Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

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  • hawaiiansteel
    Legend
    • May 2008
    • 35649

    #16
    Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

    Seattle’s young offensive line faces tougher test this week

    Posted by Gregg Rosenthal on September 14, 2011



    The Seahawks have the youngest offensive line fielded by any team in 16 years, according to our Seahawks sleuth Danny O’Neil of the Seattle Times.

    It’s no surprise that the group struggled in the season opener against San Francisco. The team installed a new scheme under offensive line coach Tom Cable and hired a new offensive coordinator.

    “It’s going to take us some time to get comfortable in all settings,” coach Pete Carroll said. “I think we just weren’t quite there.”

    Rookies James Carpenter and John Moffitt struggled against the 49ers. Now they have to play a Steelers front that was pushed around in Week One by Baltimore. Pittsburgh will be told all week how old they looked.

    In Sunday’s battle of experience versus youth, we’d expect the Seahawks young guys to learn another painful lesson.

    [url="http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/09/14/seattles-young-offensive-line-faces-tougher-test-this-week/"]http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/20 ... this-week/[/url]

    Comment

    • hawaiiansteel
      Legend
      • May 2008
      • 35649

      #17
      Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

      Steelers Vs. Seahawks: Pittsburgh Should Level Record at 1-1 Provided They Do Two Simple Things

      by Michael Bean on Sep 15, 2011


      There's really only two ways that Seattle can win this game:

      Special Teams: Yeah, yeah, kickoff rule, schmick-off rule. There were three kickoff return touchdowns on Kickoff Weekend, the most in NFL history. I guarantee you Leon Washington will take some chances in the return game at the instruction of his coaches. Seattle absolutely has to get any edge they can in the return game. They'll need to punt well, cover well, and perhaps even try something creative like a fake punt or FG.

      Turnovers: The Steelers were +17 in the turnover department a year ago; Seattle finished at -9. After turning the ball over 7 times in the season opener, it's hard to imagine Pittsburgh finishing too far in the black again this year, but so long as they win the TO matchup most weeks, that;s okay. Interestingly enough, Seattle is ranked 31st so far in turnovers (-3), with only the Steelers carrying a worse differential into Week 2. Ben Roethlisberger must protect the ball, trust the offense and his reads, and get rid of the ball quickly. Two fumbles big Big Ben last week; can't have that again this coming Sunday.

      I don't want to oversimplify a game as nuanced as football, but really those two things should be what determines whether the Steelers get a win on Sunday. Seattle just doesn't have the offensive firepower to hang with the Steelers unless they're aided by good field position from turnovers or splash plays on special teams. Frankly, I think the Steelers should try to run the ball 35 times on Sunday and keep Ben Roethlisberger in the 20-25 passes range. But a part of me is concerned that Bruce Arians and Big Ben will try to build back the confidence offensively by airing it up more often than might be prudent.

      [url="http://www.behindthesteelcurtain.com/"]http://www.behindthesteelcurtain.com/[/url]

      Comment

      • fordfixer
        Legend
        • May 2008
        • 10921

        #18
        Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

        Injury report
        [url="http://www.nfl.com/injuries"]http://www.nfl.com/injuries[/url]
        SEA
        Dexter Davis DE Hip Did Not Participate In Practice --
        Jarriel King T Ankle Did Not Participate In Practice --
        Byron Maxwell CB Ankle Did Not Participate In Practice --
        Michael Robinson RB Ankle Did Not Participate In Practice --
        Malcolm Smith LB Hamstring Did Not Participate In Practice --
        Robert Gallery G Knee Full Participation in Practice --
        Sidney Rice WR Shoulder Limited Participation in Practice --
        PIT
        Jerricho Cotchery WR Hamstring Did Not Participate In Practice --
        James Farrior LB Not Injury Related Did Not Participate In Practice --
        Aaron Smith DE Not Injury Related Did Not Participate In Practice --
        Hines Ward WR Not Injury Related Did Not Participate In Practice --
        Curtis Brown CB Ankle Full Participation in Practice --
        Chris Kemoeatu G Knee Limited Participation in Practice --
        Bryant McFadden CB Hamstring Limited Participation in Practice --

        Molon labe

        People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

        ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
        Mike Tomlin

        American metal pimped by asiansteel
        Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

        Comment

        • hawaiiansteel
          Legend
          • May 2008
          • 35649

          #19
          Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

          Sidney Rice unlikely to play Sunday

          Posted by Mike Florio on September 16, 2011



          The last time receiver Sidney Rice played at Heinz Field, he caught 10 passes for 136 yards. (Playing with Brett Favre tends to do that.)

          This time around, Rice likely won’t be playing at all.

          Per Liz Matthews of 710 ESPN, via our corporate brethren at Rotoworld, coach Pete Carroll said Friday that Rice “won’t play in this game unless something goes crazy here in the next day in our travel if he can just get healed.”

          (Apparently, someone bought Carroll an espresso machine for his 60th birthday.)

          Rice struggled with a hip injury in Minnesota last year, and he will have now missed 1/8th of the 2011 season, “unless something goes crazy here in the next day in our travel if he can just get healed.”

          Barring the presence of Mr. Miyagi and/or E.T. on the team’s charter to Pittsburgh, it’s safe to say Rice won’t be playing.

