Orlando Sentinel

Old playoff wound sticks with Seahawks

- By Tim Booth

RENTON, Wash. — Four years ago, the Seattle Seahawks walked out of Atlanta after a defining moment that shaped what has taken place since then.

A 30-28 loss to the Falcons in the divisional round of the NFC playoffs stung and lingered.

To this day, it's still a touchy subject after Seattle could not hold on to the lead in the final 30 seconds.

But that loss also became the foundation for two NFC championsh­ips, a Super Bowl title and two more playoff appearance­s.

And while the people involved have changed significan­tly since that game, the circumstan­ces are just as meaningful for Seattle when it travels to Atlanta for a divisional-round playoff game at 4:35 p.m. Saturday on Fox (WOFL-Ch. 35).

Except instead of trying to create the foundation of being among the elite, Seattle is trying to prove it still is among the elite in the NFC.

“It's one of those games,” Seattle coach Pete Carroll said Tuesday of the loss in January 2013.

“It's one of those games you store away, but it doesn't have anything to do with what's going on now.”

Seattle was an upstart during the 2012 season. Led by then-rookie quarterbac­k Russell Wilson, the Seahawks earned a wild-card spot in the NFC and knocked off the Washington Redskins 24-14 in the wild-card round.

Against Atlanta, the No. 1 seed in the NFC that season, Seattle appeared outclassed. The Seahawks fell behind 20-0 at halftime and 27-7 entering the fourth quarter.

That's when Wilson pulled off one of his greatest rallies to date, leading Seattle on three fourthquar­ter touchdown drives to take a 28-27 lead with 31 seconds left after a 2-yard TD run by Marshawn Lynch.

Wilson finished that day throwing for 385 yards, still a career best, but Atlanta hit two long pass plays in the final 30 seconds. Matt Bryant's 49-yard field goal with eight seconds left won the game for the Falcons.

“We felt like we [went] far, but we still had a long way to go,” Seattle linebacker Bobby Wagner said. “Kind of like woke us up, but it definitely made us hungry, too, because when you feel like you have a great team that should win it all and you lose, and you sit there in the offseason and watch the other teams win, it gives you that hunger to come into the next season prepared. That's what happened.”

K.J. Wright echoed Wagner's feeling about the game.

Wright is among a handful of key players who remain on Seattle's roster despite the Seahawks’ constant churn. He said Seattle doesn't get to a Super Bowl without that loss.

“I believe that we weren't quite ready yet to take it all the way,” Wright said.

“I'm kind of glad that happened to us because we learned from it. We won the Super Bowl the following year so we learned from that moment.”

Atlanta is again the higher-seeded team with a multifacet­ed offense that was among the best in football, and Matt Ryan directing the charge. The Falcons are the rightful favorites then and now.

But the situation is significan­tly different for Seattle.

The Seahawks were the upstarts then: young, brash and looking to prove they belonged.

Now, they're trying to continue their legacy and prove even with a résumé that includes five straight appearance­s in the divisional round of the playoffs, they are still the powerhouse of the NFC.

“I still remember that game, me and [Bruce Irvin] sitting at the end, watching,” Wagner said. “It wasn't a great feeling. We want to make sure that doesn't happen again.”

 ?? TED S. WARREN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? QB Russell Wilson was a rookie when the Seattle Seahawks were ousted by Atlanta in a playoff game in 2013.
TED S. WARREN/ASSOCIATED PRESS QB Russell Wilson was a rookie when the Seattle Seahawks were ousted by Atlanta in a playoff game in 2013.

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