Sherman: 'mistakes and poor judgment' ruined the special Seahawks

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https://www.cbssports.com/nfl/news/...nd-poor-judgment-ruined-the-special-seahawks/

Richard Sherman says 'mistakes and poor judgment' ruined the special Seahawks
Sherman is now with their division rival 49ers

Back in 2012, the Seattle Seahawks came out of pretty much nowhere to win 11 games and emerge as one of the best teams in football. Led by a third-round draft pick at quarterback (Russell Wilson), a Buffalo Bills castoff at running back (Marshawn Lynch), and a group of defensive backs that would become known as the Legion of Boom, the Seahawks bruised and bullied the rest of the NFL.

Things continued on that way for the next few seasons as the Wilson-led offense improved and the LOB-led defense added even more talent. Richard Sherman, Earl Thomas, and Kam Chancellor were joined by Bobby Wagner, K.J. Wright, Michael Bennett, Cliff Avril, and more, and the Seahawks made the playoffs every year from 2012 through 2016, winning one Super Bowl and narrowly losing another along the way. During that five-season span, only the Patriots and Broncos won more games than Seattle, and only New England had a better point differential.

Last season, things finally slowed down for the Seahawks amid injuries and inconsistency. Sherman ruptured his Achilles tendon. Avril and Chancellor each suffered potentially career-ending injuries. And the offense couldn't quite pick up all the slack.

A few months later, much has changed. Sherman's a 49er. Avril was released. Chancellor's retiring. Even defensive coordinator Kris Richard, who was with the team from the beginning of the LOB era, has moved on to take a position with the Cowboys.

Sherman, never one to mince words, did not hold back when asked by The MMQB's Robert Klemko about the breakup of the Seahawks. Here's what he said:

"It's just unfortunate. It's really unfortunate. I think it'll all come out when they do the 30 for 30. Mistakes and poor judgment on things ruined what could have been a really special deal. You don't have much left right now. And to say you're not going to pay Earl Thomas is just ... There's no decline in play there. He's played the game the right way. Who do you have to pay? You have the two best linebackers in the game. You have the quarterback. You have a great wide receiver in Doug [Baldwin]. And you're paying Duane Brown.

"They've lost their way. It's as simple as that. They've just lost their way. When you make too many mistakes over a long period of time, you kind of dig yourself a hole. And then when you backtrack, you gotta make a bunch of rash decisions to try and fill the hole and hope that it holds up.

"When we were rolling it was an environment for pure competitors. When it becomes something else, then it's more difficult to thrive in, and I think that's what was tough on Earl, that's what was tough on a lot of guys. But I think as it kind of progressed, you start seeing the writing on the wall. You're like, 'Not only are they probably moving in a different direction,' but it's like, 'Ah, well, I kind of want to move in a different direction, too.' So it happens like that. All great things must come to an end, I guess.

"I'm not even going to worry about it now. I've got bigger fish to fry."


Some of those mistakes have been talked about ad nauseam (the goal-line interception that cost the Seahawks a second Super Bowl) while others will probably take a few years to come out into the open. Either way, Sherman is surely correct that all great things must come to an end. The Seahawks were always going to break up eventually, for one reason or another. It just happened to come this year, and for reasons both within and beyond their control.
 
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One case of "poor judgement" I know that they made was they didn't hand it off to Marshawn Lynch and threw an interception at the end of the game and gave those stinkin Patriots another Super Bowl.
 
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They went to the show, and they lost.
Pointing fingers in hindsight is the easy thing to do, and I suspect there's a little regret over what could have been.

THAT SAID....I could go the rest of my life not hearing what Richard fucking Sherman has to say about any of it and I wish him and the Seahawks all the bad karma they have coming to them.
 
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a Buffalo Bills castoff at running back (Marshawn Lynch),

He was the key to that run IMO. Knowing that you had to stop the most physical RB of this era really opened up the passing game and Wilson took full advantage. Coupled with that defense they only had to avoid making mistakes.

Now that their time in the sun is over I'll bet the 12's won't be around as much. Watching them streaming out of the stadium after the lopsided Rams game was a treat. Hearing them boo at their own team was also a treat.
 
Same. Can't wait to see how he handles Cooks twice a year. What a bad matchup for them.

Well seeing as he's over 30 iirc and it generally takes more than a season to fully recover from Achilles surgery... I suspect he's going to struggle against quick receivers like Cooks.

And Cooks has long speed, too, so once he's gotten separation, he's GONE. Sherman always used technique to deny receivers, but if a receiver got behind him Sherman had to rely on Earl Thomas (which, honestly wasn't a bad plan).

And there's no Earl Thomas in SF...
 
He was the key to that run IMO. Knowing that you had to stop the most physical RB of this era really opened up the passing game and Wilson took full advantage. Coupled with that defense they only had to avoid making mistakes.

Now that their time in the sun is over I'll bet the 12's won't be around as much. Watching them streaming out of the stadium after the lopsided Rams game was a treat. Hearing them boo at their own team was also a treat.

I think I've watched that 10 min recap on NFL Network about a dozen times or more.

It never gets old.

It's just a clinic and what's crazy is that so many plays were left on the field and we STILL dominated them.

If this team ever starts executing at the level they're capable of on a consistent basis, this team wouldn't just be good...they could be all-time great.

That's how high the ceiling is for this team.
 
I think I've watched that 10 min recap on NFL Network about a dozen times or more.

It never gets old.

It's just a clinic and what's crazy is that so many plays were left on the field and we STILL dominated them.

If this team ever starts executing at the level they're capable of on a consistent basis, this team wouldn't just be good...they could be all-time great.

That's how high the ceiling is for this team.

No doubt. And tbh I think our ceiling is going to be defined by our defense this season. We're gonna win a ton of games and get into the playoffs. But winning enough games to get to that 13ish win plateau and win the home field advantage, plus being able to advance deep into the playoffs, that's gonna require defensive improvement.

On paper the defense looks pretty good. Strong up front and in the back end. But the edge and off ball LB play is going to determine how good they are at limiting points and more importantly flippin the field (3 'n outs with our offense will translate into points big time).
 
Uh, so signing/trading for a lotta talented FAs on defense (re-signing Sherman to a nice deal) while their QB was on a rookie contract was a bad idea? I hope not, because that's exactly what the Rams are doing.

Sherman is supposed to be some smart dude but he doesn't understand the economical repercussions that go with re-signing your franchise QB to a big contract. We've seen a few teams take a temporary downturn in talent when that happens. The key is the recovery time needed for the FO to rebuild with new, young talent.
See the saints.
 
I trust Les Snead. The guy just gets it done. Talked Tavon into a contact reduction, then trades him, and who would have thought he could trade Bradford and the great bust Greg Robinson?
 
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So the Hags got old. I don't think they draft well lately. Never replaced Lynch. Let the offensive line fall apart. You have to hit on the draft picks. The Rams have to hit on these offensive lineman they just drafted. You can pay all your good players and can't sign all the good free agents. You have to draft well.
 
Remember when John Schneider (Seahawks GM) was considered a genius in scouting? A lot of draft blunders in recent memory and that ultimately failed to keep the roster competitive.