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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Seahawks have laundry list for improvements as they face New York Giants

Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson, top, is tackled by Los Angeles Rams defensive end Aaron Donald during the first half of an NFL football game Sunday, Oct. 8, 2017, in Los Angeles. Wilson has been hit 43 times this season, sixth most in the NFL through Week 6. (Jae C. Hong / Associated Press)
By Bob Condotta Seattle Times

The Seahawks entered their bye having positioned themselves well enough but not having really proven anything.

The 16-10 win at Los Angeles on Oct. 8 gave them a tiebreaker leg-up on the team that appears to be their most legitimate threat in the NFC West.

But Seattle got to its 3-2 record rather tenuously. Other than a home blowout of a struggling Colts team, Seattle’s other four games were all decided by eight points or less, all basically going down to the final few minutes.

Seattle is averaging exactly the same amount of yards per play as its opponents — 5.2 — and has one fewer first down (94 to 95). And take out the Colts game and Seattle has been outscored.

In other words, Seattle has yet to display the kind of dominance it did in the 2012 to 2014 glory days, or in the second half of 2015, or even for a few stretches last season (it might be hard to remember, but Seattle started 7-2-1 last season before the late fold).

Maybe the fact Seattle has so far looked average doesn’t matter in a 2017 season in which parity in the NFL seems greater than ever. When Kansas City lost Thursday night it meant that all but one NFL team (the Philadelphia Eagles) has at least two losses.

As the Seahawks begin a stretch of 11 games in 11 weeks Sunday against the Giants in New York they remain a leading Super Bowl contender — Seattle has 10-1 odds in Las Vegas this week to win the Super Bowl, behind only New England (4-1), Kansas City (7-1) and Pittsburgh and Philadelphia (8-1).

But achieving those lofty goals won’t happen unless the Seahawks improve in a few key areas.

Here are five things Seattle needs to do better, in no particular order.

1, Start faster on offense: Seattle has scored just nine points in the first quarter this season, an average of 1.8 that is fifth-lowest in the NFL, all on field goals.

Seattle coach Pete Carroll and others with the team don’t seem to think it’s a big deal, in part because it’s sort of always been the Seahawks’ way to get stronger as the game goes on. In the Super Bowl season of 2013, Seattle was 21st in the NFL in points scored in the first quarter.

But this Seattle team has a smaller margin for error than some of the past teams (or it appears to, anyway) and counting on the big second half might not be as reliable of a strategy as in the past. The good news is that Seattle has allowed just two points in the first quarter this year, fewest in the NFL, oddly making the first quarter one of two in which Seattle has outscored opponents this year. The Seahawks have been outscored 38-27 in the second and 38-35 in the third before outscoring opponents 39-9 in the fourth.

2, Get more production from the tailbacks: Seattle’s rushing totals might be better than you think. The Seahawks are 15th this week at 109.2 yards per game.

But the two players who for now are the top two tailbacks — Eddie Lacy and Thomas Rawls — have yet to do much. Lacy has 74 yards on 25 carries and Rawls just 24 on 13, a combined 98 on 38, just 2.5 yards per attempt.

And with C.J. Prosise’s ability to stay on the field consistently remaining a big question, it might be Lacy and Rawls or bust for Seattle’s running game this season. Seattle simply has to get more out of at least one of those two.

3, Utilize Jimmy Graham even more in the red zone: The offensive bright spot of the win over the Rams was Graham’s 4-yard touchdown catch on a jump-ball fade route from Russell Wilson, the kind of play that looks so easy to pull off but has seemed far too difficult for Seattle to get done consistently.

But unless the running game really gets going, Seattle will need more where that came from this season. The Seahawks have just two rushing touchdowns, fewer than all but three other teams (granted, Seattle has played one less game than all but nine other teams, but it’s still a middling total).

4, Defend the run better: Sure, a few big runs have helped bloat Seattle’s run-defense statistics —- 136 of the 636 rushing yards the Seahawks have allowed have come on two plays.

But the numbers are what they are — a year after leading the NFL in fewest yards allowed per carry at 3.4 the Seahawks are now allowing 4.9, which ranks 30th. Opponents have had at least one run of 22 yards or longer in each of the past four games. In 16 games last year, only five times did an opponent have a run of 22 or longer.

5, Even out the sacks and quarterback hits: Yep, we’ve gone this far without really writing about the offensive line, though obviously the line contributes to the running-game issues and offensive slow starts mentioned earlier.

But maybe the most glaring stat indicative of the work-in-progress that the offensive line remains comes in quarterback hits. Seattle has allowed 43, sixth-most in the NFL. And that’s with Wilson back to his old shake-and-bake mobile ways of years of past. Seattle has to get through 11 games in 11 weeks and can’t afford Wilson getting hit that much every week.

Conversely, Seattle’s pass rush has been inconsistent, and now will go at least eight games without Cliff Avril, who last year led the Seahawks with 11.5 sacks. Seattle ranks tied for 21st in sacks per game at 2.2 (with 11 total) and has 29 quarterback hits, but with 11 coming against the Colts, getting four or fewer in three other games.