The Athletic Football Show: A show about the NFL

The Patriots' one-season about-face meets the Seahawks' ruthless climb to the top of the league in Super Bowl LX

59 min
Feb 3, 20264 months ago
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Summary

The Athletic Football Show covers the Patriots' shocking turnaround from 4-13 to Super Bowl contenders and the Seahawks' dominant season under new coach Mike McDonald. Hosts analyze how aggressive free agency, Drake May's MVP-caliber development, and defensive innovation propelled New England, while Seattle's offensive system overhaul and elite defense make them Super Bowl favorites.

Insights
  • Aggressive free agency ($193M guaranteed) rarely works long-term, but Patriots hit on nearly every signing (Diggs, Milton Williams, Carlton Davis) through superior player evaluation and system fit
  • Drake May's success stems from mastering Josh McDaniels' complex Patriots system using Tom Brady tape as teaching tool, proving quarterback development requires both talent and scheme alignment
  • Mike McDonald's coaching effectiveness comes from raising the floor of backup players through belief and accountability rather than motivational speeches, creating a 'ready squad' mentality
  • Seahawks' offensive transformation required multiple coordinated bets (Sam Darnold trade, Kubiak hire, JSN acquisition, OL continuity) that all needed to hit simultaneously to reach Super Bowl
  • Defensive line construction matters more than individual star power—Seahawks' seven-deep rotation of selfless, complementary pass rushers enables versatile coverage schemes and light-box looks
Trends
CEO-style head coaches succeeding through X's and O's clarity and transparent communication rather than personality-driven leadershipOffensive system fit determining QB success more than raw talent—Patriots' complex progression reads vs. Shanahan-style simplicity creates vastly different outcomesDefensive versatility through depth and scheme flexibility replacing reliance on star pass rushers in modern NFLFirst-time play-callers with proven system pedigree (Kubiak, McDaniels) outperforming first-time coaches without established frameworksRed zone execution and third-down defense emerging as critical playoff differentiators between otherwise evenly-matched teamsRookie class contribution becoming essential to Super Bowl contenders' salary cap management and depth constructionDefensive coordinator role elevation when head coach delegates offensive playcalling authority to specialists
Topics
Free Agency Strategy and Contract EvaluationQuarterback Development and System FitOffensive Line Construction and Run Game ExplosivenessDefensive Line Depth and Pass Rush RotationPlay-Calling Philosophy and Offensive System DesignHead Coach Leadership Styles and Player MotivationThird-Down Defense and Red Zone EfficiencyRookie Class Contribution and Draft EvaluationDefensive Scheme Flexibility and Coverage LooksGame Management and Situational CoachingBackup Player Development and Depth UtilizationTwo-High Safety Coverage and Light Box DeploymentBlitz Rate Adjustment and Defensive AdaptationWide Receiver Route Progression and Secondary ReadsOffensive Coordinator Authority and Head Coach Delegation
Companies
The Athletic
Employs the beat writers (Chad Graf, Michael Sean Dugar) providing analysis of Patriots and Seahawks throughout the e...
New England Patriots
NFL team that went from 4-13 to Super Bowl contender through aggressive free agency and Drake May's development
Seattle Seahawks
NFL team featuring dominant defense and revamped offense under Mike McDonald, positioned as Super Bowl favorites
San Francisco 49ers
Referenced for Shanahan offensive system comparison and 2022 playoff matchup against Seahawks
Las Vegas Raiders
Clint Kubiak hired as head coach after successful season as Seahawks offensive coordinator
Baltimore Ravens
Referenced for Mike McDonald's defensive coordinator success and Leslie Frazier's coaching influence
Tennessee Titans
Referenced for Mike Vrabel's previous success with Ryan Tannahill and Arthur Smith offensive system
Minnesota Vikings
Mentioned for offensive line investment and Sam Darnold's previous performance issues
Los Angeles Rams
Referenced in playoff game analysis and Seahawks offensive performance evaluation
Houston Texans
Mentioned as opponent in Seahawks' week seven Monday Night Football game demonstrating offensive capability
People
Drake May
Patriots QB who exceeded expectations with MVP-caliber season, mastering complex Patriots offensive system
Mike Vrabel
Patriots head coach credited with aggressive free agency strategy and defensive game management excellence
Josh McDaniels
Patriots offensive coordinator who developed Drake May using Tom Brady tape as teaching methodology
Mike McDonald
Seahawks head coach implementing defensive mastery and raising floor of backup players through accountability
Clint Kubiak
Seahawks offensive coordinator hired to implement proven system, now head coach of Raiders
Sam Darnold
Seahawks QB who succeeded in Kubiak's system after trade from Vikings, avoiding turnover-prone tendencies
Jalen Jefferson
Seahawks WR (JSN) emerging as elite receiver with highest target share, driving offensive success
Stefan Diggs
Patriots WR signed in free agency at age 31 post-ACL, delivering second-most valuable targets in NFL
Milton Williams
Patriots defensive tackle signed to $26M/year, second-highest paid at position, delivering elite production
Carlton Davis
Patriots cornerback signed to $54M contract, performing at elite level in playoff defense
Christian Gonzalez
Patriots cornerback shadowing receivers, enabling aggressive blitz packages in playoff success
Leonard Williams
Seahawks defensive tackle anchoring elite defensive line rotation with selfless, complementary play
L.J. Collier
Seahawks defensive lineman part of seven-deep rotation enabling versatile defensive scheme execution
Ernest Jones
Seahawks linebacker emerging as all-pro under Mike McDonald's coaching, playing multiple positions
Chad Graf
Athletic Patriots beat writer providing analysis of team's free agency strategy and playoff performance
Michael Sean Dugar
Athletic Seahawks beat writer covering offensive transformation and defensive dominance throughout season
Robert Mays
Athletic Football Show host conducting interviews with beat writers about Super Bowl teams
Tom Brady
Referenced via tape study showing check-down progressions used to develop Drake May's decision-making
Pete Carroll
Former Seahawks coach referenced for comparison to Mike McDonald's leadership and team culture approach
Gary Kubiak
Clint Kubiak's father, resource for coaching guidance as Clint transitions to Raiders head coach role
Quotes
"Every single one of those moves...you go into it and you're like, 80% chance this will suck. You keep going and it doesn't. That's flipping a flush in free agency over and over and over again."
Robert MaysEarly discussion of Patriots free agency
"No route is dead. It doesn't matter if the play is for Jacks. If I'm option four on here, Sam is going to get to four."
AJ Barney (quoted by Michael Sean Dugar)Discussion of Seahawks offensive depth
"Mike McDonald's secret sauce has been raising the floor of guys like that. The same thing he did in Baltimore when you had Brandon Stevens play the best year he's ever played."
Michael Sean DugarAnalysis of McDonald's coaching philosophy
"If you're going to be the CEO type of coach, what are you doing to make an appreciable difference? And with Vrabel, it's just clear."
Robert MaysDiscussion of head coach value-add
"He's a silent killer. I'll run through a wall for him too. He just goes about it differently."
