The Seahawks will add an almost-new weapon for the Super Bowl: Percy Harvin. “He’ll be ready — he’s fine,” said coach Pete Carroll Monday morning on his weekly ESPN 710 radio show. Harvin missed Sunday’s game against the 49ers after a concussion a week earlier against New Orleans. He didn’t pass the NFL’s concussion protocol
Author: Art Thiel
After a major blunder to start the game, QB Russell Wilson remained undaunted, coming up with a 4th-and-7 TD pass that will live forever in Northwest sports history.
A week after he became a minor sports celebrity, Michael Bowie found himself out of Sunday’s NFC Championship game. The seventh-round draftee was a starter against New Orleans last week — the first start of his life at left guard — but Sunday was on Seattle’s pre-game list of inactives.
In the absence of injured Percy Harvin, the Seahawks receivers get a little cranky when they hear they “aren’t worth squat.” How, they ask, did Seahawks get this far?
Sports fans in Seattle have never been in this place where the Seahawks have taken them. The anxiety is thicker than Puget Sound fog.
If you experienced in grade school the wise guy who sat behind you in class and flicked your earlobe, then quickly returned to work before Teach caught on, then you know a little bit about Marshawn Lynch.
Harvin won’t play, but if the Seahawks reach the Super Bowl, he likely will be available. Saints S Rafael Bush was fined $21,000 for his hit on Harvin.
Seahawks fans lamenting Russell Wilson’s decline in productivity should know it’s not going to take a makeover to find success in the NFC championship Sunday against the 49ers.
Fervor for 49ers-Seahawks game is such that some Californians thought about coming to Seattle in January for an outdoor event. Didn’t they read about Lewis & Clark?
Just when the NFL was upon a great celebration of its present (Tom Brady vs. Peyton Manning) and its future (Russell Wilson vs. Colin Kaepernick), the past reared its concussed head. A deal struck just before the start of the season designed to quiet the growing controversy over the NFL’s responsibility for the consequences of