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NFL

Road warriors: Seahawks hoping away success continues in the postseason

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    Had Jacob Hollister crossed the goal line on his fourth-down catch instead of getting stopped just shy of it, the Seahawks would have beaten the San Francisco 49ers and claimed the NFC West title. That would have meant the conference’s No. 3 seed and a home game against the Minnesota Vikings this weekend. But the Seahawks’ 26-21 loss to San Francisco means they enter the playoffs as the No. 5 seed and will make a return trip to Philadelphia to play the Eagles (4:40 p.m. ET Sunday) as a wild-card team.

    The Seahawks won at Lincoln Financial Field in Week 12 for one of their seven road victories this season, the most in franchise history. Those accomplishments seemed to counterbalance the disappointment of their last-second loss.

    “We’ve been road warriors all year,” coach Pete Carroll said. “Our guys have handled it well. Why? I know why we’ve done well on the road. Why we didn’t win more at home, we’ll talk about that in the offseason. But we’re not worried about going on the road, that’s for sure.”

    To be sure, the Seahawks would have preferred to spend wild-card weekend at home. They’ve won 10 straight playoff games at CenturyLink Field — including six under Carroll — since a wild-card loss to the St. Louis Rams in January 2005. But they haven’t had the same home-field advantage in the regular season that they once enjoyed and, for whatever reason, were a better team on the road this season (see chart). Their four home wins tied their fewest in 10 seasons under Carroll.

    Home Away
    Point differential minus-14 (205-229) Plus-31 (200-169)
    Turnover differential Plus-1 (10-9) Plus-11 (22-11)
    Russell Wilson’s passer rating 105.6 107.2
    Opponents’ passer rating 96.7 75.9

    While talking about the Seahawks’ success on the road this season, Carroll has made more than one mention of how they’ve settled into their travel routine. For games on the West Coast or in Arizona or Denver, they’ll usually leave the day before. For any games in Central or Eastern time zones, it’s two days before so players will have longer to adjust to the time change. They went 5-0 this year in 10 a.m. PT kickoffs, which have historically been difficult for West Coast teams traveling east.

    If there were such thing as a good year to have to reach the Super Bowl the hard way — with three straight road wins — is this it?

    “Yeah, it’s going to have to be,” linebacker

    Well, three teams have done it since the NFL expanded its playoff format to 12 participants in 1990. The only Nos. 5 or 6 seeds to reach the Super Bowl with three straight road wins in that span are the 2005 Steelers, the 2007 Giants and the 2010 Packers. All three won the Super Bowl.

    The Packers’ and Saints’ victories in the early games Sunday reduced the Seahawks’ playoff possibilities to the No. 3 seed with a win over the 49ers and the No. 5 with a loss. With the possibility of a first-round bye out of the window by kickoff, the only thing the Seahawks missed out on by losing to San Francisco was one home playoff game.

    And their playoff path doesn’t look materially more difficult than it would have been as the No. 3 seed. In that scenario, winning in the wild-card round would have sent them to New Orleans in the divisional round. If they win in Philadelphia, their likely second-round opponent would be the 49ers, whom they beat once on the road this season and were a few inches away from sweeping.

    “I think we’re confident,” wide receiver

Soccer

Footy Podcast: The best (and worst) of 2019, predictions for 2020

Welcome to the latest edition of “Sweeper Keeper,” theScore’s footy podcast hosted by Gianluca Nesci.

Find the show on iTunes, SoundCloud, Stitcher, Google Play, and Spotify. Be sure to rate, review, and subscribe, too!

Topics for today’s year in review episode include:

  • The defining moments of 2019 in world football (2:44)
  • Who “won” the year? (11:22)
  • Handing out our end-of-year awards (17:08)
  • Bold predictions for 2020 (48:45)

… and more!

“If you think about it, I've never held a job in my life. I went from being an NFL player to a coach to a broadcaster. I haven't worked a day in my life.”
-John Madden


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