Michael Sean Dugar (quoting unnamed player on Clint Kubiak)Analysis of Kubiak's coaching style
Full Transcript
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Upgrade your team to the ultimate MacBook Pro back to my CDW Apple practice and global life cycle services, empowering your teams everywhere you operate. As an Apple Premium Business Partner, CDW delivers end-to-end seamless deployment with smart financing your CFO will love. This is an ad from BetterHelp. Some days, it feels like you're carrying something no one else can see. Stress, grief, responsibility, the kind of heaviness that doesn't show up in photos but follows you everywhere. You don't have to hold it alone. With BetterHelp, you can talk to someone who helps lighten what you've been carrying for far too long. Take the weight off. Start therapy anytime from anywhere online with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com slash random podcast for 10% of your first month of online therapy. Welcome to the Athletic Football Show. I'm Robert Mays. Kicking off our Super Bowl coverage this week. Every year, we do a show with our two beat riders who covered the team for the athletic. It's one of my favorite shows that we do every year. It's a great way to kick off Super Bowl week. Just kind of looking back at the journey. Those two teams took to this moment. That's what we did again this year. Chad Graf who covers the Patriots for us joined us first. To chat about just a shocking season for a 4-in-13 team from 2024. Somehow getting to the doorstep of a championship. Then Chad with Michael Shandougar who covers the Seahawks for us. Just about all of the bets that went right for the Seahawks this off season. And how the Mike McDonald era has turned into everything Seattle could have hoped. So let's get to those conversations with both of those guys right now. Joining us now it is our wonderful Patriots rider here at the athletic. Chad Graf. Chad, great to see you, man. Yeah, thank you for having me. What a setup this year. I'm excited. At what point or at any point during this off season. Did you think that you would be covering the new England Patriots in the Super Bowl? Oh, off season. Not at all. I thought you were going to say season. No, I didn't get it. Well, get there. Yes. Even then I was going to say, boy, not so pretty way. But off season, no, I thought maybe this team had a chance to be a wild card team did not think anything more than that. I remember when they were spending all this money in free agency. But that's kind of where I want to start. And so this off season specifically, they're extremely aggressive. The total number of guaranteed money handed out by the Patriots this spring, $193 million, which is about $40 million in any other team in the week. And you look at teams that spend like that in free agency. And typically there is like a one year bump that comes with that. But usually typically you'll stall out in the divisional round. Because if you're doing that, if you're spending to that extent, you mostly don't have enough in-house talent on the roster. It's why you have to expend to that level. But you look at the contracts that they handed out. And then when they were doing it, I was like, a lot of this stuff is not going to age well. Because it so rarely does for teams that are that aggressive in free agency. And then each one, if you take them individually, Millen Williams signs for $26 million a year, which is second in AVI among all defense attackers. Those contracts don't tend to pay out very well. You sign Carlton Davis, a third contract corner for $54 million. Stefan Diggs at 31 coming off of a 20 ACL. Every single one of those moves. And then even if you go further down to the mid-range deals, to the smaller deals, this is like flipping a flush in free agency over and over and over again in a way that I cannot remember. And it feels like that as much as anything has kind of driven them to this point. Totally. And that's the perfect analogy. I've been searching for the right way to explain how this happened. And I love flipping a flush. Because every one of those, you go into it and you're like, ah, 80% chance this will suck, ugly in a while. You keep going, Harold Landry. That was a contract that I remember thinking, like, what are they paying? That's not the lukewarm on that one. Okay, fair. Absolutely. The case on like Roberts Blaine, all these guys should not have worked out in the way that they did. So I think Vrable deserves a ton of credit. You know, we'll talk about the culture. I'm sure in everything that he's done there. Free agency was also largely his. Like the front office does what it does. But this is the Mike Vrable show right now. This has been the Mike Vrable show since he was hired. He chose a lot of these free agents. And here we are. It is astoundingly worked. Like you said, it's on every single level. So the high end guys, digs, Milton Williams, Carlton Davis, those all hit the big way. The number that jumped out to me, I was looking this up for a video we did on the YouTube channel this week. Stefan Diggs this year, the only player in the NFL to average more EPA per target than Stefan Diggs was Pukinacua. That's it. So his targets were the second most valuable of any receiver in the NFL this year, at 31 coming off for 20 C.L. So those guys at the top massive successes. The mid-tier deals, again, every one of them worked at how you'd want them to. When you sign Morgan Moses to that deal, it's like all we want is passable right tackle play this season. Check, Splayin has been hugely valuable in just the way they want to play defense. Garrett Bradbury, same exact deal with the Morgan Moses contract. We're going to bring him in so we have a starting caliber center done. And then you go one step further down. The deals are like Tonga, Cheson, even like bringing back Jalen Hawkins on a one-year deal. It's just I can't remember this resounding of a success. Like the the Bengals in 2021 are kind of like this. But even that was only on defense. And so the fact that you have kind of star level players, quality starters, and then even like the million dollar contracts you signed ended up becoming really important on your way to get here. It's like a fascinating collection of moves that we very rarely see having this sort of impact this late in the season. And also fascinating because some of it was like this is the course we are charging. Let's go get Milton Williams and beef up the interior. And some of it admittedly was like, I don't know. What are we going to do at wide receiver? Dehagan's resigning like boy, we got no options. It's draft. Chris got a million. Think about like they tried Chris got. Think about the sliding doors thing with Chris Goin, where he doesn't play for the first however many. So even missing out on Chris Goin and having to settle for Diggs ends up working out in their favor. Exactly. Diggs is the one that like that just fell in their lap. They had no other choice. You have to have a wide receiver. They wanted to be able to draft Will Campbell, which means you're not drafting 10 Macmillan's like, I don't know Diggs is still there. What's on him? And even those moves have worked out so so well. So that's the off season. And we imagine. Okay, so what point during the season do we get to a place where this is starting to feel a little different? I know where it was for me when they play the bills in that first Sunday night game and they beat Buffalo. And it's not just that they won. It was some of the moments Drake may have in that game where you think, okay, like this now goes from being with is sort of a feel good story. Oh, man, this team is better than we could have hoped or would have thought to now. Can this team actually compete in this division and in the AFC at large? And then it just completely takes off from there. Even talking to some of their executives that week game that week five game flipped everything from the thinking, from the confidence from just the whole operation of the Patriots because they felt like they didn't play their A game. They went to Buffalo. They struggled in the first half offensively, second half defensively. Like it was not their best. And they beat the Buffalo bills in Buffalo in prime time. And so they came away from that thinking, oh, you know, this could actually be something. And then you think about those Drake may throws. The one that I think sticks out to me more than any other throw from this season and there are plenty was that one in week five against the bills. He's rolling right throws it. Looks like it's going to go out of bounds and just perfect weeded digs on the sideline. Like that was the kind of play that epitomized his season of, boy, things are a little muddy up front. This isn't great. Gets you out of a bad situation. And instead of getting you out of a bad situation into a neutral situation, which, hey, that's good quarterbacking. He gets you into like a plus, plus, plus, but that's when it felt different. The Drake May resurgence or the Drake May ascension is obviously like the biggest story associated with this team because you can sign all the free agents that you want. If Drake May doesn't take the step that he did going from a guy who what we talked about this a lot this off season, the production he had within that offense, given the supporting cast was borderline miraculous. Like to not have the worst offense in football, considering what was around him, really spoke to how much promise was there. But even if you were the biggest Drake May believer in the world, assuming that he would lead the league in essentially every advanced passing metric and be like a legitimate MVP candidate, were there people in the building that even thought that was possible? No, I was skeptical for sure. I thought that offensive line was not going to be good. I thought the wide receivers weren't going to be good. And even within the building, they were like going back to the passable play at right tackle. Like let's just get passable on the offensive line because passable for them on the offensive line is such a dramatic increase. It's one of the worst offensive lines I've watched over like the course of an entire NFL season. It was horrific in 24 and that's what Drake May was dropped into. And so I think there was a little bit of sense this off season with the front office of, hey, we dropped Drake May into playing this game on all Matt and Road mode as a rookie. Like we gave him the hardest situation. And the fact that he didn't immediately sink tells us something is there. But even within that, I don't think anybody expected him to be a legitimate viable MVP, depending on how you look at him or staff for it. Like he could be the MVP of the league in his second season with what I think you would still call a pretty mundane wide receiver group like