Super Hawks: The Seattle Seahawks' 2013 Championship Season
By The News Tribune and The Olympian
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Super Hawks - The News Tribune
Linebacker Malcolm Smith, who was named the MVP of Super Bowl XLVIII, celebrates after his 69-yard interception return in the second quarter. — JOE BARRENTINE/ Staff photographer
Contents
Introduction
Super Bowl XLVIII
Malcolm Smith Named Super Bowl MVP
Marshawn Lynch
Regular Season
Pete Carroll
Russell Wilson
Richard Sherman
Earl Thomas & Kam Chancellor
John Schneider
NFC Divisional Playoffs
NFC Championship vs. 49ers
TONY OVERMAN/Staff photographer
Introduction
By Kenny Via
For 38 years, it was always something.
There was always some reason why the Seattle Seahawks were not the NFL’s best.
But finally, on Feb. 2, 2014, they were.
Seattle erased years of frustration with an emphatic 43-8 victory over the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XLVIII at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.
The Seahawks’ first Super Bowl win was fueled by self-confidence and years of unwavering belief.
Denver brought the NFL’s No. 1 offense — a squad that scored 606 points in the regular season.
Seattle countered with the league’s top defense.
Hype for the showdown went into overdrive after Seattle’s NFC championship win when Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman shouted his greatness into TV cameras.
The focus shifted to Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning vs. Seattle’s Legion of Boom secondary, labeled by many the best in the NFL.
But when the teams faced off, the tailor-made matchup never lived up to the billing. The Seahawks’ suffocating defense did what it had since coach Pete Carroll took charge — dominated.
Denver started the game on offense and snapped the ball over Manning’s head for a safety. The Broncos next possession was a three and out.
Seattle piled on for a 15-0 lead in the second quarter. Late in the half, with Denver threatening to finally score, linebacker Malcom Smith intercepted Manning and ran 69 yards for a touchdown.
The score was 22-0, and the Seahawks never looked back.
Carroll’s vision had come true.
The coach, who won seven Pac-10 titles and two national championships at USC, brought his win forever
philosophy to the Northwest before the 2010 season and challenged his players to always compete.
The Seahawks obliged.
These guys started a long time ago; it took four years to get to this point,
Carroll said while clutching the Vince Lombardi Trophy after his team’s victory. They’ve never taken a step sideways or backwards from going forward to make this team the way it is now.
The architects of the 2013 Seahawks — owner Paul Allen, coach Pete Carroll and general manager John Schneider — celebrate after bringing the first Super Bowl title to Seattle. — JOE BARRENTINE/Staff photographer
At the beginning of the season, quarterback Russell Wilson posed a question to his teammates: Why not us?
Seattle spent the 2013 season showing over and again why it was the most dominant team in the NFL.
With 13 regular season wins, a bruising rubber-match victory over the rival San Francisco 49ers in the NFC championship and the Super Bowl win, Seattle earned the championship they’d set out to capture.
They likely changed a few minds along the way.
Wilson led Wisconsin to the Rose Bowl, but his pro potential was questioned because of his 5-foot-10-inch frame. Carroll and general manager John Schneider ignored all that and drafted Wilson in the third round in 2012.
The quarterback returned the favor with back-to-back Pro Bowl seasons.
It’s a common theme throughout Seattle’s roster — players whose talent was questioned before they found success with the Seahawks.
All-Pro Sherman was a fifth-round draft pick out of Stanford. Even his college coach, Jim Harbaugh, passed on him in the draft as the head man for the 49ers.
Sherman landed in Seattle, led the NFL with 20 interceptions over his first three seasons and made a critical pass deflection against San Francisco to clinch Seattle’s Super Bowl berth.
Wide receiver Doug Baldwin went undrafted before earning a job with the Seahawks in 2011. Pundits called him and the rest of Seattle’s receivers pedestrian
before Baldwin torched the 49ers for 106 yards and went on to score a touchdown against the Broncos in the Super Bowl.
Strong safety Kam Chancellor and cornerback Byron Maxwell were fifth-round draft picks. Both made big plays in the win over Denver.
Linebacker Smith was drafted in the seventh round. He was named the Super Bowl MVP.
Running back Marshawn Lynch was considered damaged goods when Seattle traded two mid-round draft picks for him in 2010. Lynch was soon dubbed Beast Mode
for his bruising running style.
Even Carroll — fired from head coaching jobs with the New York Jets and New England Patriots — had his doubters.
Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson, a second-year starter, reaches for coach Pete Carroll. Wilson had doused Carroll with Gatorade following the Seahawks’ Super Bowl XLVIII victory. — TONY OVERMAN/Staff photographer
Many wondered whether the coach’s upbeat attitude could inspire professionals to victory.
Carroll and Schneider met the challenge with shrewd enthusiasm.
They turned over Seattle’s roster at a dizzying rate. They drafted left tackle Russell Okung and safety Earl Thomas with their first two picks. They brought in castoff veterans and undrafted free agents.
They found speed — lots of it — and players who fit their scheme.
After back-to-back 7-9 seasons, the band of misfits came together in 2012. They produced an 11-5 record and the franchise’s first road playoff victory since 1983 before suffering heartbreaking defeat in Atlanta.
The Seahawks returned with a chip on their shoulders.
In 2013, they ran through opponents with dominating precision, punching their ticket to the showdown with Manning and the Broncos.
Led by Sherman, Thomas and Chancellor, the Seahawks defense did its part. Wilson and Lynch powered the offense, and Seattle took its first championship crown.
It was the culmination of a movement that started four years earlier, and the manifestation of Wilson’s question: Why not them?
Seattle answered in dramatic fashion, and silenced those who had questioned the Seahawks’ coach and players.
It was a special season — one that can truly be described as super.
Super Bowl XLVIII took place in East Rutherford, New Jersey, but Seattle’s 12th Man made its presence known. — TONY OVERMAN/Staff photographer
Super Bowl XLVIII
Seahawks 43, Broncos 8
February 2, 2014
East Rutherford, New Jersey
Hawks by a Mile
Top-ranked defense throttles Denver’s mighty offense
By Todd Dybas
The Seattle Seahawks won America’s biggest sports event by never giving Denver a chance.
Not a sniff. Not a drive that brought fear or a hint of a challenge from the Broncos. Seattle’s brash, top-ranked defense showed a superiority even they wouldn’t have predicted.
The Broncos were throttled, bottled by a simple, efficient and fierce Seattle defense.
The Seahawks tore up a Denver offense that had scored the most points in league history. At the end, blue and green confetti shot into the air. Coach Pete Carroll was drenched with Gatorade. A season-long journey while under scrutiny to be the best ended with the Seahawks as just that.
Seahawks 43, Broncos 8. The Seattle Seahawks are Super Bowl XLVIII champions, delivering the downtrodden sports region its first professional