Lagartixa
Well-known member
I have Hasselbeck third among Seahawks quarterbacks, but I can understand if people put him second.
The best was Wilson, and it's nowhere near close, even adjusting for era. I think a lot of Seahawks fans still overrate Wilson (the ones who claim he was "top-five" for much of his career, when he was actually among the five most-valuable quarterbacks in the league for one or maybe two seasons in his career, and he was never very close to the top guy of a given year), but it'll be a long time before a Seahawks quarterback ever manages to contribute more overall career value on the field (for the Seahawks) than Wilson did. It may never happen.
Wilson's flaws were (and continue to be) real, but Carroll and his offensive coördinators were simply great at taking maximal advantages of Wilson's considerable strengths while minimizing the damage from his considerable weaknesses. I think in just about any other situation, Wilson would have looked like a career backup with a short career, and quite possibly like a waste of a third-round draft pick. Instead, he ended up being a truly great player for a third-rounder. Not Canton-great, but really great for a third rounder.
Now, between Krieg and Hasselbeck, you have to start getting into the weeds of era adjustments. I think Krieg was better than Hasselbeck in comparison to other quarterbacks during their respective times in the league, but there are extremely solid arguments for the opposite position, and that doesn't bother me much, because we're still talking about second place.
I've got Zorn fourth, for what it's worth. He is one of my all-time favorite NFL players and easily my favorite Seahawks QB of all time (so far), and he was my first childhood sports hero, but there's a sizeable gap, even adjusting for era, between him and the next two, and then an even-bigger gap between them and Wilson.
The best was Wilson, and it's nowhere near close, even adjusting for era. I think a lot of Seahawks fans still overrate Wilson (the ones who claim he was "top-five" for much of his career, when he was actually among the five most-valuable quarterbacks in the league for one or maybe two seasons in his career, and he was never very close to the top guy of a given year), but it'll be a long time before a Seahawks quarterback ever manages to contribute more overall career value on the field (for the Seahawks) than Wilson did. It may never happen.
Wilson's flaws were (and continue to be) real, but Carroll and his offensive coördinators were simply great at taking maximal advantages of Wilson's considerable strengths while minimizing the damage from his considerable weaknesses. I think in just about any other situation, Wilson would have looked like a career backup with a short career, and quite possibly like a waste of a third-round draft pick. Instead, he ended up being a truly great player for a third-rounder. Not Canton-great, but really great for a third rounder.
Now, between Krieg and Hasselbeck, you have to start getting into the weeds of era adjustments. I think Krieg was better than Hasselbeck in comparison to other quarterbacks during their respective times in the league, but there are extremely solid arguments for the opposite position, and that doesn't bother me much, because we're still talking about second place.
I've got Zorn fourth, for what it's worth. He is one of my all-time favorite NFL players and easily my favorite Seahawks QB of all time (so far), and he was my first childhood sports hero, but there's a sizeable gap, even adjusting for era, between him and the next two, and then an even-bigger gap between them and Wilson.