Takeaway
Chandler Catanzaro kicked a 43-yard field goal as time expired, giving Arizona a 34-31 victory over the Seahawks Saturday at CenturyLink Field. After a furious comeback from a 31-18 deficit with 2:50 remaining, Seattle had a chance to take the lead with a minute remaining, but Stephen Hauschka botched an extra point, allowing the Cardinals a final scoring opportunity, and they capitalized (box), a bad blow for the locals.
The Seahawks fell from the No. 2 seed in the NFC to No. 4. They also lost their No. 1 running back, Thomas Rawls, to a shoulder injury (severity undetermined), and their No. 2 receiver, Tyler Lockett, to a broken leg. Lockett, who will require surgery, is out for the season. With one game remaining, Seattle will need help in order to secure a first-round bye.
The Seahawks must win at San Francisco Sunday, then need New Orleans to beat Atlanta to deny the Falcons the No. 2 spot.
Seattle seemed dead when it fell behind 31-18 with four minutes left. Then QB Russell Wilson rallied the Seahawks with two late touchdown passes, to TE Jimmy Graham and WR Paul Richardson, the latter tying at 31-31. But Hauschka couldn’t convert the PAT and Arizona took over with 60 clicks left.
Essential moment
Starting at the 25 and after an incomplete pass, Arizona QB Carson Palmer hit RB David Johnson for 13 yards. Two plays later, Palmer found Johnson again for 29 after SS Kam Chancellor lost coverage. After an eight-yard completion to WR Larry Fitzgerald, Catanzaro completed the eight-play, 50-yard drive with the game-winner.
Offense
Wilson was under siege throughout an abysmal first half, sustaining five sacks and multiple hits as the Seahawks fell behind 14-3, failing to gain even one yard on seven goal-to-go attempts just before intermission. With far better protection in the final two quarters, finished with four TD passes (and no interceptions): Two yards to Jermaine Kearse, 42 to Doug Baldwin, 37 to Graham and five to Richardson.
Wilson completed 29 of 45 for 350 yards and a 117.8 passer rating and also led the Seahawks with 36 rushing yards on 10 attempts.
Baldwin caught a career-high 13 passes on 19 targets for a career-high 171 yards. With 1,084, Baldwin is the fifth receiver in franchise history to record back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons.
Lockett appeared to catch a 29-yard touchdown late in the first half, but was ruled down at the one-yard line on review. After the catch, Lockett slid under Arizona defender Brandon Williams, who crushed Lockett’s lower right leg. Lockett went face down to the turf and trainers immediately raced on the field. An air cast was placed on Lockett’s leg and he was carted away.
With Arizona’s defensive line dominating, Rawls couldn’t get anything going in the first half — eight yards on eight carries. But Alex Collins gave the Seahawks a boost in the second half, especially on their first drive, rushing for 28 yards on seven carries.
Wilson targeted Graham only three times, but caught two passes for 43 yards. Richardson caught four balls for 42. Kearse’s TD was his first of the year.
The Seahawks rolled up 391 yards to Arizona’s 370 and controlled the clock 33:42 to 26:18, but couldn’t control the fact that Arizona put up 21 points in fourth quarter.
Defense
The Seahawks couldn’t contain Johnson, who ran for 95 yards and scored three touchdowns and caught four passes for 41 — his 15th consecutive game this season with more than 100 yards from scrimmage, an NFL record.
LB Bobby Wagner recorded 10 tackles to set the franchise record with 155. His total leads the NFL.
An 80-yard TD from Palmer to J.J. Nelson (3 catches, 132 yards) in the second quarter was the longest against the Seahawks this year (66 yards from Aaron Rodgers to Dante Adams in Green Bay three weeks ago) and the first 80-yard TD against Seattle since Oct. 4, 1998, when Rich Gannon and Andre Rison hooked up on an 80-yard scoring play for Kansas City.
Seattle’s defense gave up three touchdown drives of 60 or more yards.
Words
“This was a tough loss. We were able to put together a ballgame in the second half and I thought a lot of really good things happened. But they did a nice job to get the ball down the field (on the game-winning field goal).” — Seahawks coach Pete Carroll
“We showed what we’re capable of in the second half. They played better than us in the first half. We just didn’t execute. It comes down to us doing the right thing one play at a time.” — Wilson
“To see (Lockett) go out like that just broke our hearts. We didn’t play well in the first half, but in the second we took a breather and calmed down. It was chaos all over the place in the first half, but we got it together in the second. Now, we control what we can control. We’re in the playoffs. We’ll take it one game at a time.” — Kearse
“To struggle like we did in the first half and come back the way we did in the second half and not win, it’s an emotional roller coaster. This is very draining and exhausting. There is a sense of urgency for our team right now to get our football right. But no panic.” — Baldwin
“We’ve got to play better. It would be nice if we got a first-round bye, but you can only control what you can control. We’ve got to take this to heart and make sure it doesn’t happen again.” — Wagner
“This is not an opportunity lost. You would love to make the road easier, but sometimes you have to take the harder road.” — Seahawks CB Richard Sherman
Noteworthy
Arizona leads the overall series 18-17-1 and has defeated Seattle three times in the past four seasons. . . Had the Seahawks won, they would have recorded the fourth undefeated home season in franchise history (2003, 2005, 2012) . . . Hauschka’s 27-yard field goal in the second quarter extended his franchise-record streak to 18 consecutive games.
Next
The Seahawks close out their regular-season schedule Jan. 1 at San Francisco (1:25 p.m., FOX). Seattle defeated the 49ers (2-13) 37-18 Sept. 25.
1 Comment
Hauschka’s extra point attempt made no difference. The article made it seem like it did.