Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Seahawks must absorb Super blow

- LARRY STONE

It doesn’t feel any different in the morning, and it won’t feel any different 20 years from now. I will never regard the end of Super Bowl XLIX with anything less than a feeling of stupefied shock.

I can imagine every Seattle Seahawks fan woke up with a boulder in the pit of their stomach and anguish in their heart. It’s only a game, as one emailer reminded me. True, but that doesn’t stop people from investing every fiber of their emotion in it.

I can only imagine the feelings Pete Carroll woke up with. I doubt if he read any of the myriad articles labeling him as the Super Bowl goat of all time, the author of one of the worst calls in sports history.

He didn’t have to. He lived it. Carroll watched what would have been his greatest triumph disintegra­te into unmitigate­d disaster. And his role in it, via the still inexplicab­le decision to eschew a Marshawn Lynch run from the 1-yard line, was as subtle as Katy Perry’s halftime show. Which is to say, as plain as the giant articulate­d tiger on the field.

And now, Carroll has the toughest job of his coaching career ahead of him. It’s one that will make this year’s challenges — overcoming the pitfalls of trying to repeat, righting the ship at midseason after the turmoil of Percy Harvin’s departure — seem like Pop Warner stuff.

Carroll must keep the Seahawks together and keep them moving forward, after as devastatin­g a psychologi­cal blow as any team has ever absorbed in a moment of such paramount importance.

You could see that fact beginning to sink in as Carroll and Russell Wilson encountere­d each other after the intercepti­on, looks of stunned disbelief etched on both faces.

“We just looked at each other trying to realize the gravity of what we just witnessed,” Carroll said.

This will be a critical repair job by Carroll that will test all his famous skills of motivation and morale-building. Losses like this have the potential to take on an afterlife. Though most players refrained from criticizin­g the play call at the end, some second-guessing leaked out. I’d suspect the majority wondered the same thing as the rest of the world: Why in the world didn’t he give the ball to Beast Mode?

To his credit, Carroll took full ownership of the defeat, and of the decision to bypass Lynch. Though offensive coordinato­r Darrell Bevell called the particular play, a slant to Ricardo Lockette, and Wilson threw it into the hands of New England cornerback Malcolm Butler, who jumped the route, Carroll said over and over the buck stopped with him.

“I made it. I made the decision,” he said. “I said, ‘Throw the ball.’ ”

This loss is not all on Carroll’s call, of course. The Seahawks’ vaunted defense gave up four long touchdown drives, and blew what appeared to be an insurmount­able 10-point lead. Wilson’s pass was not the pinpoint strike that might have spared all the heartache. A critical drop by Jermaine Kearse at the end of the third quarter derailed what might have been a game-clinching scoring drive.

On top of all that, the Seahawks didn’t exactly comport themselves with poise at times. Doug Baldwin’s touchdown display of defecating the football was crass and vulgar. After that Baldwin score, which made it 24-14 Seahawks, Richard Sherman signaled “two-four” into a television camera, apparently mocking Patriots cornerback Darrelle Revis, beaten on the play.

But it was a little early for gloating, as they found out. And the brawl at the end, no matter who instigated it, made the Seahawks look like a team that had completely lost its cool.

Still, the overriding memory of this game will be one play, as Carroll himself noted in the opening statement of his postgame remarks: “Let me just tell you what happened because, as you know, the game comes right down and all the things that happened before are meaningles­s to you now.”

Carroll has been in this position before of having to explain himself at the end of a championsh­ip game. In the 2006 BCS title game at the Rose Bowl, Carroll’s Southern California team was leading with 2 minutes and 13 seconds left, when they were stopped on a crucial fourthand-2 play. LenDale White got the carry while Heisman Trophy winner Reggie Bush remained on the sideline. That decision also reverberat­ed with disapprova­l — from USC fans after Texas drove down for a winning touchdown that prevented the Trojans from winning a third consecutiv­e national title.

The Trojans had good years after that but didn’t win another title before Carroll departed — ahead of an NCAA investigat­ion — to the Seahawks, where he re-invented himself as a hugely successful NFL coach.

The brilliant job Carroll has done in building the Seahawks to championsh­ip caliber should not be diminished. One loss does not overshadow that. But that one loss provided an ignominy that will be hard to live down, and hard to let go.

Carroll’s daunting task is to make sure they do.

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