‘The TV cameras caught the Seahawks coach venting his frustration at special teams coach Pete Rodriguez along the Seattle sideline at Ralph Wilson Stadium. The problem? The Seahawks almost allowed the 30-second play clock to expire before getting off the kick that proved to be the difference in their 23-20 victory over the Buffalo Bills yesterday.’
Archives for November 19, 2001
Hawks win 23-20
‘Seattle trailed in every meaningful statistical category, yet none that seemed to matter.’
Hawks special teams buffaloed
‘Buffalo lined up to punt, Seattle sent Charlie Rogers deep to receive the kick, then the Bills snapped the ball to the up man, reserve running back Sammy Morris. Morris tucked the ball under his arm and ran right, cutting past lunging and diving Seahawks for a 9-yard gain and a first down.’
Mother Nature, Lady Luck line up behind Seahawks
‘But on the last nice day of the year in Buffalo, the wind brought hope and joy and momentary salvation for the Seattle Seahawks. It was a wind that gusted just hard enough to push Rian Lindell’s last field goal over the bar, yet howled strong enough to stop Bills kicker Jake Arians’ field-goal try just inches short of the goal post. Two kicks, six points, 14 mph from the southwest. It was the difference in the game.’
Van Pelt has career game
‘"Rob has had some pretty good games," said Buffalo offensive coordinator Mike Sheppard, who was the quarterback coach in Seattle last year. "When we haven’t played well on offense, a lot of times it’s been all of us." Perhaps, but Van Pelt led Buffalo to a season-best 316 yards, and he’s the only Bills quarterback to throw two touchdowns in a game this season.’
Hawks crafting a winning trend
‘First, there was a 51-yard field goal by Rian Lindell that gave Seattle a 23-13 lead with 3:12 remaining in the game. It appeared that the 35-second play clock had run out on the Seahawks prior to the kick, sending Holmgren into a sideline tirade as the ball barely cleared the uprights. But after looking around and finding no flags, Holmgren breathed a sigh of relief.’
Hawks’ Fauria calls refs’ replay ruling a crock
‘Tight end Christian Fauria appeared to catch a 12-yard pass on third-and-10 during the third quarter. But Fauria’s less-than-conventional methods – he kicked the ball with his left foot before snagging it out of the air – caused officials on the field to rule it an incomplete pass.’