hawknation2015":28whcsx4 said:
massari":28whcsx4 said:
kidhawk":28whcsx4 said:
Makes sense looking at the receivers on our roster. I'd probably rank them as follows, but I wouldn't be surprised to see T.L. rise on that list over the course of this season.
1) Baldwin, Doug
2) Kearse, Jermaine
3) Lockett, Tyler
4) Lockette, Ricardo
5) Matthews, Chris
6) Daniels, B.J.
Lockette has 380 yards in 3 seasons and is 29 years old. He should be the #6 WR and cut when Richardson comes back.
I don't think I agree with it, but Lockett(e) has been listed as 2nd string at WR, while Matthews and Daniels are 3rd string on the depth chart:
http://www.seahawks.com/team/depth-chart
To me, that shows how weak this receiving corps is outside of the Top 3 . . . even though Carroll has called the WR corps "deep."
"Deep" can have various meanings, depending what way you look at it.
1. Experience:
Baldwin is in his 5th year, entering his 4th with Wilson.
Kearse is in his 4th year, entering his 4th with Wilson, 3rd year with a prominent role, 2nd year as a starter.
Lockette is in his 5th year, like 3 and half with the team, entering his 2nd and half with Russell Wilson.
These guys are Veterans. They've been here for the last two Championship runs. We now see a mature Baldwin leading the corps, Kearse may or may not be better with his consistency but he's playing for a contract and that usually means a strong season for a young player, Lockette is also playing for a contract and he did some good things last year at times as with some bad things but maybe he gets better learning from his experiences. Also, besides these three having established trust and experience with Wilson, their familiarity within the system, they are all good to great blockers in the running game.
2. Potential:
Lockett is special. Its not a matter of IF but a matter of WHEN. If you asked me if the Seahawks could find a player with the dominate downfield ability of Tate, crisp route-running quickness of Baldwin, and the smooth athleticism of Harvin, without the headaches, without the immaturity, without the diva-ness, without the attitude, I would have said "you couldn't" but then Tyler Lockett was drafted by the Seahawks.
Matthews, he'll be given a chance to move up the depth chart for sure but he's been out for 2-3 weeks and Wilson has built trust with the guys he's practiced with, So Matthews kind of has to earn his snaps. But his potential to dominant like he did in the Superbowl is still there. The fact that he starts on the active squad instead of the practice squad is a testament that the Seahawks believe he can be big factor. He's also still young, still learning to be a consummate pro, still growing into his own potential. Not everyone had a Kevin Lockett to look up to and be full-throttle right of the bat in this league.
Daniels, I'm not going to say much but Deep is, what Deep does, would you rather have athletic raw potential like Daniels or Bryan Walters at the 6th?
Paul Richardson don't forget about him, 2 months from now, this kid could be back, by season's end, he could finish what he was progressing towards last year, a very outstanding WR with a great pair of mitts in the short to intermediate field.
3: Practice Squad
I don't think "Deep" stops on a 53-man Depth chart, Seahawks kept Kevin Smith and Kasen Williams close for a good reason, many of us thought one or both should have made the roster.
4. Versatility
"WR" or Wide Receiver itself can also mean various things.
Graham has lined up at WR for most of his career and has dominated those mis-matches.
Seahawks will send Lynch wide in empty back sets at times and he has been very good with his opportunities.
Don't know much about Fred Jackson "out wide" but his statistical history suggest that he as well as seen time at "WR" on occasion and has done well.
If we merely talking RECEIVER, it gets a little broader.
Rawls has looked pretty decent catching the rock and will get the opportunity to refine those skills behind mentors Lynch and Jackson.
Coleman is very good as a backfield option.
Willson and Helfet are TEs who are more known from their receiving talent, than their blocking talent. Or at least their current receiving talent is better than their current blocking talent.
CONCLUSION: I don't think Carroll was specifically pin-pointing the 6 man unit on the 53man roster as "deep" but more so the broad spectrum of the different players on this team that can be utilized at "WR", in that sense the WR corps is very deep especially compared to what we had last year.
And even if Carroll was specifically talking about the 6 man unit.
2015 Baldwin, Kearse, Lockette are probably better than the 2014 version of Baldwin, Kearse, Lockette.
2015 Lockett, Matthews, Daniels are probably better than 2014 Harvin, Norwood, Walters.
Only wild card is Paul Richardson. Can he return to the field? Can he regain his form? For now:
2015 Richardson probably isn't as good as 2014 Richardson.
But still you could argue that the unit is deeper, that it has a sense of depth, compared to what we had in years prior, I suppose.
Definitely, deeper and stronger than what the Seahawks ended the season with in the Superbowl, last year.