Archive for the ‘Seahawks’ Category

Lynch carries Seahawks to 31-14 win over Eagles

Thursday, December 1st, 2011

By TIM BOOTH

Marshawn Lynch loves the prime-time stage, even if he’s rarely given such a spotlight.

Seattle’s hard-charging running back bulled through Philadelphia for 148 yards and a pair of first-half touchdowns, David Hawthorne returned the third of Vince Young‘s four interceptions 77 yards for a score, and the Seahawks rolled to a 31-14 victory Thursday night that only added to the Eagles’ miserable season.

Lynch ran into and escaped from a massive pileup for a 15-yard TD run in the first quarter, then made a quick cut and went back against the flow for a 40-yard scoring dash on the first play of the second quarter to give the Seahawks (5-7) a 14-0 lead.

Golden Tate‘s 11-yard, toe-tapping touchdown grab along the back edge of the end zone in the third quarter pushed Seattle’s cushion to 17 over the Eagles (4-8).

But the Seahawks’ third victory in their last four games wasn’t secured until Hawthorne stepped in front of a swing pass intended for LeSean McCoy and raced untouched in the other direction with 4:24 left.

Making his third straight start in place of Michael Vick and his two broken ribs, Young couldn’t find the same magic he did in the 2006 Rose Bowl when he led Texas to an upset of Pete Carroll and USC.

Young’s first pass of the night was an awful interception thrown right to Seattle safety Kam Chancellor and nowhere near an Eagles receiver. Young was intercepted in the third quarter as well when a perfect pass deflected off the hands of Riley Cooper and into the hands of cornerback Brandon Browner. Both turnovers led to Seattle touchdowns.

Then came a pass for McCoy when Young clearly didn’t see Hawthorne, ruining the Eagles’ last chance to rally. For good measure, Young added one more interception in the final moments, giving him a career-high four picks.

Young finished 17 of 29 for 208 yards. McCoy got more chances than he did last Sunday against New England when he touched the ball just 14 times, a number that drew criticism from Eagles fans believing the leading rusher in the NFL deserved more opportunities.

McCoy finished with 84 yards on 17 carries and added another four catches for 49 yards. But he was upstaged by Lynch.

For the fourth time in five games, Lynch topped 100 yards – and the one time he didn’t, he finished with 88 yards in a victory over St. Louis. He had 90 yards by halftime on Thursday night, the most first-half yards rushing in his career. He averaged 6.7 yards per carry and almost immediately provided a spark the Seahawks needed on a short week.

And he did it while battling an upset stomach that occasionally forced him to the sideline.

Following Young’s first interception, Seattle got down to the Eagles 10 on a 26-yard third-down completion from quarterback Tarvaris Jackson to Ben Obomanu. A penalty backed Seattle up 5 yards, but that only provided Lynch more room for theatrics.

On first-and-goal at the 15, he ran into a massive crowd near the 10. He got lost in the pile, wiggled out of the arms of linebacker Jamar Chaney and suddenly burst into the end zone, a run that was reminiscent of his 67-yard, tackle-breaking touchdown gallop in the playoffs last season against New Orleans.

Lynch’s second touchdown was an opportunity for him to show off his open-field speed, and it came after another important third-down conversion, this time a 21-yard pass from Jackson to rookie Doug Baldwin on third-and-7. On the next snap, the flow of the play went to Lynch’s left, but he immediately cut back right and found open field, beating the Eagles defense to the corner and going 40 yards untouched.

It was the second-most yards rushing in Lynch’s career, behind the 153 he had in his rookie season with Buffalo against Cincinnati.

Tate’s second straight game with a touchdown grab seemed to wrap up the victory. Tate outdueled a double-team at the back of the end zone and hauled in the toss from Jackson to give Seattle a 24-7 lead. Jackson finished 13 of 16 for 190 yards and a touchdown.

But the quick bounce-back by the Seahawks only magnified their missed chance last Sunday when they blew a 10-point fourth-quarter lead and lost 23-17 to Washington. Even with the win over Philadelphia and another home game coming up against St. Louis, any hopes the Seahawks have of jumping into the playoff race are likely gone.

Meanwhile, the misery only continued for Philadelphia. The Eagles played without QB Michael Vick, CB Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie and WR Jeremy Maclin, then lost CB Nnamdi Asomugha to a neck/head injury late in the first half.

Still, Philadelphia pulled within 24-14 early in the fourth quarter when Young led a 17-play, 80-yard drive that ate up more than 10 minutes of the clock. The drive included a fourth-down conversion inside the Seahawks 10 and was capped on a 2-yard shovel pass from Young to McCoy.

Young then drove the Eagles inside the Seattle 35 on their next possession with a chance to make it a one-score game, but failed to see Hawthorne lurking in the flat.

