SEATTLE (AP) -- The loudest stadium in America was silent. A return trip to the Super Bowl was slipping away.
Time for the Seattle Seahawks to show why they are champions.
"You have the belief these guys have in one another, there is nothing you can't do," coach Pete Carroll said after an implausible comeback for a 28-22 victory over Green Bay in the NFC championship game Sunday.
Plagued by turnovers and outplayed much of the day, the Seahawks staged a stunning rally built on resilience. Russell Wilson, who struggled until the final minutes, hit Jermaine Kearse for a 35-yard touchdown 3:19 into the extra period to win it.
The Seahawks
became the first defending champion to make the Super Bowl in 10 years,
and will play the winner of the AFC title game between Indianapolis and
New England. How they got there was stunning.
"The will and the drive of these men is unbelievable," Wilson said. "We always find a way to finish."
Seattle
(14-4) trailed 19-7 with about four minutes remaining and had been
ineffective on offense all game. Wilson finally put a drive together
with passes to Doug Baldwin and Marshawn Lynch - initially ruled a
touchdown but called back because he stepped out of bounds. Wilson
finished with a 1-yard scoring run to cut the lead to 19-14 with 2:09
left.
The onside kick went high to Packers
tight end Brandon Bostick, but he couldn't gather it, and Seattle's
Chris Matthews recovered at the 50. The crowd, quiet since Seattle fell
behind 16-0, came alive, and Lynch sped and powered his way to a 24-yard
TD run. On the 2-point conversion, Wilson - about to be sacked - threw a
desperate pass hauled in by Luke Willson to make it 22-19 with 1:25
remaining.
Aaron Rodgers, limping on an
injured calf, calmly led the Packers (13-5) downfield to set up Mason
Crosby's fifth field goal, a 48-yarder with 14 seconds to go to force
overtime.
Then Wilson and Kearse struck, with
Kearse - the target on all four of Wilson's interceptions - beating
Tramon Williams on the winning pass. Kearse has also caught the winning
score in last year's conference title win over San Francisco.
"Just
making the plays at the end and keep believing," said Wilson, who was
overwhelmed and sobbing after the game. "There was no doubt ... we had
no doubt as a team."
Kearse, who has caught
touchdown passes in four straight postseason games, and several other
Seahawks leaped into the stands behind the end zone, saluting the
stadium-record crowd of 68,538. Wilson ran through cameramen to jump on
Kearse's back, and defensive end Michael Bennett borrowed a bicycle from
a police officer and rode around the edge of the field saluting the
"12s."
Until the final minutes, there seemed to be no doubt the Packers were headed to the big game Feb. 1 in Glendale, Arizona. Despite All-Pro Rodgers' injury, Green Bay and its overlooked defense was carrying the day.
"It's
going to be a missed opportunity that I'll probably think about for the
rest of my career," Rodgers said. "We were the better team today, we
played well enough to win. We can't blame anybody but ourselves."
Special
teams trickery lifted the Seahawks back into the game after falling
behind 16-0. Their first touchdown came on a fake field goal when holder
Jon Ryan threw 19 yards to tackle eligible Garry Gilliam in the third
quarter. And Matthews' onside kick recovery kept the Seahawks alive.
Lynch
rushed for 157 yards on 25 carries and was the one consistent offensive
force Seattle had. He was crucial to both late scoring drives in
regulation.
And after the Packers tied it, Seattle wouldn't be denied in overtime, winning the coin toss and going 87 yards in six plays.
The
16-point comeback was the largest ever in a conference title game. The
Colts defeated the Patriots after trailing 21-6 in 2006.
"It
takes everybody and everybody had to contribute to get that done,"
Carroll said. "It was so much heart, so much belief today. Somehow,
somehow we pulled it out."
The matchup of
Green Bay's top-ranked scoring offense against the league's stingiest
defense instead was being controlled by the Packers' ability to stop -
and turn over - the Seahawks. The five giveaways were the most in the
Carroll era that began in 2010.
The silence of
the fans was remarkable for much of the windy, intermittently rain day.
Rookie safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix had two interceptions and Green Bay
sacked Wilson five times.
Yet it wasn't enough.
"I
felt our football team was a special group. They've been great all
year," coach Mike McCarthy said.
"This is a hard one to swallow."
Seahawks
All-Pro cornerback Richard Sherman played much of the final quarter
holding his left arm at his chest. The center of conversation after last
January's NFC championship win against the 49ers, he quietly left the
field with his arm still pinned to his body, an NFC championship towel
hanging off his right arm.
Sherman said after the game about the Super Bowl: "I will 100 percent be able to play."
Rodgers
didn't shy away from throwing at Sherman, and in an early matchup of
All-Pros, Rodgers' pass to rookie Davante Adams in the end zone was
snagged by Sherman.
But the Pack was right
back in scoring position moments later when Clinton-Dix grabbed a tipped
pass and returned it 26 yards to the Seattle 4. Fullback John Kuhn,
another All-Pro, had his TD dive reversed by a replay review and Seattle
held. Crosby made it 3-0.
Doug Baldwin fumbled the ensuing kickoff at his 23, and Crosby made a 19-yarder.
It
didn't get better in the first half for the hosts. Randall Cobb caught
an 18-yard TD pass on the final play of the opening quarter to make it
13-0; Green Bay outgained Seattle 137-3 in the period.
The Seahawks' initial first down came nearly eight minutes into the second quarter.
Crosby
nailed a 40-yarder to conclude Green Bay's dominant first half. Wilson
was picked off three times, had a QB rating of 0.00, and Seattle was
fortunate it didn't trail by more.
Even after
the fake field goal TD made it 16-7, the Seahawks didn't seem likely to
pull off the comeback. Yet they did, becoming the first team since New
England a decade ago to return to the Super Bowl.
"I'm honored to be on this team, Wilson said. "I'm going to the Super Bowl again."
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