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The Tale Of The Trenches: How One Michigan Offensive Lineman Survived Being Singled Out

The Tale Of The Trenches: How One Michigan Offensive Lineman Survived Being Singled Out

The Wisconsin Badgers visited Ann Arbor and brought with them one of the craziest defenses in college football. One so complex and purposely odd that labeling it was dually confusing, as the label neither described what the Badgers were doing, and by giving the Badgers that label, it drew into question the label itself. Technically, the Badgers played a 3-4 defense, but watching Wisconsin on Saturday felt jarring. With so many players cutting, shifting, or dropping into coverage, it took…

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2015 Seahawks Re-Watch, Week 14: Baldwin Blows Up

2015 Seahawks Re-Watch, Week 14: Baldwin Blows Up

Wilson’s primary target was the often overlooked Doug Baldwin, a gritty player and persona who had never complained about the size of his role in the offense and was vocal about his demands that the other pass catchers follow suit. What had led Baldwin’s burst was his running style. Baldwin was able to go off-stride and change direction with precision, oftentimes using shoulder and head movements to disguise his feet. In doing so, he was tying defenders into knots and then blowing past them, where he would be—by no exaggeration of the term—wide open with nary an opponent’s jersey in sight. Against the Steelers, Baldwin put up 145, for a 24 yard/catch average. Against the Vikings, it was 94, for an 18.8 yard average. Against the Ravens, it was 82, for a 13.7 yard average. Out of Wilson’s 11 touchdown passes during the last three weeks, Baldwin had accounted for five. Against the Ravens, he and Wilson added three more.

For his final TD, Baldwin was covered by cornerback Ladarius Webb. Webb, whose slight nudge on Baldwin had prevented an earlier touchdown, had decided he needed a bigger cushion against the speedster. Backpedaling from Baldwin before the snap, Baldwin started at Webb furiously but then laid off the speed while still accelerating and lengthening his strides. The result was like an off-speed pitch in baseball. At the release, it felt like the pitch would come in hot, but it arrived so late that the batter had already swung. In this case, Webb had panicked when Baldwin rushed him and had gotten happy feet, forcing him to leap when Baldwin stutter-stepped to the outside. Webb flopped onto his hands and knees. He was turned so far around that he was able to watch Baldwin complete the catch.

2015 Seahawks Re-Watch, Week 13: A Complete Win

2015 Seahawks Re-Watch, Week 13: A Complete Win

After an offensive juggernaut against the Pittsburg Steelers, and being 4-1 over their last five games, the Seahawks were resembling the team of yonder. Spending most of the season in a daze, it was hard to know if these point explosions—in the last three contests, the offense had scored 32, 29, and 39—were signs of true development or simply a fluke. The team would be tested once again in week 13, facing another likely playoff team. The surprising Minnesota Vikings, who had amassed an 8-3 record, were winning in a way the Seahawks recognized. By utilizing a smart, tough defense, the Vikings kept games close, and by utilizing their dynamic tailback, Adrian Peterson, they set a slow and suffocating pace to games.

The way to beat the Vikings was not so different from the way to beat the Seahawks. Use the pass to build an early lead and put that great defense on its heels instead of its toes, thereby relegating that great running game to the bench. Victory was only a matter of sinking the Viking defense’s low scoring ambitions, but could the offense deliver?

2015 Seahawks Re-Watch, Week 11: My Name is Thomas Rawls.

2015 Seahawks Re-Watch, Week 11: My Name is Thomas Rawls.

Thomas Rawl’s statline against the San Francisco 49ers was to a scene stealer by itself—30 carries for 209 rushing yards and two touchdowns—but the numbers only hinted at the production. Rawls, the undrafted rookie, in only his third start, went from a frieght train of potential to an all-purpose, every-down back—a rarified package. Rawls was so quick to the attack point, and so decisive, that he was through the gap before the defense could even square up for a tackle. Once a defender was out of position for a tackle, Rawls would turn on the power. Fighting off arm-tackles and shin grabs, he would plant his feet forward, producing meaningful yards after contact. As the game went out, he turned into a first down machine, moving the chains again and again. Hell, he even did a little read-option with Wilson.

His dominance commanded such respect, he even came to run the play-action for himself. In the fourth quarter, 49er safety Jimmie Ward crashed to the line of scrimmage to establish early position on Rawls. Ward stayed with Rawls on the snap, but Ward soon gave up, as Rawls was not given the hand-off. Rawls went slightly limp, slowing down, serving as a minor obstruction to Ward. Ward’s eyes were so stuck on the ball, he gave no notice that Rawls had escaped upfield. While Rawls did this, tight end Luke Willson had also played as if he would run block, but like Rawls, he soon become disinterested, and snuck into the open field. On his third progression, Russell Wilson threw to an open Rawls. With Willson as lead-blocker, 49ers linerback Michael Wilhoite had to slow up, giving Rawls time to secure the ball and cut inside on the overpursing Wilhoite. Rawls took off in a straight line for the end zone, finding Willson at his front to obstruct cornerback Marcus Cromartie.

The result was a touchdown.

2015 Seahawks Re-Watch, Week 1: The Rams…Again.

2015 Seahawks Re-Watch, Week 1: The Rams…Again.

The hype for the 2015-2016 Seahawks season was unlike any season before it. Coming off of two straight Super Bowl appearances, and the belief that the Seahawks had lost the Super Bowl more than the Patriots had won it, fueled the perception that the Seahawks were as unbeatable a squad as any in NFL history. The Legion of Boom was in its prime. Bobby Wagner’s and Russell Wilson’s contracts were settled, the latter’s contract having been a controversial subject for fans. Beast Mode was back, and who didn’t love to see those Lynch runs? Everyone was confident, including the Seahawks themselves.