Sunday, November 27, 2011

Seahawks playing themselves out of Luck sweepstakes

Just when you think the Seattle Seahawks could not play any worse, they go out and beat the AFC North leading Baltimore Ravens, a team known for its stout defense.

Seattle’s 22-17 victory over Baltimore last Sunday at Century Link Field was shocking after disappointing losses to Cleveland, Cincinnati and Dallas the last three weeks gave the Hawks six losses midway through the season.

The Seahawks looked good from the start with Marshawn Lynch rushing for a touchdown and the special teams forcing a turnover to set up a field goal and 10-0 first quarter lead. From that point on, Seattle kept their lead by kicking field goals.

Lynch reached the 100-yard rushing plateau for the second straight week, the first time in his career he has done so. He has also rushed for a touchdown in the last five games he’s played, something no Seahawk back has done since the Shaun Alexander days.

It is hard to imagine the letdown Baltimore had considering they beat the Pittsburgh Steelers twice this season and many have predicted them to represent the AFC in the Super Bowl. But two fumbles on punt returns cost them and Seattle took advantage of the 12th man support to notch their third victory on the season.

Seattle currently sits in second place in the NFC West behind the surging San Francisco 49ers. The Seahawks might as well be in no-man’s land because there is no way they can over take the Niners for the division lead. While the schedule gets easier for Seattle with upcoming games against the struggling St. Louis Rams and Washington Redskins, it is hard to imagine the Hawks putting a run together to clinch a playoff spot.

Let me be clear that I am NOT in favor of Seattle throwing in the towel for a high draft pick; it certainly looked at one point that is what Coach Pete Carroll was doing. The offense has really struggled with both Charlie Whitehurst and Tavaris Jackson at quarterback. A lot of the blame should go to the offensive line for not offering protection or blocking in the running game. But neither quarterback has shown an ability to lead while Matt Hasselbeck has had a great year for the Tennessee Titans while mentoring Ferndale’s favorite son Jake Locker.

The number one projected player coming out of college this year is Stanford’s quarterback and Heisman Trophy favorite Andrew Luck. After watching the winless Indianapolis Colts look helpless without Peyton Manning, it looks as though the Colts will win the Luck sweepstakes, getting the first overall pick for having the worst regular season record.

But there is still seven weeks left in the season and who knows what can happen. My hope is that Seattle will draft a quarterback in the first round and groom their franchise leader for the future. Maybe the Seahawks will get lucky.

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