Times Colonist

Seahawks take flight for London

- TIM BOOTH

RENTON, Washington — Going overseas to play a regular-season game for the first time in franchise history, the Seattle Seahawks did as expected for their trip to England — looking at studies, analyzing options of when to leave and when to arrive and how to keep the week as normal as possible.

Added into that mix of planning was coach Pete Carroll reaching out to an old friend who became accustomed to making the trip to London on a yearly basis.

Carroll said he spoke with former Jacksonvil­le coach and current Los Angeles Chargers defensive co-ordinator Gus Bradley extensivel­y about how to manage the trip. Bradley made the journey once a year for his four seasons as the Jaguars’ head coach, a job he got after four seasons as the Seahawks’ defensive co-ordinator under Carroll.

Carroll said the message Bradley relayed was making sure the distractio­ns didn’t become overwhelmi­ng.

“They had made it through the difficulti­es, really, and they had become so familiar,” Carroll said. “It was making sure that everyone was focused and not distracted by the trip and the event of being in a foreign country and all that kind of stuff. Just so there was a process of normal focus going into game time, they were concerned about that always.”

Seattle will practise today at home before packing up and heading to the airport for a roughly nine-hour flight that’s scheduled to land in London at midday Thursday. The Seahawks are leaving a day earlier than their opponent, the Oakland Raiders, who plan to depart postpracti­ce today from the Bay Area.

Carroll compared the situation to a bowl game like those he experience­d during his time coaching at Southern California. Except instead of spending a week in one place preparing, the Seahawks will have about 72 hours on the ground in England leading up to kickoff.

“We have enough days to turn it around,” Carroll said. “There’s a lot of different ways people have done it — go over at the first of the week or wait as long as they can — and we have chosen our options after a long study and we feel really good about what we’re doing. We should be OK.”

Seattle started asking its players to begin altering their sleep schedules following Sunday’s 33-31 loss to the Los Angeles Rams in the hopes that when they board their flight at Seattle-Tacoma Airport tonight, they’ll be ready to get a little bit of sleep on the plane.

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