WATCH: Seahawks WR DK Metcalf run 100-meter dash at USATF Golden Games

Watch as Seattle Seahawks wide receiver DK Metcalf runs the 100-meter dash at USATF Golden Games. He finishes last in his heat.

It’s widely known that Seattle Seahawks wide receiver DK Metcalf is one of the quickest players in the National Football League and he finally got his shot to compete against some of the fastest runners in the world.

On Sunday afternoon, Metcalf took to the track at the USATF Golden Games to compete in the 100-meter dash. He finished the sprint in 10.36 seconds, ninth place in his heat. He needed a 10.05 or better to qualify for the Olympic Trials next month.

“To test my speed up against world-class athletes like this . . . just having the opportunity to run against these guys was just a blessing,” Metcalf said after the race.

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Here are the best reactions to DK Metcalf’s respectable 100m sprint time

DK Metcalf ran a competitive 10.36 in his 100m heat.

DK Metcalf will not be making the Olympic Trials after finishing ninth place in his USATF Golden Games and Distance Open heat on Sunday. Despite the last place finish in his heat, Metcalf still ran a very respectable — and competitive — 10.36 at the 100m race.

Last October, after Metcalf shocked the NFL world by chasing down Arizona Cardinals safety Budda Baker on a would-be pick-six, the Seattle Seahawks wide receiver tossed his hat in the ring to possibly qualify for the Olympic Trials.

Well, the race came and went, and while Metcalf did not qualify, he still put on a pretty great showing for an athlete with no track experience whatsoever.

It’s easy to pick out Metcalf’s frame in that video — all 6-foot-4, 229 pounds of it — given that he was the biggest and tallest runner in the heat by a mile. And he didn’t do too bad either! For such a big body capable of making NFL players look foolish, Metcalf ran a race to be proud of for sure.

Here are the best reactions to Metcalf’s race on Sunday, from the NFL world to the track world and more.

DL Metcalf is fast but not Olympic fast

Seattle Seahawks wide receiver DK Meftcalf is a burner but that does not mean he is Olympic-fast

Seattle Seahawks wide receiver is swift, blazing fast. However, being the fastest man in the NFL does not mean you are quick enough to find your way onto the United States Olympic team.

Metcalf ran in a 100-meter heat on Sunday and despite the broadcaster trying to make it seem like he was in the mix, the wideout finished ninth — and last — with a time of 10.36 seconds during the Golden Games and Distance Open in California.

The 6-foot-3, 220-pound Metcalf has brilliant speed but was .25 behind Cravon Gillespie, who won the race with a time of 10.11sec.

Tyler Lockett is excited about playing alongside D’Wayne Eskridge

Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Tyler Lockett is very excited about the prospect of playing with rookie wide receiver D’Wayne Eskridge.

Tyler Lockett seems quite excited about having wide receiver D’Wayne Eskridge with the Seattle Seahawks.

Lockett stated via Zoom that Eskridge is “very explosive” and has the capability to stretch the field and excel alongside him and DK Metcalf while making the passing offense more dynamic.

“I think it’s very important,” Lockett said. “The more people you have out there that can stretch the field, that can be able to take the offense to another level, I think it helps take off a lot of pressure that other people might be trying to carry. They don’t necessarily have to, but they feel like they have to based off circumstances.”

Lockett went on to say that having Eskridge around may make it easier for him and Metcalf because they may not receive as much defensive attention if he proves to be formidable.

“So I think the more and more people you have out there, it takes off the pressure you carry,” Lockett continued. “That truly may allow you to play even better, because you know you don’t have to do too much stuff. You just have to do your job.”

Lockett and Metcalf will still eat up the bulk of Russell Wilson’s targets in 2021, while Eskridge can possibly learn from the veterans in his rookie year and start to develop his game at the professional level.

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How to watch Seahawks wide receiver DK Metcalf try to earn a spot at the Olympic Trials

Guess will find out now fast he really is.

You know DK Metcalf is NFL fast. His downfield speed allowed him to become pretty much the perfect wide receiver for Russell Wilson last season, as he caught 83 passes for 1,303 yards.

Now Metcalf wants to test himself against the fastest sprinters the United States has to offer and has opted to run in the USATF Golden Games today in hopes of qualifying for the Olympic Trials in June.

Our Charles Curtis has already produced an exhaustive look at what we think we know about how fast Metcalf can actually be.

