Yogi Berra taken to hospital to stop bleeding caused by fall

Yankees legend Yogi Berra was hospitalized Saturday night to stop persistent bleeding caused by a fall at his New Jersey house, the New York Daily News reports.

A source tell the newspaper that Berra, 85, is in good condition after undergoing a procedure that was termed successful. He is expected to be released from the hospital Sunday night.

Berra suffered cuts to his nose when he fell from his his front porch Friday night. The bleeding intensified Saturday, the News reports, leading to Berra’s admission to the hospital. Berra is taking the blood thinner Coumadin.
 
Berra was unable to attend Old Timers Day at Yankee Stadium on Saturday. The News’ source said Berra will travel to Cooperstown, N.Y., for next weekend’s Hall of Fame ceremonies.

Yankees legend Yogi Berra was hospitalized Saturday night to stop persistent bleeding caused by a fall at his New Jersey house, the New York Daily News reports.

A source tell the newspaper that Berra, 85, is in good condition after undergoing a procedure that was termed successful. He is expected to be released from the hospital Sunday night.

Berra suffered cuts to his nose when he fell from his his front porch Friday night. The bleeding intensified Saturday, the News reports, leading to Berra’s admission to the hospital. Berra is taking the blood thinner Coumadin.
 
Berra was unable to attend Old Timers Day at Yankee Stadium on Saturday. The News’ source said Berra will travel to Cooperstown, N.Y., for next weekend’s Hall of Fame ceremonies.

Joba in danger of losing setup job

Yankees manager Girardi has put Joba Chamberlain on notice: Shape up or his primary setup role will be taken by fast-improving right-hander David Robertson.

Chamberlain has posted an 8.71 ERA since mid-May. In his last outing before the All-Star break, the big right-hander allowed four runs to Seattle. Robertson, meanwhile, has posted a 2.52 ERA over his past 23 appearances after a slow start.

"I’m not saying on a daily basis I am going to change our eighth-inning guy, but you have to earn your roles here," Girardi told the New York Daily News. "And we evaluate on a daily basis."

Yankees manager Girardi has put Joba Chamberlain on notice: Shape up or his primary setup role will be taken by fast-improving right-hander David Robertson.

Chamberlain has posted an 8.71 ERA since mid-May. In his last outing before the All-Star break, the big right-hander allowed four runs to Seattle. Robertson, meanwhile, has posted a 2.52 ERA over his past 23 appearances after a slow start.

"I’m not saying on a daily basis I am going to change our eighth-inning guy, but you have to earn your roles here," Girardi told the New York Daily News. "And we evaluate on a daily basis."

Launching Pad: Can Cubs show Halladay their Sunday best?

What to expect in the major leagues today:

Not ready for prime time

For the second consecutive week, the Cubs will play in the Sunday night game. And for the second consecutive week, they could struggle to score. Last week, Vicente Padilla and Hong-Chih Kuo combined to blank Chicago in a 7-0 Dodgers win. Tonight at Wrigley Field, the Phillies’ Roy Halladay will aim for win No. 11. 

Arizona turns to Edwin Jackson to salvage a game against the Padres.
Arizona turns to Edwin Jackson to salvage a game against the Padres.

As dominant as Halladay has been (perfect game, MLB-best seven complete games), the Cubs could expose a potential weakness. In his past two road starts, Halladay is 0-2 with a 6.43 ERA. However, those losses came at the hands of the Yankees and Reds, both of whom have much more potent offenses than Chicago.

Suddenly hittable

Part of the reason the surprising Padres lead the NL West is the way they have feasted on the last-place Diamondbacks. However, much of the damage was done back in April. Prior to this weekend’s three-game series at Petco Park, the division rivals hadn’t met since the season’s first month.

Sponsored link: Padres tickets available

This afternoon, Arizona’s Edwin Jackson again will try to find his no-hitter form from late June. In two starts since that historic night, Jackson has allowed 13 hits (in 10 innings) and posted an 8.10 ERA.

Adrian Gonzalez is the only San Diego player to homer against Jackson in his career, though that homer is Gonzalez’s lone hit in six at-bats against him.

