I liken our defense to a power pitcher in baseball. A flamethrower will try to get you out with the fast ball everytime. Pretty much saying , " Here it is. Let us see if you can catch up with it." Well eventually a player ( or team in this case) will start to notice the tendancies and start making adjustments to that pitcher (defense). Soon enough, balls are getting smacked all over the place (sounds painful for us guys).
However now, this Flamethrowing pitcher, has a nasty curve he can fall back on too. So when the team starts thinking fastball, they get frozen by the curve. With Seau blitzing bing that curve, I think the last thing you want to be is frozen in the box right?
I read recently that Taylor is going to be lining up opposite of where Seau is on the field. That way when Seasu blitzes and Taylor rushes the QB, teams have to pick their poison. Either have a double team on Taylor and let Seau or another linemen, come in untouched, or keep a runningback/tight end in, which can hinder their passing game by eliminating key recievers.
In Theory, this defense should be very strong, as long as we execute it properly.