booties had some. I don't know how good any of them are because I don't know how much of it is them and how much of it is Drake May. Like there's a chance that booties just way better than we think he is. But again, because the quarterback play, it kind of clouds the quality of everything around him because he's been so good. Mac Hollins played more snaps at wide receiver than anybody else on this team. I don't think anybody's running away from this. Like, this is for Mac Hollins is a number one wide receiver. This is the reason. So this is Drake May. And a lot of it I think comes back to the deep ball. Like we knew he would be good at scramble. We knew he would get them out of bad situations. I think what really elevated this was his ability to turn into maybe the best deep ball passer in all of the NFL. The touch that he had on some of the throws up the scene. But also being able to rip the outside the numbers. Like he had everything you would want in a deep ball passer. To me, it was just how many elements of his game were more refined than I expected them to be by this point in his career. Because even if you were somebody that was a Drake May, it was bullish on Drake May as a prospect. I think there were still some questions about decision-making some of the low light moments. Is he going to try to do too much too often? Is that going to lead to some turnovers to some sacks? We'll get to what the playoffs have looked like in a second here. But for most of the season, a lot of those mistakes just weren't part of the overall formula. He was making the right play so consistently. I think back to even the first Miami game. Like all the times where you see him just checking the ball down in the right moments. In fact, that his game felt so mature. And then you combine that with all the physical talent that he has. And I think that explained a lot of his season. And I wonder if somebody who has talked to these guys all the time and maybe has a better sense of this, it seems to me from the outside looking in that the Josh McDaniels part of this really matters. And for people who don't really understand the way that the Patriots' offense is compared to a lot of the other offensive systems in the league. So the Patriots' offense and the way they teach it to quarterbacks is about as far removed as the offensive meta in the league can be. If you look at the Shanahan system, for example, there's no, you don't check things. You can someplace every once in a while. It's a lot of pure progression stuff where you're just like, all right, I'm going 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 based on the not necessarily what the coverage is, but like how I'm reading this play out. They're trying to make it as easy on the quarterback as possible. The Patriots do the opposite of that. Where they put as much on the quarterback as you can possibly get. And I think some guys do well with that. And some guys don't. For some guys, it can just bog them down. Jimmy Groplow is the best possible example. When Jimmy was in San Francisco, he was fantastic in like a pure progression offense for what they asked him to do. When he got dropped into the Raider situation with Josh McDaniels, it was too much for him and he folded under the way to think of all that mental strain. But if you can have a guy that handles it, what it allows you to become as a player is very special. And so the fact that it seems like Drake may took to this so quickly and has come out is so much more of a fully formed product because of it. To me is like one of the most important stories about this entire team. Totally. And so to take it all the way back as Josh McDaniels is trying to teach this super complex system and the way to read defenses and the way that you're then going to read your progressions, what he did was he put together a clip of Tom Brady checking it down on all sorts. All right, this pattern against this even perfect. Now clip that now let's do it on this situation in this situation. And then over and over in August, showing Drake may the best quarterback of all time with seven super balls did it this way. I promise you this can work. I know your deep all is awesome. We are going to get you opportunities for that. But if this worked for Tom Brady, this can work for you. And I was admittedly a little bit skeptical even in August like you're watching training camp and there were moments where it looked okay, but there were a lot of moments where it was just a lot for Drake. May like the season turned out incredible. It was not a snap of the fingers and oh boy, here we go. There was the development of all of that. And I think going back to Brady and starting there and showing that and building the belief that this can work played a real meaningful impact in his development to this point. When you have a CEO typehead coach like Mike Brabel is so much of it comes down to two specific hires you have to get right. It's a play call in the quarter back. And if you think back to what it was in Tennessee, obviously Derek Henry had an outsized impact on what the Titans were. But Ryan Tannahill played at a very high level for those couple seasons. This was literally with Arthur Smith and Ryan Tannahill. The most efficient offense in football for multiple years. And if you have that part of it, the other elements of what Mike Brabel is start to shine through. The culture setting, the game management. When they didn't have the play caller in the quarterback, the rest of that stuff starts matter less. And so now you come to New England, you get the quarterback and play caller right again. And we get back to a place where we get to realize all the other thing Mike Brabel does well. So when you think about just him as a head coach, whether this be your interactions with him, whether it be what you've heard staff and players talk about, what has struck you about Mike Brabel, the head coach and his role and kind of how the Patriots have gotten here. What has blown me away just from having watched Bill Belichick from having watched Gerard Mayo last year, even go back to Minnesota and see in Zimmer and Kevin O'Connell. Mike Brabel is so hands on on the sideline more than any other coach I've seen. A lot of them for good reason are spending the TV time out, so like drawn on their playbook, trying to figure out where they want to go on their play sheet. All right, we're going to hit this and that's going to set up this. I'm like, you can picture Shanahan doing that and make they do that a little bit. And it makes sense for them for what they do. That is not Mike Brabel. I always want to Mike Brabel to, you know, wear some sort of fitness tracking device just to like watch him on the sideline. He is sprinting up and down the sidelines like a madman. He is running over and all right, he's with the defense align for this. And then he jumps over and he's over here with this. Like he is so hands on and everything that he has done. Now he's also let Drake may work with Josh McDaniels. Like he has said, Josh, you are the head coach of the offense. You are Drake's colleague. He'll go over, but what he says to Drake is not. All right, here's how we're going to read this. It is much more like, all right, head up here. When you won first down, this is what we're going to do. The clips of the Mike Dupstuff have been very good from the two of them. So I've been blown away just at how hands on Mike Brabel is. So it's a little bit of that. But then it's also talking to John Striker. They're their game management coordinator to figure out what they're going to do. And they have been so good at finding those little moments, like you guys have talked about on the show with the Jared Stidum Interception and slowly trodden guys off the field and slowly trodden on and speeding up the operation for Stidum, who then throws the interception. They've been so good at on the margins winning there. I think with a lot of coaching archetypes, like the type of head coach you're seeking out, my question is always, and I've been open about this. Like I offense to me feels like the safest way to go because you need a good offense, typically to consistently win. But if you get the coordinator and the quarterback right, you can have different types of coaches in the same way that Brabel has. But if you are going to be the CEO type of coach, what are you doing to make an appreciable difference? How are you, what are you doing as a value add for the organization as this type of coach? And with Brabel, it's just clear. Like as you see the things that he's doing. And so it was after the Chargers game. We said this on the show where Brabel's doing all the right stuff from a game management perspective. Harbaugh is not going for it when he should. Just little tiny things. If you're a CEO type of coach, what is your CEO type head coach doing for you in these moments? And I would argue that Brabel is doing more from that role than any other coach from cut from that type of model is doing across the entire week. And some of it, you know, is admittedly like the emotional stuff, the stuff that is a little bit that matter. But that matter is right. Yes. Totally matters. Like the way that he's getting his lip bloodied from Milton Williams, like jumping into him, like that stuff does matter, I think. And some of it, you know, for sure can be corny. Like he's having the team come up and say there are four Hs in front of everybody and having to open up about their history and their heroes and their heartbreak and stuff like that. Like I get that some of that is easy to roll your eyes out. But everybody there says that stuff matters and the little stuff that he does to embrace this team and defeat into like, hey, you guys aren't stars. Nobody thought you were going to be good. Like I do think that genuinely matters, even in an era of analytics. All right, before we move on, let's take our first quick break. Harry Styles is back with his brand new album, Kiss All The Time, disco occasionally. Featuring the number one single, ApeChug. Out now. When applying for grad roles, there's a lot to take in. Big opportunities, big clients, big teams. But don't get blinded by the big lights. You need a nice balance for the personal stuff too. Like knowing you have someone in your corner from day one, without that personal touch, we'd just be another big firm. We're big enough to grow your talent, personal enough to see your potential. That's beyond the ordinary. Search BDO early careers and explore other graduate programs today. In the Clarner app. Zach Kerr's role in all of this. To me, it's so important. So for people who don't know or have not been aware of this. So, Tyrell Williams was the defensive coordinator coming into the season. He had been the defensive line coach for the Lions last year. Previous to that, he had been the defensive line