Ogling Oswalt

The finale of the Astros-Pirates series this afternoon isn’t exactly dripping with intrigue, given the fact that the two teams have long since faded from contention. And it is quite possible that there will be more scouts in the seats than fans. That is because Roy Oswalt will be on the mound for Houston. With Cliff Lee off the market, Oswalt is the best available arm as the nonwaiver trading deadline nears.

Chris Bahr is Sporting News’ baseball editor. E-mail him at cbahr@sportingnews.com.

What to expect in the major leagues today:

Not ready for prime time

For the second consecutive week, the Cubs will play in the Sunday night game. And for the second consecutive week, they could struggle to score. Last week, Vicente Padilla and Hong-Chih Kuo combined to blank Chicago in a 7-0 Dodgers win. Tonight at Wrigley Field, the Phillies’ Roy Halladay will aim for win No. 11. 

Arizona turns to Edwin Jackson to salvage a game against the Padres.
Arizona turns to Edwin Jackson to salvage a game against the Padres.

As dominant as Halladay has been (perfect game, MLB-best seven complete games), the Cubs could expose a potential weakness. In his past two road starts, Halladay is 0-2 with a 6.43 ERA. However, those losses came at the hands of the Yankees and Reds, both of whom have much more potent offenses than Chicago.

Suddenly hittable

Part of the reason the surprising Padres lead the NL West is the way they have feasted on the last-place Diamondbacks. However, much of the damage was done back in April. Prior to this weekend’s three-game series at Petco Park, the division rivals hadn’t met since the season’s first month.

Sponsored link: Padres tickets available

This afternoon, Arizona’s Edwin Jackson again will try to find his no-hitter form from late June. In two starts since that historic night, Jackson has allowed 13 hits (in 10 innings) and posted an 8.10 ERA.

Adrian Gonzalez is the only San Diego player to homer against Jackson in his career, though that homer is Gonzalez’s lone hit in six at-bats against him.

Ogling Oswalt

The finale of the Astros-Pirates series this afternoon isn’t exactly dripping with intrigue, given the fact that the two teams have long since faded from contention. And it is quite possible that there will be more scouts in the seats than fans. That is because Roy Oswalt will be on the mound for Houston. With Cliff Lee off the market, Oswalt is the best available arm as the nonwaiver trading deadline nears.

Chris Bahr is Sporting News’ baseball editor. E-mail him at cbahr@sportingnews.com.

Nats GM not impressed with offers for Dunn

MLB.com reports Nationals general manager Mike Rizzo doesn’t like the trade offers he has received for first baseman Adam Dunn ahead of baseball’s July 31 nonwaiver trading deadline.

Last week, Rizzo told reporters it would take "an extraordinary deal" to move Dunn, who can become a free agent after the season. Negotiations on a new contract have stalled.

The White Sox, Angels and Yankees reportedly have expressed interest in Dunn as a first baseman or designated hitter.

Dunn said Saturday he’s not anxious about the situation.

"There’s nothing I can control so what am I going to get impatient about?" Dunn asked. "I’m playing baseball — I’m not playing any other game. It’s out of my decision and I don’t know anything else to say about it. It’s out of my control."

MLB.com reports Nationals general manager Mike Rizzo doesn’t like the trade offers he has received for first baseman Adam Dunn ahead of baseball’s July 31 nonwaiver trading deadline.

Last week, Rizzo told reporters it would take "an extraordinary deal" to move Dunn, who can become a free agent after the season. Negotiations on a new contract have stalled.

The White Sox, Angels and Yankees reportedly have expressed interest in Dunn as a first baseman or designated hitter.

Dunn said Saturday he’s not anxious about the situation.

"There’s nothing I can control so what am I going to get impatient about?" Dunn asked. "I’m playing baseball — I’m not playing any other game. It’s out of my decision and I don’t know anything else to say about it. It’s out of my control."

Lowell still in limbo as Red Sox keep him around

Mike Lowell isn’t optimistic the Red Sox will let him go to another team that will give him more playing time.

"I don’t think they’re going to release me," the reserve infielder told ESPNBoston.com on Saturday. "I think that’s been addressed. I’ve got no say. What do you want me to do?"

Boston unsuccessfully tried to trade Lowell before he went on the disabled list June 24 because of a hip injury. He is scheduled to begin a minor league rehab stint Thursday after receiving a cortisone shot.

