RENTON — For all the excitement about Russell Wilson’s season-opening performance, there was an even better debut for the Seahawks.
Jamal Adams’ first game with Seattle didn’t disappoint.
Whether it was in the opposing backfield or roaming the secondary, the Seahawks’ new defensive weapon was all over the field in a opening win over Atlanta.
If first impressions are important, the one left by Adams only raised the optimism of how good Seattle’s defense might end up being with the addition of an All-Pro safety.
“He has brought the energy. He has brought the focus and I think that we are going to have a really great defense,” Wilson said of Adams’ debut. “That secondary looked really good.”
Adams finished with 12 tackles, two tackles for loss and a sack. Even those numbers don’t fully define his influence on Seattle’s defense, at least for Week 1.
Because of Adams versatility, Seattle’s defense was as aggressive as it has been at any time since the heyday of the Legion of Boom secondary. Adams wasn’t alone in causing chaos with several parts of Seattle’s defensive backfield blitzing at times.
The final numbers don’t look good as Seattle gave up 450 yards passing to Matt Ryan. But many of those yards came late in the game with Seattle holding a big lead and essentially were meaningless yards.
“Overall, I think that we did a great job tackling as a defense, flying around the ball,” Adams said. “I think that’s the main thing, you have a lot of guys flying around the ball and when you fly to the ball, you make plays and that’s what we did.”
What’s Working
Seahawks fans have clamored for letting Wilson have more control of the offense with his arm and at least in the opener got their wish. Wilson was fantastic. Of his four incompletions, two were drops. Seattle threw on 21 of its first 35 plays and gained 210 total yards and scored 21 points.
Wilson finished 31 of 35 for 322 yards. He connected with nine different receivers and averaged 9.2 yards per pass attempt. If this continues, it might be the year Wilson gets an MVP vote.
What Needs Help
It might be a little strange to say considering it’s Seattle, but the run game left something to be desired in the opener. Granted, the Seahawks ran the ball only 20 times, but even with the lack of carries the production was underwhelming.
Chris Carson had just 21 yards on six carries. Carlos Hyde had 23 yards rushing on seven carries. Take away Wilson’s 29 yards rushing and David Moore’s 12-yard run, Seattle’s three running backs combined for 43 yards on 16 carries.