Originally published December 7, 2008 at 4:24 PM | Page modified December 7, 2008 at 5:28 PM
Patriots rally past Seahawks 24-21
Matt Cassel rallied the New England Patriots when they needed him most.
OTTO GREULE JR / GETTY IMAGES
Wide receiver Deion Branch #83 of the Seattle Seahawks celebrates after scoring a touchdown against the New England Patriots on December 7, 2008 at Qwest Field in Seattle.
SEATTLE (AP)— Matt Cassel rallied the New England Patriots when they needed him most.
New England's fill-in quarterback calmly stared down blitzes for completions with his team's playoff chances in the balance. Then Sammy Morris leaped into the end zone from 1 yard on fourth down with 2:44 remaining and the Patriots rallied past the Seattle Seahawks 24-21 on Sunday.
One week after flopping with four turnovers in a home loss to Pittsburgh that put New England on the outside rail of the AFC playoff race, Cassel was 26 of 44 for 268 yards passing and a touchdown, with no turnovers.
The Patriots forged a three-way tie for first place in the AFC East lead after Brandon Meriweather sacked Seneca Wallace with 1:54 left and Richard Seymour recovered the fumble to clinch it.
The New York Jets lost at San Francisco. Miami beat Buffalo in Toronto. All three teams are 8-5.
New England withstood the loss of four injured starters on defense and a rare two-touchdown receiving day from former teammate Deion Branch.
Cassel, looking more like the guy who had consecutive 400-yard passing games than the one Pittsburgh harried into four turnovers in New England's 33-10 loss at home last week, was 5-for-8 on the decisive drive that began with 8:47 left at the New England 29. He converted third-down throws to Jabar Gaffney and Wes Welker, who caught a season-high 12 passes for 134 yards.
Welker's third catch of the drive included a stiff-arm of safety Brian Russell on a 25-yard play to the Seahawks 6. Three runs later, Morris jumped in off left guard for the score.
Wallace, making the ninth start of his six-year career because Matt Hasselbeck's back is hurting again, was 20-for-28 with 212 yards passing and a career-high-tying three touchdowns for Seattle (2-11), which lost for the sixth consecutive time and is off to its worst start since a franchise-worst 2-14 season in 1992.
The Seahawks led 14-13 late in the third quarter when Branch caught a short pass on the sideline, faked out formerly retired Junior Seau and then went 63 yards. Branch then tipped Wallace's 4-yard touchdown pass to himself with his outstretched left hand to give Seattle a 21-13 lead going into the fourth quarter.
Seattle led 14-10 at halftime and had 187 yards of offense, as many as its had in three games this season -- despite Hasselbeck missing his sixth game with a back injury and fourth-fifths of the offensive line out.
Branch was playing his fifth game of the season following reconstructive knee surgery and a bruised heel. After his 14-yard scoring catch began the scoring, he took a bow and kept the ball after his first touchdown since Dec. 16, 2007.
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Just two days after again coming out of retirement for a second time to aid New England's injured linebackers, Seau entered in the second quarter.
Starter Tedy Bruschi limped off the field with a left knee injury after getting hit by a teammate while trying to tackle Maurice Morris on a 4-yard run. Bruschi was in pain and a Seahawks trainer rushed to his side before New England medical personnel could get across the field.
Just Bruschi walked to the locker room a few minutes later, Seattle tight end John Carlson beat Seau on an out route on the third play for the 12-time Pro Bowler. The 10-yard touchdown that gave Seattle a 14-3 lead, which New England trimmed to 14-10 on a 2-yard touchdown pass from Cassel to Benjamin Watson.
New England was already missing starting outside linebacker Pierre Woods, who was inactive for the first time this season with a jaw injury. Then defensive tackle Vince Wilfork went to the locker room in the first quarter with a shoulder injury. And safety James Sanders left in the third quarter after hurting his ribs.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
UPDATE - 07:23 AM
NFL, union resume labor talks at mediator's office
League, players still almost $800 million apart on revenue haring
Union, league negotiators to resume talks Monday | NFL
No new deal in NFL labor talks; deadline extended

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