"I don’t know if it’s specifically because I might beat them," Lowell replied when asked if the Sox were afraid to let him leave. "I just don’t think they want me to go to another team while they pay my salary."

Lowell is owed more than $5 million for the rest of the season. "At this point, they’re not going to get anything [in a trade]. You’re going to get a subpar prospect at best," he said. "There’s too much time left in the season, they’re not going to get money.

"I don’t know to what lengths and what teams have spoken with them. Maybe nobody wants me. Maybe there are four that want me. I’ve been hearing a lot of different things. I just don’t know."

Mike Lowell isn’t optimistic the Red Sox will let him go to another team that will give him more playing time.

"I don’t think they’re going to release me," the reserve infielder told ESPNBoston.com on Saturday. "I think that’s been addressed. I’ve got no say. What do you want me to do?"

Boston unsuccessfully tried to trade Lowell before he went on the disabled list June 24 because of a hip injury. He is scheduled to begin a minor league rehab stint Thursday after receiving a cortisone shot.

"I don’t know if it’s specifically because I might beat them," Lowell replied when asked if the Sox were afraid to let him leave. "I just don’t think they want me to go to another team while they pay my salary."

Lowell is owed more than $5 million for the rest of the season. "At this point, they’re not going to get anything [in a trade]. You’re going to get a subpar prospect at best," he said. "There’s too much time left in the season, they’re not going to get money.

"I don’t know to what lengths and what teams have spoken with them. Maybe nobody wants me. Maybe there are four that want me. I’ve been hearing a lot of different things. I just don’t know."

Votto explains, laughs off Cubs remarks from All-Star Game

Reds first baseman Joey Votto finally cleared the air about his controversial comment regarding the Cubs.

Following the NL’s All-Star Game win, Votto was quoted as saying he didn’t congratulate Cubs outfielder Marlon Byrd for a strong ninth-inning defensive play because of the Reds-Cubs rivalry. The quote: "I don’t like the Cubs. And I’m not going to pat anybody with a Cubs uniform on the back."

Votto told The Cincinnati Enquirer that he was joking, that he knew he was speaking to a Chicago reporter when he was asked that question and that he and Byrd got along very well during the All-Star festivities.

Reds first baseman Joey Votto finally cleared the air about his controversial comment regarding the Cubs.

Following the NL’s All-Star Game win, Votto was quoted as saying he didn’t congratulate Cubs outfielder Marlon Byrd for a strong ninth-inning defensive play because of the Reds-Cubs rivalry. The quote: "I don’t like the Cubs. And I’m not going to pat anybody with a Cubs uniform on the back."

Votto told The Cincinnati Enquirer that he was joking, that he knew he was speaking to a Chicago reporter when he was asked that question and that he and Byrd got along very well during the All-Star festivities.

Mark Cuban expresses interest in Texas Rangers

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban has thrown his name into the mix as a potential bidder for the Texas Rangers, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

Cuban would either join the group led by Nolan Ryan and Chuck Greenberg or join another group as a major investor.

"The economics have changed, which has gotten me interested," Cuban told the Star-Telegram via e-mail. "My lawyers are still going through everything, but the bigger point is that I now have an interest."

Added Cuban: "I think there is an opportunity to organize a bid for the team. Or if it’s feasible or possible — and I don’t know for sure if it is or isn’t — to work with Chuck and Nolan and their group. I’m not trying to push anyone off or out. I’m exploring."

Last week the New York Post reported Cuban had been added to a group led by former player agent Dennis Gilbert, who was among the early bidders for the club.

In January, Greenberg and Ryan reached a deal to purchase the team from owner Tom Hicks. However, major lenders blocked the move, claiming there were higher bids than the one from Greenberg and Ryan. The fate of the franchise, which is in bankruptcy, remains in limbo with an auction one possibility to determine a new owner.

Cuban made an attempt to purchase the Cubs before the franchise eventually was sold to Tom Ricketts in January 2009.

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban has thrown his name into the mix as a potential bidder for the Texas Rangers, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

Cuban would either join the group led by Nolan Ryan and Chuck Greenberg or join another group as a major investor.

"The economics have changed, which has gotten me interested," Cuban told the Star-Telegram via e-mail. "My lawyers are still going through everything, but the bigger point is that I now have an interest."