          [url="http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/09/16/sidney-rice-unlikely-to-play-sunday/"]http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/20 ... ay-sunday/[/url]

          Comment

          • fordfixer
            Legend
            • May 2008
            • 10921

            #20
            Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

            Steelers seeking rebound in home clash with Seahawks

            [url="http://www.latimes.com/sports/sns-tsn-abn-preview-sea-pit-20110916,0,5379797.story"]http://www.latimes.com/sports/sns-tsn-a ... 9797.story[/url]

            September 16, 2011, 2:18 p.m.

            Expected to contend for another Super Bowl championship, the Pittsburgh Steelers hardly looked like the defending AFC champions last weekend.

            The Seattle Seahawks didn't open defense of their NFC West title much better.

            A humbled Pittsburgh club will try to get on track and win its ninth straight home opener when it welcomes Seattle to Heinz Field this Sunday.

            Taking the field in a meaningful game for the first time since a loss to the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl XLV, the Steelers were routed by the rival Baltimore Ravens, 35-7, in their 2011 regular-season opener. Pittsburgh's offense struggled mightily in the game, getting forced into seven turnovers while trailing by 14 points (21-7) at the half.

            "We came into a tough place to play," said Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, who had of the team's seven giveaways. "[The Ravens] got after it, and we didn't play so well. We turned the ball over, which is [mostly] my fault. But it's the first game of the year. The season's not won or lost [in Week 1], the division's not won or lost."

            Pittsburgh now returns to Heinz Field in an effort to rebound. History says that could very well happen, as the club has won all four of its home openers under head coach Mike Tomlin, while Roethlisberger is 4-0 with 960 passing yards and a 110.7 quarterback rating in the four home lid-lifters he has started.

            The Steelers have also won 23 of their last 28 games versus the NFC during the regular season.

            While the stats seem to favor Pittsburgh, Tomlin's team should also be more focused after last weekend's defeat.

            "That's just an example of the many ways you can be humbled," Pittsburgh's head coach said. "I think that's more of a catch phrase than anything else. I think the people that know and competed in this league understand that there is a fine line between drinking wine and squashing grapes. Obviously last weekend we were grape squashers."

            The Seahawks were also left with empty drinking cups last Sunday, when they dropped a 33-17 decision to San Francisco. Seattle trailed by two points late in the divisional matchup before watching 49ers returner Ted Ginn Jr. take both a kickoff and a punt to the end zone to dash any comeback hopes.

            Like Roethlisberger, Seattle quarterback Tarvaris Jackson also struggled in the turnover department. He was intercepted once and lost two fumbles in his Seahawks debut.

            "It's a very disappointing first game for us," said Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll, whose team was penalized 11 times. "It felt like we were right there to take this game over, and then it fell apart in the kicking game."

            Seattle is opening with two straight on the road for the first time since 2004 and was without three starters last Sunday in wide receiver Sidney Rice (shoulder), guard Robert Gallery (knee) and linebacker David Hawthorne (knee). Both Gallery and Hawthorne returned to a full practice on Wednesday, while Rice was limited.

            SERIES HISTORY

            Seattle possesses an 8-7 edge in its all-time regular-season series with Pittsburgh, but suffered a 21-0 defeat to the Steelers at Heinz Field in the teams' most recent meeting, which took place in 2007. The Seahawks had recorded two straight non-postseason wins over Pittsburgh prior to that defeat, including a 29-10 decision at Three Rivers Stadium in 1999. That win is one of only two for Seattle in eight lifetime stops in the Steel City.

            The most significant game between the teams occurred at Detroit's Ford Field in February of 2006, when Pittsburgh captured its fifth Lombardi Trophy with a 21-10 victory over the Seahawks in Super Bowl XL.

            Tomlin won his only previous matchup with Seattle, while Carroll is 0-2 lifetime against the Steelers and will be going head-to-head against Tomlin for the first time. Both of Carroll's losses to Pittsburgh came as the head coach of New England in 1997, with the last of those setbacks occurring in that season's AFC Divisional Playoffs.

            WHEN THE SEAHAWKS HAVE THE BALL

            Jackson didn't exactly silence critics who say he isn't a capable starting quarterback in the NFL, throwing for 197 yards on 21-of-37 passing in the opener. However, he was playing behind an offensive line that featured three players making their first career starts: rookies James Carpenter (left guard) and John Moffitt (right guard) and right tackle Breno Giacomini. This led to Jackson getting sacked five times, though he did throw a pair of touchdown passes. One was an eight-yarder to wide receiver Golden Tate, his lone catch of the game, while rookie Doug Baldwin raced one of his four receptions 55 yards for a score on a short slant. Wide receiver Mike Williams matched Baldwin's team-leading catch total, while tight end Zach Miller made just a pair of catches for 19 yards in the ex-Raider's Seattle debut. Miller was forced into a blocking role during the contest when fullback Michael Robinson was lost due to an ankle injury, and the latter won't play this weekend. Seattle signed Eddie Williams off Cleveland's practice squad to replace Robinson. Top running back Marshawn Lynch had 13 of Seattle's 22 rush attempts for 33 yards.

            Molon labe

            People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

            ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
            Mike Tomlin

            American metal pimped by asiansteel
            Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

            Comment

            • fordfixer
              Legend
              • May 2008
              • 10921

              #21
              Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

              Pete Carroll tries time travel to get Seahawks ready

              Seahawks coach moves practices earlier to prepare for 10 a.m. game in Pittsburgh.

              By Danny O'Neil

              [url="http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/seahawks/2016221999_hawk16.html"]http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/s ... awk16.html[/url]


              advertising

              RENTON — This week started early for the Seahawks.

