Yardbarker
x
Takeaways from latest Russell Wilson report
Russell Wilson. Ron Chenoy-USA TODAY Sports

Three takeaways from latest Russell Wilson report

Friday's blockbuster report from The Athletic's Mike Sando, Kalyn Kahler and Jayson Jenks paints Russell Wilson's past 13 months as a chaotic whirlwind.

Per The Athletic, Wilson tried to get head coaches fired, undermined his new coaching staff in Denver and confused Broncos teammates with a haphazard offensive approach. 

According to the report ... 

1. Wilson wanted HC, GM fired 

Before Seattle traded him to the Broncos, Wilson asked ownership to fire HC Pete Carroll and GM John Schneider. He wanted Sean Payton as coach. Wilson got his wish -- in Denver. In late January, the Broncos hired Payton as HC.

On Friday, Wilson denied the report about Carroll and Schneider on Twitter. 

After Wilson arrived in Denver, he had an office on the coaches' floor. He also had an open-door policy for players to discuss various plays. But not all coaches liked it because they felt he was trying to do their job. 

"So, are you a coach or a player? Your open-door policy should be sitting at your locker," one anonymous coach told The Athletic. 

Also, Wilson had his personal QB coach, Jake Heaps, who disrupted the coaching staff. He interrupted meetings and gave coaches scouting reports that led to disagreements.

2. His execution stunted offensive growth

The Broncos ran a perplexing Denver-Seattle hybrid, mainly Wilson's vision. It included terminology from Seattle that players may not have heard before. One coach accused Wilson of adding cadences the offensive line had not practiced during a game.

Former HC Nathaniel Hackett wanted a happy Wilson, so he signed off on whatever he presented, even if it hurt the team. Consequently, Denver's dysfunction continued, and Wilson's inability to effectively communicate plays and lengthy motivational speeches amid play calls didn't help.

"Mostly in the beginning (Wilson) would give us a motivational speech to get us going before the play," Broncos wideout Jerry Jeudy told The Athletic.

Maybe the speeches went in one ear and out the other. Denver had the league's second-most false start penalties and ranked last in scoring. 

3. Denver is putting its foot down

Denver's leadership group asked Wilson to relinquish his office and remove his support staff for the season's final two weeks. 

During his introductory news conference, Payton confirmed Wilson's staff would not return. "Our coaches will be here. Our players will be here. That will be it," Payton said. 

Denver is taking Wilson's power away because he mishandled it, derailing the season and extending its seven-year playoff drought, second longest in the NFL. It's also a wake-up call for Wilson since he may realize it's time to change and take accountability.    

More must-reads:

Customize Your Newsletter

+

Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.