Added Cuban: "I think there is an opportunity to organize a bid for the team. Or if it’s feasible or possible — and I don’t know for sure if it is or isn’t — to work with Chuck and Nolan and their group. I’m not trying to push anyone off or out. I’m exploring."

Last week the New York Post reported Cuban had been added to a group led by former player agent Dennis Gilbert, who was among the early bidders for the club.

In January, Greenberg and Ryan reached a deal to purchase the team from owner Tom Hicks. However, major lenders blocked the move, claiming there were higher bids than the one from Greenberg and Ryan. The fate of the franchise, which is in bankruptcy, remains in limbo with an auction one possibility to determine a new owner.

Cuban made an attempt to purchase the Cubs before the franchise eventually was sold to Tom Ricketts in January 2009.

Podcast: Braves got tired of Escobar

Sporting News Audio is a weekly series of conversations with Sporting News experts during the MLB season. In this installment, Tom Gatto talks about the Yunel Escobar for Alex Gonzalez trade, and how that impacts the Braves and Blue Jays moving forward.

Sporting News Audio is a weekly series of conversations with Sporting News experts during the MLB season. In this installment, Tom Gatto talks about the Yunel Escobar for Alex Gonzalez trade, and how that impacts the Braves and Blue Jays moving forward.

NFL camp countdown: Find your team’s date

SportingNews.com will be previewing the 2010 seasons of all 32 NFL teams as training camp approaches. Here is a schedule of when each team’s preview will run.

AFC East

June 1: Buffalo Bills: Gailey comes in to end postseason drought | Fantasy: Backfield concerns
June 2: Miami Dolphins: Investments to pay off with playoff push? | Fantasy: Marshall helps Henne
June 3: New England Patriots: Counting on healthy Brady | Fantasy: Welker poses a quandary
June 4: New York Jets: If pieces fit, Jets have hope | Fantasy: The Shonn Greene question

NFC East

June 7: Dallas Cowboys: Short road to the Super Bowl? | Fantasy: Will Barber be primary back?
June 8: New York Giants: Big strides needed on defense | Fantasy: Case of a missing Jacobs
June 9: Philadelphia Eagles: Kolb heads hefty makeover | Fantasy: True test comes in Week 1
June 10: Washington Redskins: McNabb still has good years left | Fantasy: One confusing team

AFC North

June 11: Baltimore Ravens: It’s Flacco’s time to shine | Fantasy: Boldin’s impact on offense?
June 14: Cincinnati Bengals: Palmer has supporting cast | Fantasy: Factors working against Palmer
June 15: Cleveland Browns: Holmgren hopes to reverse Dawg Days | Fantasy: Harrison or Hardesty?
June 16: Pittsburgh Steelers: Repair secondary, cover for Ben | Fantasy: Ben among many questions

NFC North

June 17: Chicago Bears: Peppers, Martz spice things up | Fantasy: Don’t invest too much in WRs
June 18: Detroit Lions: Offense will keep them in games | Fantasy: Defense worth drafting?
June 21: Green Bay Packers: Youth needs to learn to win | Fantasy: Rodgers-to-Finley connection
June 22: Minnesota Vikings: Favre key to another run | Fantasy: Favre’s impact on receivers

AFC South

June 23: Houston Texans: Winning divisional games toughest task | Fantasy: Andre a top-five pick
June 24: Indianapolis Colts: No end in sight for sustained playoff run | Fantasy: Addai’s draft status 
June 25: Jacksonville Jaguars: Youngsters need to step up | Fantasy: All you need to know is Mo-Jo 
June 28: Tennessee Titans: Team has questions on ‘D’ | Fantasy: Question mark surrounds CJ

NFC South

June 29: Atlanta Falcons: Young core ready to mature | Fantasy: Turner’s the big name here
June 30: Carolina Panthers: Running game may need to carry team | Fantasy: Williams-Stewart
July 1: New Orleans Saints: Fighting Super Bowl hangover will be tough | Fantasy: Can WRs step up?
July 2: Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Draft should help rebuilding Bucs | Fantasy: Not much in Tampa Bay

AFC West

July 6: Denver Broncos: McDaniels’ style needs to catch on | Fantasy: Expect more from run game
July 7: Kansas City Chiefs: On track for improvement | Fantasy: Can you trust Jamaal Charles?
July 8: Oakland Raiders: Their mountain gets steeper | Fantasy: Bush, McFadden to split time
July 9: San Diego Chargers: It’s Super Bowl or bust | Fantasy: RB Ryan Mathews overrated?