              That's true for their practice times and their alarm clocks as they prepare to play in Pittsburgh on Sunday.

              "We're on schedule with the wake-up call for Sunday morning, which is going to come at 6 a.m. our time," coach Pete Carroll said. "So we've just adjusted to make sure that we're doing what we can to compete for a level of comfort at that time frame."

              Better try something. The Seahawks are bigger underdogs than they've been in any game since 1992, and they're playing in the home opener for the Steelers, who pitched a shutout the last time Seattle was in town, in 2007.

              On top of all that, there's the whole cross-country travel thing to worry about. Seattle is 1-10 in games played in the Eastern time zone the past four seasons.

              "It's hard to win these games when you go that way," Carroll said. "It's not unique to any one program, it's unique to West Coast-East Coast. So we're going to try to even that out."

              These Seahawks have already shown a tendency to snooze through the first half. They were scoreless in the first half last week, and didn't score a touchdown in the first half of their first three exhibition games.

              Of all the things football coaches seek to control, geography is one thing that remains beyond their purview. All they can do is adjust and tinker and hope that helps.

              So the Seahawks decided to wind back their clocks a little bit this week.

              Seattle played only one game in the Eastern time zone last year, a 38-15 loss at Tampa Bay on Dec. 26, and Carroll didn't dramatically alter the team's schedule that week.

              The Seahawks will be playing three games in the East this year, so Carroll plans to adjust preparation time. That's not just what time the day starts, but Seattle's practices, which began at 11:45 a.m. Wednesday and Thursday, compared to 1:30 p.m. in Week 1. Seattle plans to start its workout at 10:30 Friday morning and fly to Pittsburgh afterward.

              Carroll is not the first Seattle coach to switch routines. Coach Mike Holmgren tinkered, too. He started flying out Friday for games back East, with no discernible effect.

              The time change might be the least of Seattle's problems Sunday. The Steelers are coming off their largest season-opening loss since 1997, so they're sure to be extra salty.

              "We know how they're feeling because we felt the same way last week. We lost," quarterback Tarvaris Jackson said. "We felt like we should have won the game, we had a chance to win the game, but we're 0-1 just like they're 0-1. It's a new season."

              The Steelers have appeared in two of the past three Super Bowls and have been notoriously tough on visitors.

              "It's as hard as it gets," Carroll said of playing at Pittsburgh.

              Starting things off a little earlier is just one little way Carroll is trying to make Sunday feel like any other week for his team.

              Molon labe

              People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

              ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
              Mike Tomlin

              American metal pimped by asiansteel
              Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

              Comment

              • fordfixer
                Legend
                • May 2008
                • 10921

                #22
                Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

                Hawks face a surly Steelers bunch
                seahawks: Road game made tougher because of absence of Rice, several key special-teams guys

                DAVE BOLING;
                [url="http://www.theolympian.com/2011/09/17/1803277/hawks-face-a-surly-steelers-bunch.html"]http://www.theolympian.com/2011/09/17/1 ... bunch.html[/url]

                RENTON – Early this week, Seahawks coach Pete Carroll speculated that the challenge of facing a grumpy Pittsburgh Steelers team in front of its home fans was “as hard as it gets.”

                Actually, it’s gotten a little harder because receiver Sidney Rice has been ruled out for the game due to his injured shoulder, and at least three (possibly four) key players on special teams will be sidelined with injuries.

                “Sidney won’t make it in this one,” Carroll said of Rice, the team’s pricey free agent who has yet to see action. Rice missed the opener at San Francisco, too, and the Hawks struggled offensively in a 33-17 defeat.

                “He had a lot of work (this week),” Carroll said of Rice. “And (that) gave us the thought that he has a pretty solid chance next week.” The Seahawks face Arizona a week from Sunday in their home opener.

                Ankle injuries to fullback Mike Robinson and cornerback Byron Maxwell against San Francisco contributed to the Seahawks’ coverage problems as 49ers returner Ted Ginn Jr. brought back a kickoff and a punt for fourth-quarter touchdowns.

                In addition, injuries to backup defenders and special-teams performers Dexter Davis (listed as out Friday, hip) and Malcolm Smith (doubtful, hamstring) complicate the problems faced by a unit already short on manpower.

                However, Robert Gallery is expected to return to the starting lineup at left guard after having missed the opener with a knee sprain. His return allows rookie James Carpenter to move back to his spot at starting right tackle. Carpenter opened his NFL career last week at Gallery’s guard spot, and Breno Giacomini started at right tackle.

                Veteran middle linebacker David Hawthorne (knee) is listed as the probable starter this week after being inactive and watching rookie K.J. Wright start against San Francisco.

                In the absence of Rice, Carroll said rookie receiver Kris Durham likely will be active.

                Other than the injury-mandated personnel shifts, Carroll made some schedule changes as the Hawks prepared for the first of three games this season in the Eastern time zone. Meetings, lifting and practices started earlier all week in an attempt to reset the team’s biological clocks.

                “We’ve had a very solid week in preparations,” Carroll said. “We’ve asked the guys to make a commitment to the time frames we’re dealing with, so we can adjust a little bit, and everybody did it to a tee.”

                Carroll had the Hawks fly out Friday afternoon, too, to give them a day to acclimate to the time change in hopes of overcoming the team’s historical problems since 2007 in games that start at 10 a.m. Pacific time (1 p.m. on the East Coast).

