Seahawks demolish Cardinals with record 58-0 win

SEATTLE (AP) — Russell Wilson got the hook. He wasn't complaining.
On his way to some NFL history, Wilson was told to be an observer for the final 25 minutes of Seattle's 58-0 rout of the inept Arizona Cardinals.
"It was great to be able to come out of the game because we blew them out so bad," Wilson said. "The game was a crazy game throughout."
Richard Sherman and Bobby Wagner each had two interceptions, Marshawn Lynch ran for three touchdowns and the Seahawks set a franchise record for points. They forced eight turnovers and kept firm grasp on the final NFC wild-card spot.
Seattle (8-5) also holds a slim chance of catching San Francisco in the NFC West.
Wilson became the first rookie quarterback to start and win his first six games at home since the 1970 merger.
"This was really a different game. This is so much different than everything we've played," Seattle coach Pete Carroll said. "It's a nice reward. Sometimes you get a chance to win big like that and we haven't had many since we've been here."
After two straight weeks of games decided in the final seconds or overtime, the Seahawks got a chance to relax. Seattle also picked up its first division victory of the season and gave Carroll his first eight-win season in three years here.
But no one could have expected this kind of rout.
Leon Washington's 3-yard run with 2:32 left pushed the Seahawks past the old record of 56 points scored against Buffalo in 1977. The eight takeaways were their second most, equaling a 1998 achievement.
Lynch ran for 128 yards on 11 carries and scored on runs of 20, 4 and 33 yards. His last score on the first drive of the second half tied his career high for TD runs in a game and was the capper to his afternoon. Lynch's backup, Robert Turbin, also topped the century mark with 108 yards.
And there were numerous statistical oddities.
Tight end Anthony McCoy, who had a 67-yard reception to set up one of Lynch's TD runs, became the first Seattle receiver to top 100 yards this season. Sherman got the Seahawks their first defensive touchdown of 2012 when he intercepted John Skelton and returned it 19 yards in the second quarter. He also recovered a fumble.
"I've never been involved in anything where the ball falls your way every single time. It seemed like if the ball was going to come out it was going to fall our way," Sherman said. "Even on the fumble where I fell on it and got the recovery, it just kept bouncing around. I was like 'There is no way this ball is going to bounce right to me' and it did."
Wilson wasn't asked to do much, completing 7 of 13 for 148 yards and one touchdown. But unlike last week in Chicago, the Seahawks didn't need any heroics from Wilson.
Matt Flynn finally got his first regular-season action in a Seahawks uniform and finished 5 of 9 passes for 68 yards.
"I'm glad we had a win like this. We needed it especially for our confidence," Seattle fullback Michael Robinson said.
The Seahawks scored nearly every way possible, turning their first home game in about a month into a rout that will only increase debate whether Ken Whisenhunt will be back as Cardinals coach.
It was an effortless performance by the Cardinals (4-9), who have lost nine straight, the longest slide for the franchise since 1944. The Cardinals gained just 154 yards and had almost as many turnovers as first downs (10).
Larry Fitzgerald had one reception and that didn't come until the fourth quarter. Skelton made numerous ill-advised throws into coverage and was intercepted four times.
"For them to come out and dominate the way they did in every phase of the game it's embarrassing," Skelton said.
Arizona actually started well, with Skelton completing his first three passes. When Skelton finally threw in the direction of Fitzgerald the day quickly spiraled out of control. Skelton's pass found Fitzgerald's hands, but was wrestled free by K.J. Wright, tipped from hitting the ground by Walter Thurmond and into Wagner's hands.
Wagner's return set up the first of Steven Hauschka's three field goals and Lynch added touchdown runs on consecutive drives for a 17-0 lead.
That's when the turnovers became comical for the Cardinals.
Skelton was stripped by Chris Clemons and fell on the loose ball. He followed that by throwing into triple coverage to Fitzgerald and Sherman returned it 19 yards for a touchdown.
Patrick Peterson muffed a punt the ball was batted and eventually tipped to Malcolm Smith, who caught it out of midair at the goal line for a 31-0 lead.
And finally, Peterson was hit from behind and fumbled on a punt return late in the first half. Wilson hit Zach Miller for a 24-yard TD with 6 seconds left in the second quarter.
About the only bit of fight shown by the Cardinals came late in the third quarter when some pushing led to Daryn Colledge getting a personal foul. By that point, the Seahawks led 51-0.
"We're always taking shots at (turnovers)," Smith said. "I guess today was just our day."
Notes: The largest shutout victory for Seattle was a 45-0 win over Kansas City in 1984. ... Seattle had two players top 100 yards rushing for the first time since 2005. ... It was Arizona's first time being shut out since losing 38-0 to the Seahawks in 2003.
On his way to some NFL history, Wilson was told to be an observer for the final 25 minutes of Seattle's 58-0 rout of the inept Arizona Cardinals.
"It was great to be able to come out of the game because we blew them out so bad," Wilson said. "The game was a crazy game throughout."
