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April 22, 2008

Shaun Alexander: Seahawks tell him to walk

Filed under: Shaun Alexander, Released, NFL, NFC West, RB, News, Seahawks — Jason Wood @ 7:52 pm

Shaun Alexander was given his release today, after 8 years in Seattle. The writing had been on the wall for some time, as the Seahawks went out and signed not one, but two free agent runners this offseason: T.J. Duckett and Julius Jones. Alexander has been synonymous with the Seahawks under Mike Holmgren’s tenure.

Over a 5-year period (2001-2005), Alexander enjoyed one of the most dominant statistical runs in NFL history:

  • 1,653 rushes
  • 7,504 rushing yards
  • 4.54 YPR
  • 87 rush TDs
  • 183 receptions
  • 1,346 receiving yards
  • 11 receiving TDs
  • 1,473 fantasy points
  • 3 Pro Bowls
  • 1 All Pro
  • 1 NFL MVP

Unfortunately things haven’t been the same since Alexander’s MVP season. Over the last two years, he’s missed 9 regular season games, averaged just 3.6 yards per rush (after never falling below 4.0 in any season prior to 2006), and failed to break the 1,000-yard mark.

So what now? Alexander has expressed an eagerness to test the free agent market for the first time in his career; and there’s little question he’ll have suitors. With the NFL draft looming, expect teams to consider Alexander after they see how their drafts unfold this weekend.

Assessing his options:

  1. Sign with a contender
  2. Sign with a team desperate for RB help
  3. Find a team that fits both criteria

Is Alexander willing to take a backseat or, at the very least, accept a role as part of a committee? Are there any teams that could be considered a) contenders AND b) could possibly use Alexander as their main runner? Let’s take a look at all the teams that finished 0.500 or better in 2007 as a starting point:

  • New England Patriots (16-0) — L. Maroney
  • Dallas Cowboys (13-3) — M. Barber
  • Green Bay Packers (13-3) — R. Grant
  • Indianapolis Colts (13-3) — J. Addai
  • Jacksonville Jaguars (11-5) — F. Taylor & M. Jones-Drew
  • San Diego Chargers (11-5) — L. Tomlinson
  • Cleveland Browns (10-6) — J. Lewis
  • New York Giants (10-6) — B. Jacobs
  • Pittsburgh Steelers (10-6) — W. Parker
  • Seattle Seahawks (10-6) — Not applicable for obvious reasons
  • Tennessee Titans (10-6) — L. White
  • Tampa Bay Buccaneers (9-7) — E. Graham & W. Dunn
  • Washington Redskins (9-7) — C. Portis
  • Arizona Cardinals (8-8) — E. James
  • Houston Texans (8-8) — A. Green & C. Brown
  • Minnesota Vikings (8-8) — C. Taylor & A. Peterson
  • Philadelphia Eagles (8-8) — B. Westbrook

Realistically, there are three teams out of this group where Alexander could be the main ball-carrier without upsetting the apple cart too much. Of course, in the NFL where parity abounds, there are a number of teams with losing records last year that could contend this season; particularly if they had a better ground game. Here are the bottom ten teams last year in rushing yards:

  • Kansas City Chiefs (32nd) – Larry Johnson is under contract, was hurt last year
  • Detroit Lions (31st) – Definitely in the market for a RB; will they draft one?
  • Chicago Bears (30th) — Benson isn’t guaranteed anything
  • Arizona Cardinals (29th) – James is under contract, would Alexander be any better?
  • New Orleans Saints (28th) — Bush is there, and McAllister says he’ll be back this season
  • San Francisco 49ers (27th) – Frank Gore should be healthy
  • Atlanta Falcons (26th) — Signed Michael Turner to a monster deal
  • St. Louis Rams (25th) – Steven Jackson is healthy
  • Cincinnati Bengals (24th) — Need a runner, unless Rudi Johnson finds a fountain of youth

OK, so where does that leave us? Alexander is very likely going to have to accept a committee situation unless Chicago, Cincinnati or Detroit are willing to commit to him.

Where do YOU think Alexander will land?

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