The immortal run by Marshawn Lynch Jan. 8, 2011, skewered the Saints, legitimized the Seahawks and layers in some juicy drama for Monday night.
Author: Art Thiel
Suspensions of Thurmond and Browner add to the pile of drug-bust distractions for Carroll, which can’t be erased by soaring rhetoric about second chances.
Antoine Winfield, the longtime veteran cut at the end of training camp because he was beaten out at cornerback by younger Walter Thurmond, “is a possibility” to fill at cornerback, coach Pete Carroll said Monday, while the Seahawks wait for Thurmond to return from a pending four-game suspension for violating the NFL’s substance-abuse program.
Thurmond was starting for an injured Brandon Browner, making his pending suspension by the NFL an even harder hit to the roster — and to the Seahawks’ national image.
A ground game of 530 yards led to a record Washington win over the Beavers in Corvallis and quieted both the OSU crowd and some of Sarkisian’s critics back in Seattle.
If the Seahawks hadn’t scrubbed the rug of the Georgia Dome with the Falcons two weeks earlier, perhaps the Saints’ 17-13 win over Atlanta would have been a tad more impressive. But the next opponent of the Seahawks did not instill shock and awe Thursday night, allowing the Falcons to create actual suspense, until their
I-91 supporters Sonics Without Subsidies claims deal between Chris Hansen and the city contains “gross shortfalls” in estimating the real public cost of the proposed arena.
His shortcomings in the UCLA loss were evident, but Steve Sarkisian deserves a chance to mature and to recruit to the new facilities. Football coaching churn is a killer UW habit.
The Seahawks have benefited from a friendly schedule of sub-par QBs and an apparently injured Adrian Peterson. The trick is to keep getting better faster than the remaining foes.
Harvin’s kickoff return electrified not only the Clink crowd but the Seahawks themselves, illuminating a future over the next couple of months that looks better by the week.