(Note: Since I was redoing my spreadsheets anyway, I went ahead and revamped the tables I've been using for the stats articles as well. That part took a heck of a lot longer than I thought it would, but such is life.)
Entering their bye week, the Seahawks’ record stands at 6-4 with six games left to play in the season. Last year, the team was 4-6 after ten games, and in 2010 they were 5-5 with three of those wins coming against some truly awful Rams and Cardinals squads.
It wasn’t that long ago that most everyone pretty much took it as a given that the Seahawks were probably going to lose whenever they played a top-ten team. We’d still scream our throats out for the Hawks to win, but we all knew that a victory was probably not going to happen. This year, they’ve beaten the Patriots and their 1st-ranked offense as well as the Packers and their 10th-ranked offense and 9th-ranked defense. The Vikings sit just outside that top tier with their 14th-ranked offense and defense, but their 6-4 season record is reason enough to be proud of that win, too.
And as frustrating as all four losses have been, they only lost by an average of 5.25 points in those games. Compare that to 2011, when the Seahawks were outscored in their losses by an average of 9.78 points, or 2010, when nine regular season opponents blew them out of the water by a 21 point average margin of victory.
After this bye week, the Seahawks will face two back-to-back road games in Miami and Chicago that may very well determine whether they make the playoffs this year. The Dolphins have been surprisingly good this year, although the strongest team they’ve managed to beat so far is the Bengals, and the Bears’ 2nd ranked defense is at or near the top of the league in nearly every statistical category. If they win one of those games, they should have a good shot at winning a wild card berth; if they win both, wresting the division crown from the 49ers falls within the realm of possibility, too.
(Note, for explanations of some of the stats included in this piece, please see the first article in the series.)
Rushing Averages
|
Game |
Yards/Rushing Attempt |
Yards/Game |
|
Yards/Rushing Attempt Allowed
|
Yards/Game Allowed
|
|
1 (ARI)
|
3.48 |
115 |
|
2.15 |
43 |
|
2 (DAL) |
4.44 |
182 |
|
3.06 |
49 |
|
3 (GB) |
4.38 |
127 |
|
4.00 |
84 |
|
4 (STL) |
5.26 |
179 |
|
2.78 |
75 |
|
5 (CAR) |
2.80 |
98 |
|
4.32 |
82 |
|
6 (NE) |
3.27 |
85 |
|
3.35 |
87 |
|
7 (SF) |
4.69 |
136 |
|
5.47 |
175 |
|
8 (DET) |
7.00 |
133 |
|
3.82 |
84 |
|
9 (MIN) |
4.33 |
195 |
|
9.00 |
243 |
|
10 (NYJ) |
4.05 |
174 |
|
3.82 |
84 |
|
Total |
4.26 (11th)
|
142.4 (7th) |
|
4.34 (21st) |
100.6 (12th) |
After a statistical drop in weeks five and six, over the last four games the Seahawks’ rushing stats have moved back up into the 4+ yds/att territory where they belong. Really, when you’ve got a runner like Marshawn Lynch in your backfield, anything less is unacceptable.
That said, there’s a false positive lurking in the stats here. Seattle’s rushing attack performed well against the 49ers, Vikings, and Jets, but Lynch’s 77-yard touchdown run in the Lions game artificially inflated the numbers for what was an otherwise lackluster showing. The Seahawks averaged just 3.11 yds/att on every other carry in that game, and Lynch himself posted a dismal 2.33 yds/att on his 11 other rushing attempts. Being able to pull off explosive plays like that is important to the success of any offense, but it’s no substitute for being able to sustain an acceptable level of production throughout a whole game.
Individually, Lynch is currently averaging 4.74 yds/att this season, plus he’s now officially rushed for 1,000 yards in each of his first two seasons with the Seahawks. Better yet, he’s only 26, so as long as the team watches his touches and doesn’t wear him out unnecessarily (he’s already racked up 212 carries this season) there should be plenty of Beast Mode left in his tank. His backup Robert Turbin is doing respectably well, averaging 3.98 yds/att on his 42 carries. He’s not quite the battering ram that Lynch is, but he’s a shifty runner and it doesn’t take him long to accelerate up to full speed.
Unfortunately, the run defense has not fared quite so well. At the beginning of the season, the Seahawks’ ability to stonewall opposing running backs was widely considered to be one of the team’s core strengths, but over the last four weeks they’ve allowed teams to rush for an average of 5.67 yds/att. It’s one thing to get mauled by a great run blocker like the 49ers’ Mike Iupati or an all-pro runner like the Vikings’ Adrian Peterson, but it’s quite another to let the Lions’ Mikel Leshoure run you over for 4.6 yds/att.
The middle of the line has been particularly vulnerable, so Bobby Wagner has a share in the blame here, but I’ve also been seing Brandon Mebane and Alan Branch get shoved backwards on a concerning number of plays. Unless the team has been violating league rules by keeping those two off the daily injury reports, I’m not entirely sure what their problem has been. Here’s hoping the coaching staff can correct whatever’s gone wrong during the bye week, ‘cause I’m not enjoying the sight of opposing rushers bursting into the clear at top speed with Seahawks defenders trailing in their wake.
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