SEATTLE SEAHAWKS

Gee Scott: Seahawks shouldn’t gamble on Adrian Peterson at Thomas Rawls’ expense

Mar 8, 2017, 2:19 PM

Even at 32 years old, Adrian Peterson has minimal experience running out of a scheme like Seattle's...

Even at 32 years old, Adrian Peterson has minimal experience running out of a scheme like Seattle's. (AP)

(AP)

With NFL free agency beginning this week and seven-time Pro Bowl running back Adrian Peterson one of the biggest names available, it’s understandable that significant buzz kicked up when rumors started linking him to the Seattle Seahawks.

Would adding Peterson be the kind of addition that puts the Seahawks back in the Super Bowl picture? Gee Scott of 710 ESPN Seattle isn’t buying into it.

While Peterson would give the Seahawks’ backfield a proven veteran presence it lacked in 2016, Scott thinks the pros are outweighed by the cons for Seattle should it sign the 2012 league MVP.

“It would be a make-or-break situation,” Scott said on his show Tuesday night. “Bringing Adrian Peterson in for this team, I believe, would be the equivalent of going all-in at the poker table. … This would be a gamble like, you know, this is the missing piece. If you bring him in and he’s not the guy, now what are you going to do?”

There’s reason to believe he isn’t the missing piece that eluded the Seahawks for much of last season after the retirement of Marshawn Lynch, too. For one, as 710 ESPN Seattle producer Curtis Rogers pointed out, Peterson doesn’t have much experience playing in an offense like Seattle’s. And while Lynch didn’t either before coming to Seattle from Buffalo, the difference was that Lynch was 24 when he joined the Seahawks, eight years younger than Peterson is now.

“Adrian Peterson runs out of the backfield – I formation,” Rogers said. “And you’re gonna bring in a guy who’s 32 years old, who’s only known one way to run the football, and you’re gonna try and teach him an entirely different scheme? It’s gonna be really tough to see success with that on your team.”

The stats bear that out. According to this article by ESPN.com’s Kevin Seifert, nearly 95 percent of Peterson’s career carries have come when the quarterback was under center, while he has only 132 attempts ever out of a shotgun formation. Not only that, he’s performed noticeably better carrying the ball behind a lead blocker (4.91 yards per carry), like in the I, than as a single back (4.61 yards), which would be the case out of the shotgun.

Meanwhile, the Seahawks put a lot of emphasis last year on building a new corps of running backs that fit their system, adding three RBs in the 2016 NFL Draft behind Thomas Rawls, who broke out as an undrafted free agent filling in for much of 2015 when Lynch was plagued by injuries. Scott doesn’t see much benefit in deviating away from the development of those players by giving the lion’s share of carries to a player who will be on the roster for one or two years.

“Remember, you drafted three running backs last year in the draft. So you’ve already kinda made an investment,” Scott said. “You’ve got Alex Collins, who was a rookie, who I think is gonna be an alright back, and we’re gonna wait and see with C.J. Prosise. The quick fixes, that’s not what this team is about. I don’t think the Seahawks are that far away. You saw where they finished last season, losing to the Atlanta Falcons (in the NFC divisional playoff round). Bringing (Peterson) in would not be a good thing.”

Scott is confident the Seahawks already have the missing piece on the team, saying people have been too quick to write off Rawls after he was slowed by a pair of injuries himself last year – especially considering he ran for a Seahawks playoff record 161 yards in a playoff win over the Detroit Lions.

“Have you guys given up on Thomas Rawls? Because I just for some reason don’t see the same excitement as before, and I don’t know why,” Scott said. “Not only did he come back from the ankle injury, he came back from the leg injury to start the season and he still came back and was kinda productive. Towards the very end of the season and in the playoffs, he looked really good. As a matter of fact, he broke Marshawn Lynch’s playoff rushing record. I don’t understand how that excitement doesn’t go into next season.”

Seattle Seahawks

Seattle Seahawks draft Byron Murphy II...

Brent Stecker

There’s a very telling story behind Seahawks drafting Murphy

"Those phones were ringing off the hook," Brock Huard said about the Seattle Seahawks before making their pick at No. 16.

8 hours ago

Seattle Seahawks Tyler Lockett DK Metcalf Arizona 2024...

Cameron Van Til

What Bump hopes OC Grubb brings to Seahawks’ WRs from UW

Under new OC Ryan Grubb, what route combinations does former NFL receiver Michael Bumpus want to see from Seattle Seahawks wideouts?

15 hours ago

Seattle Seahawks former safety Jamal Adams...

Zac Hereth

Are Seahawks going to reunite with polarizing Jamal Adams?

Former Seattle Seahawks receiver Michael Bumpus says the team should consider re-signing Jamal Adams to bolster the linebacker corps.

24 hours ago

Seattle Seahawks Buffalo Bills Tyrel Dodson Pittsburgh Steelers 2022...

Cameron Van Til

With draft complete, what is Seahawks’ biggest question mark?

With the dust settled from the draft, Michael Bumpus and Stacy Rost examined the biggest question mark on the Seattle Seahawks' roster.

2 days ago

Seattle Seahawks draft NFL Nehemiah Pritchett Auburn...

Cameron Van Til

Huard explains why Seahawks drafted two cornerbacks

Why did the Seattle Seahawks use two draft picks on seemingly one of their deepest position groups? Brock Huard gives his thoughts.

2 days ago

Seattle Seahawks draft Byron Murphy...

Mike Lefko

Lefko: The message the Seattle Seahawks’ 2024 draft class sends

Mike Lefko details the theme of the Seattle Seahawks' eight-player NFL Draft class, and the way each pick plays into that theme.

2 days ago

Gee Scott: Seahawks shouldn’t gamble on Adrian Peterson at Thomas Rawls’ expense