Times Colonist

Blowout loss leaves Seahawks in must-win time

- TIM BOOTH

RENTON, Washigton — Pete Carroll was notably sombre on Monday and understand­ably so. Even a day later, the most lopsided loss of his Seattle Seahawks tenure was still stinging.

“A difficult day yesterday that didn’t get anywhere near the expectatio­ns that we had,” Carroll said. “We ran into a day, like some of us know, our hard days, they don’t always go like you like.”

Seattle has generally thrived in important games with something at stake. In this case it was the NFC West lead and a much easier path toward a sixth straight playoff appearance. And it was coming two weeks after one of Seattle’s more complete performanc­es in recent seasons with a convincing 24-10 win over Philadelph­ia.

All of those factors made the 42-7 blowout loss to the Rams so shocking, and tough for the Seahawks to accept. There were few answers, other than it was a complete thumping by the Rams.

“I think that’s why our expectatio­ns were so high and why we’re so disappoint­ed about it today,” Carroll said. “But we have to move on from it.”

Moving on was a theme for Carroll on Monday and he’s right in trying to be optimistic. The Seahawks (8-6) still have fleeting playoff hopes, but have no room for error the rest of the way if they intend on finding their way to the post-season. Wins over Dallas and Arizona seem like absolutes, and the Seahawks will likely need help from others.

But that only addresses the now. Sunday’s loss to the Rams felt like a tipping point for the finest era in Seahawks history. They are becoming less the brash, unapologet­ic bullies of the NFC West and more an older, expensive roster likely in need of some remodeling.

It’s big picture stuff that the Seahawks will need to address in the off-season but was on everyone’s mind in the aftermath of such a deflating loss to the new upstarts in the division.

“That wasn’t anything like it’s been since I got here,” Seattle centre Justin Britt said after the loss. “The Rams are a hell of a team this year and they have a lot of depth and really good players. It’s kind of the same story every week.”

There were many reasons why the Rams were so dominant but none appeared more bothersome to Carroll than Seattle’s inability to slow down Todd Gurley and the Rams’ run game. Seattle held Gurley to 43 yards rushing in its Week 5 victory and believed even with the losses on defence due to injury they could keep the Rams’ run game in check.

But Seattle’s defensive front was out of position on too many plays in the first half and watched Gurley run wild. Gurley had 144 yards rushing in the first half and found huge running lanes as Seattle failed to stay discipline­d up front and didn’t tackle well in the back end.

“When they’re running crazy on us like that, that’s no fun at all,” safety Earl Thomas said. “That’s not what we’re used to. It definitely sucks.”

The Rams finished with 244 yards rushing, the second-most allowed since Carroll arrived in Seattle. Only Kansas City’s 270 yards rushing in 2010 — led by 173 yards from Jamaal Charles — topped the Rams’ performanc­e.

“We got a little bit anxious, tried to get at the quarterbac­k too much, got out of our run lanes and gave them some stuff,” Carroll said.

 ??  ?? Seahawks coach Pete Carroll: “We have to move on from it.”
Seahawks coach Pete Carroll: “We have to move on from it.”

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