While Sunday's victory over the Colts wasn't exactly worthy of a postcard, the result is absolutely more important than the route Seattle took to achieving it.
This is absolutely not at all a total rip-off of Mitch Levy's "Mr. Playoffs."
I thought Coach Poaching season was over. Then Michigan's coach went and lost his job, and now I'm worried all over again.
The Seahawks have a safety who is a headache waiting to happen for opponents and a receiver who did something no one else has managed to do this season: score on A.J. Terrell.
The single biggest surprise of this Seahawks season is how frequently it has buried opponents beneath an avalanche of points. It happened again on Sunday in Atlanta.
Ernest Jones' interception return is a metaphor for Seattle's position in the division as they've got a straight line to the end zone.
John Schneider's single biggest strength as Seahawks GM has been his ability to avoid overcommitting to quarterbacks, something exemplified by this season.
Between the retention of Josh Naylor and the margin of the Seahawks' defeat, I'm feeling surprisingly optimistic. I'm sure that will change, however.
Seattle travels to Los Angeles this weekend for what is the franchise's biggest regular-season game in six years.
The Seahawks' cup ranneth over against the Cardinals while the Huskies couldn't scratch out a win against a team whose top passer was the punter.
To use the terms of a romantic relationship, the Seahawks are infatuated with their quarterback while the Cardinals just broke up with Kyler Murray over text.