DeMarco Murray of the Cowboys ran for 115 yards and scored the decisive touchdown against the Seahawks Sunday. / Drew Sellers, Sportspress Northwest

Although Dallas dominated statistically and stylistically, Sunday’s game at CenturyLink Field essentially came down to one play, heavily weighted against the visitors: trailing 23-20, the game on the line, the Cowboys faced third and 20 from their 31-yard line with 4:55 to play. The Seahawks needed only a stop. And who converts in that hellish situation against the Legion of Boom?

The Cowboys did, improbably, Tony Romo threading a remarkable sideline pass to Terrence Williams for 23 yards that set up DeMarco Murray’s 15-yard touchdown run with 3:16 remaining. That play enabled Dallas to knock off the Seahawks 30-23 on a day of anguish for the defending Super Bowl champions.

Seattle will not be No. 1 in any NFL power rankings this coming week, or No. 1 in any NFC power rankings, either. Las Vegas will also remove the Seahawks as favorites to repeat their win in the Super Bowl — appropriately so. After a stirring, but flawed, win last Monday night, the Seahawks came out uninspired, requiring two unlikely special teams plays just to stay in the game. Even with those, they did so barely.

It was astonishing — and a testament to their overall skill — that the Seahawks only lost by seven considering that the Cowboys, after falling behind 10-0 early, practically owned the rest of the game.

“It was a really tough,” said head coach Pete Carroll. “They played a really great game. We were not right in any phase today. We didn’t run the ball well, we didn’t throw ball, and they were 10-for-17 on third down. We’re better than that. It was a case them playing well and us not playing well.”

It was, simply, a case of Dallas dominating both sides of the ball. The Cowboys accumulated 23 first downs to Seattle’s nine, ran 70 plays to Seattle’s 48, had 401 total yards to Seattle’s 206 and piled up 162 rushing yards to Seattle’s 80. Seattle was overwhelmed, especially offensively.

Russell Wilson, with three 100+ passer ratings in his first four starts, finished at 47.6, about as low as a quarterback can go without becoming Charlie Whitehurst. Wilson didn’t throw a touchdown, didn’t come close to throwing one, had a final-play pass intercepted, and nearly had two others picked off. Wilson’s major problem Sunday was that his receivers couldn’t gain separation. Wilson often had time to throw, but had nowhere to go. When he tried to scramble, as he did last Monday night, he also had nowhere to go.

Marshawn Lynch rushed for 61 yards, but 32 came on one carry. Lynch had only two rushes in the first half and 10 for the game, not how Carroll wants to conduct business. Percy Harvin had six touches, but produced  minus-1 yard. The Cowboys expertly diagnosed every screen that Wilson threw in Harvin’s direction, stuffing him for less than nothing.

The Seahawks defense entered Sunday allowing an NFL-best 62.3 rushing yards. Not only had the Seahawks not allowed a 100-yard rusher this season, they hadn’t even allowed a 40-yard rusher. But DeMarco Murray blasted them for 115 and Joseph Randle added 52. Murray tied Jim Brown’s 1958 NFL record with his sixth consecutive 100-yard rushing game to start a season.

The Seahawks looked like they were going to run away with it early, taking a 10-0 lead on a Steven Hauschka 33-yard field goal, set up by Wilson’s 53-yard completion to Jermaine Kearse, and Mike Morgan’s 18-yard return of a Doug Baldwin blocked punt.

But the advantage proved to be a mirage. Dallas pulled within 10-7 when, following a 38-yard run by Randle, Tony Romo threw a two-yard TD pass to Gavin Escobar. Byron Maxwell narrowly missed an interception at the goal line which, had he made it, would have provided him clear sailing for a touchdown.

Dallas tied it 10-10 and took a 17-10 lead at intermission. In the third quarter, after Morgan recovered a muffed Dallas punt, Wilson ran nine yards for a touchdown that tied the game at 17. The Seahawks moved out to a 20-17 lead on another 33-yard field goal by Hauschka, quickly answered by Dan Bailey’s 56-yarder with 2:16 to play in the third.

The Seahawks went ahead 23-20 with 8:16 left (Hauschka again) and had a chance to put it away when Dallas faced that third and 20 with 4:55 left. But Romo’s pass to Williams was perfect. Carroll challenged the call, but the ruling stood. That play deflated the Seahawks. Murray knocked off runs of 25 and six yards before bolting into the end zone from 15 for what proved to be the game-winning score.

“Murray was terrific,” said Carroll. “They played the game they wanted to play it and we couldn’t do anything about it. Our blocking and tackling was not as good as it needed to be. Going forward, we’ve got to get better.

