Vancouver Sun

End of an era might be at hand for Seahawks

Salary concerns likely to mean stars won’t be re-signed amid roster shuffling

- MARK MASKE The Washington Post

It has been a magnificen­t run of on-field prosperity for the Seattle Seahawks — not exactly New England Patriots-like, but superb by the standards of the rest of the NFL. They have won one Super Bowl and were an ill-fated play call at the 1-yard line from winning another. They have been an annual contender for more than half a decade.

And for most of this season, the Seahawks seemed capable of adding to that list of accomplish­ments, as they jockeyed for playoff positionin­g with the other NFC heavyweigh­ts, the notion of making another trip to the Super Bowl not entirely far-fetched.

But the narrative can change quickly in the NFL, a week-to-week league in which a franchise’s entire way of doing things can be affirmed or repudiated each Sunday. And the narrative indeed has changed in recent weeks for the Seahawks, to the point that when they take the field Sunday in Dallas, there is room to wonder if this is a last stand of sorts for the team that everyone has come to know so well in recent years.

“When you lose a couple games in a row, it’s no fun,” coach Pete Carroll said at his news conference Wednesday. “That’s different. We rarely have been in that situation . ... We’re grinding right now. We’ve got to grind our way back into a win.”

The Seahawks have lost two straight games and even a wildcard playoff spot is far from a certainty at this point. They were overwhelme­d at home Sunday by the Los Angeles Rams 42-7, a showing that completed the passing of the torch in the NFC West.

The team that will take the field Sunday will be missing key members of the Seahawks’ core group of players. The “Legion of Boom” secondary has been decimated by injuries. Cornerback Richard Sherman and safety Kam Chancellor suffered season-ending injuries. So, too, did defensive end Cliff Avril.

That secondary and that defence, along with quarterbac­k Russell Wilson, have been the centrepiec­es of the Seahawks teams that reached the playoffs the previous five seasons. There was the dominating Super Bowl triumph over Peyton Manning and the Denver Broncos to close the 2013 season, and the Super Bowl near miss the following season against the Patriots when Wilson threw a championsh­ip-deciding intercepti­on after the Seahawks decided that handing the football to Marshawn Lynch one yard away from consecutiv­e titles was not the way to go.

“We’ve had the spotlight for a long time,” Sherman said following an October win over the Giants at the Meadowland­s. “We’ve had the spotlight on us every game, every week. I think a lot of people just look for us to fall and look for us to fail and hope that it comes this game. And they keep watching us hoping that it’s this game or this game or this game. But we’ve had the spotlight on us for a long time. I don’t think the market necessaril­y matters in our case. I think we’ve turned Seattle into a big-market team. We’ve got a lot of Pro Bowlers, all-pros, a lot of jersey sales. We get a lot of media attention. So I think as small of a market theoretica­lly as it is, we get a lot of attention.”

The focus this coming off-season will be on general manager John Schneider and how he retools the roster. There will be tough choices to be made. Sherman will count US$13.2 million against next season’s salary cap. Safety Earl Thomas is to count $10.4 million and Chancellor $9.8 million.

There has been speculatio­n that they could be among those to exit in a roster overhaul, possibly along with Avril and defensive end Michael Bennett. Tight end Jimmy Graham and defensive lineman Sheldon Richardson are eligible for unrestrict­ed free agency.

“There are some decisions to be made there, obviously,” a front office executive with another NFL team said. “They’ve been very good and very consistent, and it’s always difficult to make that decision to take apart your core group and go another direction. But they’ll still be competitiv­e. They have the quarterbac­k in place and they’ll still have some pieces on defence.”

There was a time when the Seahawks had the luxury of having, in Wilson, a championsh­ip-winning quarterbac­k playing on the rookie contract of a third-round draft choice. Those days are gone. Wilson counts $23.8 million against next season’s salary cap. The flexibilit­y to spend so freely on other parts of the team, including the defence, is not what it once was. But Schneider is highly regarded within the league. Many within the sport say he will find the right buttons to press.

At this point, the Seahawks have a here-and-now focus. That means trying to beat the Cowboys and attempting to find a way to sneak into the NFC playoffs. Would that change the inevitabil­ity of the roster reconstruc­tion that is about to come? Perhaps not. But it might reduce the urgency attached to it.

“We have to bounce (back),” Carroll said Wednesday. “And everybody seems tuned into it and focused on it and realizing again whatever happened last week, we still would’ve had to win this week. It’s really the same scenario. Every one of these games are must games and championsh­ip (opportunit­ies). That’s how we’re facing it and they seem to realize that, too.”

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