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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Seahawks must find ways to better protect Wilson

Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson was sacked a league-high 9.92 percent of passing plays last season. (Associated Press)

RENTON, Wash. – After a question was asked about potential changes to the least-used passing game in the NFL the past season, the arch in Pete Carroll’s eyebrow launched and nearly reached earth orbit.

“Why,” he said, “would we do anything to change it?”

Hard to argue when the evidence for status quo includes the Lombardi Trophy.

But if we were to argue, evidence includes a belief that standing pat is rarely a recommended course. Especially when the quarterback’s health is at stake.

In the exhibition opener Thursday in Denver, Russell Wilson demonstrated again his remarkable ability to elude the pass rush, at least twice pivoting away from from hostiles far behind the line of scrimmage to create positive plays.

Then again, in completing four of six passes among his 18 snaps, he was sacked twice, hard, behind a makeshift offensive line temporarily missing four-fifths of its stalwarts.

The sacks recalled a time early in the 2013 season in which injuries knocked out up to three OL starters and left Wilson vulnerable to predation. That he escaped largely uninjured was one of the unheralded miracles of a championship season.

Not only were his 2.8 sacks per game average 25th in the NFL – and up from 2.2 a year earlier – the Seahawks had the highest sack percentage in the NFL: 9.92 percent of pass plays ended up with Wilson munching dirt. That was a full percentage point up from the next-worst team, the New York Jets.

Obviously, the Seahawks managed the weakness well, thanks to the high-end success of so many other facets of the operation. But a fair question is what happens to Wilson in 2014 if the pass protection doesn’t improve, should some other aspects of the Seahawks slip.

As a percentage of scrimmage plays, the Seahawks and 49ers threw the ball less than the rest of the NFL. The Seahawks threw 45.21 percent, the Niners 45.23. For perspective, the Broncos threw 59.8 percent of the time in 2013, and the Falcons a league-high 67.2. Carroll doesn’t want that to change, because of his antipathy toward turnovers.

To further tighten the lens, Pro Football Focus broke down passing plays into QB depth of throws, while also counting the number of QB rollouts. In plays that had throws of one to 10 yards, Wilson rolled out 14 percent of the time, highest in the NFL. Next most was Washington Robert Griffin III at 7.5 percent.

In fact Wilson had more than double the rollouts of the next highest QB through passes up to 30 yards. The reason is obvious: The Seahawks compensate for his 5-foot-11 height by moving him out of the pocket for clearer views downfield.

While most of those rollouts are scripted, enough are not that Wilson’s exposure to hits in the open field as well as the pocket are higher than any NFL QB. As undisputed as the brilliance of his evasiveness is, the Seahawks enter a third season under his field command a bit out there on the tightrope.

But Carroll is not owning up to any modifications, at least not publicly.

“Gosh, we don’t want to do that,” he said. “We’re just going to keep growing. We’re not changing anything. We’ll always play to the strengths and uniqueness of our players and hopefully as the guys develop, you learn more.

“The new guys add something and just seem to fit that together. We have no intentions of changing.”

What has changed is the receiving group, which he labeled earlier in the year “an Olympic relay track team,” referring principally to Percy Harvin, Ricardo Lockette and draftee Paul Richardson, all of whom have speed normally witnessed every four years at some exotic five-ring locale. Adding returning reliables such as Doug Baldwin and Jermaine Kearse suggests that despite the loss of Golden Tate in free agency, the Seahawks have weaponry of increased sophistication.

The trick is getting Wilson the time to deliver. Maybe the passing game requires nothing more than a return to health in the offensive line. Then again, even when they were healthy, Wilson in 2013 often seemed to count on his legs more than his blockers.

So if you want to watch for signs Friday in the home exhibition opener against San Diego, see how often he is booked to run, versus booking to save his hide. By plan or execution, the Seahawks need to find a way to keep Wilson from leading the league again in grass snacks.