NFC West

July 12: Arizona Cardinals: Pressure is on QB Leinart | Fantasy: Is Fitzgerald a top-10 WR?
July 13: St. Louis Rams: All eyes on Bradford | Fantasy: Hopes rest with Steven Jackson
July 14: San Francisco 49ers: Banking on stability | Fantasy: Smith anything but consistent
July 15: Seattle Seahawks: Carroll heads a major makeover | Fantasy: Backfield unsettled

SportingNews.com will be previewing the 2010 seasons of all 32 NFL teams as training camp approaches. Here is a schedule of when each team’s preview will run.

AFC East

June 1: Buffalo Bills: Gailey comes in to end postseason drought | Fantasy: Backfield concerns
June 2: Miami Dolphins: Investments to pay off with playoff push? | Fantasy: Marshall helps Henne
June 3: New England Patriots: Counting on healthy Brady | Fantasy: Welker poses a quandary
June 4: New York Jets: If pieces fit, Jets have hope | Fantasy: The Shonn Greene question

NFC East

June 7: Dallas Cowboys: Short road to the Super Bowl? | Fantasy: Will Barber be primary back?
June 8: New York Giants: Big strides needed on defense | Fantasy: Case of a missing Jacobs
June 9: Philadelphia Eagles: Kolb heads hefty makeover | Fantasy: True test comes in Week 1
June 10: Washington Redskins: McNabb still has good years left | Fantasy: One confusing team

AFC North

June 11: Baltimore Ravens: It’s Flacco’s time to shine | Fantasy: Boldin’s impact on offense?
June 14: Cincinnati Bengals: Palmer has supporting cast | Fantasy: Factors working against Palmer
June 15: Cleveland Browns: Holmgren hopes to reverse Dawg Days | Fantasy: Harrison or Hardesty?
June 16: Pittsburgh Steelers: Repair secondary, cover for Ben | Fantasy: Ben among many questions

NFC North

June 17: Chicago Bears: Peppers, Martz spice things up | Fantasy: Don’t invest too much in WRs
June 18: Detroit Lions: Offense will keep them in games | Fantasy: Defense worth drafting?
June 21: Green Bay Packers: Youth needs to learn to win | Fantasy: Rodgers-to-Finley connection
June 22: Minnesota Vikings: Favre key to another run | Fantasy: Favre’s impact on receivers

AFC South

June 23: Houston Texans: Winning divisional games toughest task | Fantasy: Andre a top-five pick
June 24: Indianapolis Colts: No end in sight for sustained playoff run | Fantasy: Addai’s draft status 
June 25: Jacksonville Jaguars: Youngsters need to step up | Fantasy: All you need to know is Mo-Jo 
June 28: Tennessee Titans: Team has questions on ‘D’ | Fantasy: Question mark surrounds CJ

NFC South

June 29: Atlanta Falcons: Young core ready to mature | Fantasy: Turner’s the big name here
June 30: Carolina Panthers: Running game may need to carry team | Fantasy: Williams-Stewart
July 1: New Orleans Saints: Fighting Super Bowl hangover will be tough | Fantasy: Can WRs step up?
July 2: Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Draft should help rebuilding Bucs | Fantasy: Not much in Tampa Bay

AFC West

July 6: Denver Broncos: McDaniels’ style needs to catch on | Fantasy: Expect more from run game
July 7: Kansas City Chiefs: On track for improvement | Fantasy: Can you trust Jamaal Charles?
July 8: Oakland Raiders: Their mountain gets steeper | Fantasy: Bush, McFadden to split time
July 9: San Diego Chargers: It’s Super Bowl or bust | Fantasy: RB Ryan Mathews overrated?