Track athletes, as USA TODAY’s Tom Schad reported, are excited to face Metcalf and presumably dispel the notion, once and for all, that any football player truly has “track speed.”

It’s not that they don’t believe Metcalf is a world-class athlete; they just know he hasn’t been practicing the specific skills needed to win this race as much, or as long, as they have. Here he is working on his start:

I’m the furthest thing from a track expert, but you can see here that, from this position, Metcalf appears to lack that elite burst you’d get from the best of the best.

Still, it’s going to be thrilling to watch him give it a try, right? Metcalf is scheduled to run in the 100m prelims, which start at 3:32 ET.

NBC has coverage of the event, so you have a few streaming options:

Metcalf didn’t run track in college and it’s not entirely clear how much training he’s done for this race, so he’s clearly an underdog. According to NBC, a 10.44 was good enough to advance to the finals in a similar recent meet. Metcalf, based on his 4.33 40-yard dash at the combine, could come close to that.

If Metcalf does make it, that race is scheduled for 5:03 and would be broadcast on NBC, and could be streamed via the following:

Metcalf needs a 10.05 to automatically qualify for the trials, but NBC says anything under a 10.20 would likely be good enough.

Hitting either of those marks would be amazing for Metcalf. And even if he doesn’t, he’s still very, very fast.

(You didn’t honestly think you’d get through this post without seeing this highlight, right?)

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Is DK Metcalf really fast enough to make the Olympic trials in 100m?

Could he really qualify for the Olympic Trials?

It was all the way back in October of last year that Seattle Seahawks wideout D.K. Metcalf stunned the NFL world by chasing down Arizona Cardinals safety Budda Baker after an interception and tackled him, saving a would-be pick six.

The next day, the official Twitter account of USA Track and Field responded to the highlight that was going mega-viral, and said, “For everyone asking if we have a spot open on our relay team for [Metcalf and NFL] players are welcome to come test their speed against real speed next year at the Olympic Trials.”

Metcalf had this response:

Well, it’s next year. And it appears Metcalf is actually going to give the 100m a go on Sunday at the USATF Golden Games and Distance Open!

So that begs the question: how fast is he? And can he really qualify for Olympic Trials? Let’s break it all down:

DK Metcalf to test his speed in the 100 meter at USATF meet on Sunday

Seattle Seahawks wide receiver DK Metcalf is entered in the 100-meter dash at the USATF Golden Games and Distance Open this Sunday.

Seattle Seahawks wide receiver DK Metcalf is now set to compete in a whole different sport. Metcalf is entered in Sunday’s 100-meter dash at the USATF Golden Games and Distance Open at Mt. SAC.

It all started last fall when he “RSVP’d” to the USATF Twitter account.

According to the folks over at OlympicTalk at NBC Sports:

If Metcalf wants to qualify for the Olympic Trials 100m, he likely must break 10.2 seconds (with legal tailwind of no more than two meters per second).

A 10.05 automatically qualifies for Trials. Fifteen American men have 10.05 right now (who are expected to enter the Trials 100m), according to World Athletics. The field will likely be filled with the next fastest men to get around 32 entries overall.

In 2016, a 10.16 earned a place at Trials.

While Metcalf did compete in hurdles in high school, he wasn’t a true sprinter nor did he participate in track and field in college. There is no denying he is one of the fastest players in the NFL, but the true Olympic hopefuls might just put him to the test.

Tune in to NBC at 1:00 p.m. PT on Sunday to watch Metcalf turn on the speed.

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Seahawks planned to trade down from 56th pick, but it ‘fell apart’

The Seattle Seahawks initially planned to trade down from the 56th pick in the 2021 NFL draft, but the trade fell apart at the last minute.

The Seattle Seahawks selected Western Michigan wide receiver D’Wayne Eskridge with the No. 56 overall pick in the 2021 NFL draft, but the Seahawks apparently had a plan to trade back, as is routine with the team under general manager John Schneider and head coach Pete Carroll.

The Seahawks only had three picks in the draft and were expected to attempt to acquire more picks via trade. Seattle planned to draft Eskridge with a later pick, but the trade for it fell through. They also feared that he would be taken by another team if they traded back, so they kept the No.56 pick and selected him while he was still available.

“We thought we were close and then we lost something right at the end,” Schneider said via Zoom Friday night. “We were literally like five minutes away or something so it just kind of fell apart and so we were excited to move forward and just take our guy.

