2004 Seattle Seahawks season explained

Team:Seattle Seahawks
Year:2004
Record:9–7
Division Place:1st NFC West
Coach:Mike Holmgren
General Manager:Bob Ferguson
Owner:Paul Allen
Stadium:Qwest Field
Playoffs:Lost Wild Card Playoffs
(vs. Rams) 20–27
Pro Bowlers:RB Shaun Alexander
OT Walter Jones
OG Steve Hutchinson
Ap All-Pros:RB Shaun Alexander (2nd team)
OT Walter Jones (1st team)
OG Steve Hutchinson (2nd team)
Shortnavlink:Seahawks seasons

The 2004 Seattle Seahawks season was the franchise's 29th season in the National Football League (NFL), the third season in Qwest Field and the 6th under head coach Mike Holmgren. Finishing the season at 9–7, the Seahawks were unable to replicate the year they had prior.

This was the first of four consecutive NFC West titles for the Seahawks. In the Wild Card round, they faced off against the divisional rival St. Louis Rams, who swept them 2–0 in the regular season. Seattle looked to avenge their two losses, but it was too late as Matt Hasselbeck's game-tying drive to Bobby Engram was incomplete, leading Hasselbeck to his knees and punch the turf in frustration. The Seahawks lost 27–20. The Rams, despite a mediocre 8–8 record, advanced to the Divisional round the following week, only to lose to Michael Vick's Atlanta Falcons in a 47–17 blowout.

On October 20, 2004, the Seahawks traded a conditional 2005 7th round pick (condition failed) to the Oakland Raiders in exchange for Jerry Rice.

Draft

See main article: 2004 NFL draft.

[1]

Final roster

[2] [3]

Schedule

Preseason

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordGame siteRecap
1at Green Bay PackersW 21–31–0Lambeau FieldRecap
2Denver BroncosL 3–191–1Qwest FieldRecap
3at San Diego ChargersW 26–202–1Qualcomm StadiumRecap
4Minnesota VikingsW 23–213–1Qwest FieldRecap

Source: Seahawks Media Guides[4] [5]

Regular season

Divisional matchups have the NFC West playing the NFC South and the AFC East.

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordGame siteRecap
1September 12at New Orleans SaintsW 21–71–0Louisiana SuperdomeRecap
2September 19at Tampa Bay BuccaneersW 10–62–0Raymond James StadiumRecap
3September 26San Francisco 49ersW 34–03–0Qwest FieldRecap
4Bye
5October 10St. Louis RamsL 27–33 3–1Qwest FieldRecap
6October 17at New England PatriotsL 20–303–2Gillette StadiumRecap
7October 24at Arizona CardinalsL 17–253–3Sun Devil StadiumRecap
8October 31Carolina PanthersW 23–174–3Qwest FieldRecap
9November 7at San Francisco 49ersW 42–275–33Com ParkRecap
10November 14at St. Louis RamsL 12–235–4Edward Jones DomeRecap
11November 21Miami DolphinsW 24–176–4Qwest FieldRecap
12November 28Buffalo BillsL 9–386–5Qwest FieldRecap
13Dallas CowboysL 39–436–6Qwest FieldRecap
14December 12at Minnesota VikingsW 27–237–6Hubert H. Humphrey MetrodomeRecap
15December 19at New York JetsL 14–377–7Giants StadiumRecap
16December 26Arizona CardinalsW 24–218–7Qwest FieldRecap
17January 2Atlanta FalconsW 28–269–7Qwest FieldRecap

Source: 2004 NFL season results[6]

Postseason

Game summaries

Preseason

Week P4: vs. Minnesota Vikings

Regular season

Week 1: at New Orleans Saints

The Seahawks won for only the seventh time in their last eighteen road games, holding Aaron Brooks to one touchdown while forcing two New Orleans fumbles.

Week 2: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The Seahawks defeated the Buccaneers 10–6 despite recording only nine first downs and being shut out in the second half. The Seahawks intercepted Brad Johnson and Chris Simms and limited the Bucs to just 271 total yards.

Week 3: vs. San Francisco 49ers

The Seahawks home opener was a 34–0 shutout of the 49ers where they intercepted Ken Dorsey twice and limited the Niners to just 175 yards. It was San Francisco's first shutout loss since losing to the Atlanta Falcons 0-7 in 1977.

Week 5: vs. St. Louis Rams

The Seahawks suffered their first home loss since 2002. The Rams were bullied in the first half and fell behind 24–7, but in the second half Marc Bulger threw two touchdowns as the Rams outscored Seattle 20–3; tied 27–27 the game went to overtime and Bulger threw three passes – the last a 52-yard score to Shaun McDonald and the 33–27 Rams win.

Week 6: at New England Patriots

A week after losing to one participant in Super Bowl XXXVI the Seahawks fell to that game's winner as the Patriots reached a league-record 20th consecutive win (regular and postseason) 30–20. Matt Hasselbeck, a former Patriots ball boy whose dad Don Hasselbeck played in Foxboro alongside Steve Grogan, threw for 349 yards but was intercepted twice.