“We came back from the Monday night game and didn’t do very well. We had no rhythm, we couldn’t get going and it gets amplified when (defensively) you can’t get off the field. I didn’t do a good enough job to get us ready to do this.”

The Seahawks, who fell to 3-2 and lost for just the second time in 21 home games, face consecutive road games at St. Louis and Carolina, and have some injury issues confronting them. Maxwell left the game with a high ankle sprain and linebacker Bobby Wagner jammed a big toe, although he returned.

Notes

Morgan’s blocked punt return for a touchdown was the first for Seattle since Jeron Johnson returned one three yards against the Cowboys Sept. 16, 2012 . . . Wilson went 4-for-14 (28.6 percent) in the fourth quarter, the second-worst fourth-quarter completion percentage in his career. Wilson went 1-for-5 in last season’s loss to the Colts. The Seahawks had no rushing first downs in the first half and did not make a first down in the second quarter.

Next

The Seahawks travel to St. Louis at 10 a.m. Sunday for their first meeting with the Rams (FOX).

SCORING SUMMARY

1st Qtr. (Seahawks 3-0): Steven Hauschka 33 field goal, 10:06. Drive: 10 plays, 64 yards in 4:24.Key Play: Jermaine Kearse 53 pass from Russell Wilson on 3rd and 9.

1st Qtr. (Seahawks 10-0): Mike Morgan 18 yards with blocked punt (Hauschka kick), 7:13. Drive: 6 plays, 18 yards in 2:53. Key Play: Doug Baldwin blocked punt.

1st Qtr. (Cowboys 10-7): Gavin Escobar 2 pass from Tony Romo (Dan Bailey kick), 2:34. Drive: 9 plays, 80 yards in 4:39. Key Play: Joseph Randle 38 run.

2nd Qtr. (Cowboys 10-10): Bailey 42 field goal, 5:15. Drive: 15 plays, 71 yards in 9:45. Key Play: Byron Maxwell missed interception at the goal line.

2nd Qtr. (Cowboys 17-10): Jason Witten 3 pass from Romo (Bailey kick), 0:16. Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards in 2:48. Key Play: Lance Dunbar 18 pass from Romo on 3rd and 18.

3rd Qtr. (Seahawks 17-17): Wilson 9 run (Hauschka kick), 6:19. Drive: 2 plays, 14 yards in 0:38. Key Play: Morgan fumble recovery of Dallas punt at the Dallas 14-yard line.

3rd Qtr. (Seahawks 20-17): Hauschka 33 field goal, 3:20. Drive: 4 plays, 5 yards in 1:26. Key Play: Fumbled punt recovery by Jordan Hill.

3rd Qtr. (Cowboys 20-20): Bailey 56 field goal, 1:04. Drive: 5 plays, 43 yards in 2:16. Key Play: T. Williams 47 pass from Romo to the Seattle 34.

4th Qtr. (Seahawks 23-20): Hauschka 48 field goal, 8:16. Drive: 7 plays, 12 yards in 2:48.

4th Qtr. (Cowboys 27-23): DeMarco Murray 15 run (Bailey kick), 3:16. Drive: 9 plays, 80 yards in 5:00. Key Play: T. Williams 23 pass from Romo on 3rd and 20.

4th Qtr: (Cowboys 30-23): Bailey 31 field goal. Drive: 5 plays, 31 yards in 1:26.

 

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5 Comments

  1. Sadly, this is an accurate description of the game. We have grown accustomed to Wilson playing near perfect and the defense to match it, but it didn’t work out today and the depth don’t seem so deep anymore . . .

  2. This is definitely concerning, and really is just what could have happened in the last three weeks (well, DID happen against San Diego). This team has an identity crisis – heck, I’m not sure what they are trying to do. I lay this one on the coaching – prep for the game, the game plan, ability to make adjustments, having the right personnel in at the right time…looked out of sync, and this has been going on for a while now. Love Russell, but he can’t put this team on his back every week. And he doesn’t play defense, either.

  3. Dallas runs the fullback lead. Hawks key on fullback. DeMarco Murray cuts and runs to the open side then cuts again and scores. Hawks D out of position and out of jock straps.

  4. The 12th Man seemed fairly subdued in this game and I swear I heard as much cheers for the Cowboys as I did for the Seahawks. Not sure if the shortened week played a role in the outcome.

  5. The Cowboys, “America’s Team” is a bunch of rapists and thieves reading at the news. Fortunately the Seahawks have better moral character.