Seahawks suddenly on brink of playoffs

The Associated Press
Tim Booth

SEATTLE–Bobby Wagner leapt over the line of scrimmage, swatted Dan Bailey’s field-goal attempt, and sparked the Seattle Seahawks to two late touchdowns.
Whether or not what Wagner did was entirely legal, he frankly didn’t care.
“I’m not stressing about that. I made the play. They called what they called,” Wagner said.
“There’s times in games where things happen all the time,” he noted. “I’m not stressing on it.
“It was a big block and we’ll definitely take it. It was amazing.”
Wagner’s block midway through the fourth quarter was the catalyst in a 21-7 win over the Minnesota Vikings last night that pushed Seattle to the brink of a playoff berth.
Chris Carson followed the blocked kick with a two-yard TD run with 2:53 left, then Justin Coleman capped off the Seahawks’ fourth-straight victory with a 29-yard fumble return for a touchdown 18 seconds later.
What was an ugly and mostly forgettable first three quarters turned into a Seattle party in the fourth as the Seahawks (8-5) moved to the brink of wrapping up a wild-card spot in the NFC.
One win in Seattle’s final three games, including matchups with lowly San Francisco and Arizona, should be enough to put the Seahawks into the post-season.
“It’s really about the defence. I loved the way they played; they played so hard and so spirited,” said Seattle coach Pete Carroll.
“It was almost poetic after last week’s game that Bobby would get to block the field goal, and he pulled it off and did it,” Carroll added.
“That was an incredible play.”
Minnesota (6-6-1) twice had scoring chances in the fourth quarter when it still was a one-score game but was turned away each time.
Minnesota’s chances of winning the NFC North took a major hit with its second-straight loss, but the Vikings still hold the No. 6 spot in the NFC.
“Part of it is being better on third downs. We haven’t really done a good job there,” Vikings’ coach Mike Zimmer conceded.
“Part of it is being better in the red zone,” he added. “We had the ball on the two-yard line and didn’t score.”
But much of the conversation centered on Wagner’s block of Bailey’s 47-yard attempt with 5:38 left and whether it was entirely legal.
Wagner’s jump through a gap in Minnesota’s offensive line was fine but it appeared he used his teammates to gain leverage, which allowed him to come through and block the kick.
A flag initially was thrown but was picked up by the officials.
Wagner said he tried it four times in practice without a problem but acknowledged it could be tough to pull off the play during the fourth quarter of a tight game.
“When I did it in practice, I was pretty fresh,” he reasoned.
Zimmer said he asked for an explanation of what happened but wasn’t given one. He was told he couldn’t challenge.
“Quite honestly, I didn’t see what happened. I was told what happened,” Zimmer noted.
Seattle took possession and Russell Wilson immediately scrambled 40 yards deep into Minnesota territory.
Five plays later, Carson scored and Seattle finally had a cushion.
Two plays after that, Jacob Martin sacked Minnesota’s Kirk Cousins and the ball popped to Coleman, who weaved his way for the clinching touchdown.
Cousins threw a six-yard touchdown pass to Dalvin Cook with 1:10 to go but Seattle recovered the onside kick.
“I feel like all of our losses we, as an offence, we are so slow,” said Vikings’ wide receiver Adam Thielen.
“Our defence is keeping us in games,” he noted. “And we’re not pulling our side of the bargain.”
Wilson had one of the worst passing games of his career, completing just 10-of-20 attempts for career-low 72 yards and a baffling interception late in the first half–one of the many mistakes by Seattle that allowed Minnesota to hang around.
But Seattle’s ground game was outstanding against one of the better run defences in the NFL. The Seahawks finished with 214 yards rushing, led by 90 yards from Carson.
Sebastian Janikowski hit field goals of 37 and 35 yards to account for all of Seattle’s scoring until the closing minutes.
“If you run it 40-something times, you ought to win. That was pretty good,” Carroll said.
Minnesota hung around despite failing to run a play in Seattle territory until there was 4:16 left in the third quarter.
Cousins was 20-of-33 for 208 yards, most of that coming late.
But he failed to get the Vikings into the end zone from inside the Seattle five while trailing 6-0 early in the fourth quarter.
The Vikings had first-and-goal at the Seattle four-yard line but turned the ball over on downs with 9:06 to go.
Two short runs and an incompletion brought up fourth-and-goal at the one, and Cousins’ pass for Kyle Rudolph was knocked away by Bradley McDougald.
Bailey’s field goal was blocked on Minnesota’s next drive.
Minnesota fell to 0-6 when allowing its opponents to run for at least 100 yards.
The Vikings came in to the week giving up 99 yards per game on the ground, good for seventh-best in the NFL.
Seattle had 136 yards rushing in the first half alone.