coach for a variable when he was in Tennessee. He's diagnosed with a really prostate cancer, correct? For the season, he has to step away. They promote or kind of elevate Zach Kerr into this role where he's the inside lab backers coach who's now calling plays. And the quality of the defense, that would be enough to pay attention to what he's done. But what I find so interesting about the Patriots defense specifically this season. There have been so many different iterations and phases of what the Patriots defense has been. And so if you go through it, the first month of the season, they're playing with light boxes on less than like half of their run place. One of the lowest rates in the league. And then from like week five to 13, they start playing with light boxes in one of the highest rates in the league. Then after the buy, they go down to one of the lowest rates in the league again. Since week 14, the only teams to play with light boxes at a lower rate than the Patriots with a box and the box in the Bronx. That's it. So they were the third from the bottom after being up near the top for like a good chunk of the year. They started blitzing 40% of the time after the buy. It was only like 25% of the time before that. And so you have a defense that has kind of been like this living breathing thing that continues to change based on what they think they need. And so it's not just the fact that curves call plays for defense that's been good. It's that the target has been moving so often that I actually don't think the staff on that side of the ball has gotten enough credit for the way that they've been able to kind of change and iterate over the course of this entire year. And I think it's worth pausing and looking at Zach Kurs' background because I think this would be impressive for anybody. But certainly with somebody from his background, I think you would probably get this opportunity and just be like, boy, I have so much on my plate right now. Like, here's how we're going to play. We're just going to do this. And we're going to get as good as we can at it because this is his background. He joins James Madison University with Everett Witheres comes from Ohio State and he's on the offensive side of the ball. He starts out coaching running backs. Then they go to Texas State and he's a co-offensive coordinator. His whole career has been the offensive side of the ball. He joins up with Mike Raeble, the connections a couple of Ohio State guys and John Striker who he's close with. And they throw him like as an assistant inside linebackers coach. Like we are talking very, very low level. These are not the guys who are super influencing game plans or what's happening. When Raeble gets fired, he doesn't know what he's going to do. So he's just like a quality control coach for the giants. Again, super low level. This is last year. Like he has no say in anything basically last year. For the first time ever this season, he was going to lead his own position group in the NFL. Holy smokes. This is a lot that's going to be on his plate. Like are you ready for this act? That's the question coming in. And then two weeks in because the cancer diagnosis, oh, hey, I know you were going to lead a position group for the first time. Your column plays, man. Good luck. Here you go. And is he like at the front of meetings and stuff? Yeah, he's leading every defense of court. 100 percent. Just the play calling. The other thing about this is, and I'm curious how much insight you have to this because I don't think Raeble's ever been very open or transparent about how much of a role he has with the defense, but I look at it. And this is a very simplistic kind of rough around the edges like way of doing this, but hear me out. When you look at what Bowen was doing with the Titans, when Raeble was there, I loved watching that defense. And they were, I think, the ideas and some of the creativity and just how amorphous it was in the back end. I thought that Bowen and that staff had done a very good job. When you look at what Shane Bowen was with the giants, it was not nearly as good as it was when he was with the Titans. And so my like kind of outside looking in perspective here is that Raeble has more of a hand in shaping what the defense and the defensive identity and just the quality has been at these last couple stops than maybe we appreciate, given how we think about him as like a CEO and only coach. Do you think that's fair? I do think that's fair. And yet I think if you talk to anybody, Raeble certainly included even off the record, whatever. He is going to downplay that and insist it's not him and insist you wouldn't believe the jobs at court is doing and he has been unbelievable, which I do think is all true. But also, you know, if you're given them true serum, I do think Mike Raeble still has a little bit more say than we give him credit for, especially because he truly has passed off the offense. Josh McDaniel's you run the show over there. I'll help you. I'll support you, whatever you need, but you're running the show. So I do think he's got a little bit more time to spend with the defense, even though it is that core basically defensive coordinator. I do think he's probably helping and helping spin that wheel defensively. So we're not just doing the same thing over and over. And the Blitz rate, I think is the big tell what they've done in the playoffs is they basically looked at in the charges case, the offensive line and in the Texans case, the quarterback and the Broncos case, the quarterback and said, if we get pressure on you, even if we have to send extra guys, we trust Christian Gonzalez and what he's doing on the back and we trust Carlton Davis and our safeties, if we get pressure on you, game over, you're not going to stand a chance. And so their Blitz rate has gone through the roof. And now I'm curious, does that continue against the Seahawks or to the Seahawks? We'll get this and say, hey, they're going to blitz a ton and all the sudden, variable and core totally flip it and they stop blitzing that I think is a big question going into this. I'm sure we will talk a lot about that on the preview. We do on Thursday, because to me, it's like one of the biggest questions about the entire game. The Seahawks, I think it've been blitzed the second highest rate in the league this year, but they haven't been a bad Blitz team. The question is, if you do send a lot of heat in that game, can you get the two or three mistakes from their offense that you probably need to win? But the problem though is that you can flip that thinking to the other side too, because I wanted to ask you what their path through the playoffs have looked like. You're played three offenses that essentially like imploded. Some of that is the quality of your defense, but the Chargers offense and their offensive lines are bad group that we've seen how we've seen the floor of that Chargers offense be very low multiple times throughout the season. You get that sort of game from them, you win a nugly game. Week after, CJ Stroud like implodes in front of us, right? That probably is not going to happen again. Then you play a backup quarterback in the AFC championship game. So as you think about what the formula for these wins has looked like, do you think that sort of game is possible again? Where Drake make and have another bad game, but the defense can play well enough that the Patriots can win an ugly Super Bowl. I don't really think so. I think Drake may have to go back to being the Superman that he was in the regular season for them to pull this off. Now, I think that Deven's can play very well, and we've seen Sam Darnell's struggle with interior pressure, which is where the Patriots are so good. They've been sending more blitzes from their DBs. Marcus Jones has been a big factor in their blitz packages. So I think there are ways that they can rattle Sam Darnell a little bit. We saw the Vikings spend a small fortune to up their interior offensive line after seeing what happened to Darnell last year. That's a whole different subject, but I think that I like the Patriots defensive tackles in this matchup, especially with blitz help against this interior Seahawks O'Lean. But I don't think that they can win an ugly Super Bowl unless Drake may has three or four of those awesome moments. All season, he's come through in those moments, maybe less so in the playoffs when he hasn't had two six of the quarters. We're in pretty crummy weather. So there's an there's an out for it and those defenses are all very good, but I think you have to have Drake may pulling close to an A game to have a chance. So where do we land on like what the offense actually is? Because the entire regular season, you're playing against a slate of pretty bad teams. And then in the playoffs, you play against three very good defenses. And the offense has looked much, much different than it did for most of the year. So I mean, there's probably no way to answer this, but like it really does feel like we don't have a good sense for where the offense actually lands. Like are they, I think they finished second and offensive to be aware of third. First in EPA per play. First in EPA per play. So are they that or are they closer to the offense? Be saw during the playoffs. I really don't know like where we should land on that. And for now, I think I'm leaning more toward the regular season. Perhaps this is a home or bias or just being around it, but half of those playoff quarters were in blizzard basically or or just really bad conditions that didn't lend themselves to good offensive football. And so I think that gets back to variable and knowing game management and be like, oh, this is going to be this kind of game. Like sure, we can play that. We will do that kind of game. But it is certainly fair to look at this and say, oh, like once you started playing all these good defenses, Drake May wasn't the Superman that we thought. And these wide receivers went back to being what they thought. Like all of that is totally fair. And what is their reward for getting through those three defenses? Probably the best defense in the week. I want the last thing I wanted to ask you, you're around this every day. You're on this team every day. We just went through a lot of like the main players and what got the Patriots here. Who are the guys we're not thinking enough about? Like who are some of the quiet contributors to this that have been integral to this team's success, but maybe somebody that's away from this or isn't a Patriots fan or has been paying attention might not appreciate enough. Let me start with one thing that'll lead to a bigger picture. Craig Woodson, their rookie safety from California has been unbelievable in the playoffs. He was good in the right year season. Like better than you thought he would be for being a fourth round pick