LeveeBreak
Well-known member
ok...if we are talking playoff wins, the next game against Miami was even bigger.'83
That Wildcard win over the Broncos was completely off the friggin' hook.
ok...if we are talking playoff wins, the next game against Miami was even bigger.'83
That Wildcard win over the Broncos was completely off the friggin' hook.
The whole season was fun. The defense was actually good and the offense was scrappy. A rookie Curt Warner provided all kinds of boost to the RB position and ended up leading the AFC in rushing. It was Knox' first season, which seemed to generate an air of hope in the whole fan base. Prior to that year even getting to the playoffs seemed like a pretty far-off concept. Then the 1st franchise playoff game was an absolute stomping of the Broncos at the King Dome. The atmosphere was simply electric and crazy to say the least. Then the team went on to beat the Phins and ended up losing to the Raiders in the AFCCG, both on the road. Quite a season for a team a lot of NFL fans were not even sure actually existed. And that 1st playoff win will forever be one of my all-time Hawk moments.
In what sense? I want to know more.
I was at that patriots game. It was a late blocked punt.
Me too! And it was my second Seahawks game. I had gone to the one in Foxborough in September of '84 too.First live game they ever won I was at.
My dad drove 5 hours each way to take me to it
The whole season was fun. The defense was actually good and the offense was scrappy. A rookie Curt Warner provided all kinds of boost to the RB position and ended up leading the AFC in rushing. It was Knox' first season, which seemed to generate an air of hope in the whole fan base. Prior to that year even getting to the playoffs seemed like a pretty far-off concept. Then the 1st franchise playoff game was an absolute stomping of the Broncos at the King Dome. The atmosphere was simply electric and crazy to say the least. Then the team went on to beat the Phins and ended up losing to the Raiders in the AFCCG, both on the road. Quite a season for a team a lot of NFL fans were not even sure actually existed. And that 1st playoff win will forever be one of my all-time Hawk moments.
But I have to go with the magical 1983 season. Curt Warner burst on the scene. The Seahawks swept the Raiders in the regular season, rolled through the Broncos in the wildcard round, surprised the world by going to Miami and beating the Dolphins in the divisional round, and then the AFCCG was against those same Raiders the Seahawks had beaten twice that season. In the team's eighth season, it was "this close" to the Super Bowl. F**kin' Raiders.
Great reflection on that season. You could feel palpably feel the change that elevated the team. Somehow I missed your first post regarding the 1983 season, so mine was a bit redundant in retrospect.Thanks. The reason I asked is because I was all the way across the continent in Maine, and while I definitely watched and enjoyed the wildcard game, the big game that year for me was the Dolphins game the following week.
I think 1983 was the year Seahawks fans brought "the wave" to the NFL. I'm certain it was the year when the national media noticed. As the wildcard game against Denver was ending, one of the announcers on whatever TV network it was said something to the effect of "I guess now the question is: 'can the Dolphins ride "the wave"?'" It was at that point that my dad sat down with me to talk about how great the season had been, how it looked like the Seahawks would be good for a while, and how hard it would be to go and play a team as good as the Dolphins in their stadium. Dad wanted to try to limit how disappointed I would be if they lost the following week. I understood.
And that's why the Seahawks actually winning that game was the biggest moment of what was a magical season for me. I was prepared for them not to win, but when they did, I celebrated by going outside in my neighborhood in a small town in Maine, wearing my numberless royal-blue pre-hawk-on-the-sleeve Seahawks jersey and my Seahawks helmet, and ran around yelling and waving my arms around over my head.
The Dolphins game was on New Year's Eve, but I honestly didn't remember that myself. I noticed it when I went to look up the box score from that game a few years ago. All I remembered is that it was getting late, and it was about as cold as you'd expect in the afternoon on one of the shortest days of the year in Maine. Early winter in Maine means that nobody had their doors or windows open, so I don't know if anyone other than my dad saw me celebrating.
I don't recall Dad talking to me about expectations again after the Dolphins game. I think he knew that I knew the Seahawks were already playing with house money, having gotten to the AFCCG in their first time ever in the playoffs.
Even so, I may or may not have gotten my expectations too high for the AFCCG in a way I hadn't for the divisional-round game because the Seahawks had already beaten the Raiders twice that season and had just gone into Miami and beaten the 12-4 Dolphins in their stadium (voice of Ron Howard as the Narrator: "he did.").
Great reflection on that season. You could feel palpably feel the change that elevated the team. Somehow I missed your first post regarding the 1983 season, so mine was a bit redundant in retrospect.
Yep. I remember the media essentially said we had no hope against the phins.Thanks. The reason I asked is because I was all the way across the continent in Maine, and while I definitely watched and enjoyed the wildcard game, the big game that year for me was the Dolphins game the following week.
I think 1983 was the year Seahawks fans brought "the wave" to the NFL. I'm certain it was the year when the national media noticed. As the wildcard game against Denver was ending, one of the announcers on whatever TV network it was said something to the effect of "I guess now the question is: 'can the Dolphins ride "the wave"?'" It was at that point that my dad sat down with me to talk about how great the season had been, how it looked like the Seahawks would be good for a while, and how hard it would be to go and play a team as good as the Dolphins in their stadium. Dad wanted to try to limit how disappointed I would be if they lost the following week. I understood.
And that's why the Seahawks actually winning that game was the biggest moment of what was a magical season for me. I was prepared for them not to win, but when they did, I celebrated by going outside in my neighborhood in a small town in Maine, wearing my numberless royal-blue pre-hawk-on-the-sleeve Seahawks jersey and my Seahawks helmet, and ran around yelling and waving my arms around over my head.
The Dolphins game was on New Year's Eve, but I honestly didn't remember that myself. I noticed it when I went to look up the box score from that game a few years ago. All I remembered is that it was getting late, and it was about as cold as you'd expect in the afternoon on one of the shortest days of the year in Maine. Early winter in Maine means that nobody had their doors or windows open, so I don't know if anyone other than my dad saw me celebrating.
I don't recall Dad talking to me about expectations again after the Dolphins game. I think he knew that I knew the Seahawks were already playing with house money, having gotten to the AFCCG in their first time ever in the playoffs.
Even so, I may or may not have gotten my expectations too high for the AFCCG in a way I hadn't for the divisional-round game because the Seahawks had already beaten the Raiders twice that season and had just gone into Miami and beaten the 12-4 Dolphins in their stadium (voice of Ron Howard as the Narrator: "he did.").
"Off the hook" doesn't necessarily mean "bigger." In that win against Denver in the wildcard, our first ever playoff game, the Kingdome crowd went absolutely nuts. The Broncos never stood a chance.ok...if we are talking playoff wins, the next game against Miami was even bigger.
1986 Seahawks. They were the hottest team at the end of the regular season and narrowly missed the playoffs due to tiebreakers. They most likely would have been in the Superbowl had they made the playoffs.
Yeah, 2012 was definitely it in the modern era for me. We were on freaking fire! If only we had less predictable prevent defense against the Falcons. That was rough, but I kind of knew we probably couldn’t go to the top after losing Clemons that game. Also knew we’d win the SB the next year!2012
You just knew something special was brewing.
- We saw the blossoming of the best back-to-back drafts in our history.
- We were in every game we lost that year.
- Finished 11-5 for the season
- Won the last 5 reg season games by 234-60
- Bears 23-17
- Cards 58-0
- Bills 50-17
- 9ers 42-13
- Rams 20-13
- Won our wild card game
- Barely lost to the falcons in the divisional