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Mike Macdonald Hopes New Offensive Coaches Give Seahawks 'Alignment On Each Side Of The Ball'

Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald discussed some of the changes the team has made to its offensive coaching staff this offseason.

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INDIANAPOLIS—After the Seahawks named Klint Kubiak the team's new offensive coordinator, head coach Mike Macdonald acknowledged that more changes to the offensive coaching staff were likely coming.

And sure enough, the Seahawks have indeed made several additional changes led by Macdonald and Kubiak, hiring John Benton as offensive line coach, Andrew Janocko as quarterbacks coach, Rick Dennison as run game coordinator and senior offensive advisor, and Justin Outten as run game specialist and assistant offensive line coach.

The common thread running between all of those coaches is that they all have significant experience working with Kubiak and/or his father, longtime offensive coordinator and head coach Gary Kubiak, and they are all well versed in the Shanahan version of the West Coast offense and wide zone run scheme Kubiak is bringing with him to Seattle.

"It's great to have a staff in place this time around, where last year I think we were finalizing it about this time," Macdonald said Wednesday from the NFL Scouting Combine. "I just really believe in the men that we brought into our coaching staff, their leadership ability, coaching ability. It's going to be a fun group to work with. I think our players are going to love playing for them.

For Macdonald, it was an easy decision to empower Kubiak to bring in coaches he was familiar with and who were familiar with the offense the Seahawks will be running, because that will allow the offense to get on track as quickly as possible.

"I thought it was important for Klint to be able to work with guys that he has a prior relationship with," Macdonald said. "Just having alignment on each side of the ball, having done it a couple times where you haven't had those relationships, I understand that sometimes it's difficult. And with this particular scheme, there's a lot of nuances that kind of take the test of time to iron out all the details, so it's not like we have to go back through steps one through whatever to get up and running. So I thought that was really important, but these guys are some of the best in the business too, so to be able to add great coaches to your staff, great experiences, different types of skill sets and thoughts and backgrounds I thought was important as well. So I felt like it was a great mix."

As Macdonald and Kubiak have both discussed this offseason, a big goal for the Seahawks following this change is for the team to run the ball better, and the hope is that the blocking scheme will play a big role in that. The Seahawks will no doubt look to add to their offensive line this offseason, as they do every year, but there is also a belief that Kubiak's scheme will help get the most out of players already on the roster.

"What's exclusive to that (scheme) is you got to be able to move, got to be able to change direction, think on your feet," Macdonald said. "These guys have a great track record of evaluating guys and developing them, and we have some people in house too. I've spoken to this at length, but the guys that we have on our roster are good at this scheme and I'm excited to develop these guys and see where they go."

Kubiak's offense should also make life easier on quarterback Geno Smith, Macdonald noted. Smith has shown he can thrive in multiple offensive schemes, but various versions of the Shanahan West Coast offense have proven to be pretty quarterback friendly for multiple reasons. For starters, a good running game always helps the passing game, and there are also elements of the passing game itself, including quick timing passes, getting the quarterback on the move and play-action passes that all can take pressure off a quarterback.

"He's not like, specific to this scheme or whatever, but this scheme has a track record of the quarterback playing fast," Macdonald said. "I just feel like if you can get the quarterback play decisive and fast, it builds confidence. It's hard to defend on defense when the ball is out on time. And then all the play actions and the movements to be able to protect him that way, they take pressure off the offensive line, that's going to help us.

"Both the track heard of how Klint has coached quarterbacks and their success was really important, and this scheme as a whole, you just think of all the guys who are coaching this scheme. And the things we know about Geno, he's tough as crap, he's smart, he's accurate as hell. He throws a great ball, sees the field, plays with anticipation. Ultimate competitor. I mean, you line those things up with things that we doing, you've got to be excited."

The NFL Combine gives the nation's best draft prospects an opportunity to showcase their talents ahead of the NFL Draft. Check out some of the best photos of current Seahawks players at the NFL Combine.

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