Falcons able to hold off Seahawks

The Associated Press
Tim Booth

SEATTLE–Matt Ryan and the Atlanta Falcons did enough through three-and-a-half quarters that even the best comeback attempt by Russell Wilson fell short this time.
A couple of yards short to be exact.
Ryan threw a pair of touchdown passes, and Adrian Clayborn returned a fumble 10 yards for a score, as the Falcons watched Blair Walsh’s 52-yard field goal attempt in the final seconds fall short–holding off the Seattle Seahawks for a 34-31 win last night.
Atlanta won its second-straight to stay on the heels of New Orleans and Carolina in the NFC South while handing Seattle a second-consecutive home loss.
“What an absolute team win from the guys tonight,” said Falcons’ coach Dan Quinn.
“Coming here, in this environment, with the crowd, we thought it would be two competitive, tough teams that were going to battle for it in the biggest way,” he added.
Ryan threw TDs to Mohamed Sanu and Levine Toilolo while Tevin Coleman added a one-yard touchdown run on Atlanta’s opening possession.
But it was Clayborn’s fumble return that helped break the game open early in the second quarter and gave Atlanta a 21-7 lead.
He scooped up a loose ball after Wilson was crunched by Takk McKinley and Courtney Upshaw.
“I think we’re moving in the right direction,” Clayborn said. “We keep proving we can finish games and beat guys.
“We have to take the momentum and keep rolling with it,” he stressed.
With Seattle down 11 points, Wilson hit Doug Baldwin on a 29-yard TD with three minutes left and then threw to Jimmy Graham for the two-point conversion.
Seattle got the ball back and moved in range for Walsh, whose attempt was on line but landed short of the crossbar.
“That was in our range, and in hindsight I would have just driven it more,” Walsh said.
“I was too accurate and didn’t have enough on it,” he noted.
Wilson again was the entirety of Seattle’s offence, throwing for 258 yards and two touchdowns while running for another 86 yards and a TD.
But it was an awful night for the Seahawks, filled with more injuries and questionable decisions by coach Pete Carroll.
He called for a fake field goal late in the first half rather than attempting a 35-yard kick.
He also made a questionable challenge in the fourth quarter that didn’t go his way and left Seattle with just one time-out.
That lack of time-outs came back to haunt Seattle on the final drive when seconds ticked away and rather than running one more play, Walsh was sent out to attempt the 52-yard kick.
His long for the season is 49 yards.
The conclusion only amplified Carroll’s baffling decision at the end of the first half, when Seattle ran a fake field goal rather than having Walsh attempt a 35-yarder that would have pulled Seattle within 24-20.
Holder Jon Ryan completed his shovel pass to Luke Willson, but Grady Jarrett read the play and tackled Willson for a four-yard loss.
“It would have been a really good call if we had made it,” Carroll said.
“Terrific opportunity right where we wanted it and the defensive tackle made a better play.”
Seattle played a game for the first time since the end of the 2010 season without Richard Sherman.
His streak of 99-consecutive starts in the regular season was snapped because of a torn Achilles tendon suffered against Arizona.
The Seahawks also were without safety Kam Chancellor because of a neck injury, leaving their vaunted secondary with several new faces.
“Those two are phenomenal players. . . . It was a lot different,” Sanu said.
“They did a lot of different things but we just had to take advantage of our routes,” he noted.
Ryan was more than happy to pick on a defence without Sherman and Chancellor.
He was 19-of-27 passing for 195 yards and rarely faced pressure.
Seattle had just one sack while the Falcons went 9-of-14 on third-down conversions.