
For the Seahawks, they aren’t just called special teams. They really are special.
Saturday night’s third preseason game against the Broncos in Denver was a three hour-plus reminder of just how well the units coached by Brian Schneider and Jeff Ulbrich can be. The capper to a game that was decided by special teams play was the 105-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by rookie free agent ![]()
But there was more. So much more.
Veteran kicker ![]()
“I hit the ball well,” Reed said. “But yeah, it’s nice kicking here. I can’t tell you all those (kickoffs) would have been out of the end zone if we were playing in Seattle – or any other stadium, actually. But you still have to hit the ball well.”
Punter ![]()
Leading the cover of those punts and kickoffs were rookies ![]()
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And after breaking his big return, Baldwin heaped praise on his blockers, including those from ![]()
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Good stuff, from start to finish.
Just like last season, when the special teams were the best – and most consistent – unit on the Seahawks’ NFC West championship team. The Schneider- and Ulbrich-coached crew tied for fourth-best in the NFL, according to the rankings compiled by Rick Gosselin of the Dallas Morning News that are based on 22 special-teams categories.
With that said, here’s a look at three things that worked in the 23-20 loss to the Broncos and three things that need work this week:
What worked
The special teams. Big return? Check. Big kicks? Double check. Big-time coverage? Check, and check.
The tight ends. The Seahawks have three receiving touchdowns in the preseason – all by tight ends, and not the tight ends you might expect. ![]()
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“Those are always the toughest ones, because you know you’re wide open,” Byrd said of his TD – the first scored by the No. 1 offense. “Sometimes your shoulders might relax or something like. I just wanted to focus and make sure I got the six points.”
Byrd could have the 2-1 edge over McCoy, because he was even more open in the end zone on the play that produced McCoy’s TD in the opener against the Chargers.
Asked about that play, Byrd smiled and offered, “As long as it goes to the tight end position, we’re happy.”
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What needs work: The three P’s
Pass protection. ![]()
Penalties. The Seahawks had 10 against the Broncos, to go with 10 against the Vikings and six against the Chargers. Yes, it’s the preseason, and one that is following no offseason. Sure, there are so many new players learning a new offense. But concentration is key.
Pass defense. It wasn’t as porous as Kyle Orton’s 236-yard performance in three quarters made it appear. It’s just that 136 of those yards came on five of his 16 completions, with four of them on first-down plays.




