The Daily Courier

Disappoint­ment mixed with optimism for Seattle Seahawks

SPORTS

- By The Associated Press

RENTON, Wash. — Once Pete Carroll was finished answering for the shortcomin­gs of a disappoint­ing playoff loss, the oldest coach in the NFL started articulati­ng why he’s so excited about what the future holds for the Seattle Seahawks.

After listening to his enthusiasm, it’s no wonder Carroll signed a contract extension to stick around Seattle a few more years to see if this group of Seahawks can develop into another championsh­ip team.

“That connection they have to what we are asking them to do, and the willingnes­s to practice that on a regular basis, to bring their attitude and bring their energy all the time, that’s rare. It’s special,” Carroll said on Monday.

“And that’s what gives me the thought; I can go back a few years,

I said the same thing four, five, six years ago, whatever it was now, you know? You can tell that the nucleus and the core of the team that you need to have a championsh­ip club is here.”

Carroll’s feeling about the direction of the Seahawks after an unexpected 10-6 regular season and opening-round playoff loss to Dallas mirrors that of many of his veterans who believe Seattle is on a similar track to its 2012 team that unexpected­ly made the playoffs with a mix of young talent and important veterans, and the following year won a Super Bowl.

The belief is that the Seahawks are trending up again.

No one is going as far as to expect Seattle is going to be playing for a championsh­ip a year from now, but the Seahawks’ overhaul last off-season ended up being a quicker rebuild than most expected and has them in a place with fewer question marks headed into 2019.

Instead of continuing a rebuild, the Seahawks could be more supplement­ing with the belief they are a contender.

“We’re pleased with the progress that we’ve made with the guys we have. We don’t feel like there’s big voids and big holes, so we’re going to add,” Carroll said.

“To make this roster more competitiv­e across the board is really the intent and make guys have to work harder to hold their spots and have to get better to do that. That’s right at the heart of what we’re all about, so we’re really looking forward to that.”

In the short term, there was still disappoint­ment about Saturday’s 24-22 loss to Dallas that ended Seattle’s season.

Much of the frustratio­n about Seattle’s loss centered on the offence and a game plan that seemed conservati­ve and slow to adjust.

Carroll tried to deflect criticism being thrown at offensive co-ordinator Brian Schottenhe­imer, pointing out the success the offence had during the season — both developing the top running offence in the NFL and having one of the best scoring teams in franchise history.

Seattle was held to just 73 yards rushing by the Cowboys and was 2-of-13 on third-down conversion­s.

“For somebody to look at this game and (say) somebody didn’t do this or didn’t do that, and try to hold that against them or whatever, is really unfair. Hold it against me, I’m the guy that’s in charge of this thing,” Carroll said.

“It’s a team thing. But I’m on top of it and I’m the one to be pointed at.”

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