                Other changes this week were aimed at bolstering the offensive line, which allowed quarterback Tarvaris Jackson to be sacked five times by the 49ers. Carroll said that line coach Tom Cable suspected they were more concerned with assignments than being physical and finishing their blocks.

                “(Cable) did a couple things, and the guys understood it and it absolutely showed up on the practice field this week,” Carroll said. “I’m really anxious to see that generate a little something different for us.”

                The Seahawks are heavy underdogs to a Steelers team that is returning home after suffering a 35-7 thrashing to rival Baltimore in the season opener. Carroll said he never paid attention to betting lines. He doesn’t need Las Vegas to tell him anything about the problems of playing Pittsburgh.

                “It’s a big matchup for us,” he said. “It’s going to be as difficult as it can get.”

                Dave Boling: 253-597-8440 [email="dave.boling@thenewstribune.com"]dave.boling@thenewstribune.com[/email]

                Read more: [url="http://www.theolympian.com/2011/09/17/1803277/hawks-face-a-surly-steelers-bunch.html#ixzz1YERGa9BF"]http://www.theolympian.com/2011/09/17/1 ... z1YERGa9BF[/url]

                Molon labe

                People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

                ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
                Mike Tomlin

                American metal pimped by asiansteel
                Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

                Comment

                • fordfixer
                  Legend
                  • May 2008
                  • 10921

                  #23
                  Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

                  « Seahawks injuries: Robert Gallery full-go for second straight day | Main |
                  Carroll says Robert Gallery will start this weekend, but Sidney Rice still out
                  [url="http://blog.seattlepi.com/football/2011/09/16/carroll-says-robert-gallery-will-start-this-weekend-but-sidney-rice-still-out/"]http://blog.seattlepi.com/football/2011 ... still-out/[/url]

                  Robert Gallery will start on Sunday. (Photo by Ted S. Warren/Associated Press)

                  RENTON — Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said on Friday that left guard Robert Gallery will start against the Steelers this week.

                  Gallery sat out the season opener with a sprained knee before returning to practice this week. Gallery’s return — though he’s listed as questionable on the injury report — means rookie James Carpenter will start at right tackle, and Breno Giacomini will come off the bench.

                  Receiver Sidney Rice (shoulder) still isn’t able to play. But Carroll seemed optimistic that Rice could make his season debut next week against Arizona.

                  “He had a lot of work and gave us the thought that he has a pretty solid chance next week,” Carroll said.

                  Linebacker David Hawthorne, who was inactive for the season opener due to a sore knee, is also expected to play. Hawthorne fully participated in practice all week.

                  Gallery’s return brings experience to an offensive line that sorely lacked it in the opener, with three players (Carpenter, John Moffitt and Giacomini) making their first career starts.

                  “He’s rock solid and a guy and a worker and his dedication to the system and the scheme and all that it calls for,” Carroll said of Gallery. “He really helps us. So hopefully we should be sharper and cleaner.”

                  Staying with injury news, it sounds as if defensive end Dexter Davis may have a serious problem with his hip. He played Sunday, but didn’t participate in practice this week.

                  Here’s the full Friday injury report for both the Seahawks and Steelers:

                  SEATTLE SEAHAWKS

                  OUT

                  DE Dexter Davis (hip)

                  T Jarriel King (ankle)

                  CB Byron Maxwell (ankle)

                  FB Michael Robinson (ankle)

                  WR Sidney Rice (shoulder)

                  DOUBTFUL

                  LB Malcolm Smith (hamstring)

                  QUESTIONABLE

                  LG Robert Gallery (knee)

                  PROBABLE

                  LB David Hawthorne (knee)

                  PITTSBURGH STEELERS

                  OUT

                  WR Jerricho Cotchery (hamstring)

                  QUESTIONABLE

                  OG Chris Kemoeatu (knee)

                  CB Bryant McFadden (hamstring)

                  PROBABLE

                  CB Curtis Brown (ankle)

                  Molon labe

                  People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

                  ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
                  Mike Tomlin

                  American metal pimped by asiansteel
                  Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

                  Comment

                  • fordfixer
                    Legend
                    • May 2008
                    • 10921

                    #24
                    Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

                    Seahawks at Steelers: 5 things to watch
                    [url="http://blog.seattlepi.com/football/2011/09/17/seahawks-at-steelers-5-things-to-watch/"]http://blog.seattlepi.com/football/2011 ... -to-watch/[/url]

                    WHAT: Seattle Seahawks (0-1) at Pittsburgh Steelers (0-1) (Week 2)

                    WHEN: 10 a.m. PT Sunday

                    WHERE: Heinz Field, Pittsburgh, Pa.

                    TV/RADIO: FOX (channel 13) / 710 AM, 97.3 FM

                    What to watch for:
                    1 of 6 | Share
                    Seahawks at Steelers: 5 things to watch



                    1. Picking up the Blitz-burgh

                    Tarvaris Jackson knows full well what the first priority of the Seahawks’ offense will be against the Steelers on Sunday.

                    “We’ve got to take care of the football first,” Jackson said. “Make sure we take care of the football. They’re going to bring different blitzes and stuff at us.”

                    Yes, they are. The Steelers have earned a reputation across the league as an aggressive, hard-hitting defense full of experience and a whole bunch of dudes who don’t mind picking up a personal foul or a fine here or there.

                    And that doesn’t bode particularly well for a Seahawks offensive line that allowed five sacks of Jackson by the San Francisco 49ers in the season opener.

