2012 Seattle Seahawks season explained

Team:Seattle Seahawks
Year:2012
Record:11–5
Division Place:2nd NFC West
Coach:Pete Carroll
General Manager:John Schneider
Owner:Paul Allen
Stadium:Lumen Field
Playoffs:Won Wild Card Playoffs
(at Redskins) 24–14
Lost Divisional Playoffs
(at Falcons) 28–30
Shortnavlink:Seahawks seasons

The 2012 season was the Seattle Seahawks' 37th in the National Football League (NFL) and their third under head coach Pete Carroll. The Seahawks had a three-way quarterback competition with Tarvaris Jackson, Matt Flynn and rookie Russell Wilson. Jackson was traded to the Bills, and Wilson won the job.

The Seahawks finished 11–5, an improvement from a 7–9 record in 2011, and it marked Seattle's first winning season since 2007. The team was 4–0 during the preseason. Their 11 victories was the third best in franchise history. The Seahawks went undefeated at home for the third time in franchise history, after 2003 and 2005. Additionally, with their victory over the Washington Redskins at FedExField in the wild-card round, the Seahawks won their first road playoff game since 1983. However, despite holding a lead with just 30 seconds left in regulation, the Seahawks lost to the Atlanta Falcons in the Divisional round by a score of 30–28.

New logo and uniform

On April 3, 2012, Nike unveiled the new design for the uniforms and logo for the Seahawks. The new designs incorporate a new accent color, "Wolf Grey", and the main colors are "College Navy" and "Action Green". The uniforms incorporate "feather trims", twelve feathers printed on the neckline and down each pant leg to represent the "12th Man", referring to the team's fans.[1]

2012 draft class

See main article: 2012 NFL draft.

Round Selection Player Position College
1 15West Virginia
2 47Utah State
3 75Wisconsin
4 106Utah State
114Florida
5 154LB Idaho
6 172Northwestern State
181Kentucky
7 225G N.C. State
232DE Louisville
Notes

The team traded its original first-round selection (#12 overall) to the Philadelphia Eagles in exchange for the Eagles' first- (#15 overall), fourth- (#114 overall) and sixth- (#172 overall) selections.

The team traded its original second-round selection (#43 overall) to the New York Jets in exchange for the Jets' second- (#47 overall), fifth- (#154 overall) and seventh- (#232 overall) round selections.

The team traded its original fifth-round selection (#147 overall) and a 2011 fourth-round selection to the Buffalo Bills in exchange for running back Marshawn Lynch.

The team traded its original seventh-round selection (#219 overall) to the Detroit Lions in exchange for offensive tackle Tyler Polumbus.

The team acquired this seventh-round selection (#225 overall) as part of a trade that sent linebacker Aaron Curry to the Oakland Raiders.

Final roster

Schedule

Preseason

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendanceRecap
1Tennessee TitansW 27–171–0CenturyLink Field65,589Recap
2at Denver BroncosW 30–102–0Sports Authority Field at Mile High74,012Recap
3at Kansas City ChiefsW 44–143–0Arrowhead Stadium63,870Recap
4Oakland RaidersW 21–34–0CenturyLink Field66,157Recap

Regular season

Divisional matchups: the NFC West played the NFC North and the AFC East.

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendanceRecap
1September 9at Arizona CardinalsL 16–200–1University of Phoenix Stadium60,032Recap
2September 16Dallas CowboysW 27–71–1CenturyLink Field68,008Recap
3Green Bay PackersW 14–122–1CenturyLink Field68,218Recap
4September 30at St. Louis RamsL 13–192–2Edward Jones Dome53,193Recap
5October 7at Carolina PanthersW 16–123–2Bank of America Stadium72,676Recap
6October 14New England PatriotsW 24–234–2CenturyLink Field68,137Recap
7at San Francisco 49ersL 6–134–3Candlestick Park69,732Recap
8October 28at Detroit LionsL 24–284–4Ford Field63,497Recap
9November 4Minnesota VikingsW 30–205–4CenturyLink Field67,584Recap
10November 11New York JetsW 28–76–4CenturyLink Field67,841Recap
11Bye
12November 25at Miami DolphinsL 21–246–5Sun Life Stadium51,295Recap
13December 2at Chicago BearsW 23–17 7–5Soldier Field62,264Recap
14December 9Arizona CardinalsW 58–08–5CenturyLink Field67,685Recap
15December 16at Buffalo BillsW 50–179–540,770Recap
16December 23San Francisco 49ersW 42–1310–5CenturyLink Field68,161Recap
17December 30St. Louis RamsW 20–1311–5CenturyLink Field67,936Recap

