Seahawks offensive line ranked No. 19 by PFF after Week 1

The offensive line has room to grow, though.

The Seahawks dominated the Colts on Sunday to earn their first win of the 2021 NFL season. Seattle’s offense has been dominating the headlines ever since, thanks to an exceptional debut from Shane Waldron and a superb effort from Russell Wilson and his skill players.

The offensive line has room to grow, though. Heading into Week 2, Pro Football Focus has ranked Seattle’s front five No. 19 in the league.

“Despite all of the Seahawks’ additions to the offensive line in recent years, it remains one rock in Duane Brown at left tackle and then various shades of concern in the other four spots. New acquisition Gabe Jackson surrendered a pair of pressures on 29 pass-blocking snaps and ended his Seattle debut with a 62.8 overall PFF gradeKyle Fuller at center and Damien Lewis at left guard each earned sub-40.0 PFF pass-blocking grades.”

This is hardly breaking news, though. Wilson has rarely had an above-average offensive line in his career and he’s generally made it work so far. What’s more interesting is their competition was ranked so much higher.

Indianapolis’ offensive line came in at No. 2 on PFFs list behind the Browns. Obviously, missing starting left tackle Eric Fisher was a blow and the Seahawks took advantage of backup Julie’n Davenport.

However, it wasn’t just one spot where Seattle kept winning. Darrell Taylor, Alton Robinson, Bryan Mone, Carlos Dunlap and Rasheem Green all shined at one point or another. It’s only one game, but this performance from the Seahawks defensive line against quality competition is a very good sign.

[lawrence-related id=75284]

[vertical-gallery id=75230]

Seahawks guards have a bet on who gets the most knockdowns

The loser buys the entire offensive line dinner.

The Seattle Seahawks’ track record with drafting offensive linemen is… pretty horrible to put it as kindly as possible. For the most part, the only good OL that have come through Seattle during the Pete Carroll era have been acquired via trade or free agency.

Last year, the front office finally hit on one when they picked LSU’s Damien Lewis in the third round. After a strong rookie year at right guard, Lewis is sliding over to left guard in 2021 to make room for the veteran Gabe Jackson. Apparently, the two of them have a bet on who will get the most knockdowns this season. The loser buys the entire offensive line dinner.

Center Kyle Fuller is considered a fair and neutral third party, so he will keep count during the season.

These guys can afford it, but that dinner will no doubt come with a hefty price-tag. As promising as Lewis looks, it’s hard to bet against Jackson.

[lawrence-related id=74571]

[vertical-gallery id=74557]