and he played a ton of games in college. And that was, you know, you draft a guy like that. He'll contribute right away. He'll help us out in special teams. He has been so, so good in the playoffs covering up a lot. And then I think that lends itself to in the bigger picture, the only thing that we haven't talked about this team that I think is worth noting. They kind of nailed their rookie class. Now Wil Campbell has had some issues in the playoffs. There's bigger picture stuff there. They have 13 rookies on their 53 man roster. Every member of their 11 man draft class plus two undrafted guys like they've gotten a bunch of contributions. I don't know what will happen with Wil Campbell. Their second round pick, Travegan Henderson has not really played because they're just trusting Ramondra Stevenson more. So it's not like every pick was a home run, but especially these kind of middle round guys, including their starting left guard Jared Wilson. They've done a good job with those. And I think if you want to find somebody on the Patriots that doesn't get enough credit, watch number 31 safety Craig Woodson. And look listen, you don't, you're left tackle, even if he's a top five pick, doesn't need to be a star right away. We've seen guys struggle there all the time. And also he struggled coming back from injury. Like he was better against a Neil Hunter. Yeah, a Neil Hunter, Will Anderson and Nick Manito and again, it's not going to get any easier on Sunday. That's the problem. But the idea that like, will, will Campbell is a disappointment because of what's happened over the last three weeks. Like, we don't have to do that. Like and the fact that Travegan Henderson hasn't played because Stevenson in particular, this is my, my take on this is most likely they find him more reliable and steady in these moments, whether that be from just the ways running the ball, but also the past protection stuff from Stevenson and the playoffs has been phenomenal. And so the idea that you're going with a safer option as you're just trying to mitigate mistakes against bad offenses, I think is totally fine. And so overall, I think the point stands like what they've gotten from this rookie class and what it looks like moving forward that together with what the free agency class looks like, bringing it back to the top, that's how you get a Patriots team that's playing the Super Bowl that we never could have expected. Four and 13 last year, four and 13 the year before that. I know we spent all this time talking about it. And yet I still don't think the point is made enough. The Patriots might have been the worst team in the NFL last year. Like, they beat the bills in that game that nobody was trying. One of the worst games you could possibly watch, the Patriots got a lead in the bills like, Oh, cool. You guys got this one from here because they didn't want the Patriots to have the number one pick. Just an interesting thing to look back on that the Patriots almost had the first pick overall last year because they were that bad. And now they're four and a half point underdogs against the best team in the NFL. This is not like a 10 point spread. Like, this is a game that Patriots absolutely can win. And I don't think any of us could have pictured being in this spot probably mid season let alone if you go back a year from now. Chad Graf sincerely appreciate the time, sir. Great to see you. We'll do it again very soon. Thanks for having me. All right, before we move on, we're going to take one more quick break. Hello, we're Jane and Fee from the Off-Air Podcast. And we're currently sponsored by Stripenstead. Stripenstead, Nickers are some of the softest things I've ever worn made from breathable wood fibers. They're perfect for women juggling a million things at once who want to be stylish and comfortable. They've got 10 shapes in sizes six to 22. So there's a fit for everybody. Plus, their sleepwear is like sleeping in a cloud. Oprah and Vogue are obsessed for a reason go to Stripenstead.com and use the code offer 20 for 20% off. Daniel, out of all your decisions lately, choosing a Vancey West Coast first class is by fire your best. Peace and space to work and that service. You don't have to find the coffee. The coffee finds you. Oh, what's that? The smell of bacon and success, Daniel. Success. Arrived ready with the Vancey West Coast first class. Enjoy delicious, freshly prepared food and drink and service to your seat. Some journeys belong in first class. Book direct with the Vancey West Coast. Exclusions, limitations, apply. 1983 election, she's won a landslide second. Peace have been deployed to disperse crowds as the poll tax riots escalate. Credit crunches continuing to spread from the USA. Britain has left the European Union. I mean, this goes on. Boris, these. We've helped Britain invest through 45 years of change. That's why we're the UK's number one investment and savings platform trusted by two million people. Hargreese lands down, helping Britain invest for it all. Investment returns vary for claim verification because it's hl.co.uk. Joining us now, it is our Seahawks writer here at the athletic. I buddy Michael Sean Dugar, how you doing, man? I'm doing good. How you doing, man? It's good to see you here. It's exciting. My first time covering the Super Bowl, which is funny. You started covering the Seahawks just after they were playing in Super Bowls and they were playing in it as a championship games. I remember that era very well, but it's like just before your time. Yes, my year is the first year that Cam Chancellor broke his neck. Cliff Avril broke his neck. Sharmtore is a kill. He's like, I was the bad luck charm. The end of the Legion of Boom. The end of the Legion of Boom was when Michael Sean Dugar showed up to cover the Seahawks. Yes. The last time you and I talked in person, we were sitting in the closet out off the media room at the VMA in Rent and where the Seahawks practice. And I went back and listened to it today because I wanted to get the exact details read. We were talking about the Seahawks offense and just the wide range of outcomes that could happen from the Seahawks offense. And I said, I could see them being the 28th best offense in the league. I could see them being the 12th best offense in the league. Well, we're here at the Super Bowl. The Seahawks offense finished between like 10th and 14th in any statistical category you want to look at. DVOA, they were 10th. Way to DVOA, they were 14th. EPA per play, they were 14th. So they were closer to that 12th than they were at 28th. And that's the reason I think that they're here. When did you know that the offense was going to be the version of it? They had hoped it was going to be after remaking it in the way they did this offseason. It came through and waves for me. So first it was, Ken Jackson Smith and Jacob would be the number one. And then I went to joint practice in Green Bay and I was like, yes, okay, so that was you knew going into it. Like even in training camp, he was going to be able to have this kind of season. Yeah, going against his own guys, you know, you get caught watching one team of bunches. Why like when you and other guys parachute in, you got a better national feel for the league. I'm just watching the same guys every day. Sure. Then I went to Green Bay though. Joint practice has been pretty instructive for me last couple years. And I was like, oh, no one can cover number 11. He'll be fine, you know. And then as the season went on, I think I would say week five against Tampa Bay is when I bought into everything else. Yeah. That was when they couldn't win with their defense. So defense was getting shredded by Baker. Mayfield that day. And what it's saying, dude, we'll be put up like 35 points throwing everybody all over the yard. The offensive line was good. That's really when I started to believe, oh, wait a minute. This can be something. And then I decided it was something in week seven. When they hosted the Houston Texans on Monday Night Football and they hung 27 on those guys. Now they scored, they gave up four turnovers, I believe. One of them led to a Houston Texas touchdown. So it wasn't the greatest offensive performance ever, but we could probably go down the game log and count on one hand how many teams score 27 points on offense against the Houston Texans this year. It was a very good defense. So I think week seven that went into their by week. That's when I believed in the rest of the world saw them on Monday Night Football or Sunday Night Football, I believe against the commanders week nine. And they just blitzed them. That game was over before the parking lot filled up on Sunday Night Football. So that's really that little middle of the road there. I was like, I this offense is for real. The Tampa Bay game is a good kind of jumping off point, but even for me, like the first three weeks of the season, it wasn't even necessarily the results. It was the plan because when they had the offense they did under grub last year, I think that even going into the season, there was some hesitance from Mike McDonald about, okay, when I'm a defensive coach, to me, the hardest thing to play against is an offense where the run and the pass are tied together where everything is cohesive where there are no tells they make it hard on me. The Seattle offense under Mike Erden Ryan grub was the exact opposite of that. They didn't do any of that. And so I think on purpose, they tried to seek out whatever the furthest thing was away from last year's offense. And that's what a kubi action hand offense is. And so that to me is like the first bet that they made on the offense being different. Then you make the bet to go get Sam, trade it out for Gina. You make the bet to trade, DK McAf. All of these small things that if they had gone the other way, we're looking at an offense that never finds itself. Instead, every single one of those small bets that they made turned out as good as it possibly could have. J.S.N.'s the best receiver in the league next to Pukinakua, Klinkubiak is so good as a play collar that he's no longer, he's not the offense accordingly. The C.O.X anymore, like the fact that it wasn't just one of those or two of those or three of those of like the five major bets that they made every single one of them turned into the best possible outcome it could for the C.O.X. Which there's no way you could predict that. Like there's no way you could envision this being how it would go on offense even if you believed in the plan. Yeah, and you didn't even mention the offensive line, right? They brought back pretty much all the same guys. All they do is draft a guy from North Dakota State in the first round and then they make the center. Also a guy from North Dakota State and undrafted free agent Saini from the year before in Jalen Sundell. So you're talking about bringing