Week 7: at Arizona Cardinals

Playing in Sun Devil Stadium the Seahawks' previous road woes resumed with four interceptions thrown by Matt Hasselbeck and the Seahawks limited to just 257 total yards in a 25–17 loss. Seattle erased a 16–3 gap (the go-ahead score came when Ken Lucas picked off Josh McCown and ran back a 21-yard score) but gave up a safety, then gave up a 23-yard touchdown by Emmitt Smith in the fourth quarter.

Week 8: vs. Carolina Panthers

Against the defending NFC champion Panthers the Seahawks erupted to 237 rushing yards and a 23–17 win. Shaun Alexander accounted for 195 rushing yards and a touchdown.

Week 9: at San Francisco 49ers

Despite seven penalties for 55 yards the Seahawks shot down the 49ers at Candlestick Park 42–27, rushing for 184 yards and two touchdowns alongside 285 yards and three scores from Matt Hasselbeck. The Seahawks ended the game when they intercepted Tim Rattay and ran back a 23-yard score in the fourth.

Week 10: at St. Louis Rams

At St. Louis the Rams won a battle of field goals 23–12, limiting Hasselbeck to just 172 yards. Hasselbeck was knocked out of the game.

Week 11: vs. Miami Dolphins

The Dolphins rallied from down 17–7 to tie the game, but in the fourth Michael Boulware picked off A. J. Feeley and ran back a 63-yard touchdown. Trent Dilfer started instead of Matt Hasselbeck and managed a touchdown to Jerry Rice in the 24–17 Seahawks win; the score was Rice’s first of the season after being traded to Seattle from the Raiders.

Week 12: vs. Buffalo Bills

The 6–4 Seahawks hosted the 4–6 Bills and Willis McGahee exploded to four touchdowns in a 38–9 Buffalo rout. Drew Bledsoe was intercepted three times but managed a touchdown to Lee Evans.

Week 13: vs. Dallas Cowboys

Hosting Monday Night Football the Seahawks' roller-coaster of a season continued as they fell to 6–6 to the now-5-7 Cowboys. The Hawks led 14–3 after one quarter, but in the second and third the Cowboys scored 26 points (botching a two-point attempt after Vinny Testaverde's touchdown to Terrance Copper). In the fourth Matt Hasselbeck (414 total yards) erupted to three touchdown drives, two of them ending in Shaun Alexander rushes, a 19-yard score to Jerheme Urban, and a two-point conversion to Darrell Jackson, but the Seahawks could not hold on to a 39–29 lead; Testaverde found Keyshawn Johnson for a 34-yard touchdown with 1:54 to go; the Cowboys kicked onsides and recovered, then four Julius Jones rushes ended in a 17-yard score with 37 seconds remaining. The Seahawks' final drive petered out and the Cowboys had the stunning 43–39 win.

Week 14: at Minnesota Vikings

The Seahawks rallied to beat the Vikings 27–23 on 334 yards and three touchdowns by Hasselbeck and 112 more rushing yards from Shaun Alexander. Darrell Jackson competed despite learning on game morning that his father had died; he caught ten passes for 135 yards and a go-ahead touchdown.

Week 15: at New York Jets

Matt Hasselbeck managed two touchdowns in the first half but the game collapsed as the NY Jets scored 24 points in the first half then shut out the Seahawks while adding two more Chad Pennington touchdowns, marred by a missed PAT. Curtis Martin rushed for 134 yards and two scores, outpacing the entire Seahawks backfield (88 rushing yards).

Week 16: vs. Arizona Cardinals

Shaun Alexander accounted for 154 yards and all three Seahawks touchdowns as Seattle returned to Qwest Field and edged the five-win Cardinals 24–21. Trent Dilfer subbed for Hasselbeck but managed only 128 passing yards.

Week 17: vs. Atlanta Falcons

The Seahawks clinched the NFC West by erasing a 17–7 Falcons lead to win 28–26.[7] It was the second time in three seasons the Falcons made the playoffs despite losing the regular-season finale.

Postseason

See main article: article and 2004–05 NFL playoffs. Seattle entered the postseason as the #4 seed in the NFC.

NFC Wild Card Playoff: vs. #5 St. Louis Rams

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.footballdb.com/teams/nfl/seattle-seahawks/draft/2004 The Football Database
  2. Web site: Home . pro-football-reference.com.
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20050205161223/http://www.seahawks.com/players.aspx?secID=37 Seattle Seahawks 2004 Roster
  4. http://seahawksmedia.com/MediaGuideArchives/2004MG2.pdf 2004 Seahawks Media Guide
  5. http://seahawksmedia.com/MediaGuideArchives/2005MG2.pdf 2005 Seahawks Media Guide
  6. http://www.nfl.com/teams/schedule?team=SEA&season=2004&seasonType=REG 2004 NFL season results
  7. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/200501020sea.htm Pro-Football-Reference.com