                    The good news: Robert Gallery is expected to start at left guard this week after missing the San Francisco game with a sore knee. That moves James Carpenter back over to right tackle, where he’d spent the majority of the season working out before sliding over to left guard in Gallery’s absence.

                    Still, we’ve yet to see any reason to think that unit has it figured out.

                    “It’s about finishing and working their feet the way they have to properly,” coach Pete Carroll said. “I’m really anxious to see that generate something different for us. They know they’ve got to get it going. Robert coming back helps us. He’s experienced. The reason we got him here is to help those guys up front communicate well and make the game move more smoothly for us.”

                    The key, Seahawks offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell said, is that Pittsburgh has so many players with an intimate understanding of defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau’s blitzing schemes.

                    “They have a bunch of players that have been there a long time,” Bevell said. “There are veteran players. You can keep going back years and years and years and you keep seeing the same guys in there, so they understand the scheme very well, they know the ‘why’s’ and ‘what for’s’ of all their spots and where they need to be. He could probably call just about anything and they could get it done.”

                    And how do the Seahawks combat the Steelers’ pass rush?

                    “We want to make sure that we target it right. If we don’t, we won’t have a chance,” Jackson said. “We know they’re going to mix it up, they’re going to give good disguises. They run some of the same blitzes, but they kind of mix it up a little, they kind of keep you off guard. So we’re going to make sure we use our indicators and just follow our rules.”

                    2. East Coastin’

                    Much has been made of the Seahawks’ recent struggles with 10 a.m. PT start times against East Coast teams on the road.

                    And much should be made. After all, the Seahawks haven’t won a 10 a.m. start in the Eastern Time Zone since beating Philadelphia 28-24 on Dec. 2, 2007. Just how long ago was that? Shaun Alexander was still Seattle’s running back.

                    (And for those recalling the Seahawks’ 10 a.m. victory over the Bears last year, remember that Chicago is on central time.)

                    Carroll is doing everything he can this week to calibrate his players’ body clocks to the long-distance trek.

                    That’s why Seattle practice a couple hours earlier than normal on Wednesday, and that’s why the Seahawks are flying to Pittsburgh on Friday and conducting a practice at an undisclosed site on Saturday.

                    “It’s just to get our habits right, and make sure we’re real disciplined in going to sleep at night so that we have a good solid week of preparation, the guys are rested,” Carroll said. “They’re going to get a wake-up call at 6 a.m. West Coast time to go get ready for the football game. And so all week long that’s what we dealt with. It’s just to make everybody aware and make the commitment solid for this preparation.”

                    3. Bruising Big Ben

                    When facing Ben Roethlisberger, pressuring the quarterback is only half the battle.

                    Actually getting the dude on the ground is a different story.

                    “If you can hit him when he’s not looking,” defensive end Raheem Brock said, asked the best way to take down the 6-foot-5, 240-pound Steelers quarterback. “You know how to hit the big guys. You’ve got to get them off their feet. If you don’t take him down right away, he’s just going to toss you aside. You’ve got to hit him.”

                    The Seahawks didn’t do much to pressure Alex Smith last week, though San Francisco’s offensive game plan didn’t lend much opportunity for a ton of quarterback hits.

                    The Steelers, on the other hand, didn’t protect Roethlisberger nearly as well against the Ravens. He was sacked four times and threw two interceptions, part of the seven turnovers Baltimore forced.

                    A similar effort from Seattle will be required if the Seahawks harbor any hopes of covering the 15-point spread.

                    But that’s a tall task against a quarterback like Roethlisberger, who scrambles well and prefers to throw the ball deep when he leaves the pocket.

                    “He’s really tough. He has a good pocket presence,” Brock said. “He’ll get out of the pocket and when he sees something open up, he’ll run for like 20 yards. He’s a good vet. He’s a great quarterback. So we have to be on our toes and try to get after him as much as possible.”

                    Forcing an early turnover or two seems critical for the Seahawks defense.

                    “Last week he tried to force a couple, and to Baltimore’s credit they made the plays,” defensive coordinator Gus Bradley said. “He rarely makes bad decisions. We’ve got to try to strip the ball from their ball carriers, wide receivers if they do catch it. I think we did a pretty good job last week. We always talk they come in bunches. We’re going to stay aggressive going after it.”

                    4. Special teams concerns

                    Antonio Brown returned three kicks for the Steelers last week. He had a long return of 41 yards.

                    Even if he averages that against the Seahawks, it would be a massive upgrade for Seattle’s coverage units, which were, of course, roasted by San Francisco’s Ted Ginn last week for two touchdowns in a 59-second span.

                    That can’t happen again. But it may be hard to avoid, with four key special teams players almost certain to sit out. Michael Robinson (ankle), Dexter Davis (hip) and Byron Maxwell (ankle) have already been ruled out for Sunday’s game, with linebacker Malcolm Smith listed as doubtful on Friday’s injury report.

                    That leaves the shorthanded Seahawks scrambling for a solution to last week’s problem.

                    “We had a lot of work to catch some guys up,” Carroll said. “We had to make some decisions to do that and how to get that done, but we feel very good about it and the plan that we have allows hopefully even the alternative guys that have to come off the bench to play and understand what’s happening, so they need to come through. They need to step up. We definitely had a falter last week late, and we can’t have that happen.”

                    5. Leavy me alone

                    As you likely know by now, referee Bill Leavy has been assigned to work Sunday’s game. As you likely also know, Leavy was the referee who made a couple of controversial calls against the Seahawks in Super Bowl XL, which Seattle lost to Pittsburgh 21-10.

