It’s hard for Hawks to find wins, so final three games are no gimmes

For all of the Seahawks’ flaws, there apparently is only one NFC team they cannot beat – or at least come close to beating.

Pete Carroll surely would like another chance to face the 49ers, but the only way to do it is to make the playoffs, which will require an unlikely four-game winning streak to end the season — or else some help from other teams losing.

Everyone, especially Carroll, was giddy about Seattle’s last-minute win over the Philadelphia Eagles last Monday – a win that not only ended a four-game slide but boosted the Seahawks’ playoff hopes.

The win over an NFC team gave them a little more pull in the tiebreakers, but they still have to win their final three or get some help from teams playing Minnesota, Los Angeles and/or New Orleans.  

Continue reading It’s hard for Hawks to find wins, so final three games are no gimmes

‘Lay the hammer down’: Wright nailed the truth about the Hawks

“The season is not over, but just the sour taste that has been in our mouth since Day 1 hasn’t really left. It hasn’t been right since Day 1. … Something’s missing.” — K.J. Wright on Seattle Sports 710

It was great to hear K.J. Wright speak the brutal truth about these uninspired, inattentive, nonchalant Seahawks this week.

The former team star, speaking on his Seattle Sports 710 radio show, ripped the immature antics of DK Metcalf and Jamal Adams, the poor play of Darrell Taylor and Riq Woolen, the out-of-the-picture Quandre Diggs and even, subtly, his venerable friend Bobby Wagner.

With all of the bad attitudes and/or terrible play, Wright said Pete Carroll needs to “lay down the hammer.”

“I am pleading with him this week to really and truly lay down the hammer, lay down the law with these guys. Enough has been enough.”

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More ‘bad ball’ from the defense means it’s time to look ahead

Now that the Seahawks have proven how far they are from contending, with another double-digit loss to the 49ers, attention for most is turning to the future of this franchise. How do they get where the 49ers are?

Pete Carroll’s team is technically still in the playoff chase, but the odds are against the Hawks making it. They are 6-7 with four straight losses – something Carroll hasn’t been a part of for at least a couple of decades — and probably will go 2-2 in the final four to finish 8-9.

The Hawks are among the league’s many mediocre teams: 13 are 6-7 or 7-6. The 49ers are the clear class of the NFC, if not the NFL, and Seattle has been beaten by that Super Bowl contender by an aggregate score of 59-29 (average of about 30-15) twice over the past three weeks. So we know the gap between the Hawks and Super Bowl contention: two touchdowns.

But no one really knows what the solution for this team is. Many want Carroll gone (whether he is fired or retires). Others want coordinators ousted. Others want better players at key spots. Some people want all of the above.

One thing’s for sure: Something has to change.

Continue reading More ‘bad ball’ from the defense means it’s time to look ahead

Playoff chances are minimal and shrinking

The Seahawks’ chances of making the playoffs have dropped by more than 50% over the past four weeks, and Green Bay and Los Angeles look very capable of keeping them out.

Seattle has a 23% chance of getting in, down from 81% before its current three-game losing streak, per the New York Times’ projections. The Packers (70%), Rams (50%) and Vikings (42%) all have the statistical inside track on the NFC’s two last wild-card spots now (Dallas has the top spot).

Assuming the Hawks lose to the 49ers and Eagles over the next two weeks, they would need to win their final three – at Tennessee, vs. Pittsburgh and at Arizona – to finish 9-8 and have any shot of making it.

But they would have to ace out two of the three wild-card contenders mentioned above. And that could be pretty difficult.

Continue reading Playoff chances are minimal and shrinking

Carroll won’t win another playoff game unless he creates a ‘conflict defense’

It’s very difficult to see Pete Carroll ever winning another playoff game unless he changes the way his defense plays. We’ve seen the same thing for six seasons now, which is enough to know it is more than just the players who are at fault.

Last Thursday in Dallas, the Seahawks’ offense finally snapped out of a two-month funk and looked like the unit we expected it to be all season, but the defense remained a broken record playing the same old sad-sack song.

The offense was surprisingly competitive against the Cowboys in the 41-35 loss, but Seattle’s slide continued as expected – now four losses in five games. And, with a terrible defense yet again, there is no encouraging sign the Hawks will be able to beat San Francisco and Philadelphia in the next two weeks to stop that skid.

Continue reading Carroll won’t win another playoff game unless he creates a ‘conflict defense’