Santa Fe New Mexican

Lynch ‘just here’ to give Seattle a playoff push

- By Ken Belson

In the days before the Super Bowl in 2015, Marshawn Lynch taunted the media — and the NFL, which requires all players to speak to reporters before the championsh­ip game — by proclaimin­g, “I’m just here so I don’t get fined.”

It was peak Lynch: Defiant, funny, original. He got away with it, too, because he was a superb running back, a cornerston­e of the Seattle Seahawks teams that made it to the Super Bowl in consecutiv­e years.

Now Lynch is back in Seattle after an uneasy departure following the 2015 season. Not to avoid getting fined, but to save the team’s precarious playoff chances.

Lynch, according to his agent, signed a contract with the Seahawks, who have lost several of their top running backs to injury in the past several weeks, including Chris Carson and C.J. Prosise in a loss Sunday to the Arizona Cardinals.

Lynch’s arrival comes just days before the Seahawks face the San Francisco 49ers in Seattle on Sunday night, with the winner taking the NFC West crown, while the loser will enter the postseason as a wild-card team.

Lynch characteri­stically spoke on his own terms this week, saying in a video on YouTube before his deal was signed that he hears from fans all over the world that he “should have two Super Bowl rings.”

At 33, Lynch is well past his peak, when his grinding

and creative running style fit his nickname: Beast Mode. After retiring and sitting out the 2016 season, he returned to the NFL with his hometown Oakland Raiders for two seasons. He appeared in just six games last year because of a groin injury that required surgery. He has not played this season, and his outside pursuits have included acting in the upcoming season of HBO’s futuristic show Westworld.

As desperate as the Seahawks are, it is unclear how much Lynch can contribute Sunday. While he is familiar with the Seahawks’ playbook, Seattle’s offensive line has been mediocre, ranked 19th in the league by FootballOu­tsiders.com. Lynch will also be facing the 49ers, who have one of the best defensive fronts in the league.

Still, the Seahawks need just one good game out of Lynch to earn a week off. They also have quarterbac­k Russell Wilson, who is having an MVP-caliber season, and they will be playing in front of their home crowd against a 49ers team that has less postseason experience.

There are also the intangible­s that only Lynch can bring to a locker room. He was immensely popular with his Seattle teammates during his five and a half seasons there, bringing a unique swagger with his largerthan-life persona.

His love of Skittles resonated nationally. He turned his Beast Mode moniker into an apparel line. He announced his retirement in 2016 on Twitter with a peace-sign emoji and an image of his football cleats tied to together and hanging from a wire. (It was retweeted nearly 200,000 times.)

When players across the NFL knelt during the playing of the national anthem to protest police violence against African-Americans, Lynch went further: He sat on the bench. In 2017, that earned him the wrath of President Donald Trump, who criticized him for sitting during “The Star-Spangled Banner” but standing while the Mexican anthem was played before a game in Mexico City.

His ever-present yet sometimes inscrutabl­e presence was the subject of a documentar­y, Lynch: A History, which premiered at the Seattle Internatio­nal Film Festival this year.

Then there was the fiery end to the 2015 Super Bowl against the New England Patriots. With less than 90 seconds left, the Seahawks were on the 1 yard line, needing a touchdown to all-but-secure a second consecutiv­e title.

Instead of giving the ball to Lynch, who had 15 rushing touchdowns that year, coach Pete Carroll called a pass play. Patriots cornerback Malcolm Butler intercepte­d Wilson’s intended pass to Ricardo Lockette, earning Carroll a lifetime of questions, including from some of his own players.

Lynch said in his YouTube video that he wanted to help the Seahawks win the Super Bowl he said they ought to have won five years ago.

“At my age, this is a great opportunit­y, coming in and help when needed,” he said in the video. “Hopefully be able to help them go ahead and get the Super Bowl that they should be playing for.”

He was asked: Why Seattle?

“We got history, we got unfinished business,” Lynch said.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch, who played his last game for Seattle in 2016, is back and preparing to play Sunday against San Francisco with the NFC West title on the line.
ELAINE THOMPSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch, who played his last game for Seattle in 2016, is back and preparing to play Sunday against San Francisco with the NFC West title on the line.

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