Bold indicates division opponents.

Source: 2012 NFL season results[2]

 #  Indicates that the Seahawks were the visiting team in the Bills Toronto Series.

Postseason

RoundDateOpponent (seed)ResultRecordVenueAttendanceRecap
Wild CardJanuary 6, 2013at Washington Redskins (4)W 24–141–0FedExField84,325Recap
DivisionalJanuary 13, 2013at Atlanta Falcons (1)L 28–301–1Georgia Dome70,366Recap

Game summaries

Preseason

Week P4: vs. Oakland Raiders

Regular season

Week 1: at Arizona Cardinals

With the loss, the Seahawks started their season 0–1. This would be the last time the seahawks lost a regular season game in Arizona until 2020.

Week 2: vs. Dallas Cowboys

After facing the Cardinals on the road, the Seahawks returned home for a home game against the Cowboys. The game went very well for the Seahawks as the team improved to 1–1. This is also the first win for rookie QB Russell Wilson.

Week 3: vs. Green Bay Packers

See main article: Fail Mary.

The game had a controversial ending when Seattle quarterback Russell Wilson threw a Hail Mary pass to the endzone on the final play that appeared to have been intercepted by Green Bay. However, while one official signaled the interception, the other official signaled a touchdown for Seattle by receiver Golden Tate, based on the rule that a catch with simultaneous possession is ruled a completion for the offense. The play was reviewed and the officials awarded the touchdown to Seattle. The call by the officials, who were replacements for the customary and more experienced officials, was met with outrage by other NFL players and fans around the country who believed Green Bay should have been awarded the interception and thus the game. Many also claimed the officials had missed an offensive pass interference call committed by Tate on Packers cornerback Sam Shields that also would have won the game for Green Bay. The NFL released an official statement the next day that, while acknowledging that pass interference should have been called on Tate, supported the decision to uphold the play as simultaneous possession.[3]

With the win, the Seahawks improved to 2–1. With the 49ers' loss to the Vikings the previous day, Seattle and San Francisco were now tied for 2nd in the NFC West behind the 3-0 Arizona Cardinals. The Seahawks' defense accomplished a noteworthy achievement, sacking Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers 8 times, a career-high; this was even more impressive because all eight sacks occurred in the first half of the game.

The game's final play, dubbed the "Fail Mary" or the "Inaccurate Reception", is still viewed as the catalyst for the return of the NFL's customary officials due to the ineptitude of the replacement officials.

[4] [5]

Week 4: at St. Louis Rams

With the loss, the Seahawks fell to 2–2. QB Russell Wilson also had his first career game with no passing touchdown.

Week 5: at Carolina Panthers

With the win, Seattle's first of three road wins during the regular season, the Seahawks improved to 3–2.

Week 6: vs. New England Patriots

With the win, the Seahawks improved to 4–2, and with losses by the 49ers and Cardinals, the team moved into a tie for first in the NFC West. This was head coach Pete Carroll's first meeting with the Patriots since he was fired by the organization following the 1999 season. Carroll served as their head coach from 1997–99, the last one before Bill Belichick's hiring in 2000. This game is also infamous among Patriots fans as the genesis of the Richard Sherman/Tom Brady "You Mad, Bro" meme.

Week 7: at San Francisco 49ers

With the loss, the Seahawks fell to 4–3 moving into a 2nd-place tie with the Cardinals in the NFC West.

