Originally published December 16, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified December 16, 2007 at 9:47 PM
Hawks offense a no-show in 13-10 loss to Panthers
The Panthers (6-8) were the defensive aggressors. They made the big plays the Seahawks had grown accustomed to making. This loss, like two others this season, came down to one play.
Seattle Times staff reporter
ROD MAR / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Seattle's Matt Hasselbeck scrambles out of the pocket as he is pursued by Carolina's Julius Peppers during the first half.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- When it was over and the Seahawks had their five-game winning streak snapped today, quarterback Matt Hasselbeck could hardly believe he wasn't on the field anymore.
"I don't even feel like I played a full game," Hasselbeck said after he finished 27 of 41 for 274 yards but fumbled twice. "I feel like we should go back out there and try again. It wasn't us."
The Seahawks' 13-10 defeat against the Carolina Panthers was hard to figure. Seattle was one of the NFL's hottest teams entered the game with just about everything clicking -- an on-target Hasselbeck, a productive receiving corps that had been more than enough to overcome a faint running game, and an opportunistic and aggressive defense that was harassing opponents' quarterbacks.
Carolina, on the other hand, was practically out of the playoff chase. Its coach, John Fox, is trying to save his job and the Panthers started an undrafted rookie from Oregon State at quarterback in Matt Moore, who last year at this time was taking the Beavers into the Sun Bowl and who had thrown three interceptions, no touchdowns and completed just 43.8 percent of his passes.
"I tip my hat to the young man," Seahawks coach Mike Holmgren said of Moore, who stunned the Seahawks with a quick release and completed 19 of 27 passes for 208 yards in his first NFL start. "In their plan and what they asked him to do, you have to give him credit for that."
Now what? Two games remain in the regular season and the Seahawks can finish as either the No. 3 or 4 seed in the NFC playoffs. The biggest thing the Seahawks were playing for, the reason why Holmgren opted not to rest any starters this week even with the NFC West title and a playoff spot clinched, is now gone. The Seahawks' loss and the Green Bay's Packers' victory today ensured that Green Bay the Packers will get a first-round bye in the playoffs as the No. 1 or 2 seed in the NFC.
The best the Seahawks -- who at 9-5 are three games behind the Packers with two to play -- can do is hold on to their No. 3 seed and look forward to a wild-card game at Qwest Field in January.
"We wanted to run the table. We wanted to win the last eight games," safety Brian Russell said. "But we're in the playoffs, we'll have the first one at home and we want to go into the playoffs playing good football and finish strong."
The question is, can the Seahawks keep the 9-5 Tampa Bay Buccaneers from taking the third seed? Tampa Bay won today and has to finish with a better regular-season record to overtake the Seahawks for the No. 3 seed because Seattle defeated the Bucs in Week 1.
All of that will shake itself out, but the Seahawks found themselves shaking their heads at the defeat today. They forced no turnovers and didn't sack Moore. Their running game wasn't just faint, it all but disappeared with only 44 rushing yards as a team. And their offense scored no points until the fourth quarter, the final seven points with one second left in the game.
The Panthers (6-8) were the defensive aggressors. They made the big plays the Seahawks had grown accustomed to making. This loss, like two others this season, came down to one play.
Trailing 6-3 with the ball at the Panthers 43-yard line and 1:44 to play, the Seahawks were moving the ball toward a tying or possible go-ahead score. But once again, a bad break doomed them.
Hasselbeck was looking downfield when linebacker Thomas Davis blasted him from his blind side and knocked the ball out of his grip. Panthers cornerback Richard Marshall recovered the fumble. for the Panthers, putting to rest the Seahawks' final chance to win.
Three plays later, Carolina running back DeAngelo Williams burst through over right guard and ran 35 yards for the game-winning decisive touchdown with 1:17 to play.
The Seahawks got a touchdown pass from Hasselbeck to Deion Branch, who tipped the ball to himself, with one second to play.
Carolina proved to be the better team early, though neither team scored for three quarters. In the first quarter, John Kasay missed a 36-yard field-goal attempt wide left after a high snap.
The Seahawks had just one first down in the first quarter. Hasselbeck was the Seahawks' leading rusher at halftime with 11 yards, and Kasay made up for his miss with a 53-yard field goal in the fourth quarter.
"There's not a lot to say about this game," Holmgren said. "We didn't play very inspired football. I told the team we went on a nice run to win five in a row and be careful not to catch your breath. I think we caught our breath just a little bit."
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
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