Spin Doctor
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You're vastly overplaying the risk here. People around the nation already say it was Seattle's defense that won the Super Bowl. Wilson was an important cog in the wheel, but he played second fiddle to Marshawn and the defense during that run, at least according to the fans around the league. That isn't exactly wrong, but it isn't right either, it is a half truth. People often cite the drop in wins, and playoff success after the defense was slowly aging, and being dismantled as well.HansGruber":1kz4hsw1 said:It would be a very high-risk move by Wilson. And no doubt about it, Wilson would have to be the one driving that trade.
If he went to NYG and that team wasn't immediately Superbowl material, it would ruin his career. You're talking about losing hundreds of millions on that bet.
Bad coaching? Injuries? Wouldn't matter. He'd be the next Kirk Cousins. Everyone would immediately say it was the Seattle defense that won that Superbowl and got us there. And Carroll will have a team in the playoffs with or without him. So that argument gets a lot of traction.
Wilson is a businessman. Smart enough to know he doesn't want to be the next Kirk Cousins. Yeah, dude got one big contract. But he'll never see Superbowl QB money again.
For what? So his wife can MAYBE earn $20-50m if she's somehow able to resurrect a singing career? Lol. Yeah ok.
Wilson needs the Seahawks as much as they need him. No way he leaves Seattle. I'd put a paycheck on it.
Unfortunately, none of those criticisms will ever be answered underneath the Carroll regime. As I said in an earlier post, we're playing the offensive equivalent to the prevent defense. Carroll's main concern is minimizing the toxic differential above all else. He could care less about having a productive offense. Carroll's philosophy is the NFL equivalent of Mohommed Ali's rope a dope. Sitting on the rope, dodging punches until the other person has punched themselves out, and is struggling to catch their breath, then striking. Even in our hey-day rarely ever blew teams out, even clearly inferior teams. Really we only open up our playbook at the 11th hour. As a result, there are tight reigns put on the Quarterback and his agency in the game. Russ does not have the agency that most NFL QB's have.
This is why I could see Russell Wilson wanting to leave Seattle at some point, and trying to force some kind of trade. Wilson is the type of guy to take a gamble on himself, and he always has been.
Now as far as the Giants go, they actually are closer than you think to being competitive. They have one of the best running backs in the NFL, a decent offensive line, a very good WR corp in Sterling Sherpard and Beckham, and an above average TE in Evan Engram. A QB like Wilson could immediately jump start that team. Eli Manning is not really a QB that is capable of carrying a team these days. Defensively they need a lot of work, but that is exactly the type of team that could dispel any sort of negative notions about Russell Wilson. That offense is really just one piece away from being a real powerhouse in the NFL, the Quarterback.
Now, will any of this happen? I suspect not. I think both sides are just going to go with the status-quo. I think the biggest person we need to watch out for is Russell's agent. I could see him coming up with some crazy plan. In fact, that rumor may be directly from him. He's a big fan of "leaking" information to the media and creating false narratives to drive up Wilson's price. I would also be wary of this guys influence over Russ. Wilson seems to really trust this guys opinions. I could see him coming up with some crazy scheme to get him out of Seattle, or perhaps using that as a feint to drive up the price.