NFC West

July 12: Arizona Cardinals: Pressure is on QB Leinart | Fantasy: Is Fitzgerald a top-10 WR?
July 13: St. Louis Rams: All eyes on Bradford | Fantasy: Hopes rest with Steven Jackson
July 14: San Francisco 49ers: Banking on stability | Fantasy: Smith anything but consistent
July 15: Seattle Seahawks: Carroll heads a major makeover | Fantasy: Backfield unsettled

Camp countdown: Seahawks hope new leaders will translate into stability

The Seattle Seahawks won’t be the same in 2010. That doesn’t mean they’ll be any better than last season, when they were a 5-11 afterthought. But they will be different, as the franchise begins its most severe overhaul in a decade with a new coach in Pete Carroll and new general manager in John Schneider.
 
Pete Carroll's job is to reinvigorate the Seahawks and teach them to win.
Pete Carroll’s job is to reinvigorate the Seahawks and teach them to win.

Starting over looks to be a good thing for Seattle, which let a once-potent offense age, atrophy and erode to the point that the team finished with just 280 points in 2009 — the franchise’s fewest since 1993. Meanwhile, the defense has not performed up to the investment the Seahawks have made in terms of draft picks and free agents.

 
Enter Carroll, twice fired in the NFL but epically successful at Southern Cal. He was hired to remake the franchise around one philosophy: his. "A new time for us," Carroll said after conducting his first minicamp. "It is a new day for the Seahawks we hope."
 

What’s new

Offense: Coordinator Jeremy Bates’ NFL indoctrination came under Jon Gruden in Tampa Bay, but Seattle’s offense will look more like what Mike Shanahan ran in Denver in everything from terminology to the ground game. The passing game will contain the quick rollouts and quarter bootlegs that used to be a Broncos trademark while the running game will feature the one-cut-and-go discipline that once allowed Denver to swap out 1,000-yard rushers as if it were changing tires.
 
Seattle has spent millions on veteran receivers, signing Nate Burleson, Deion Branch and T.J. Houshmandzadeh to large contracts over the past four years. And for all that money, it has yet to find a true No. 1 wideout. Now, the top receiver in yards per catch last season is gone after Burleson left for Detroit in free agency. Mike Williams, a former first-round pick of the Lions who ate his way out of the league, has looked good in workouts and is in the picture for playing time.
 
The performance of Matt Hasselbeck and the passing game will depend a lot on the development of rookie left tackle Russell Okung. The Seahawks need Okung to be effective immediately so that Hasselbeck can recapture his passing rhythm after absorbing too many hits the past two seasons. The team hopes free-agent pickup Leon Washington can provide big plays to complement the running of Julius Jones and Justin Forsett.
 
Defense: Defensive coordinator is among the few positions that didn’t change in Seattle’s coaching staff. Casey Bradley is a Monte Kiffin disciple and was retained by Carroll, who is showing flexibility in his approach. The Seahawks will use what looks like a 3-4 scheme at times, employing what is being called the "elephant" pass rusher. That’s essentially a hybrid linebacker/end who lines up in a two-point stance and comes from different angles and gaps along the line.
 
Seattle will deploy Chris Clemons in the hybrid position initially. Clemons is a pass-rushing specialist acquired from the Eagles in March who had seven sacks over the previous two seasons. The question is whether he’ll be enough to stimulate a pass rush that was dormant at the end of the 2009 season.
 
Carroll is a known for the play of his safeties. In Seattle, he’s starting nearly from scratch, and Earl Thomas — the 14th overall pick — has a chance to be the starting free safety. Free-agent pickup Lawyer Milloy and Jordan Babineaux are competing for the strong safety job, and the loser of the battle might not make the roster.
 
Aaron Curry is ready to come roaring back as a pash-rushing beast.
Aaron Curry is ready to come roaring back as a pash-rushing beast.

Breakout player

Aaron Curry, LB
Carroll requested film of Curry before he was even introduced at his first press conference. Curry (6-2, 254) is too big, fast and destructive to be the nonfactor he was when he went without a sack in his final nine games before missing the last two (hip) as a rookie. Expect that to change as Carroll assigns Curry a healthy dose of pass-rushing responsibilities.
 