back three of the same five guys. You plug in two guys from the FCS and roll the ball out there and say go to the Super Bowl and they did that. That was part I was actually really skeptical about as well. I liked Gray's Able. I thought he was very good. I'm no online expert but just watching him talk to people who are online experts. They're like, all right, that's great. How much does one left guard elevate an offensive line that I've watched be bad for the better part of a decade? And the answer was a lot. The answer's a lot. That's part of it but I also think that again, structurally. And I did a video on this like two weeks into the season. If you looked at you could see it immediately that difference of when you have a system where you're going to be in the gun and you're dropping back 65% of the time, you're going to make your individual offensive linemen look like the worst versions of themselves. You're hanging them out the drive consistently. When you do the opposite, when you are running the ball as much as any team in the NFL, when you're using all of this play action, when you're using all of this personnel, that type of system allows those guys to be the best versions of themselves. And so even swapping out one piece, you are still going to raise the floor of the offensive line play overall so much by making the system change that they did. And so the fact that they knew that as part of how they were making the individual players along that line, I just think speaks to the vision that the combination of Mike, John Schneider and Clint Kubiak had when they were trying to figure out what they wanted this offense to be. Yeah, and I think them hiring someone who came with a proven system was huge for problem solving. Yeah. The other thing about Ryan Grubb is like, okay, let's say in a week nine, Ryan Grubb's offense couldn't figure out how to do something, run the ball, run dagger, whatever it is. What is he going to show them? Often Washington Huskies tape, you know, from 2020, you can't, right? That's just not instructive enough for these NFL guys. But what if your wide zone stuff's not hitting in week 14, if you're Clint Kubiak? We have decades of data for whatever we need to show, hey, this is what it's supposed to look like. Here's how this step works, this technique against this front, against this defensive coordinators database of tried and true system. And Grubb didn't have that. So in week 14, 15, or whatever, they don't have an identity. They can't just problem solving real time, which is what they needed to do. Whereas now the run game did hit a low in like November. And then what do you know? Week 16 against the Rams starts to click. Now all the wide zone stuff is hitting. Now they can get first downs with runs on third and 16, which they did like four times this year. I think they're like 10 or 15 of them throughout the league. And they had four or five. Yeah, they had four there in the regular season. Yeah. And that's because they were able to problem solve during the season. That's a lot easier when you have this collection of data to point to the show guys to show all the left guards, show the tight ends, how to take on this block to show the receivers. All right, here's the technique to reach this nickel, this safety. Grubb just couldn't do that. No, to no fault of his own. He was the first time coach in the NFL. But Kubiak doesn't have that problem. Like you said, that's why by the time Monday, February 9th hits, he starts his new job with the Raiders. I was going to it's funny that you said this because I was going to ask you and that kind of back after the season where it was a little bit bumpier. The Carolina game sticks out to me. I think the Carolina game is like weirdly indicative of how I felt about the C-OX and the C-OX over the C-OX offense and how they played into what the C-OX were overall. Because they scored 27 points in that game. But so much of that is short fields, your defense is dominating. The offense down to down. There's part of you. It's like, is this good enough? Because this is going to be good enough when we get to the biggest parts of the season. So aside from the running game, what do you think were the other things they had to work through in some of those lows to move past that version of the offense that was leaving me with the sort of doubt that it did? With the running game, it wasn't necessarily just wasn't clicking all the time. They weren't getting explosive. That was the huge issue. Like you need explosive. We use like yards per carry as a way to measure run game quality. But also just go look at those logs. You're averaging four yards per carry. Let's say how many of those are a 12 yarder? How many of those are an 18 yarder? That's really what brings your average up. It makes your offense something that people have to worry about. You mentioned running the marry in the past. The run in the past together. Well, that marriage only works when the run game is also explosive. And they figured out how to get that. But also what they needed from this offense was explosives from people who aren't jacks. That's pretty huge in this. And we've seen like AJ Barnard make big plays. We saw Rashid Shaheed make big plays in the play offs, whether as a runner or as a receiver. That's been huge. Cooper Cup has made a couple big, big catches. It's not high volume, but he has multiple catches of like 20 plus yards over the last few games. And so that was the other thing. Because after a while teams are like, no, we're not going to do it. Let jacks run by us. You know, that's how defensive coordinators lose their hair. Right? As watching number 11, the best player who they plan for all week run by their safeties. And that's slowed down a little bit. And when they figure out how to get other guys to run by the safeties or whoever, that's when their offense felt a little bit more complete to get to the point where it is now. I think that's exactly right. I mean, you watch what they were against the Rams. And the fact that it's all those other guys chipping in his pass catchers. But also like what they've gotten from Kenneth Walker in the playoffs. And I understand why Zack Sharbonne played as much as Zack Sharbonne did over the course of the regular season. And especially in this game, I'm sure we'll talk about during our preview. Like the past protection you get from Zack Sharbonne is very important in the overall quality of the offense. But there's no denying that Kenneth Walker is like an incredibly talented explosive player. And so the fact that they've had to lean into him more in the playoffs, it's almost been this like accidental path to more explosiveness that they would never have planned on because you would have assumed Sharbonne would have been a part of the formula going into the postseason. Yeah, I think Ken had five scrimmage touchdowns in the regular season. He's had four in the play. Yes, as a Ken of the Walker severely invested fantasy player, I'm deeply aware of how many touchdowns he had in the regular season. Yeah, we have a running bit on our C.O.X. band of Man Park as because I had Ken as well. And then I'm watching the games live and then George Hullani would get these red zone carries. And I'm like, did I miss something? Is Ken in the dark house? He's never fumbled in his career. So I'm like, okay, what's going on? Why is George Hullani or Zack Sharbonne getting all these goal line carries? And no knock to those guys? Those are good backs as well. Like you said, Zack brings other value. But you know, when Ken switched agents, which he did like a couple weeks ago, I was like, yeah, that makes sense. I could, as good as this team was, I bet Ken's agent was pissed watching this season going, why is my guy not touching the ball and go look in the playoffs. He's been one of the best players in the playoffs for the Seahawks offense. And then he felt like they just took the Ferrari out of the garage, really with Ken Walker. I think that's going to be key on Sunday as well. And it's nice to use fresh though too because there wasn't a ton of mileage. He can be explosive at this point in the season. So that's huge. The last thing I'll ask you about the offense specifically, obviously like the big larger machinations and the big moves that they made. Those are obvious. Hitting on Sam, Kubiak, all of that. What are some of the quieter things that you feel like have kind of driven this? Like you mentioned AJ Barney, like somebody like that. What are the things that somebody that isn't watching this offense day to day? Who are the guys that have shaped this more than we might appreciate? Yeah, I think one really quiet but subtle aspect of this is something AJ Barney mentioned to me in week two after he got a touchdown against his dealers. He said, Mike, I just got to remember that no route is dead. He's like, what are you talking about? He's like, it doesn't matter if the plays like for Jacks. If I'm option four on here, Sam is going to get to four. Yeah, that's going to matter. And the Bobo touchdown, right? Like that's a backside throw. The, the two point conversion and overtime against the Rams. Eric Salberts, the fourth read. That was his first catch of the game. But that's the thing. No route is dead. And that's been pretty key because obviously they're going to draw a place for number 11. That's just very obvious. But the defense knows that too. And the other guys, they can't just fall asleep. You can't just say, I'm the through route on this dagger concept. I'm not going to get the ball. It's going to Jacks. No, you actually might. So alert, man, when I throw you this goal ball. And that's been huge. I think for all those other guys who have been on the backside of these plays Cooper Cup and the playoffs, there's touchdown and the NFC championship game. He's option three. The play is to the front side. Sam comes all the way back around. So all that stuff has been huge. And that just minds it. Just like, hey, the plays for Jacks, but I might get the ball. You know, that's really massive for these guys. Psychies as well, because you can get caught up in someone like Jacks who has this massive target share. I think the highest and spend in March of 2012. He has. And so like the other guy, I'm just running around getting cardio. No, you're running around and you might get this ball. And it might be for the game winning touchdown on Thursday night football as the number two tied in. It could be, I think that's been huge as to why this team has gotten so much out of Jacks, but gotten all these key plays from everyone else. I spent a lot of time thinking about and talking about the offense this year, just because the offense is the thing that surprised me. Right? Like the offense is the thing that snuck up on me. And I think snuck up on a lot of people just in terms of how well this