Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Wilson’s final throw makes hero of Butler

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GLENDALE, Ariz. — When most of the world expected Marshawn Lynch to get the ball, Russell Wilson saw a formation that made passing from the 1 the right call for the Seattle Seahawks with the Super Bowl on the line. It didn’t work. Malcolm Butler stepped in front of Wilson’s pass intended for Ricardo Lockette and made his first career intercepti­on to seal the New England Patriots’ 28-24 win over the Seahawks on Sunday.

“I don’t know what I could have done differentl­y,” Wilson said. “I put the blame on me. I’m the one that gave him the ball.”

Wilson twice rallied the Seahawks (14-5) from deficits in the first half and his 3-yard touchdown pass to Doug Baldwin gave Seattle a 24-14 lead going into the fourth quarter.

Wilson finished 12 of 21 for 247 yards and had two TD passes. He ran for 39 yards and was sacked three times. The third-year pro will hear criticism for his final pass throughout the offseason and longer.

Seahawks Coach Pete Carroll and offensive coordinato­r Darrell Bevell tried to take the blame for making the call to pass the ball with 20 seconds left in the fourth quarter.

“We sent in our personnel and they sent in goal-line [defense]; it’s not the right matchup for us to run the football,” Carroll said. “So on second down, we throw the ball really to kind of waste the play. If we score, we do. If we don’t, then we’ll run it on third and fourth down. We had three wide receivers, a tight end and one back in that situation. They had extra guys at the line of scrimmage so we don’t waste a run play at that.”

 ?? AP/ROSS D. FRANKLIN ?? Seattle’s hopes ended when Russell Wilson was intercepte­d in the final seconds.
AP/ROSS D. FRANKLIN Seattle’s hopes ended when Russell Wilson was intercepte­d in the final seconds.

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