By Tom Robinson
The Virginian-Pilot
© June 27, 2014
WILLIAMSBURG
After romping and laughing with kids at William & Mary's football camp Monday, loquacious cornerback Richard Sherman revealed a key to the Seattle Seahawks' defensive success.
Romping and laughing like kids, of course.
"Run as fast as you can, tackle as hard as you can, celebrate after plays," Sherman said. "That's what I like about us in Seattle; we play like a bunch of kids. Big kids, but kids just the same."
The Super Bowl champions, though, are the bullies on the bus.
Anchored by its "Legion of Boom" secondary featuring power-hitting safety Kam Chancellor of Maury High and Virginia Tech, Seattle's defense has yielded the fewest points in the NFL the last two seasons - 15.3 a game in 2012, 14.4 last year.
No game amplified that dominance better than the Super Bowl, when Seattle dismantled the highest-scoring offense in Denver history, winning 43-8.
And no game centered Sherman, a third-year pro with an NFL-best eight interceptions last season, in the public lens more than the NFC championship game.
Moments after tipping San Francisco's potential game-winning pass to a teammate for a clinching interception, Sherman was trash-talking the 49ers for testing the "best corner in the game" at crunch time.
Reaction to the rant still greets him as he works his way through camps and other offseason appearances, Sherman said with a smile.
"I don't really care," he said. "You're going to have people who love you, people who hate you. I hate when people are in the middle, so I like that they either love me or they hate me."
http://hamptonroads.com/2014/06/richard ... plenty-fun
The Virginian-Pilot
© June 27, 2014
WILLIAMSBURG
After romping and laughing with kids at William & Mary's football camp Monday, loquacious cornerback Richard Sherman revealed a key to the Seattle Seahawks' defensive success.
Romping and laughing like kids, of course.
"Run as fast as you can, tackle as hard as you can, celebrate after plays," Sherman said. "That's what I like about us in Seattle; we play like a bunch of kids. Big kids, but kids just the same."
The Super Bowl champions, though, are the bullies on the bus.
Anchored by its "Legion of Boom" secondary featuring power-hitting safety Kam Chancellor of Maury High and Virginia Tech, Seattle's defense has yielded the fewest points in the NFL the last two seasons - 15.3 a game in 2012, 14.4 last year.
No game amplified that dominance better than the Super Bowl, when Seattle dismantled the highest-scoring offense in Denver history, winning 43-8.
And no game centered Sherman, a third-year pro with an NFL-best eight interceptions last season, in the public lens more than the NFC championship game.
Moments after tipping San Francisco's potential game-winning pass to a teammate for a clinching interception, Sherman was trash-talking the 49ers for testing the "best corner in the game" at crunch time.
Reaction to the rant still greets him as he works his way through camps and other offseason appearances, Sherman said with a smile.
"I don't really care," he said. "You're going to have people who love you, people who hate you. I hate when people are in the middle, so I like that they either love me or they hate me."
http://hamptonroads.com/2014/06/richard ... plenty-fun