The Daily Courier

Seahawks seek 1st 5-0 start in team history hosting Vikings

- By TIM BOOTH

SEATTLE — Throughout its franchise history, the Seattle Seahawks have never started a season 5-0.

Not in the years Seattle was a contender in the old AFC West. Not after it moved to the NFC. Not even the year the Seahawks won their only Super Bowl.

Then again, the Seahawks have never had a quarterbac­k playing as well as Russell Wilson has in leading Seattle to a 4-0 record heading into Sunday night's matchup with Minnesota.

“I think we’re playing at the highest level that we've ever played,” Wilson said.

While the Seahawks are looking for a bit of franchise history before their bye week, the Vikings (1-3) are seeking validation that they can still be contenders.

The Vikings have given up more points and yards than has been the norm for a Mike Zimmer team, and struggled with turnovers for the first few weeks.

But the Vikings did get their first win last week in a 31-23 victory at Houston. They do have the league’s leading rusher in Dalvin Cook. They have familiarit­y playing in Seattle for the third straight year and facing the Seahawks for the fifth time since 2015. And they’ll get a break as CenturyLin­k Field will be silent outside of what gets piped through the stadium speaker system.

“Before when we played there, that crowd noise was definitely an impact on what we had going on,” Cook said.

RECORD START

Wilson’s start to the season has placed him firmly in MVP conversati­on. He tied Peyton Manning’s record with 16 TD passes in the first four games.

He’s completing 75% of his passes, has just two intercepti­ons and has topped 300 yards three times. Perhaps most impressive are the big shots Wilson has completed. He already has 16 completion­s of more than 20 yards and is averaging 9.4 yards per attempt.

“They’re obviously letting Russell Wilson be more explosive. I think they’re No. 1 in the league in pass average. They’ve got terrific receivers, they're all fast,” Zimmer said.

COOK(ING) WITH FIRE

One of the bright spots for Minnesota has been Cook’s start to the season. He leads the league with 424 yards rushing and is averaging 5.7 yards per carry.

He’ll be facing a Seattle defence that ranks third in the league in yards rushing allowed, but hasn’t necessaril­y been tested. Todd Gurley in Week 1 and Ezekiel Elliott in Week 3 both had 14 carries against Seattle. That’s the most by any running back against the Seahawks this season. If Minnesota can stay with the run game, it could be the first significan­t test of Seattle’s run defence.

“It’s definitely fun to watch him run the ball,” Seattle linebacker Bobby Wagner said. “It’s going to be fun to play against him and get into the backfield and really just tackle him.”

END ZONE EQUALS FRIEND ZONE The Vikings have shown their share of vulnerabil­ities over the first quarter of the season, but they’ve been at their best near the end zone on both sides of the ball. The offence is tied for eighth in the NFL in goalto-go touchdown rate (87.5). The defence is seventh in goal-to-go touchdown rate (58.3).

They’ll be challenged by Seattle’s offence that until last week was perfect on the season, converting trips inside the 20 into touchdowns. Seattle has 13 TDs in 15 red zone trips.

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