                    Carroll, predictably, had little to say on the matter.

                    “It’s too far in the past to think that it’s going to be a factor,” Carroll said. “I don’t know why it would be. He’s a pro and I really don’t know all of that story. I know what happened in the game. I know there’s a real sensitive thought about it here for good reason, I would guess. But that can’t be a factor in our minds.”

                    That’s true. But it’s still worth mentioning and keeping an eye on. Jim Moore raised a good point in his column this week, writing that Leavy has essentially been put in a no-win situation: if calls go the Seahawks way, he’ll be accused of trying to make it up to them. If they go the Steelers way, he’s still a no-good cheat and hey, why the heck did the NFL assign THIS referee to work THIS game in the first place?

                    Maybe we should cut the guy a break. As Carroll said: “He’d probably like to feel good about it, too.”

                    Molon labe

                    People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

                    ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
                    Mike Tomlin

                    American metal pimped by asiansteel
                    Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

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                    • hawaiiansteel
                      Legend
                      • May 2008
                      • 35649

                      #25
                      Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

                      Jackson, Lynch will both be a challenge

                      By Teresa Varley - Steelers.com
                      Posted Sep 15, 2011


                      The Steelers have been watching film on Seattle quarterback Tarvaris Jackson for a few days and the more they watch the more praise they have for him.

                      “The thing he brings to the table is he is tough,” said linebacker James Farrior. “He is a tough quarterback. He doesn’t get easily rattled. He is going to be tough to bring down because he is strong in his legs.”

                      Keeping Jackson contained in the pocket is going to be a key, because if they don’t he can wreak havoc.

                      “He is a leader for them,” said linebacker Lawrence Timmons. “He is a tough guy, he is a scrambler. We have to watch out for him coming out of the backfield. We have to look for him when he scrambles, buying time for his receivers to open up.

                      “We are going to have to stay in our rush lanes because we don’t want him to escape the pocket. We have to contain him. That is going to be big for us.”

                      Jackson isn’t the only offensive weapon the Steelers will have to contend with. They also will have to focus on running back Marshawn Lynch.

                      “They have a great running back and they are going to try to give him the ball,” said defensive end Aaron Smith. “If I was them I would do the same with the running back they have and go from there. He is a fantastic running back. I have a lot of respect for him and the way he runs the ball.”

                      Lynch didn’t put up big numbers in the Seahawks loss to the San Francisco 49ers last week, gaining just 33 yards on 13 carries. But that isn’t a typical Lynch performance.

                      “Lynch is their workhorse,” said Farrior. “We expect them to give the ball to him a lot. He is probably going to carry the load for that team. He is a great running back. We expect him to have the ball a lot.”

                      * * *

                      Former NFL defensive tackle Warren Sapp, now an NFL analyst, took shots at the Steelers defense and wide receiver Hines Ward on Showtime’s Inside the NFL.

                      Sapp knocked the Steelers defense overall because of age and took shots at individual players.

                      “The Pittsburgh Steelers - I have three things: old, slow and it's over,” said Sapp on the show. “It's just that simple.

                      “James Harrison told us that he was 70-to-75 percent. It looked more like 40 percent to me if you are looking at the ballgame I was looking at. And Hines Ward, Mercedes Sapp can cover Hines Ward right now. You have to be kidding me…Mercedes is my 13-year-old daughter. She will cover Hines Ward in a heartbeat. And Troy Polamalu, Ed Dixon runs this crossing route. Troy Polamalu is trying to grab him to have a pass interference and he can't even get close enough to grab him. (It) looked like he was dragging a wagon behind him. Touchdown Baltimore. Pittsburgh Steelers done.”

                      Steelers players weren’t angered by Sapp’s comments, but they certainly don’t agree with them.

                      “The guy has earned the right to say what he wants to say,” said Chris Hoke. “He is one of the best defensive tackles ever to play the game, but I don’t agree with it.”

                      Cornerback Ike Taylor laughed at the comments, but defended the defense.

                      “That’s his opinion,” said Taylor. “I don’t have anything to do with what he says. I can’t control what he says. Once you get a certain age, you get labeled as old. That’s kind of understandable. Just the group of guys we do have, age isn’t a factor.”

                      Harrison wasn’t fazed by Sapp’s comments when asked about them.

                      “That’s his opinion,” said Harrison. “It don’t matter. He don’t write my checks.”

                      Harrison said that the Steelers “played terrible. Point blank; period,” against the Ravens and it will take more than a game or two to make people change their opinions of the team.

                      “You aren’t going to be able to quiet everybody in one week anyway,” said Harrison. “Those who jump on the bandwagon when this is over with let them do what they do.”

                      * * *

                      Wide receiver Jerricho Cotchery (hamstring) did not practice on Thursday. Guard Chris Kemoeatu (knee) and cornerback Bryant McFadden(hamstring) were limited in practice.

                      [url="http://www.steelers.com/news/article-1/Jackson-Lynch-will-both-be-a-challenge/8b337877-58b1-4318-849f-44009e96ad1d"]http://www.steelers.com/news/article-1/ ... 009e96ad1d[/url]

                      Comment

                      • fordfixer
                        Legend
                        • May 2008
                        • 10921

                        #26
                        Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

                        Pittsburgh vs. Seattle
                        [url="http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/gametracker/preview/NFL_20110918_SEA@PIT"]http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/gametracke ... 18_SEA@PIT[/url]
                        TIME: 01:00 P.M. EST
                        VENUE: Heinz Field

                        The Pittsburgh Steelers made few offseason changes to a roster that was good enough to get to Super Bowl XLV, but in their season opener they looked like a team that was introduced shortly before kickoff.

