Hawkpower":2rc0ag61 said:
In a league where the difference between winning and losing is razor thin, these types of mistakes are unacceptable as they can and do completely impact the outcome of a game.
Anyone think our chances of winning don't go exponentially up if we have that time back?
In this case, no.
There was plenty of time on the clock even with no timeouts (1:50).
In my opinion, the biggest contributors were the following:
1. Seattle's penchant for trying to get into 2nd/3rd and manageable.
Seattle always seems to be driven to get under 10 yards to go on second and third downs. They are too formulaic in their approach and do not account for circumstance where they should deviate from this approach. It's simply awful situational execution.
Here are the first plays of 3 series of downs in that final drive that doomed us:
1. 1st and 10 (1:50). Russell scrambles for 5 yards. Costs us :22 seconds which is about 3-5 pass attempts
2. 1st and 10 (1:01). Baldwin for 4 yards. Costs us 24 seconds to next snap. Another 3-5
3. 2nd and 10

16) After spike to stop clock, Pass to Prosise for 8 yards. Costs :14 seconds.
The short curl pass to Baldwin for minimal yardage was the biggest factor in the lack of time and should never have been attempted.
In that situation, you have to get out of bounds, or make chunk yardage. Incompletions are better than 4 yard advances. Wilson would have been better served to dump a pass at his receivers' feet and took his chances on another play.
2. Taking what the defense gives you
In 1:50 we got 6 plays off (if you omit spiking the ball). That's just pathetic awareness plain and simple. In that scenario you have one, maybe two, opportunities over the middle (and should be for chunk yardage). Seattle took 5 plays in the field of play. That's just critically awful decision making on Wilson's part.
It really has no bearing on what Bevell called. Ultimately the decisions and the clock management fall on Wilson exclusively. In this case, he situationally had to understand what he could get inbounds and what he couldn't. If a play isn't there, you dump it to the ground and you dial up another play. They are playing prevent, so getting 10-15 yards is far easier. But you have to get big yards and you really can't indulge in run after catch type of options.
It may be easier for us to just blame someone else for our problem. But this was a case of serious misplays given the circumstance. We made errors that we should not have made -- and did so repeatedly on that drive. Time and happenstance will tell if we commit the same decision making gaffes in future games.