The Jags went out because they have a QB that is not living up to expectations. Injuries or not...
Precisely. He made several bad throws. Not a couple, several. If he was
that hurt he should not have even been playing.
Pathetic Bronco game. Didn't watch much of it but saw enough at how bad the Broncos are. O'Connell outplayed Stidman, who looks more like a backup in his career potential.
Like I said, Stidham is "okay". He really is a career back-up. Not a bad thing, really. But I don't see any team signing him to be their #1 QB. Even after Denver cuts Wilson, they are going to look for another vet (or somehow get a high draft pick) to legitimately compete with Stiddy. At most, he could be their starter for a rebuilding season, while they recover from the horrifying cap hit and dead money they will be facing for the Wilson debacle.
Speaking of. There's a situation where the Raiders could sign Wilson. Wilson could take the veteran minimum of $2m a year, which would leave Denver completely on the hook for some $35m of his salary next season. Let that sink in for a moment. Actually, any team could sign Wilson this way. But a division rival would be the best way to stick it to the Broncos. Though I'm sure Wilson is going to want to go to a team that welcomes him as their starter (Not sure where that would be though).
Here's the big question: Did the Raiders do enough under Pierce for him to be offered the HC job? I think so but I'm not Davis. Lol (we should know very soon I would think).
He's a blatantly obvious choice. The team was noticeably better with him than McDaniels, and he's shown a keen interest in learning, and growing. And the players love the guy. But who knows what goes through Mark Davis brain? He could offer Pierce a 5 year deal tomorrow, or sit around a month then announce he's hiring Gruden back. Which would of course be a disaster setting the team back a decade.
Seahawks will need to have major changes this off-season if they want to get out of mediocrity.
End of an era and time for ‘new blood.’
Keep in mind, per Paul Allen's trust, at some point Jody Allen has to sell the team. Now, one could easily argue that dissolving a $20b trust into a sustainable charity will take many years, and that's true. And I'm sure the Seahawks are one of the biggest "jewels" in that crown. Jody can also argue to any critic that the Seahawks are a financially growing enterprise, well run under her guidance, so there is obviously no hurry to sell.
I bring this up because while she may be heavily relying on Chuck Arnold and John Schneider, starting an era of "new blood", a post-Pete Carroll team, has to be taken into consideration with any attempt to sell. Put another way, they are arguably at a very high premium today, and presuming Pete stays on another year, she could start talking offers now, with plans to sell in the 2025 off-season, when the new owner can bring in whomever they like. But if the entire Seahawk org feels pressured by that, or that it won't make financial sense, it benefits Jody to keep Arnold and Schneider, let them find a new coach, sign that person to a 4-6 year deal, then after that dust settles (2026? 2027?) start looking for buyers at that time.
I still believe Jeff Bezos is interested in buying the Seahawks, and coughing up a $5b check to the Paul Allen Trust for the team would be like you and me digging a couple $20 bills out of your wallet (well, maybe).
It wasn't about running up the score, like people think. It was apparently deception. The Falcons were expecting the Saints to take a knee, and instead, well, here's apparently what happened: The offense asked DA if Jamaal Williams could get a TD. He said no and told them to take a knee. The players ran the play for a TD anyway. Allen later said Smith had a right to be upset. “That’s not who we are, not what we’re about.”