“He was the guy.”

Eskridge will join DK Metcalf and Tyler Lockett in the receiver room and hopefully emerge as a reliable target for Russell Wilson.

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Seahawks wide receiver DK Metcalf signs with CAA Sports

Seattle Seahawks wide receiver DK Metcalf has signed with CAA Sports agency in the aftermath of his successful second season in the NFL.

In the aftermath of his second NFL season, Seattle Seahawks wide receiver DK Metcalf has signed with sports agency CAA Sports.

Metcalf joins fellow NFL players Chris Godwin, AJ Brown, Eddie Goldman, and Marshon Lattimore as a member of the agency and representee of CAA Sports Football Division co-leader and managing partner Tory Dandy.

The 23-year-old Metcalf is heading into his third year following a season in which he accumulated 83 receptions for 1,303 receiving yards and 10 touchdowns in 16 games and 16 starts.

The Seahawks may lose some key players to free agency but their offense still figures to be in at least decent shape roster-wise, and Metcalf is a significant part of that.

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2021 NFL coaching changes: Seattle Seahawks

Seattle turns over the offense to a Sean McVay disciple with hopes of toppling its divisional foe.

The Seattle Seahawks jumped out to a torrid start in 2020, only to look lethargic on offense in a system that had become quite predictable. The stale nature and first-round exit from the playoffs as the third seed forced head coach Pete Carroll to effectively fire offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer.

It took some time, and the input from quarterback Russell Wilson, but Carroll found his replacement playcaller from the coaching staff of the team that bounced him from the playoffs. Los Angeles Rams passing game coordinator Shane Waldron was hired for the job after seven seasons as an NFL assistant without actually calling plays in the NFL’s regular season.

Waldron entered the league in 2002 as an operations intern under Bill Belichick’s New England Patriots. The stay lasted until the end of the 2004 season, and Waldron left with the title of special teams quality control coach. The next three years would find Waldron at Notre Dame as a graduate assistant under Charlie Weis before a 2008 return to the Patriots as an offensive quality control coach. The Pats would make him tight ends coach in 2009, and Benjamin Watson paced his positional mates with 29-404-5 — the third-most yards and second-most touchdowns by any New England pass catcher that year.

A one-year stay in 2010 as wide receivers coach of the Hartford Colonials of the United Football League would be followed by a single season as the offensive coordinator for the Cambridge, Mass.-based Buckingham Browne & Nichols High School. The 2012-13 seasons witnessed Waldron coach tight ends for UMass, and he would transition in 2014 to the offensive line coaching gig.

All of that culminated in a return to the NFL in 2016 as an offensive quality control coach for Washington, which put Waldron on the same coaching staff as Sean McVay. When McVay went to Los Angeles in 2017, Waldron followed and was named tight ends coach for that season. In 2018, LA tabbed him its passing game coordinator, which is a key role in this dynamic system. He added quarterbacks coach in 2019 but relinquished the title a year later

Coaching tendencies

“He’s a phenomenal coach,” McVay said of Waldron in 2018, according to The Detroit News via ESPN.com. “He’s a great communicator. He’s got a rare ability to authentically and genuinely connect with not only coaches but the players and be able to correct in a manner that doesn’t make guys’ guards come up. It’s all about problem-solving and doing it together. He’s obviously done a phenomenal job, really mainly as a leader for our offense, not exclusively to just being a pass game coordinator.”

The Rams featured a balanced offense in the last four years, ranking in the top 10 for passing and rushing three times apiece. The interesting aspect of this marriage with Carroll will be how much of Waldron’s own offense will he be allowed to install.

For example, when Schottenheimer took over the job in 2018, he was given only about 30 percent of the offense to make his own after the remainder was carried over from the Darrell Bevell’s system. That’s a rather unusual situation, but it stands to reason we could see it again. Seattle set team highs in points scored last year, and Carroll has gone on the record saying he wants the offense to be more committed to a successful ground game.

Having background of playing tight end in college and coaching the position, as well as guiding offensive lines, Waldron probably is given ability this offseason to implement a new rushing system but little more. This team needs a fresh coat of paint, not a complete rebuild from the ground up.

Los Angeles has consistently been among the best teams at utilizing play-action passing under McVay and Waldron. In order to establish a believable play fake, the defense must be worried about the run. This is one area where things could get dicey in the offseason.

