Special Teams Coordinator, Jay Harbaugh
There are a bunch of different possibilities for kick return duties.
During the Seahawks training camp practice at Lumen Field, Laviska Shenault Jr., Dee Williams, Dee Eskridge, Tre Brown, Dareke Young and Easop Winston Jr. all got reps on kick returns, while Eskridge, Winston, Williams and Jaxon Smith-Njigba got reps on punt return. Today special teams coordinator, Jay Harbaugh said, "It's necessary to build up a bunch of different guys and have a lot of possibilities back there just to see which way the roster ends up going at certain spots."
Harbaugh wants to evaluate as many players as possible to see what everyone's strong suits are and where they can fit into either kick or punt return.
"So we're trying out a bunch of different guys seeing who can do what best," Harbaugh said. "What types of return do different guys run best. So it's been an important part of it just to be able to picture, OK, if this guy's active on game day, this is what a good return for him might be."
Adding that the duties are not only exclusive to running backs and receivers. "I think those running backs obviously have just a ton of time on task with the ball, looking at blockers, evaluating gaps and putting the ball where it should go. But I think there's receivers that have that kind of vision. Tre Brown is a guy who has good kick return experience and has a very good vision. So I don't think it precludes other positions."
The skillset for a kick/punt returner will still look the same.
Even though Harbaugh says that other positions could be considered for kick/punt return duties, the skills of a returner will look the same, despite the new kick off rule.
"It's not super different than the previous world. Like last year for instance, or 10 years ago, you had people that were running more man type of returns where 'Hey, the ball can go anywhere and he's going to find a crease.' And then there's also people running more gap scheme type plays where we're going to double team a guy and then trap and it's more like an offensive power play and the returners, 'Hey, you're running this course and hitting this gap.' That's always existed and moving forward I think it'll still be the same. I think you'll see different types of plays. And so I would imagine that there's still be a few different body types, the more punt-returner type of bodies and then the bigger, more downhill type of runners. I think you'll see it all."
Defensive Coordinator, Aden Durde
Seahawks defensive line is "quite similar" to last season's Cowboys.
In Durde's defensive line coaching stint with the Dallas Cowboys from 2021-2023, Dallas' defense was ranked in the Top-7 overall in team defense each of his three seasons. Durde says he sees the similarities between Seahawks defense and last season's Cowboys defense.
"It's quite similar, but the players have very different attributes. So we have some really good edge players here, and in Dallas we had a lot more of edge players. Here we have a lot more of interior players, so it's how you roll those players, how you compliment the edge players with the interior players and really we're still in that phase. I feel like right now where we're working out what some people can do and what they're best at and try and get them in those spots. That's really once you get out of training camp, you want to know that and we're getting close."
Growth mindset > fixed mindset.
For a defense that is rebuilding and trying to improve on last season's total defensive ranking of No. 30 overall, the unit is developing into who they want to be.
"I would think the personality of defense is a growth mindset right now. We're still in our phase where we're growing, we're understanding each other, we're developing our identity. It's easy to say what we want to be, but we have to become it. We're going to a place where teams will have to deal with us and as we go through camp and as we go through the start of the season, we're building that."
Durde added that head coach Mike Macdonald has also helped implement that mindset with the entire team.
"Mike's doing a great job of building that with the team mentality and in the moment, that's where I see us is we're still just growing and growing. We're learning it from our mistakes. We're looking at some of the stuff we do really good and we're just growing. The energy was great today."
Offensive Coordinator, Ryan Grubb
The offensive install is coming along well.
Coaches learning a new offense and players learning a new offense means a lot of learning for everyone. Offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb and the rest of the coaching staff have been chipping away at installing their offense and are in a good spot right now.
"We're probably 70-80% there. I mean, I feel like the bones of everything we need to do are there. There's probably some of the finer details and some of the motions and movements and things like that that you can add to some of the concepts that we already have in. So I feel like we got a lot of the basic structure. So now there's some of the fine tuning that still has to happen, some of the late-game mechanics, situational football, things like that that we have to continue to build."
The coaches are all learning each other too.
While Football Fest inside of Lumen Field was a chance for the coaches to get their headsets on and figure out what works best in terms of communication, the preseason games will give a better feel for how it will all work in a game situation.
"When there's a little bit more of an element against another team, just some of the communication processes and typically it's in the tight moments when clock's winding down and making sure we got the right personnel in, end of quarters, end to halfs, things like that. So luckily for us, we've got a good veteran staff. Guys have been around a lot and it's pretty easy to communicate with those guys. I think we've already kind of worked out some of those kinks, but there'll be a lot more, we will grow a ton as a staff in these three games."
Check out the Seahawks 53-man roster for the 2024 season.