all clicked. The defense, I always thought the defense could be truly great this year. If you look at what they were in the back half of last season, there were a lot of indications that this was potentially coming at the same time. I think it's caused me to not appreciate the defense for what it is enough because I don't find it surprising. But you look at what happened on defense, even if you thought they were going to be really good on that side of the ball, there are still some of these small things that came together to make them what they are. Like the human worry thing being the skeleton key that it has and allowing it to allowing them to play exactly how they want to play in the way they have. That's one of them getting the wosuit back from injury. Like that's one thing where if you think about why the defense is great and the role that like noose who didn't really play that much last year and tank lorence have had, there are still kind of these quiet elements that have propped up the defense and pushed it to an even better place than you could have hoped even if you thought they had a chance to be the best defense in the week. Yeah, I remember in 2022 when the C-Hox lost in the wildcard round, the San Francisco 49ers, Pete Carroll on his radio show the next day was X was the difference between your team and their team. Tell them why. And he said, well, what they have up front is serious. At that point they had a Z's, Fred and Greenlaw, which looking back just seems completely crazy. That's all I feel about the C-Hox defensive line right now. Yes, and so I bring that up to say now when you ask what is the C-Hox defense good at? Why are they so dominant? It's because of what they have up front. In a few years now they've remade the spot that was their weak point. Now, Chenna was on that team, but now liquids around him. He's got all pro guy around him, pro bowl guys around him, and they're just really savvy selfless players. You know, they don't, I think Byron Murphy led them in Sacks and Leo, I think with like seven a piece, they don't have anyone out here's going to get paid because they rush the passer is because they rush the passer together. They're very selfless. Chenna loves taking on tight ends. He hates tight ends. He's like, if you want to feel like you can block me in the C-Gap, God bless you, buddy, because we can meet there and duke it out. But I love that you say that because there was a play and I sticks in my mind for some weird reason. There was a play against the Rams in the second Rams game where their Rams just run into duo and they're in 13 personnel and you watch what Chenna does. I think it was Kobe Parkinson on the right side. And then Leonard Williams does it to the left guard where they're just standing those guys up in the hole and just changing the line of scrimmage and the physicality collectively that that group plays with. The one that it like when it's four down in nickel when it's in Chenna, Byron Murphy, Leonard Williams and Lawrence together. When you watch how that group defends the run, there is a reason that the C-AX can play nickel all the time with all of these two high looks with all of these light boxes because they have like four to five monsters in those situations at all times. And we talked about this on a show we did last week where it's like there have been moments where like when they signed to Marcus Lawrence, I was like, you need another one of these. You really need another one, but collectively the reason that they're so great is because they have seven guys along the defensive line that you rotate through and you don't even notice a difference. And if they didn't have that group constructed and composed the exact way that it is, this defense wouldn't be what it is. Yeah, and it's one of the best short yardage defenses. And you try to run on third and one or fourth and one of these guys just no bueno. You got teams trying all types of stuff that Max Brosmer pick that Ernest Jones runs back for a touchdown. That was on like fourth and one. Well, why didn't they just run it up the gut? Well, because that does not work against these guys. And obviously it went the other way, but that's because of the guys you're mentioning upfront. Nicki Mimori has been just outstanding in that role. He can be whatever they need. He didn't play dime, play Mike, play Will and any given snap play on the edge. He can do it. Ernest Jones has emerged as an all pro guy. The guy he's always believed he could be. You know, Mike McDonald brought that out of him every every game Drake Thomas has just one missile play. That's it. One play where he just kills someone. That's my best know caught a shit. That to me is where like, this is ridiculous. Like the idea that like even when they've had to cycle, because Drake Thomas wasn't a star at the beginning of the season, Ocado wasn't a starter. I mean, the the fact that we didn't even mention the fact that Drake Thomas was a backup or that Julian Love was hurt for a good chunk of this year. The only game you realized they were banged up in the secondary was the bucks game. That's it. Yeah, the only game you realized all year. And so the the when watching O' Thomas and Ocado play the way that I did that to me is that moment where you just kind of realize there's like pixie dust associated with the defense where they can just kind of drop anybody into these roles. And it's so well coached and they have such a collective mentality that they can still be the best defense in the league, even with guys that are two, three spots down the depth chart. Yeah, and I think this is something that if I had to coach the year vote, this would be if I had to get up on the podium, explain why I made it for Mike McDonald. It would be because of that. He's a floor razor. And it's his mentality. You know, I asked him about this earlier in the year. I said, because here's Mike McDonald's view when the backup has to come in, whereas Tio Cotta, Drake Thomas, Josh Job, they played Chiquil Griffin in a game this year. His mindset is I'm excited to see that guy in the field because if I'm putting him out there, he earned it. It's not what was me. I got to play such and such at Tyree Snipe, whoever. And he said that wasn't a case always early in his career. Sometimes people like, Oh, damn, we got to run such and such out there. And once he shifted his mindset, it changed everything. Like they don't call it the practice quad and Seattle. It's called the ready squad. Yeah, because it's the mindset. Like you need to be ready because you could help us win today. And I think that's why you've seen Tio Cotta come in and make plays at Interception. He had against the commanders on Sunday night football is one of the best catches you're going to see from anyone of offense or defense. He makes that play because he knows if I'm out here, they believe I can make that play. And that's huge. Like all these guys, one is just someone to believe in them. They're like any employee in any office, you know? So I think Mike McDonald's secret sauce has been raised in the floor of guys like that. The same thing he did in Baltimore when you had Brandon Stevens played the best year he's ever played. Gino Stone had like seven interceptions that year in 2023. All these guys who were just okay before play the best football of their lives. And Mike McDonald has brought that to Seattle. I'm so glad you mentioned this because I wanted to ask you about this specifically. I think Mike gets penned and rightfully so, he's like a defensive guru, right? Like he is the what they hired him to be from the outside looking in. I want defensive Sean McVeigh because I have to play against Sean McVeigh twice a year. They got that's exactly what he's been. He was the best play caller on defense in the league when he was in Baltimore. He has still been the best play caller on defense in the league. I want to know more about like the interpersonal stuff because you covered Pete Carroll teams for a long time. You were very aware of what a Pete Carroll team and a Pete Carroll locker room feels like. What does a Mike McDonald team and a Mike McDonald locker room feel like? There are two things that stand out. One on offense and one on defense. The offensive one is how he coaches Sam. You know, I'm a big movie reference guy and one thing that stands out is a movie inception when they're explaining how it works. The guy says to him, don't think about elephants. So the guy's like, all right, what are you thinking about? Well, elephants, right? Because you know, I just told you to think about elephants. That applies to San Donald with turnovers, right? The last thing you could do to hurt San Donald is say, hey, Sam, here's the play call. Hey, protect the ball here. What's he going to do? defensive coaches do their quarterbacks all the time. All the time. All the time. All the time. They say, hey, you know, spider two, I've been in a, hey, but here day, don't throw this. It's like, okay, well, now Sam's thinking about turning it over whether he does or not. He's going to turn it over. That's just how Sam's kind of been in his career. That's how he can see ghosts. And Mike McDonald, he doesn't do that. You know, when I asked him about the seven row, he threw the Cooper Cup in overtime against the Rams on week 16. He was like, that play. It's like, that's why I don't tell him, just don't turn it over because then he won't make plays like that. That's opposite field with a Jared verse in his face. That's a big boy throw. All right. So I think Mike McDonald finding the way to communicate to his guy at the most important position has been huge. And I've asked Sam about that. And he's like, yeah, that that matters to me. And Kubiak does the same thing. I gave you the play call. Maybe I gave you a tidbit, but it's not, hey, hey, don't turn it over here. No, just go be you. So that's the first thing I'd offense. The second thing is after they beat the Arizona Cardinals in week 14 of 2024 season in Mike McDonald's post game speech, he said, you guys did great. I freaking scoot up the first drive. