Such is the aura of success emanating from Russell Wilson that he claims in the dozen Mariners games he has attended in person since the quarterback came to Seattle during last baseball season, the Mariners have yet to be defeated.
“They haven’t lost yet,” he said Tuesday after practice. “I need to keep going.”
Well, no kidding, Russell. The Mariners tried to spend more than $100 million on free agent Josh Hamilton last winter, when all they needed was to comp Wilson some tickets. Forget bringing up catcher Mike Zunino. Let Wilson in the stadium door, and he will become the first athlete in U.S. history to lead teams in different sports to championships in the same year.
He just became the World’s Most Interesting Young Man, and doesn’t even need to stay thirsty.
He eavesdrops on the NSA. He recommends dates for Martha Stewart. Tim Tebow now Russells.
OK. Enough. Making the Mariners champions is sufficiently preposterous.
But he did tell King Felix Hernandez, who caught his ceremonial opening pitch ahead of the Mariners game Saturday, to bring a catcher’s mitt. Wilson, smiling, was worried for Hernandez that his heater “might break a thumb or something.”
Hernandez’s riposte: “Bring the heat.”
After the strike, the Safeco Field scoreboard posted a radar reading of 98 mph, which seemed a stretch by about 20 mph. Then again, the throw was made by Wilson.
“You never know,” he said, smiling. “You never know.”
True. With Wilson, you never know.
After watching him sling bullets around the VMAC practice field Tuesday in the first of a mandatory three-day minicamp practice, Wilson might be capable of breaking thumbs and bats. One particular jaw-dropper sent the football on a 50-yard tightrope to a receiver who failed to reach it. If he had, he would have discovered the ball’s tip was still pointing up.
Some scientists at Boeing are going to have to re-think the book of aerodynamics to account for Wilson. And while they’re at it, they might try to figure out how a football pass can leave a contrail.
“He’s so much further ahead than he was last year at this time,” coach Pete Carroll said. “He’s in such greater command. Just imagine — this was the first minicamp with the vets for him last year. It’s amazing how far he’s come.”
Before it was asked, Carroll posed the question himself: How does Wilson top what he did last season?
Wilson had one of the greatest rookie seasons in NFL history for a quarterback — even though he finished third in the Rookie of the Year balloting behind fellow QBs Robert Griffin III and Andrew Luck — and led the Seahawks on a run to the playoffs that included a three-game stretch in which the Seahawks scored 150 points.
“It’ll be hard for anybody to come back and have a better year,” Carroll said. “It’s a challenge in itself just to do that. That’s just something that anybody that has had a good season has to deal with.
“He’s working really hard to command every aspect of what the quarterback position calls for. At the line of scrimmage, coming out of the huddle, pre-snap alerts, line of scrimmage calls, and protections and run calls, the whole thing. We’ve given him everything, and he’s working to refine it and get it nailed. I couldn’t ask for more in terms of his preparation than what he’s putting together.”
Gregg Rosenthal of NFL.com wrote recently that Wilson’s rate of improvement through his first season was so rapid that he became better faster than any quarterback since Pittsburgh’s Ben Roethisberger in 2004. Despite Carroll’s conservative playcalling approach with Wilson early in the season, he wound up ninth in the NFL in touchdown passes (26), eighth in completion percentage (64.1) and fourth in QB rating (100.0).
One of the hoariest bromides in sports in the notion of the sophomore slump, when a breakout debut season is followed by mediocrity. Wilson can barely hear the phrase before calling a halt.
“I don’t even know those words,” he said. “I don’t pay attention to it. I think the biggest thing is just focusing on tomorrow, focusing on the day, the next couple hours.
“Stay in the moment. Stay in the now. Whenever I do that, (I) have a better opportunity to play at a high level. I’m not concerned about (a sophomore slump) at all.”
Carroll was equally quick to dismiss the idea that Wilson is destined for a falloff.
“People try to put labels on you like that,” he said, “that this is going to happen, that’s going to happen. He’s not letting anything happen. He’s going straight ahead. He’s going to keep balling.”
Footballing. Wilson still likes to think of himself as a baseball player, and he did play minor league ball after three years in college. But really, it’s too easy for him.
All he has to do is sit there, and the Mariners win.
3 Comments
Russell Wilson is so awesome he can beat a brick wall in tennis.
I think Wilson has forgotten, and haven’t we all, about Perfect Game Felix Bobblehead night against the Rangers. He was shown in attendance on the big screen but sadly the M’s lost that game.
Little known fact, drops of Russell Wilson’s blood can cure cancer….