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Doug's avatar

I always feel like McDowell should be left out of the discussion unless the argument is the Seahawks should have known he was the type of guy who would get into an ATV accident... before the draft the knock on him was only that he took plays off playing for a baaaad MSU team, but that he had undeniable NFL talent.

But, yeah.

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KHammarling's avatar

Throw out "JS did X before". There are distinct periods of the JS/PC era, with the key there being 50% of that is PC. The 'Hawks were very much a collaboration with 50% of the decision making input (arguably more, we'll get to that) coming from Pete.

We have the 2010-~13 era, the "Legion of Boom". Coming out of CFB Pete knows a ton of whats happening. You have an excited partnership with a newly minted GM, and a team that needed something new. A fair chunk of roster moves and taking swings, based on exciting new ideas and knowledge of the players coming through. Paired with coaching who could actually improve players, and players that wanted to play hard.

Then we hit the 2014-21 era, the "always compete". Too many second guesses and reaches to try and keep the team in reach of the superbowl, despite obviously getting further away every year. Pete has established himself the 'the man' in Seattle and i'd put forther is the primary driver on draft and roster moves. Excpet he's not seeing the changes to the NFL, regressing as a coach, and no longer has an accurate insight on players coming up.

Finally we have the 2022-2023 era, the "fuck it lets try going back to what did work". A re-evaluation of the draft process and roster construction. We see changes, and they almost all work. The glaring issues being the contracts and retention of 'Pete's guys' which kind of reinfornces my idea that Pete had a lot of control on the roster before, and we had a bit of behind the scenes wrestle so when results continued to flail because Pete was a bit cooked as a coach, it all came to a head and he was gone.

So the notes to take from this? Coaches who know the recent/next grop of CFB players can have an advantage (MM has a little, Grubb a lot, Peetz a bit, Hill a good amount, Partridge a lot, Harbaugh a lot). When going back to character focus and more defined BPA draft we have success. And when using those, a trade down can work out but equally so does holding in place.

In conclusion: If it's a trend from the last two years, it counts. If it's a trend from 2010-~2013 take some notes from it. Anything else is irrelevant. It's a new time in Seattle and i'm willing to give JS/MM a clean slate. They're already bucking trends of the last years under JS/PC which tells me it is different and we should be thinking different. (Thus i can argue we're making moves to set-up for 2025 where we trade up/pick high to get Ewers and be the first team to win the Superbowl with a rookie).

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