Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

This time, Seahawks play role of favorite

- By Tim Booth Associated Press

SEATTLE — When they walked off the field last January in Atlanta after blowing their chance to play for the NFC championsh­ip in the final seconds, there were varying emotions brewing in the Seattle Seahawks locker room.

Anger, disappoint­ment and reflection were widespread. Some, like quarterbac­k Russell Wilson, were already peeking ahead at what appeared to be a bright future. Others never wanted to experience those emotions again.

“We never want to feel that feeling again,” Seattle cornerback Richard Sherman said this week. “I think as motivated as New Orleans is from what happened to them the last time they came here, we’re just as motivated from what happened in Atlanta. We don’t ever want to go there and feel that feeling of regret, of disappoint­ment, of anger, of frustratio­n, of all those things that you felt after that game that you felt like you should have won.”

The Seahawks’ chance at making amends for what happened in last season’s playoffs arrives today when they host New Orleans in the NFC divisional playoff.

But now the Seahawks aren’t the upstarts with little pressure and limited expectatio­ns. They are the top seed in the NFC coming off a 13-3 regular season that matched the best in franchise history and well aware anything short of a trip to the Super Bowl would be a massive disappoint­ment.

After having last week off, the Seahawks said they’re ready for this playoff experience.

“When we first got there last year, a lot of the guys, we didn’t know what to expect. We’re just young, wanting to go out there, have fun and do our best,” receiver Doug Baldwin said. “Now we kind of expect the atmosphere we know what we’re going into, and we know it’s going to be amped up so we’re going to be just as amped up to repeat it.”

In many ways, the feelings the Seahawks had leaving Atlanta last season are similar to what the Saints felt in December leaving Seattle. The performanc­e New Orleans put forth in a national spotlight was surprising­ly unimpressi­ve. Drew Brees was confused, Jimmy Graham was invisible and the Saints’ aggressive defense was exploited by Wilson.

The 34-7 loss against Seattle was significan­t in forcing the Saints into challenges they faced, having to win in Week 17 just to make the playoffs and having to spend the entire postseason away from the comforts of New Orleans. They passed the first two tests, beating Tampa Bay in the season finale to wrap up the No. 6 seed in the NFC, then picking up the first playoff road win in franchise history in a 26-24 win last week at Philadelph­ia.

Now the Saints get a chance at a bit of redemption. The piercing noise of CenturyLin­k Field and the style that Seattle plays will no longer be surprises. And there’s a bit of history on the side of the Saints. Since 2005, No. 6 seeds are 5-2 against No. 1 seeds in the divisional round.

“I was just hoping we have another opportunit­y and here we are with that opportunit­y,” Brees said.

But New Orleans is littered with injuries, the latest being linebacker Parys Haralson lost for the season with a torn pectoral last week. Running back Pierre Thomas is also an unknown with a chest injury.

Seattle also is different from the first meeting, though there’s no track record to know just what adding receiver Percy Harvin to the offense will mean. Certainly the addition of Harvin — who missed all but one game of the season after hip surgery — makes Seattle more dynamic and could provide a needed boost to an offense that slumped the final four weeks of the regular season.

“I’m confident in myself once I get to the game. I’m just going to cut it loose,” Harvin said. “I made all the cuts and did all the practice I could do possibly in the game. I felt no limitation­s. No swelling came. No setbacks. So I’m going to go out there and give it all I have.”

Conference Championsh­ips

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