This was the kind of game that
separates the true 12s from mere fair-weather fans.
The first half was a disaster. The offensive line was such an uncoordinated mess that Wilson had to be more concerned with self-preservation than making plays. First down penalties from the receivers and linemen were singularly unhelpful in that they
backed the Seahawks up from "manageable" to "long."
Marshawn Lynch was so annoyed with the line issues that he
gathered the offense together at the sidelines and gave them a talking-to. It
looked like a cross between a pep-talk and a reverend thundering at his
congregation. This was quite a thing coming from Lynch, who usually spends his
off-time gazing calmly at the horizon.
It must have worked.
Inside the two minute warning Wilson mounted a ferocious
drive, using Lynch to pound through for a first down, running it himself for
another, then completing a 40-yard pass to Jimmy Graham that might as well have
been shot from a cannon. This put them in the Red Zone.
Wilson tried a pass
that didn't pan out. Then, just when everyone thought he'd hand it to Marshawn Lynch, Wilson
craftily put it into Will Tukuafu's giant paws instead. Tukuafu is a big, relatively slow guy
but all he had to do was chug one yard into the end zone before the Cardinals
realized what was happening.
The score at the end of the first half was 22 - 7 Cardinals. Seven points may not sound like much, but it mattered a lot to the fans and the team. The momentum carried over to the third quarter.
The Seahawks had two scoring drives to start the second half:
first one ended in a field goal, second was a touchdown. Wilson scored on a
30-yard "sluggo" play.
The Cardinals head coach, Bruce Arians, was grumpy all night. He
challenged so many calls that he ran out of challenges and mouthed off to a
referee such that he got an Unsportsmanlike called against his team.
In the third, KJ Wright nabbed a forced-fumble ball and took
off running. He was brought down at the three yard line but Shawn brought it
home on the next play. He was patient, too. He didn't charge forward
immediately or try to force his way through where it wouldn't count. No no. He
chose his opening and followed it.
25 - 23 Cardinals.
Bobby Wagner forced another fumble for a pick-six. This put
us in the lead.
25 - 29 Seahawks.
More penalties against the Seahawks led to what
would have been an abortive Cardinals drive ending in a touchdown.
32 - 29 Cardinals.
Late in the fourth, we needed the defense to hold it
together in time for Wilson to make another drive: a touchdown to win or at
least a field goal. But the defense, who had been doing well and even made some
great plays, made a critical error. They expected a throw and a Cardinals
runner escaped to make a touchdown.
39 - 29 Cardinals.
Wilson did not give up. He drove into field goal range and
was prepared to go further. Then Pete Carroll told him to let Hauscka kick a
field goal. The plan was to get an onside kick and tie it. Unfortunately while
the field goal worked, the onside kick was caught by the Cardinals.
The final score was 39 - 32 Cardinals.
I have to give our guys credit for not giving up even after
that terrible first half. The Cardinals, who must have felt like they were going to stomp all over us, instead had to fight to the bitter end.
The Good News:
The road to the Playoffs just got rockier but it has not disappeared.
The Bad News:
The Cardinals are a great football team but let's face it, those penalties were the deciding factor. Doesn't matter who they play, the Hawks can't afford to beat themselves.
The Question:
Can the Seahawks bounce back from this loss at home in time to get back on the rocky road to the Playoffs?
Excellent synopsis. I can't help but to have the sense that the Hawks are playing like a very good team in a rebuilding year. You're right, penalties are really hurting us. I was very impressed with the defense forcing amazing plays. They've seemed to come together. I loved seeing Lynch on the sidelines animated, engaged and talking to his teammates. I think the Hawks are improving with each game but not so sure it's enough at this point. However, if this turns into more of a rebuilding year, these improvements do matter. The season isn't lost, never know what will happen with other teams. But, stating the obvious, losing more games is something the Hawks really can't afford any longer.
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