"This year, I’m really focusing my job at the highest level of effort, the highest level of intensity. And just the highest level so it gets to the point where I’m making plays on the regular, (and) it’s no longer to the point where I’m chasing ’em." — Curry
 

Opponent’s view

(An anonymous opponent breaks down the Seahawks)
"Matt Hasselbeck can play two more years definitely, and you kind of feel for him because his whole career, he was in one offense. He had it down cold, and now Seattle has changed that offense on him twice in two years. …
 

"For years, Seattle didn’t give the offense much of anything in the draft. The tight end, John Carlson, is the only playmaker the Seahawks have chosen over the past couple of years. …

 

"Among the receivers, you could say the best guy got away in Nate Burleson, but he hasn’t always been able to be trusted for precise routes."

 

Bottom line

The Seahawks took a swan dive off the cliff of relevancy in 2008, and two years later they haven’t resurfaced. The decision to eschew free-agency fixes might play dividends down the road, but right now the Seahawks have too much work on both lines to imagine the team will bounce back this season.

 

With Carroll, though, Seattle has a coach who’s intimately familiar with college players, which should give the Seahawks an edge in restocking what is a fairly barren roster.

 

Depth chart

OFFENSE
QB: Matt Hasselbeck, Charlie Whitehurst

FB: Owen Schmitt, Ryan Powdrell
RB: Julius Jones, Justin Forsett
WR: T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Mike Williams
WR: Deion Branch, Golden Tate
TE: John Carlson, Chris Baker
LT: Russell Okung, Joe Toledo
LG: Ben Hamilton, Mike Gibson
C: Chris Spencer, Steve Vallos
RG: Max Unger, Mansfield Wrotto
RT: Sean Locklear, Ray Willis
 
DEFENSE
DE: Red Bryant, Lawrence Jackson, E.J. Wilson
DT: Brandon Mebane, Craig Terrill
DT: Colin Cole, Kevin Vickerson
DE: Chris Clemons, Nick Reed
OLB: Leroy Hill, David Hawthorne
MLB: Lofa Tatupu, David Hawthorne
OLB: Aaron Curry, Will Herring
LCB: Marcus Trufant, Josh Wilson
SS: Jordan Babineaux, Lawyer Milloy, Kam Chancellor
FS: Earl Thomas, Jamar Adams
RCB: Kelly Jennings, Walter Thurmond
 
SPECIAL TEAMS
K: Olindo Mare
P: Jon Ryan
KR: Leon Washington
PR: Golden Tate
LS: Matt Overton
The Seattle Seahawks won’t be the same in 2010. That doesn’t mean they’ll be any better than last season, when they were a 5-11 afterthought. But they will be different, as the franchise begins its most severe overhaul in a decade with a new coach in Pete Carroll and new general manager in John Schneider.
 
Pete Carroll's job is to reinvigorate the Seahawks and teach them to win.
Pete Carroll’s job is to reinvigorate the Seahawks and teach them to win.

Starting over looks to be a good thing for Seattle, which let a once-potent offense age, atrophy and erode to the point that the team finished with just 280 points in 2009 — the franchise’s fewest since 1993. Meanwhile, the defense has not performed up to the investment the Seahawks have made in terms of draft picks and free agents.

 
Enter Carroll, twice fired in the NFL but epically successful at Southern Cal. He was hired to remake the franchise around one philosophy: his. "A new time for us," Carroll said after conducting his first minicamp. "It is a new day for the Seahawks we hope."
 

What’s new

Offense: Coordinator Jeremy Bates’ NFL indoctrination came under Jon Gruden in Tampa Bay, but Seattle’s offense will look more like what Mike Shanahan ran in Denver in everything from terminology to the ground game. The passing game will contain the quick rollouts and quarter bootlegs that used to be a Broncos trademark while the running game will feature the one-cut-and-go discipline that once allowed Denver to swap out 1,000-yard rushers as if it were changing tires.
 
Seattle has spent millions on veteran receivers, signing Nate Burleson, Deion Branch and T.J. Houshmandzadeh to large contracts over the past four years. And for all that money, it has yet to find a true No. 1 wideout. Now, the top receiver in yards per catch last season is gone after Burleson left for Detroit in free agency. Mike Williams, a former first-round pick of the Lions who ate his way out of the league, has looked good in workouts and is in the picture for playing time.
 
