D-train wrote: ↑Wed Jun 03, 2026 4:10 pm
Sibelius Hindemith wrote: ↑Wed Jun 03, 2026 3:06 pm
Donn Beach wrote: ↑Wed Jun 03, 2026 5:22 am
Now the seahawks need to respond. And that's really going to be our new OC, hopefully he's up to it. We've been talking about the improved offensive line, well it's got a bigger challenge now. I doubt he's rationalizing that Garrett isn't really that good and ignoring it. Now the scheming begins. It's nice that they don't have a, run for your life sort of offensive line as in the past
It's going to be the same offensive line. Imagine if the Rams line Garrett up opposite Bradford. I mean, omg.
Edge Rushers don't usually line up opposite Guards...lol
Garrett does occasionally. From AI...
Myles Garrett lines up inside the offensive tackles on roughly 10% to 15% of his defensive snaps, primarily as a pass-rushing defensive tackle or in "wide-9" alignments. While the vast majority of his reps are on the edge, defensive coordinators frequently rotate him inside to create matchup nightmares against interior offensive linemen.
A Breakdown of His Alignment
-Primary Role: Garrett is overwhelmingly an edge defender, spending about 85-90% of his time lining up outside the offensive tackles over his career.
-Inside Packages: In obvious passing situations or exotic blitz packages, he kicks inside to a 3-technique or 5-technique, utilizing his elite get-off speed and initial burst to exploit slower guards.
-Total Versatility: Garrett relishes his mobility along the defensive line. Coaches use his versatility to drop him into coverage, shift him across the formation, or scheme him free from double teams.