bigger moments came when linebacker Cody Barton shut down a screen pass by Denver that could have changed the outcome. ESPN’s Dan Orlovsky calls it the reason why they won the game. Watch.

Barton ended the game with 10 tackles, including two for a loss.

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Seahawks add LB Tanner Muse to active roster, sign experienced LB to practice squad

Yesterday, the team announced the solution.

Heading into the 2022 season, the Seahawks roster was conspicuously thin at linebacker. After starters Jordyn Brooks and Cody Barton the only player listed on the depth chart was Nick Bellore, a fullback and special teams guy who hasn’t played a defensive snap since the 2017 season. Needless to say, Seattle had to address that at some point.

Yesterday, the team announced the solution: backup linebacker Tanner Muse has been signed to the active roster from the practice squad. Muse had been elevated for Week 1’s win over the Broncos. He made a couple of key special teams stops and was apparently good enough to earn a spot on the active 53-man roster. Muse was a former third-round pick by the Raiders in 2020 who appeared in six games for Seattle last year, all on special teams.

With Muse moving up to the active roster, the Seahawks had a hole to fill on the practice squad. That spot will go to linebacker Christian Jones. He played his college ball at Florida State then went undrafted. He first signed with the Bears in 2014, then spent a few seasons with the Lions before returning to Chicago last year. Jones offers plenty of experience, having appeared in 125 total games and making 74 starts.

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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 share clips of DK Metcalf, 3 others doing individual drills

The team is now officially in regular season mode prior to its final preseason game of the year on Friday against the Cowboys.

Seahawks 2022 training camp officially ended on Sunday with the team’s last practice that was open to the public. The team is now officially in regular season mode prior to its final preseason game of the year on Friday against the Cowboys.

Here are a few video clips the team shared of several individual drills from yesterday’s practice.

DL L.J. Collier

LB Cody Barton

OLB Alton Robinson

WR DK Metcalf

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Cody Barton sees puzzle pieces fitting together for Seahawks defense

Seattle Seahawks linebacker Cody Barton now sees the pieces of the puzzle fitting together for the new-look defense under DC Clint Hurtt.

The Seattle Seahawks wrapped up their mock game over the weekend and all eyes are now looking ahead to the first game of the preseason. Inching closer to the real deal, linebacker Cody Barton was asked about the changes he’s seen in the defense under new defensive coordinator, Clint Hurtt.

“I would say the difference is, and I can speak just for the defensive side, obviously, feel wise, there’s an energy about this team,” Barton told reporters after Sunday’s walkthrough. “I’m sure you guys have heard it already. The energy throughout the team, and especially on defense, is just different. Guys are excited, guys are hungry, and we just want to compete, and go out there and just prove ourselves.”

Barton is now entering his fourth season in the league, originally selected by the Seahawks in the 2019 NFL draft out of Utah. He is also embracing a much larger role on the field, having grown from mostly special teams to a starting spot with the linebackers. He sees the overall changes in the team as well.

“If you look at the game, imagine it’s like a puzzle, all the pieces have to fit together,” Barton explained. “The D-line has to work with the linebackers, the linebackers have to work with the DBs, so it’s all going to work together. I wouldn’t say there’s just one focal point, I would say it’s just a whole defensive thing.”

The Seahawks return to the practice field on Tuesday to begin to prepare to face the Steelers on Saturday, Aug. 13.

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Seahawks release LB Ben Burr-Kirven after failed physical

The Seattle Seahawks released linebacker Ben Burr-Kirven after a failed physical designation in the wake of Chris Carson’s retirement.

In the aftermath of running back Chris Carson’s retirement from the NFL, the Seattle Seahawks have handed linebacker Ben Burr-Kirven his walking papers after a failed physical designation.

Seattle drafted Burr-Kirven in the fifth round of the 2019 NFL Draft out of the University of Washington. Throughout his three-year career thus far, he has rarely seen the field on defense but has been used extensively on special teams, where he has thrived.

Burr-Kirven suffered a torn ACL in the preseason last year and missed the entire 2021 season as a result. He would be released by the Seahawks on July 26 after failing his physical.

Jordyn Brooks and Cody Barton are expected to lead the linebacker corps in 2022 with the releases of Bobby Wagner and Burr-Kirven, while Rashaad Penny and rookie Kenneth Walker III will receive significant playing time in replacing Carson at running back.

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Seahawks 2022 training camp: One question for each defensive position

Now, lets do the same for Seattle’s defense.

The Seahawks report to training camp today, bringing us one big step closer to the start of the 2022 NFL season.

Yesterday we looked at questions for each position on offense. Now, lets do the same for Seattle’s defense.

Seahawks: 8 important x-factor players to watch during the 2022 season

The departures of Russell Wilson, Bobby Wagner and Duane Brown account for a serious reset in leadership – if not a total rebuild.

The Seahawks made some radical changes to the top of their roster this offseason. The departures of Russell Wilson, Bobby Wagner and Duane Brown account for a serious reset in leadership – if not a total rebuild. New captains will have to be chosen on both offense and defense this year, but it will take more than just a couple of guys stepping up in the intangibles department. Replacing the experience that this team lost will require a group effort by several key personnel pieces in Seattle.

Here are eight of the most important x-factor players on the roster to watch.