Posting that Adams clip indicates that you are either unaware that he couldn't use his right arm due to the shoulder injury, or that you know and don't care about the details if it furthers your agenda.
My argument is that you are not considering the variations of player performance when you claim that little has changed besides the Carson injury. Imagine that you could evaluate every one of Russ's performances and then plot a distribution based on how well he personally played against his own average. It would look something like the following:

Most of the time, Russ plays within a standard deviation of his own performance mean. However, like any human he will also have occasional games where he is +/- multiple standard deviations as a basic fact of Statistics 101. It's a fundamental concept that 10% of his games will involve Russ at his 10th percentile low. Those are going to be very tough/impossible for the Seahawks to win due to the other factors outlined, and sometimes it really can be as simple as our key player having an off game.
The impact of no running threat and poor defense is huge because it means that we can't win games where Russ isn't good by his own standards, and those are inevitable. I don't have an issue with apportioning blame to the lack of a running game and the defense, but assuming a causative link between them and Russ having a bad day does not fit what we saw on the field. He missed hot routes, took bad sacks, threw late, tried to pick up that fumble instead of falling on it, and was generally inaccurate (compared to himself).Sgt Largent":21fxp0ua said:If you can't see that the only thing that's changed the past three weeks for our offense is the absence of a run threat, then idk what to tell you.
My argument is that you are not considering the variations of player performance when you claim that little has changed besides the Carson injury. Imagine that you could evaluate every one of Russ's performances and then plot a distribution based on how well he personally played against his own average. It would look something like the following:

Most of the time, Russ plays within a standard deviation of his own performance mean. However, like any human he will also have occasional games where he is +/- multiple standard deviations as a basic fact of Statistics 101. It's a fundamental concept that 10% of his games will involve Russ at his 10th percentile low. Those are going to be very tough/impossible for the Seahawks to win due to the other factors outlined, and sometimes it really can be as simple as our key player having an off game.