Maelstrom787
Well-known member
But they had a TO called, Pete is on the headset listening, why if it was called as a pass and that was it then once in the huddle the pay called yeah I can see that. But if they called the play on the sideline there was time. Secondly if Russell seen the defense alignment was set against the success of it why no damn audible ? Unless he was scared to or not allowed to. Seeing Browner lined up across from Kearse would have been an automatic indicator.
Pretty sure any QB that was a leader would have changed it and took the hit after the play or fallout, chances are it would not have been an INT. I am betting Hass, Favre, Brady, hell almost everyone that played and was in high stakes games would have made a decision to audible and took the heat if it needed. Thats what a leader does.
We got everything the opposite, failed leadership in the huddle and on the field, failed execution of a bad play to begin with, failed accountability by Bevell, throwing a player under the bus again Bevell, Pete doing the honorable thing in taking heat, but failed to hold Bevell accountable, failed to address Bevell's throwing a player under the bus, all that caused us the failure to keep the team together, the divide had been made, the trust broken.
There wasn't a lot of time to audible, and there was 5 seconds left on the playclock. The game clock was running and they had one timeout. An audible there is complicated - checking to run into an 8-man box is a terrible choice (without the benefit of hindsight) and it forces you to take a timeout afterward - which means you really can't run on the next snap, telegraphing the pass.
There are a lot of plays in the NFL in which the defense knows what is coming. Execution is hard to defend regardless of whether you know what is coming or not, and even with Browner recognizing the play it took several things going exactly wrong for Seattle for that play to end in a turnover. Between ball placement, Kearse's block, Lockette's attempt at the catch, and Butler JUST getting there... even with Browner knowing, you don't expect that to end in a turnover.
There's no world in which Russ, again without the benefit in hindsight, would've been right to check into a run against an 8 man box - and an audible into a separate pass play would've taken too much time off that clock.
I get where you're coming from, but this line of thinking would end in on-field disaster more often than not when you're down to every single second mattering like Seattle was. There just wasn't time.
I've analyzed this over and over, frame by frame like the Zapruder film. Studied the game situation, the personnel on the field, the dynamics of the formation and call, Browner's body language, Marshawn's eyes, Russell's throw, Malcolm's angle to the ball... all of it. I have an unhealthy obsession with the end of that game.
After countless hours of doing nothing but pondering every aspect of that play, it becomes clear to me...
We just got really, really f****** unlucky.
It took so many things going wrong at the same exact time for that ball to end up intercepted. Removing hindsight from the equation makes the decision to pass and even the individual call itself totally defensible.
Even with Browner knowing the play, we had the exact look we wanted. Lockette had a butt ass naked path to the endzone. The route didn't flatten enough into the open space, the throw led Lockette too far, Kearse really didn't block nearly as well as he could've, Lockette's attempt at the catch was poor...
They knew what was coming and they still had a perfectly reasonable shot at a touchdown. Just like a goal line fade, or a simple goal line rush. Goal line plays are often extremely predictable and players know what's coming. That isn't always the end-all be-all. The staples are the staples because in the NFL, knowing what's coming is not enough. The good plays work anyway if they're executed properly.
Most of the real mistakes happened after the game with regard to ownership and accountability. No healing could take place with certain parties responding in certain ways.
I'm fine with the decision to pass. I'm fine with the individual play. God, fate, random chance, whatever... we weren't meant to win that game. I've made my peace with it.
There's comfort in the knowledge that sometimes, things just don't work out. Accepting that is a big part of life.