Week 8: at Detroit Lions

With the loss, the Seahawks dropped to 4–4.

Week 9: vs. Minnesota Vikings

With the win, the Seahawks improved to 5–4.

Week 10: vs. New York Jets

The Seahawks improved to 6–4.

Week 12: at Miami Dolphins

The Seahawks engaged in a back-and-forth affair, with six lead changes or ties. Russell Wilson touchdowns to Anthony McCoy and Golden Tate and a 98-yard Leon Washington kick return for a touchdown were answered by rushing scores from Reggie Bush and Daniel Thomas. With the Seahawks up 21–14, rookie Dolphins quarterback Ryan Tannehill found Charles Clay from 29 yards out. Tied 21–21, the Seahawks had to punt with 1:39 to go, and Tannehill drove the Dolphins in range for the winning Dan Carpenter field goal.

The game was interrupted briefly with 1:40 to go in the third quarter following a 19-yard Tannehill run; the sprinklers at Sun Life Stadium suddenly switched on, soaking the field for roughly one minute.

Week 13: at Chicago Bears

With their second road win, the Seahawks improved to 7–5.

Week 14: vs. Arizona Cardinals

Week 15: at Buffalo Bills

Bills Toronto SeriesWith its third and final regular season road victory, Seattle rose to 9–5.

Week 16: vs. San Francisco 49ers

The Seahawks won and clinched at least a playoff spot. In order to win the NFC West, the Seahawks needed to beat the St. Louis Rams at home the following week, have the 49ers lose to the Arizona Cardinals. A Packers loss to the Vikings would give Seattle a first round bye as well. However, a loss or a 49ers win would result in the Seahawks being the #5 seed heading on the road for the wild-card round in January.

Week 17: vs. St. Louis Rams

With the NFC West title still up for grabs, the Seahawks finished their season at home against the Rams. Avoiding being swept by their foes, they finished the season with a record of 11–5, and a perfect 8–0 at home. However, with the Niners' win over the Cardinals, the team would end up 2nd in the division and the NFC's #5 seed.

Postseason

See also: 2012–13 NFL playoffs. Seattle entered the postseason as the #5 seed in the NFC.

NFC Wild Card Playoff: at #4 Washington Redskins

After Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III went down with a knee injury in the second half, Seattle outscored Washington 3-0 to win 24-14. Seattle would move on to take on the #1 seed Atlanta Falcons.

NFC Divisional Playoff: at #1 Atlanta Falcons

The Seahawks fell behind, trailing Atlanta 20–0 at halftime and 27–7 with just over 17 minutes remaining. Seattle scored three touchdowns in the fourth quarter to take the lead 28–27 with 31 seconds left to play. But Matt Ryan quickly completed two long passes. A mystery time out, credited to Seattle, was blown by officials just as Matt Bryant kicked and missed a 49-yard field goal try, allowing Atlanta to kick again and giving them the victory. Russell Wilson's Hail Mary pass on the final play was intercepted by Julio Jones in the end zone (Wilson's only interception in the game), ending Seattle's season.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Here’s the new Seahawks logo, uniform and helmet – officially. April 2, 2012. Nick. Eaton. Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
  2. http://www.nfl.com/teams/schedule?team=SEA&season=2012&seasonType=REG 2012 NFL season results
  3. https://www.nfl.com/news/nfl-supports-decision-to-not-overturn-seahawks-touchdown-0ap1000000066164 Official statement
  4. http://www.nfl.com/videos/nfl-network-total-access/0ap1000000065984/Was-Seahawks-final-play-really-a-touchdown?module=HP11_content_stream NFL.com video
  5. https://www.nfl.com/news/nfl-to-address-packers-seahawks-td-call-tuesday-0ap1000000066116 nfl.com news article
  6. Web site: Newberry . Paul . Bryant's late FG lifts Falcons over Seattle 30–28 . . 2013-01-13 . 2013-01-13 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130116064815/http://sports.yahoo.com/news/falcons-lead-seattle-10-0-185731188--nfl.html . 2013-01-16 .