Seahawks problems may be perfect 'fit' for Bears offense
November 28, 2012, 7:00 am
Conventional wisdom (and being “conventional” in the NFL is death) is that you blitz a rookie quarterback, which the Seattle Seahawks have in Russell Wilson from Wisconsin.
But part of convention also is to blitz a struggling offensive line, which the Bears aren’t exactly, just one with potentially three starters next Sunday who weren’t in those positions nine days ago.
The intention is to force quick and multiple decisions by a group still in a molten state. With Gabe Carimi and Edwin Williams at guard (assuming Chris Spencer’s knee is not sound enough for a full game) and Jonathan Scott at right tackle, causing upheaval in protection schemes and ensuing assaults on Jay Cutler simply makes sense. The Bears are still 32nd in passing yardage, 30th in yards per pass play and 32nd in sacks per pass play.
But here’s the problem for Seattle, ranked third defensively in passing yards allowed and seventh in sacks per pass play:
The Bears are 10th in rushing yards and the Seahawks are bad against the run (26th in yards per attempt). But it goes deeper than that.
Consider this
assessment by Danny O’Neil, Seahawks beat writer for the Seattle Times:
“When Frank Gore rushed for 92 yards in the second half of Seattle's loss at San Francisco last month, it was chalked up to scheme. The 49ers ran a trap play that Seattle didn't adjust to adequately. When Adrian Peterson gained 182 yards on the ground two weeks later, it was a testament to Peterson's MVP-caliber comeback. But when Miami gains 189 yards on the ground? Well, that's a pretty sure sign of a serious problem. The Dolphins hadn't rushed for more than 100 yards in a game as a team since September yet Reggie Bush and Daniel Thomas averaged more than 6 yards per carry against the Seahawks.” Pass blocking is defensive by nature; run blocking is offensive. For a Bears offensive line still coming together, a smash-mouth game plan plays into its strength as well as protects the less experienced.
Danny goes into some detail on the specifics of the decline in Seattle’s run defense. Then he points to a situation that further suggests if you just stay close to the Seahawks, they will crack.
“No defense for the fourth quarterSeattle is now batting .400 when it needs one stop to seal the game or force overtime. That's a great average in baseball, but it might turn out costing the Seahawks a playoff berth. Seattle's defense has given up a game-winning score in the final 5 minutes of its losses at Arizona, at Detroit and now at Miami. The Seahawks did manage to shut the door on New England and Carolina, but if coffee were for closers…then the Seahawks are sipping on tea.” And if anybody with any connection to Seattle isn’t doing coffee, something’s already wrong.
Tags: nfl,
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San Francisco 49ers,
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edwin williams,
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Danny O'Neil,
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Gabe Carimi,
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Chris Spencer,
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russell wilson ,
Jonathan Scott