It’s been four days since the Seattle Seahawks played a meaningless preseason game and somehow completely changed my entire view of their offense.
That is no easy feat.
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Like many, I’m not particularly fond of preseason football. It’s more of a necessary evil – the teams need to see the young players in game situations and everyone needs to get themselves ready for regular season action. You might, in the process, gain a tidbit or takeaway here or there that could play itself out into the season.
But this was more than that. Because the observations that stood out weren’t about individual players. They weren’t about who played well or deserved a roster spot or even a starting gig. Those things can be easily discounted with the reminder that it was the preseason, the other team wasn’t playing its best players and there was little-to-no gameplanning done during the week.
No. This was about the biggest and most important new face standing on the Seahawks’ sideline: offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak.
I might be in love. That was, I think, the best-called game of my time watching the Seahawks. Certainly in the past ten years.
It had everything. Fullbacks. Throwback “I” formations. Third-down runs. Competent and varied run schemes. Play action and movement building off the success of the run game.
And most importantly, an honest to goodness commitment to running the ball. What does that mean? It’s actually pretty simple. It means calling running plays! Lots of them. The Salk Doctrine states that you can’t run the ball unless you run the ball. And they certainly abided by that in this one.
They ran the ball 48 times. The gained 268 yards on the ground. And they physically dominated from the opening snap.
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After a decade in which subpar might be a compliment, the offensive line looked incredible. The running backs look dominant. The quarterbacks were in command. They controlled the ball and the clock. They finished in the red zone.
And the one constant among all of those success stories was the man in charge of the offense.
For years, we have heard the leaders of this organization talk about being a physical football team, running the ball as a way of creating a balanced offensive attack, and fixing the constant problems on the offensive line. That’s all it was: talk. Because year after year, the team failed to deliver on those themes.
There were some challenges. Russell Wilson wanted to “cook” and that led to division and uncertainty for anyone trying to call his games. Brian Schottenheimer and Shane Waldron had to navigate that minefield. Then it was Geno Smith and Ryan Grubb, a college coordinator trying to adapt his offense on a weekly basis. With challenges along the offensive line and no clear plan, that didn’t work.
I admit to being skeptical when Kubiak was first hired. Of the top candidates, he struck me as the safest more than the one with the highest ceiling. He had the requisite experience and the family name to boot. But would he be creative? Would he bring that physical mentality that we’ve watched in Detroit, Baltimore and other cities doing it that way?
We won’t truly know the answers to those questions for quite a while, but the early returns are extremely positive. In two preseason games, the offensive line has looked better than anytime in recent memory. The running game has resembled that of the teams doing it best. And the commitment to that style, to that identity, has been somewhere between tangible and obvious.
I don’t want to make too much of a preseason game because the results mean nothing. I’m not excited because they won or because they played well. But the way the game was called? The actual commitment to the running game? The emphasis on physicality and the personnel groupings?
All of those things mattered – a lot.
I am more excited about this season than at any point during this offseason. And I can’t wait to see what Kubiak does next.
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