Skip to main content
Advertising

Around the League

Presented By

Edwards sees 'better' in Russell Wilson than Sanchez

Braylon Edwards has been around a few talked-about rookie quarterbacks in his time. Edwards was with Brady Quinn on the Cleveland Browns and Mark Sanchez with the New York Jets. Sanchez was an immediate starter, just like Russell Wilson is for the Seattle Seahawks.

Schein: NFL's most fascinating team

_Schein-65x90.jpg

Seahawks training camp has had a bit of everything, and Adam Schein couldn't be more intrigued by Pete 

Carroll's team. **More ...**

So does Edwards see any similar things between Sanchez and Wilson?

"I see better things," Edwards told Doug Farrar of Yahoo's Shutdown Corner.

That's no surprise. While Sanchez had his moments in 2009, he's never displayed the kind of awareness and playmaking ability that Wilson showed during the 2012 preseason. Yes, it's only the preseason. But jobs are won in the preseason; highly paid free-agent acquisitions get benched because of the preseason.

"Russell's performance was just so far off the charts that we just had to recognize it," Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said, according to the Seattle Times.

On most teams, it might be a story that the veterans have allegiances to the former starting quarterback. On Seattle, Matt Flynn is just as new to the program as Wilson. Tarvaris Jackson is with the Buffalo Bills. This is a mostly new Seahawks group overall.

"He puts in a lot of hard work, man," fellow rookie Robert Turbin said, via the Tacoma News Tribune. "And he deserved to be the starter. He earned it. And I told him that I got his back for a whole career. He's the first guy in and the last guy out, you know what I mean? Sometimes I beat him to the punch. But ever since he's got here, he's acted like a quarterback that's been here for 10 years. He never really acted like a rookie.

"He motivates guys to go to work."

Wilson did everything possible to make Carroll's decision difficult. And Carroll made the call that most coaches wouldn't have the guts to make.

Follow Gregg Rosenthal on Twitter @greggrosenthal.

This article has been reproduced in a new format and may be missing content or contain faulty links. Please use the Contact Us link in our site footer to report an issue.

Related Content