Tyler Lockett did Russell Wilson 1 last favor after much-anticipated return

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - SEPTEMBER 12: Tyler Lockett #16 of the Seattle Seahawks greets Russell Wilson #3 of the Denver Broncos after the game at Lumen Field on September 12, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images)
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - SEPTEMBER 12: Tyler Lockett #16 of the Seattle Seahawks greets Russell Wilson #3 of the Denver Broncos after the game at Lumen Field on September 12, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) /
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After Russell Wilson lost his return to Seattle, his former Seahawks teammate Tyler Lockett did him a favor. It turns out Wilson might want to alter his pre-snap signals.

Wilson struggled at times against his former team — perhaps it was the familiarity the Seahawks and Pete Carroll had with his style of play, or the emotion of the moment. The end result was the same: Wilson went 29-of-43 for 342 yards and a touchdown.

Much of those statistics were inflated late, though two red-zone turnovers by Broncos running backs essentially forfeited any chance Denver had at victory in the second half.

Lockett, for one, noticed that Wilson was using the same pre-snap hand signals he employed in Seattle. The veteran wide receiver forwarded that intel to the Seahawks’ defense, which helped them time the snap.

The full segment can be found at this link, starting at about 3:40 in.

Tyler Lockett does Russell Wilson, Broncos a favor

For the most part, Wilson has said all the right things about his time in Seattle. Carroll stoked the flames somewhat pregame, and made it obvious how badly he wanted to defeat Wilson.

We can likely chalk that up to competitive edge.

Now that the moment has passed, Lockett made sure to mention Wilson’s hand signals to Broncos wide receivers Courtland Sutton and K.J. Hamler.

Week 1 signaled an early stumble for Wilson and Nathaniel Hackett. Perhaps Super Bowl or bust was a little premature for this team in their first go-around together, especially considering we had yet to see the final product on the field together.

Offensively, they can certainly move the ball. The key is avoiding major mistakes (such as red zone turnovers), and game management. Hackett learned the latter point the hard way.

Next. Nathaniel Hackett states the painfully obvious about Broncos’ 4th-down decision. dark