                        Hosting the Seattle Seahawks could help them rediscover a bit of continuity.

                        Seven turnovers doomed the Steelers in their most lopsided loss in 14 years, one they'll be eager to put behind them Sunday at Heinz Field against a Seahawks team that has plenty of its own issues.

                        Pittsburgh (0-1) didn't tinker much with a team that finished 12-4 and reached its third Super Bowl in six years, and it went into last Sunday's opener at Baltimore with every reason to believe it could make another deep playoff run this season.

                        That confidence certainly took a hit after a 35-7 loss, the Steelers' worst defeat since their 1997 season opener against Dallas and the first time they finished minus-seven in the turnover department since Week 1 in 1989.

                        Pittsburgh, however, insists it's already moved on from a loss safety Troy Polamalu described as "a big step toward humility."

                        "That game is behind us," receiver Hines Ward told the team's official website. "We are just worrying about Seattle. The guys in this locker room know how bad we played. ... Are we excited about how we played? No. We are embarrassed about it."

                        Coach Mike Tomlin agreed, pointing to punter Daniel Sepulveda's work as the only performance he was pleased with in Baltimore.

                        "I think the people that know and compete in this league understand that there is a fine line between drinking wine and squashing grapes," Tomlin said. "Obviously, last weekend we were grape squashers."

                        The Seahawks (0-1) were hardly satisfied with their own Week 1 effort, letting an opportunity slip away in San Francisco. Down 16-0 at halftime, Seattle pulled to within 19-17 with 3:56 left before allowing Ted Ginn Jr. to return both a kickoff and a punt for touchdowns to seal the 49ers' 33-17 win.

                        Aside from the Seahawks' obvious special teams issues, though, coach Pete Carroll wasn't totally upset.

                        "I made sure (Monday) in the team meeting to show them that there was a big contrast from first to second half. They need to know that they're capable and feel it and have that confidence," Carroll said.

                        Neither Carroll nor Tomlin was around when Pittsburgh and Seattle met in Super Bowl XL, won 21-10 by the Steelers in a game that featured some officiating controversy, but the man who made those decisions will be at Heinz Field.

                        The NFL assigned Bill Leavy - who admitted last year that he botched two fourth-quarter calls - as Sunday's head referee, marking just the second Seahawks game he's been given since that Super Bowl.

                        While Seattle's defense was one bright spot last week - it held the 49ers to 209 total yards and just one third-down conversion in 12 attempts - not much went right for a Steelers unit that's finished no lower than fifth in total defense since Tomlin arrived in 2007.

                        Baltimore ran for 170 yards, 15 more than Pittsburgh allowed in three playoff games combined last season.

                        Marshawn Lynch and the Seahawks' rushing attack certainly don't figure to follow suit, especially with fullback Michael Robinson (ankle) out, but the Steelers are concerned about the escapability of quarterback Tarvaris Jackson if a play breaks down.

                        "The difficult part about preparing for him is he can run just as well as he can pass," said linebacker James Harrison, who's expected to play despite suffering a knee injury last Sunday. "You have to be able to keep him contained and not lose containment because he can kill you with his legs, too."

                        Jackson may be looking to run more often if he doesn't have receiver Sidney Rice (shoulder), who is again questionable to make his Seahawks debut after signing a five-year, $41 million contract in July.

                        Pittsburgh, meanwhile, will break in second-round pick Marcus Gilbert at right tackle after starter Willie Colon tore his right triceps against Baltimore and was placed on injured reserve.

                        Ben Roethlisberger, who threw three interceptions Sunday for the ninth time in his career, should be happy to see an NFC team coming into Heinz Field. Roethlisberger has led the Steelers to a 12-1 record in interconference home games he's started, averaging an impressive 8.48 yards per attempt and posting a 92.9 passer rating.

                        Seattle, meanwhile, has lost its last eight road games against AFC opponents - a streak that began with a 21-0 loss in Pittsburgh on Oct. 7, 2007.

                        Molon labe

                        People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

                        ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
                        Mike Tomlin

                        American metal pimped by asiansteel
                        Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

                        Comment

                        • papillon
                          Legend
                          • Mar 2008
                          • 11340

                          #27
                          Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

                          Originally posted by BradshawsHairdresser
                          If I were the Seahawks (or any other team), I would not be afraid of the Steelers right now. Just follow the blueprint, play to the Steelers' weaknesses rather than to their strengths, and you have a decent chance of winning.
                          Unfortunately, I tend to agree with this and the Seahawks may be getting the Steelers at the right time, not the wrong time.

                          Pappy
                          sigpic

                          The 2025 Pittsburgh Steeler draft

                          1.21 - Derrick Harmon, DT, Oregon - Nick Emmanwori, S, S. Carolina
                          3.83 - Kaleb Johnson, RB, Iowa - DJ Giddens, RB, Kans St
                          3.123 - Will Howard, QB, OSU
                          4.156 - JJ Pegues, DT, Ole Miss
                          5.185 - Clay Webb, OG, Jack St
                          7.229 - Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins, DT, Georgia

                          "Football is a physical game, well, it used to be anyways" - Mel Blount

                          Comment

                          • Steeler Shades
                            Starter
                            • May 2008
                            • 724

                            #28
                            Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

                            Also have to agree. However most of the teams that do well against the Steelers have an accurate passer and I'm not sure that the Seahawks have someone that fits that description.
                            Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity

                            Comment

                            • hawaiiansteel
                              Legend
                              • May 2008
                              • 35649

                              #29
                              Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

                              Steelers right the ship in shutout win

                              Posted by Josh Alper on September 18, 2011



                              Here’s a quick way of letting you know how one-sided today’s game in Pittsburgh turned out to be: The Seahawks didn’t run their first play in Steelers territory until the fourth quarter.

