Field Gulls
After not allowing opponents to score a touchdown for 9 consecutive quarters, the Seattle Seahawks said “this looks fun, let me try!”
Six scoring drives. 18 points.
Six scoring drives if they’re touchdowns gets you 42 points. Field goals don’t win postseason games.
Unless, apparently, Jason Myers is on a hot one.
I’ll just get it out of the way early: Seattle doesn’t win that game with early-season Myers. Seattle doesn’t win that game quite a few years of his career Myers. But right now, Jason Myers hasn’t missed a kick since before Thanksgiving and he is a superhero.
But yes. The offense is broken. How? Why?? We dive in after these brief messages.
I don’t know who Brian Drake is – he looks like a guy I used to play volleyball with – but allow me to disagree. This is the premise of this piece: significant problems on offense exist right now, but Sam Darnold is not the problem. A second contention: Darnold is currently damaged, but he’s not broken, and he’s on his way to repair.
Let’s frame the argument this way, statistically. Seattle had a dynamically better game than the Indianapolis Colts. Here’s the breakdown:
Furthermore, Sam Darnold led the ultimate game-winning drive with 47 total seconds on the clock, Philip Rivers did not.
And yet, on 11 drives, only six of them scored, and only field goals.
I was at the game in person this time, which always adds a layer of perspective you just don’t get on the TV. I remember one time on a pitch left to Zach Charbonnet, seeing the hole open up far before he got there, whooping it up as it materialized into the big run of the game.
One time. It was eight yards. It was the longest run of the game.
Unfortunately, we are back to that. The run game is a massive problem. Seattle’s in the bottom-third of the league in rush yards per game this month, and it’s getting worse. 2.3YPC was the final mark against the Colts.
The inability to run the ball is both a symptom and a cause of the current offensive disastrophe. The following series began with a penalty on the kick return and ended with fans booing the offense off the field when the punt team came on.
Undeniably the worst drive of the series. Every single play contained a Colts player in Seattle’s backfield, plus a false start.
The problem is what we hoped it wasn’t this year, but that which it has been for years, now. The offensive line continues to struggle.
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