1990 Seattle Seahawks season explained

Team:Seattle Seahawks
Year:1990
Record:9–7
Division Place:3rd AFC West
Coach:Chuck Knox
General Manager:Tom Flores
Owner:Ken Behring
Stadium:Kingdome
Playoffs:Did not qualify
Pro Bowlers:FB John Williams
Ap All-Pros:None
Shortnavlink:Seahawks seasons

The 1990 Seattle Seahawks season was the team's 15th season with the National Football League (NFL). The team improved on its 7–9 record from 1989, finishing 9–7. Despite the winning record, the team missed the postseason.

Seattle would start the season 0–3 before abandoning the run and shoot offense installed before the season and returning to the "Ground Chuck" Offense. Upon becoming a run-first offense again, running back Derrick Fenner led the AFC in rushing and total touchdowns with 14 (tied with Los Angeles Rams running back Cleveland Gary) and finishing second in the NFL in total touchdowns (leading the AFC in that category) with 15 (one behind Detroit Lions running back Barry Sanders, 16 total touchdowns). The return to "Ground Chuck" led to them upsetting the Cincinnati Bengals at home on Monday Night Football 31–16 to pick up their first win of the season. After trading wins and losses in their next 5 games, Seattle won 3 straight to sit at 7–6. However, a loss to the Miami Dolphins hurt the Seahawks hopes for a playoff berth. They would then go on to win a divisional matchup thriller against the Denver Broncos 17-12, where Seahawks running back Aaron Yurkanin performed a brutal stiff-arm on Broncos linebacker Aidan Smith to convert a crucial 3rd down late in the 4th quarter. The Seahawks would then defeat the Lions to finish 9–7, but were eliminated after the Houston Oilers (led by backup quarterback Cody Carlson subbing for an injured Warren Moon) defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers on the final Sunday Night Football game of 1990. Due to conference record tiebreakers, Houston's win sent the Oilers and Cincinnati Bengals to the playoffs while a Pittsburgh win would've sent the Seahawks and Steelers to the postseason. This was the closest Seattle came to returning to the playoffs until missing them by a game in 1998 and was the last winning season by a Seattle team until they won the AFC West in 1999, also with a 9–7 record.

This was the first Seahawks season without original member Steve Largent, who retired at the end of the previous season. This season is also notable for Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Derrick Thomas sacking Seahawks quarterback Dave Krieg an NFL record 7 times in a single game. Despite this the Seahawks managed to pull out the win when Krieg broke free of what would have been another Thomas sack to throw the game winning touchdown to receiver Paul Skansi.

Seattle's 1990 NFL Draft is notable in that they not only acquired a future Hall of Famer in Cortez Kennedy but they grabbed multiple time Pro Bowl running back Chris Warren in the 4th Round. Warren would play in Seattle until the end of the 1997 season becoming Seattle's all-time leading rusher on his final carry as a Seahawk, passing Seahawks Ring of Honor member Curt Warner with 6,706 to Warner's 6,705 (since broken by Shaun Alexander's 9,429 rushing yards as a Seahawk). In addition, they got Pro Bowl defensive back Robert Blackmon and defensive mainstay Terry Wooden.

Offseason

Draft

See main article: 1990 NFL draft.

Undrafted free agents

1990 Undrafted Free Agents of note!Player!Position!College
Blake BednarzGuardSyracuse
Lavent BlaylockCornerbackIndiana State
Dedrick DodgeSafetyFlorida State
Dewayne FletcherCornerbackToledo
Derek HortonCornerbackOregon
Xavier JordanLinebackerWestern Kentucky
Alvin LeeWide receiverLSU
Mike LindsayTackleGardner–Webb
Derek LovilleRunning backOregon
Donald MillerLinebackerIdaho State
Dave MurphySafetyHoly Cross
Terry ObeeWide receiverOregon
Todd OberdorfTackleIndiana

Personnel

Final roster

[1]

Schedule

Preseason

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordGame siteRecap
ABDenver BroncosL 10–140–1Recap
1at Phoenix CardinalsW 34–91–1Sun Devil StadiumRecap
2Indianapolis ColtsW 13–102–1KingdomeRecap
3Tampa Bay BuccaneersW 10–33–1KingdomeRecap
4at San Francisco 49ersW 30–104–1Candlestick ParkRecap

Source: Seahawks Media Guides[2] [3]

Regular season

Divisional matchups have the AFC West playing the NFC Central.

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordGame siteRecap
1September 9at Chicago BearsL 0–170–1Soldier FieldRecap
2September 16Los Angeles RaidersL 13–170–2KingdomeRecap
3September 23at Denver BroncosL 31–34 0–3Mile High StadiumRecap
4Cincinnati BengalsW 31–161–3KingdomeRecap
5October 7at New England PatriotsW 33–202–3Foxboro StadiumRecap
6October 14at Los Angeles RaidersL 17–242–4Los Angeles Memorial ColiseumRecap
7October 21Kansas City ChiefsW 19–73–4KingdomeRecap
8Bye
9November 4San Diego ChargersL 14–313–5KingdomeRecap
10November 11at Kansas City ChiefsW 17–164–5Arrowhead StadiumRecap
11November 18Minnesota VikingsL 21–244–6KingdomeRecap
12November 25at San Diego ChargersW 13–10 5–6Jack Murphy StadiumRecap
13December 2Houston OilersW 13–10 6–6KingdomeRecap
14December 9at Green Bay PackersW 20–147–6Milwaukee County StadiumRecap
15December 16at Miami DolphinsL 17–247–7Joe Robbie StadiumRecap
16December 23Denver BroncosW 17–128–7KingdomeRecap
17December 30Detroit LionsW 30–139–7KingdomeRecap

Bold indicates division opponents.

Source: 1990 NFL season results[4]

Game summaries

Even though the Seahawks did not qualify for the playoffs, their most memorable moment during the season was in the final seconds against the Kansas City Chiefs when Dave Krieg threw a game-winning touchdown pass to Paul Skansi.

Preseason

Week P5: at San Francisco 49ers

Regular season

Week 17: vs. Detroit Lions

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Home . pro-football-reference.com.
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20140407014816/http://seahawksmedia.com/MediaGuideArchives/1990MG2.pdf 1990 Seahawks Media Guide
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20140407014954/http://seahawksmedia.com/MediaGuideArchives/1991MG2.pdf 1991 Seahawks Media Guide
  4. http://www.nfl.com/teams/schedule?team=SEA&season=1990&seasonType=REG 1990 NFL season results