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Paul G's avatar

FWIW, KJ Wright thought the play-calling was fine. We probably shouldn’t be surprised that an offense that has trouble converting third downs gets conservative on second-and-short.

I’ve been a sports fan for over sixty years. It’s my experience that when writers and fans explain offensive deficiencies as about anything but the QB (“it’s the line; it’s the play-calling; it’s DK; it’s not playing Charbonnet enough”), they are avoiding the issue. *All* of those could have been true on Sunday and the Seahawks would still have beaten Cincinnati with better QB play. On the other hand, expecting none of them to be issues strikes me as missing the point. Lines *will* struggle at times, and not every play will be the right call. That’s why good QBs are precious—they make it so that none of that makes a difference.

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zezinhom400's avatar

If Seattle could have easily scored 4+ TD’s as you’ve shown, despite the OL issues and the useless formations and Waldron’s other shortcomings and Walker not getting the ball enough, etc, and if all that’s on tape (not theoretical), then doesn’t it essentially come down to Geno either not seeing the field or being hesitant/late?

Is where I land.

Hell even with just 2 of those 4+ TD layups, we’d be talking about a 10pt win on the road against a preseason Super Bowl shortlist team. And we’d be 4-1. Completely different mood.

But….we’re not.

And Geno’s the reason.

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