Creativity will play a factor, too. McVay, like Andy Reid, has done a tremendous job of masking his intentions by designing multiple attacks from the same-look personnel groupings presnap, often incorporating motions to further get the defense guessing.

Expect more freedom for Wilson calling plays at the line of scrimmage if he sees something he doesn’t like from the defense. Seattle also should emphasize more zone blocking.

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Personnel changes

Starting with running backs, 2020’s top rushers, Chris Carson and Carlos Hyde, are set to become unrestricted free agents in March. Carson is the focus and will have a market, if he so chooses to explore it, after surpassing all expectations as a seventh-round pick in 2017. It’s unlikely the Seahawks will come close to his market value in a long-term deal, but there’s always the chance he could receive a tag.

Carson had a dozen 100-yard games in 2018 and 2019 combined but failed to top 80 yards in any of his 12 appearances in 2020. He still rushed for a career-high 4.8 yards per carry, and even though Carson scored only once in the final six games, including the postseason, he still totaled nine offensive scores for the third consecutive season — and on far fewer touches.

In 2018, Seattle spent a first-round pick on running back Rashaad Penny. He has battled injuries and ineffectiveness since coming into the league. There’s a decent chance he enters the offseason as Seattle’s top back, but DeeJay Dallas will want to make his mark, too.

The Seahawks currently sit almost $14.45 million under the cap, which is subject to change due to the coronavirus pandemic. This placement has Seattle ranked 17th in most cap space among its top 51 players.

Possible veteran replacements include free agents James Conner, Le’Veon Bell, Aaron Jones, Marlon Mack, Kenyan Drake, Todd Gurley, Mark Ingram, Mike Davis, Leonard Fournette, Malcolm Brown and Adrian Peterson, or the team may turn to the NFL draft yet again for a late-round addition.

There’s obvious connections to Waldron with Gurley and Brown, but neither back will be asked to shoulder the load in a just world. Seattle could opt for a committee approach with players on the team already, or we could see the likes of role players, such as Matt Breida, Brian Hill, Jerick McKinnon, Jamaal Williams and Tevin Coleman, getting a shot in a true committee.

Offensive line woes continue to plague Seattle, but according to Pro Football Focus, the 16th-ranked 2020 version of this fivesome is the highest grade earned since Wilson become the team’s quarterback nine years ago. Starting left guard Mike Iupati and center Ethan Pocic are unrestricted free agents in March.

Iupati is 34 years old for the 2021 season and doesn’t have many options. It looked like retirement should be in the conversation he has with himself this spring.

Pocic moved back to his natural position for 2020, starting 14 games and playing well enough that he warrants a look, if the money makes sense. Pocic, 26, struggled late in the year, which will be fresh in the old memory banks. Pocic is far better suited for a zone-blocking system, which is likely to come over to some degree with Waldron from LA in contrast to offensive line coach Mike Solari’s preference for power blocking. This area will require a deeper look over the summer.

Seattle also faces free agency at fullback (Nick Bellore) and from No. 3 receiver David Moore, who proved to be a clutch asset in 2020 with defenses focusing on the two big guns ahead of him.

Tight end should be addressed in a more meaningful way than Seattle attempted with Greg Olsen in the 2020 offseason. He has since retired, and Will Dissly has been a major injury liability when given more playing time.

Fantasy football takeaway

The weapons in the passing game are present for Wilson to cook all day and night, but the words out of Carroll’s mouth paint a picture of Russ tending a microwave and not a fiery grill.

The ideal balance is run more successfully than last year — a season in which Seattle rushed the 14th fewest times — and parlay that into play-action passing down the field. The vertical gains will make up for the lessened volume, suggesting Wilson remains among the elite fantasy options at the position.

The backfield is still in too much flux to make any strong predictions, but there’s plenty of reason to be optimistic for the lead ball carrier. Penny could emerge as a fantasy favorite in draft season, provided the offseason works in his favor. Stay tuned.

Expect markedly fewer receptions for Tyler Lockett than his career-high 100 from a season ago, while DK Metcalf actually stands to benefit from healthy play-action system. The latter has more upside simply because he’s a generational talent. Lockett is a better WR2 than a No. 1.

Should the offense decide to rely more on the run, there will be fewer targets to go around, particularly for running backs, the tertiary wideout, and the tight end position, indicating we’re looking at spot plays from any of these players.

We’ll revisit this situation once the backfield shakes out with more clarity.