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I was like, that stood out. What do you mean? You guys just won the game? Why are you admitting that you did something wrong? I went and talked to the guys. Like, that's who Mike is though. He is a defensive mastermind, but he'll also acknowledge, hey, that calls sucked. You didn't make that play, but that call put you in a bad spot. He had a play like that last year against the Vikings. He had a trade round one on one to the boundary against Justin Jefferson. Justin Jefferson made the play because that's what Justin Jefferson does. If it's like, I shouldn't have put trade round in that spot. And I think that's a part of his secret sauce too is the humility and the accountability. Like I have answers, but not all of them. And the guys really appreciate that because while they're 90% of the time, the player didn't do his job. Well, Mike acknowledges that other 10% and that makes guys want to run through a wall form. Yeah. I think again, it's with these guys where they come in and they're a very specific archetype. And I think that most more teams will seek this out. Right? Like I think Jesse Menter is the head coach of the Ravens in part because why McDonald has done. I think that will continue to happen. But this has happened with the offensive guys where you just think, well, I just want like the hot shot play call or and there it's a layered job that requires a lot of different strengths and a lot of different qualities for guys to be successful at it. And so I'm just that's why I was curious. Like as you're watching it every day, what are some of the maybe misunderstood or underrepresented aspects of who he is as a coach that have driven them to this place? And I think both of those are very good examples. As we're looking at this game specifically, this feels to me like the best team in the league. It's been the best team in the league. The foreign app point favorites, they're the best offense, they're the best defense and football. The offense has been so much better and so much more explosive than we could have hoped to it's top to bottom when you combine it with the special teams, the best team in football. What am I not worried about enough? Like if you're in that building this week and you're thinking about how this can go wrong, what would be keeping you up at night? Yeah, it would just be the ability to execute in the red zone because I'm sure as you've talked about on the show, the Patriots have been, they've been nails on defense just the tire playoffs. They're just unreal. They've allowed fewer red zone trips than any team in the league, but they've been one of the worst red zone defenses in the league. And then the the good and playoffs, they've turned up. They've turned up on third down, that third down defense in the playoffs is ridiculous. Like the Patriots look like an entirely different unit and they're on third down what I've been watching. I granted some film the other day. This is not like the Patriots are not a team I studied most of the time. So I turned on the tape thinking I would see like I had 2019 JC Jackson and Gilly just run in man all day. It was not now. It was it was mugged up looks, a bunch of games and stunts so front with Milton and bear more. It was a crultan on this side one day and the Christian Gonzalez maybe shadowing a guy here or it was just all this different stuff that we're confusing guys. And when Sam has had those times where he's had mistakes, it's because he got fooled a lot of the time. He thinks they're in robber. Nope. That's covered too, buddy. You just got picked off like that. That's happened to him. And that's what the Patriots have been doing like CJ Stroud and Justin Herbert were awful in their playoff games. Part of that is because the Patriots defense was very good. And while the C.O.X offense has been great, I think they have scored 72 points to C.O.X. having two playoff games like that they're outstanding. But this Patriots defense has been very good at mixing it up, showing you one thing, dropping into another thing, taking advantage of the aggressiveness of their cornerbacks and Marcus and Carlton and Christian and so while I think the C.O.X. should win this game, their offense is very good. That's an opportunistic defense back there before we even get to the guys like upfront making it happen or if Spalane plays in this game, the place he's been able to make this year. So while you're right, this is the best team in football, but that's a damn good defense over that New England has. Kubiak going to the Raiders. He's somebody that again, coming into the season, he had those couple really good games with the Saints last year and then they kind of the injuries just completely take over that team. The season gets kind of lost. He was a first-time play-caller with the Vikings, the staff gets fired immediately after that happens. Personality-wise, he's like, it's not the highest energy guy, right? That's just not who he is. And so I'm just curious, when you combine what has been as a play-caller with the interactions you've had with him, the conversations you guys have had with him, what do you make of him as a head coach in Canada and what do you think the Raiders are getting? So Mike McDonald was asked about Kubiak because you're right. He's about as exciting as, you know, a can of paint, right? But Mike, he was, Mike McDonald was asked, is he like that just with us? Or is he like that all the time? And Mike McDonald said, no, he's like that all the time, but that's a good thing about Clint, is that he's not just Bill Belichick, a great pop of rich with the media and then turns into Stone Cold Steve Austin when he's in the meeting room. No, he's him all the time and guys appreciate that. I had one player last week, I was like, you think Clint will be a good coach. He got all mad. He's like, yeah, he's going to be a great coach. It's like this sucks. We're going to lose a guy we think is a great, great mind that it wasn't because he does this raw raw stuff. Like you mentioned, I could repeat Pete will legitimately run through a whiteboard on Saturday nights before Sunday games. Let's not do one none of that. But this player who also played for Pete, he was like, it's different. Clint's a silent killer. I'll run through a wall for him too. He just goes about it differently. And I think that's something that the whole league can learn that it's not just are you Dan Campbell, right? Like you can win other ways. You can motivate guys other ways. You can be a silent killer. Mike McDonald sucks at speeches because a run through a wall for this dude, an offense defense and special teams. I think Clint kind of has some of that same sauce to him. And he'll also have the benefit of this is important. I think too, Mike McDonald knew to hire Leslie Frazier. Like, hey, I'm a first time head coach. Leslie come coach me on how to be a coach. Basically, I don't know if Clint will do that, but he also has his dad. Like Gary is very involved. They talk all the time. Like wherever when he goes to Vegas, I'm sure Gary will be a resource for him. And I think that'll help quite a bit on handling maybe the other stuff Clint doesn't naturally have. Like that makes him a killer, but his dad will be right there to help him. I love that you bring out McDonald in that way because I don't I think some people wouldn't really understand that. They're like, he isn't a natural at some of like the forward facing stuff. Like it is something that he's had to kind of come to. But I also think we're at a point in the league. And I think we're going to see this more and more Kyle Van Noisse said this thing on the McAfee show a couple weeks ago. And he was talking about this idea that the younger guys really like X's and O's coaches because they can communicate to them very clearly and transparently. It's like, this is why we're doing this. I'm setting you up to succeed. And when they see that success, they buy into it very quickly. And so these guys who are more X's and O's oriented that maybe aren't as natural in the front of the room. They're not the biggest personalities. If you can communicate to a guy, hey, I'm going to ask you to do this. You're going to be good at doing this. We're going to be successful. And you're going to make more money at the end of the day because you're doing this. Guys respond to that. And so I do think that we might be kind of moving toward this world where these coaches who don't necessarily have the personalities, we would describe to a head coach, this leader of men type thing, actually have a decent amount of success because they can convince guys. I promise you, you're going to be a better player because I'm putting you in these positions. Yeah. And I think sports movies have just over romanticized like the value of speeches. I look at what happened in the AMC Championship game, right? Mike McDonald Ocarly said, we did not care. Right? And his guys love that. When they flew here yesterday, they were wearing shirts that said we did not care. Right? That was an awful speech. Yeah. Well, anybody didn't rob me up, but it robbed the guys out because they know the speeches are one thing. Help me own the Sea Gap. Right? Help me get open on this post. I don't really care whether you, you know, these win one for the Gipper speeches. Guys want to be good. Yes. Guys want to be good. Guys want to be coaches. And I think this staff in Seattle again is not made up of the types of coaches that you're going to see in a sports movie, but there's a reason that they've been so good. And there's a reason they feel so dominant in this moment. Yeah, absolutely. As much as I love all the speeches that Denzel gave her, remember the Titans and everything that Matthew McConaughey said, and we are Marshall, that is not real life. For real life is help me be great at football coach. And I'll run through a wall for you. However, you just bring that out of me, it'll work. Yeah. The fact that you have like these like kind of weird nerds is the C.O.X coaches and they're the honest arguably the most physically dominant like attitudes that team in the league, you can have both. And I think too often we think it has to be one of the other. Yeah, you don't got to be the meathead coach. I love Dan Campbell, like the whole, you know, bite kneecaps thing. You can have that. But Mike McDonald will also get you to bite some kneecaps on the field. He'll just tell you, hey, right here, they're going to run duo here, beat the guard and you can do whatever the hell you want. And that's how Leo Williams is all pro. Michael Sean, always great to see you, my friend. If you are not reading all of Michael Sean's stuff and listening to the C.O.X man and man podcast, especially if you're a C.O.X fan, it is time to get on that. Excited to be here all week with you. We'll talk again very soon. I'll always love when you have me on. Thank you. All right, that's all we got for today. Thank you to Chad. Thank you, Michael Sean Doogar. We're going to be back with shows every single day from Radio Row. A lot of me, David and Derek, a little bit later in the week, Derek is going to pay off the wins pool bet, which I'm very much looking forward to. We're going to have some player interviews over the course of this week and we're going to roll them out over several weeks. We're doing some play breakdowns, plenty of stuff coming to you from Radio Row. Be sure to check out the Athletic Football Show YouTube channel all week and for the first time we now have T.A.F.S. Merch available to you. 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