Holmgren and Carroll
Posted: Tue Jun 30, 2020 9:26 pm
A few different discussion on this forum have got me thinking lately. Both of these coaches who took Seahawk teams to the Super Bowl had at least some control over the players being brought in. Am I the only one that thinks they did it backwards?
Holmgren had to write "run the damn ball" on his play sheet. This from a man that had Jones, Hutch, Tobeck, Grey, and Locklear across the line. We lost a Super Bowl where Hasselbeck, a good but far from great QB, threw it 49 times. The NFL's MVP Alexander? 20 carries for 95 yards. Rothlisberger had one of the worst days by a QB ever, let alone in a Super Bowl. I feel like we would have lead 13 to 3 at the half with Pete's style and that team and the Steelers would be wondering why their offense was never on the field!
That O Line and that RB that seemed the perfect fit for that line? And you have to remind yourself to run the ball, and on the biggest stage not only turned it over to Matt, but threw it 8 times to Jeremy Stevens show he could show us all how much butter was on his fingers? I think that run would have been something else if you give Pete that team. That probably isn't the only Super Bowl we go to.
Flash forward to now? Can you imagine Holmgren in the seasons after the Super Bowl? As Russ developed, the defense was maybe not "best ever" like the 12, 13 and 14 seasons, but pretty damn good. I will tell you this, we don't lose to the Cowboys wondering why we never stopped running the ball even thought a very good Cowboy defense knew it was coming. I also don't think we set the world on fire to and go 6 and 1 to get into the playoffs only to abandon that style for two quarters in the second round against Carolina. That team was firing on all cylinders in the passing game once Beast got hurt, but he comes back the week of the Panther game and Pete decides to see what happens if we stop passing for thirty minutes. Well, what happens is we trailed 31 to 3. Freaking Holmgren would have ditched the run after the second TD that Carolina scored...and probably the first TD!
Just seems odd that both men have a very different style, and each's style seems to fit the team that the OTHER one assembled.
Holmgren had to write "run the damn ball" on his play sheet. This from a man that had Jones, Hutch, Tobeck, Grey, and Locklear across the line. We lost a Super Bowl where Hasselbeck, a good but far from great QB, threw it 49 times. The NFL's MVP Alexander? 20 carries for 95 yards. Rothlisberger had one of the worst days by a QB ever, let alone in a Super Bowl. I feel like we would have lead 13 to 3 at the half with Pete's style and that team and the Steelers would be wondering why their offense was never on the field!
That O Line and that RB that seemed the perfect fit for that line? And you have to remind yourself to run the ball, and on the biggest stage not only turned it over to Matt, but threw it 8 times to Jeremy Stevens show he could show us all how much butter was on his fingers? I think that run would have been something else if you give Pete that team. That probably isn't the only Super Bowl we go to.
Flash forward to now? Can you imagine Holmgren in the seasons after the Super Bowl? As Russ developed, the defense was maybe not "best ever" like the 12, 13 and 14 seasons, but pretty damn good. I will tell you this, we don't lose to the Cowboys wondering why we never stopped running the ball even thought a very good Cowboy defense knew it was coming. I also don't think we set the world on fire to and go 6 and 1 to get into the playoffs only to abandon that style for two quarters in the second round against Carolina. That team was firing on all cylinders in the passing game once Beast got hurt, but he comes back the week of the Panther game and Pete decides to see what happens if we stop passing for thirty minutes. Well, what happens is we trailed 31 to 3. Freaking Holmgren would have ditched the run after the second TD that Carolina scored...and probably the first TD!
Just seems odd that both men have a very different style, and each's style seems to fit the team that the OTHER one assembled.