Follow Tim Booth on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ByTimBooth

Philadelphia Passing
Player Cmp Att Comp % Yds TDs Int
V. Young 17 29 58.6 208 1 4
Seattle Passing
Player Cmp Att Comp % Yds TDs Int
T. Jackson 13 16 81.3 190 1 0
Philadelphia Rushing
Player Carries Yds Avg TDs
L. McCoy 17 84 4.9 1
V. Young 5 32 6.4 0
R. Brown 2 11 5.5 0
D. Jackson 1 5 5.0 0
Seattle Rushing
Player Carries Yds Avg TDs
M. Lynch 22 148 6.7 2
L. Washington 6 9 1.5 0
G. Tate 1 8 8.0 0
J. Forsett 2 5 2.5 0
T. Jackson 2 4 2.0 0
Philadelphia Receiving
Player Rec Yds Avg TDs
R. Cooper 5 94 18.8 0
L. McCoy 4 49 12.3 1
D. Jackson 4 34 8.5 0
B. Celek 3 21 7.0 0
J. Avant 1 10 10.0 0
C. Harbor 0 0 0 0
C. Hall 0 0 0 0
Seattle Receiving
Player Rec Yds Avg TDs
Z. Miller 2 53 26.5 0
G. Tate 4 47 11.8 1
M. Robinson 4 41 10.3 0
B. Obomanu 2 28 14.0 0
D. Baldwin 1 21 21.0 0
M. Williams 0 0 0 0
Philadelphia Kicking Statistics
Player FG Made Missed XP
A. Henery - - - 2/2
Seattle Kicking Statistics
Player FG Made Missed XP
S. Hauschka 1/1 49 - 4/4

Baltimore flops again, this time 22-17 to Seattle

Sunday, November 13th, 2011

By TIM BOOTH

That Baltimore Ravens flopped on the West Coast, too.

Steven Hauschka matched a franchise record with five field goals, Marshawn Lynch scored Seattle’s only touchdown on a 1-yard plunge, and the Seahawks forced three turnovers in a surprising 22-17 win over the Ravens on Sunday.

A week after staking claim to the lead of the AFC North with a thrilling last-second win at Pittsburgh, the Ravens lost in the Pacific Northwest in an all too similar fashion to letdowns twice already this season.

After routing Pittsburgh in their opener, the Ravens (6-3) were dominated in a loss at Tennessee. Just a few weeks ago, after an impressive win over AFC South-leading Houston, the Ravens were beaten by Jacksonville.

Go ahead and add Seattle (3-6) to the list.

The magic Joe Flacco had in last week’s win over the Steelers was gone. He was rarely able challenge the Seahawks secondary downfield due to strong coverage that forced him to throw underneath. When he did have opportunities to pick up chunks of yards, Flacco missed open receivers. Ray Rice was a non-factor as a runner and David Reed fumbled twice on kickoff returns leading to six points for Seattle.

Hauschka kicked field goals of 22, 38, 39, 35 and 30 yards. Tarvaris Jackson was 17 of 27 for 217 yards and Lynch had 109 yards rushing and another 58 receiving as Seattle snapped a three-game losing streak. The Seahawks also picked up their second victory over a division-leader this season after beating the New York Giants in early October.

These flops by the Ravens are rare occurrences since John Harbaugh took over in 2008. The latest was fourth loss by the Ravens against a sub-.500 team since Harbaugh took over, and two of them have been after Week 2 – Sunday’s loss to Seattle and three weeks ago against the Jaguars.

Flacco was 29 of 52 for 255 yards. Rice, who was visibly upset after the Ravens had to settle for a 35-yard field goal from Billy Cundiff late in the third quarter, had five carries for 27 yards. He caught eight passes for 54 yards.

Baltimore had a chance with a 10-play, 65-yard drive, helped along by two defensive penalties and capped by Flacco’s 11-yard TD pass to tight end Ed Dickson with 5:52 remaining, cutting the lead to 22-17. Flacco set a career-high in attempts, while Dickson had a career-high with 10 catches and two touchdowns, including a second-quarter TD catch from Rice.

But Flacco and the Ravens never got the ball back. Following the score, Seattle faced third-and-5 at its 25 and Jackson found Golden Tate for 24 yards with 4:37 left. The Seahawks got another third-down conversion when Lynch took a short pass and faked out both Ray Lewis and Jarret Johnson to get the needed yards. Seattle ran out the clock, finally taking a knee at the Ravens 17 as the final seconds ticked away.

After Lynch’s 1-yard TD run on Seattle’s second possession, the Seahawks got inside the Baltimore 25 on five other occasions, settling for field goals each time.

That proved to be enough thanks to Seattle’s stout defense and special teams mistakes by the Ravens. Along with Reed’s two fumbles, Cundiff missed field-goal attempts of 52 and 50 yards in the first half.

Seattle also forced a turnover when rookie K.J. Wright dropped off the line, batted Flacco’s pass for Anquan Boldin into the air and into the arms of David Hawthorne, who returned the interception inside the Ravens 10 and lead to another Hauschka field goal.

After giving up 13 total first-quarter points this season, the Ravens surrendered 10 to the Seahawks. Lynch was responsible for 50 of Seattle’s 60 yards on its opening drive with receptions of 23 and 21 yards and plowing in from the 1 for a 7-0 lead.

Follow Tim Booth on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/ByTimBooth