The performance of Matt Hasselbeck and the passing game will depend a lot on the development of rookie left tackle Russell Okung. The Seahawks need Okung to be effective immediately so that Hasselbeck can recapture his passing rhythm after absorbing too many hits the past two seasons. The team hopes free-agent pickup Leon Washington can provide big plays to complement the running of Julius Jones and Justin Forsett.
 
Defense: Defensive coordinator is among the few positions that didn’t change in Seattle’s coaching staff. Casey Bradley is a Monte Kiffin disciple and was retained by Carroll, who is showing flexibility in his approach. The Seahawks will use what looks like a 3-4 scheme at times, employing what is being called the "elephant" pass rusher. That’s essentially a hybrid linebacker/end who lines up in a two-point stance and comes from different angles and gaps along the line.
 
Seattle will deploy Chris Clemons in the hybrid position initially. Clemons is a pass-rushing specialist acquired from the Eagles in March who had seven sacks over the previous two seasons. The question is whether he’ll be enough to stimulate a pass rush that was dormant at the end of the 2009 season.
 
Carroll is a known for the play of his safeties. In Seattle, he’s starting nearly from scratch, and Earl Thomas — the 14th overall pick — has a chance to be the starting free safety. Free-agent pickup Lawyer Milloy and Jordan Babineaux are competing for the strong safety job, and the loser of the battle might not make the roster.
 
Aaron Curry is ready to come roaring back as a pash-rushing beast.
Aaron Curry is ready to come roaring back as a pash-rushing beast.

Breakout player

Aaron Curry, LB
Carroll requested film of Curry before he was even introduced at his first press conference. Curry (6-2, 254) is too big, fast and destructive to be the nonfactor he was when he went without a sack in his final nine games before missing the last two (hip) as a rookie. Expect that to change as Carroll assigns Curry a healthy dose of pass-rushing responsibilities.
 
"This year, I’m really focusing my job at the highest level of effort, the highest level of intensity. And just the highest level so it gets to the point where I’m making plays on the regular, (and) it’s no longer to the point where I’m chasing ’em." — Curry
 

Opponent’s view

(An anonymous opponent breaks down the Seahawks)
"Matt Hasselbeck can play two more years definitely, and you kind of feel for him because his whole career, he was in one offense. He had it down cold, and now Seattle has changed that offense on him twice in two years. …
 

"For years, Seattle didn’t give the offense much of anything in the draft. The tight end, John Carlson, is the only playmaker the Seahawks have chosen over the past couple of years. …

 

"Among the receivers, you could say the best guy got away in Nate Burleson, but he hasn’t always been able to be trusted for precise routes."

 

Bottom line

The Seahawks took a swan dive off the cliff of relevancy in 2008, and two years later they haven’t resurfaced. The decision to eschew free-agency fixes might play dividends down the road, but right now the Seahawks have too much work on both lines to imagine the team will bounce back this season.

 

With Carroll, though, Seattle has a coach who’s intimately familiar with college players, which should give the Seahawks an edge in restocking what is a fairly barren roster.

 

Depth chart

OFFENSE
QB: Matt Hasselbeck, Charlie Whitehurst

FB: Owen Schmitt, Ryan Powdrell
RB: Julius Jones, Justin Forsett
WR: T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Mike Williams
WR: Deion Branch, Golden Tate
TE: John Carlson, Chris Baker
LT: Russell Okung, Joe Toledo
LG: Ben Hamilton, Mike Gibson
C: Chris Spencer, Steve Vallos
RG: Max Unger, Mansfield Wrotto
RT: Sean Locklear, Ray Willis
 
DEFENSE
DE: Red Bryant, Lawrence Jackson, E.J. Wilson
DT: Brandon Mebane, Craig Terrill
DT: Colin Cole, Kevin Vickerson
DE: Chris Clemons, Nick Reed
OLB: Leroy Hill, David Hawthorne
MLB: Lofa Tatupu, David Hawthorne
OLB: Aaron Curry, Will Herring
LCB: Marcus Trufant, Josh Wilson
SS: Jordan Babineaux, Lawyer Milloy, Kam Chancellor
FS: Earl Thomas, Jamar Adams
RCB: Kelly Jennings, Walter Thurmond
 
SPECIAL TEAMS
K: Olindo Mare
P: Jon Ryan
KR: Leon Washington
PR: Golden Tate
LS: Matt Overton