                              It was 24-0 by that point and the Seahawks’ big drive would wind up ending on a James Harrison sack of Tarvaris Jackson. That meant the game would end with the same score and it meant the Steelers could take a big step toward putting their Week One loss behind them. It will take a bit more than a win over a wildly overmatched Seattle club, but anyone looking for signs of serious holes in the Pittsburgh armor will have to wait a bit longer to point them out.

                              The Steelers followed a pretty familiar path to the win. Ben Roethlisberger threw for 298 yards, including a couple of deep balls to Mike Wallace and Emmanuel Sanders. Rashard Mendenhall and Isaac Redman kept the clock moving and first downs coming on the ground. And Sanders even completed a pass on a gadget play to keep the venerable Pittsburgh tradition of wideouts throwing passes alive in the absence of Antwan Randle-El. They also didn’t turn the ball over, a nice change after the comedy of errors against Baltimore in Week One.

                              And then there was the defense. They did exactly what you expect a good defense to do when faced by an offense quarterbacked by Tarvaris Jackson that that can’t run the ball. They had five sacks, forced eight punts and, as we mentioned previously, spent most of the game nowhere near their own end zone.

                              In short, it was the kind of game Pittsburgh needed after last week’s debacle.

                              [url="http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/09/18/steelers-right-the-ship-in-shutout-win/"]http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/20 ... utout-win/[/url]

                              Comment

                              • fordfixer
                                Legend
                                • May 2008
                                • 10921

                                #30
                                Re: Looks like a bad time for the Seahawks to come to Heinz

                                Sunday, September 18, 2011 - Page updated at 08:30 p.m.
                                Seahawks dominated by Steelers in 24-0 loss
                                [url="http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/text/2016245955.html"]http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/text/2016245955.html[/url]

                                By Danny O'Neil
                                Seattle Times staff reporter
                                PITTSBURGH — Trips don't get any more pointless than the one the Seahawks just finished.

                                On Sunday in Pittsburgh, they crossed midfield only twice, never got inside the Steelers' 25 and left town with a 24-0 loss weighing down their carry-on baggage.

                                The defeat wasn't a surprise. Seattle was a bigger underdog than it had been in any game since 1992. It was the spectacularly one-sided nature of this loss that stood out. The Seahawks had not failed to score in a game since Oct. 7, 2007 — the last time they played in Pittsburgh.

                                "That's embarrassing," quarterback Tarvaris Jackson said. "We just didn't show up as an offense."

                                That's not technically accurate. The Seahawks were, in fact, present on the field. It was just hard to tell by looking at the scoreboard or the stat sheet.

                                Mike Williams — who led Seattle with 65 catches last season — was not targeted in the first half for the second consecutive game. Zach Miller, the premier free-agent tight end Seattle signed, didn't catch a pass until there was less than nine minutes remaining.

                                Jackson was 20-for-29 passing for 159 yards, and while he was sacked five times, all were in the second half. Coach Pete Carroll was asked afterward if the offense's persistent struggles made him consider changing quarterbacks.

                                "It had nothing to do with the quarterback spot," he said. "I don't feel like that at all."

                                The Seahawks failed to score for just the 11th game in franchise history. Its longest play from scrimmage was a 17-yard pass to fullback Eddie Williams, who has been on Seattle's roster for almost a whole week now. Seattle sustained only one drive longer than six plays.

                                "The biggest frustration is that we're just better than what we're putting on the field on Sunday," Williams said.

                                As bad as Seattle's offense was — and it was unambiguously awful — the defense didn't do much better, considering it didn't force the Steelers to punt until the second half. This was a game in which the Seahawks' offense and defense could have sued each other for a lack of support.

                                Makes you wonder what would have happened if Seattle hadn't changed its practice times last week, instituted early wake-up calls and flown East two days before the game, huh?

                                Seattle is 0-2 for the second time in the past eight seasons. The Seahawks have never made the playoffs after losing their first two games of the season.

                                And as the Seahawks prepared to leave Pittsburgh, Carroll was left sounding almost like a politician who was preaching persistence and trying to quell panic.

                                "We have to stay the course," he said. "We have to keep battling."

                                This season began with the distinct possibility that Seattle could be worse than it was a year ago, when it won the NFC West. Not only were the Seahawks changing quarterbacks for the first time in 10 years, but they were planning to start an offensive line that included two rookies on the right side and three others who had never started a regular-season game next to each other.

                                Did Carroll have any idea the offense might be this unproductive?

                                "We hoped we could make it happen fast," he said, "and hoped that other people would be struggling to get going. But knowing how new we were and how few opportunities we had to bring them along, it's going to take a little while. And that's unfortunate, and it's very difficult to have to live through it."

                                It's not easy to watch it, either.

                                Danny O'Neil: 206-464-2364 or [email="doneil@seattletimes.com"]doneil@seattletimes.com[/email]

                                Molon labe

                                People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

                                ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
                                Mike Tomlin

                                American metal pimped by asiansteel
                                Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

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