Richard Sherman and Bobby Wagner each had two interceptions, Marshawn Lynch ran for three touchdowns and the Seahawks set a franchise record for points. They forced eight turnovers and kept firm grasp on the final NFC wild-card spot.
Seattle (8-5) also holds a slim chance of catching San Francisco in the NFC West.
Wilson became the first rookie quarterback to start and win his first six games at home since the 1970 merger.
"This was really a different game. This is so much different than everything we've played," Seattle coach Pete Carroll said. "It's a nice reward. Sometimes you get a chance to win big like that and we haven't had many since we've been here."
After two straight weeks of games decided in the final seconds or overtime, the Seahawks got a chance to relax. Seattle also picked up its first division victory of the season and gave Carroll his first eight-win season in three years here.
But no one could have expected this kind of rout.
Leon Washington's 3-yard run with 2:32 left pushed the Seahawks past the old record of 56 points scored against Buffalo in 1977. The eight takeaways were their second most, equaling a 1998 achievement.
Lynch ran for 128 yards on 11 carries and scored on runs of 20, 4 and 33 yards. His last score on the first drive of the second half tied his career high for TD runs in a game and was the capper to his afternoon. Lynch's backup, Robert Turbin, also topped the century mark with 108 yards.
And there were numerous statistical oddities.
Tight end Anthony McCoy, who had a 67-yard reception to set up one of Lynch's TD runs, became the first Seattle receiver to top 100 yards this season. Sherman got the Seahawks their first defensive touchdown of 2012 when he intercepted John Skelton and returned it 19 yards in the second quarter. He also recovered a fumble.
"I've never been involved in anything where the ball falls your way every single time. It seemed like if the ball was going to come out it was going to fall our way," Sherman said. "Even on the fumble where I fell on it and got the recovery, it just kept bouncing around. I was like 'There is no way this ball is going to bounce right to me' and it did."
Wilson wasn't asked to do much, completing 7 of 13 for 148 yards and one touchdown. But unlike last week in Chicago, the Seahawks didn't need any heroics from Wilson.
Matt Flynn finally got his first regular-season action in a Seahawks uniform and finished 5 of 9 passes for 68 yards.
"I'm glad we had a win like this. We needed it especially for our confidence," Seattle fullback Michael Robinson said.
The Seahawks scored nearly every way possible, turning their first home game in about a month into a rout that will only increase debate whether Ken Whisenhunt will be back as Cardinals coach.
It was an effortless performance by the Cardinals (4-9), who have lost nine straight, the longest slide for the franchise since 1944. The Cardinals gained just 154 yards and had almost as many turnovers as first downs (10).
Larry Fitzgerald had one reception and that didn't come until the fourth quarter. Skelton made numerous ill-advised throws into coverage and was intercepted four times.
"For them to come out and dominate the way they did in every phase of the game it's embarrassing," Skelton said.
Arizona actually started well, with Skelton completing his first three passes. When Skelton finally threw in the direction of Fitzgerald the day quickly spiraled out of control. Skelton's pass found Fitzgerald's hands, but was wrestled free by K.J. Wright, tipped from hitting the ground by Walter Thurmond and into Wagner's hands.
Wagner's return set up the first of Steven Hauschka's three field goals and Lynch added touchdown runs on consecutive drives for a 17-0 lead.
That's when the turnovers became comical for the Cardinals.
Skelton was stripped by Chris Clemons and fell on the loose ball. He followed that by throwing into triple coverage to Fitzgerald and Sherman returned it 19 yards for a touchdown.
Patrick Peterson muffed a punt the ball was batted and eventually tipped to Malcolm Smith, who caught it out of midair at the goal line for a 31-0 lead.
And finally, Peterson was hit from behind and fumbled on a punt return late in the first half. Wilson hit Zach Miller for a 24-yard TD with 6 seconds left in the second quarter.
About the only bit of fight shown by the Cardinals came late in the third quarter when some pushing led to Daryn Colledge getting a personal foul. By that point, the Seahawks led 51-0.
"We're always taking shots at (turnovers)," Smith said. "I guess today was just our day."
Notes: The largest shutout victory for Seattle was a 45-0 win over Kansas City in 1984. ... Seattle had two players top 100 yards rushing for the first time since 2005. ... It was Arizona's first time being shut out since losing 38-0 to the Seahawks in 2003.
This is easily the best game they have ever played. I'm talking about the franchise as a whole. Why would the Seahawks get any play in the media? Seattle is still not a legitimate contender for the Superbowl.
@IMHO this was not even close to the best game they have ever played. Also, any playoff team is a Super Bowl contender. Just look at the recent run of 9-7 Super Bowl winners. You just gotta get in.
I still can't believe they won that easily. I wish they showed a little more life in their first meeting. Now we need to get ready for another long road game in Buffalo. Hopefully they can take this momentum to that game.
 @Paddy At least the Buffalo game is a 1 o'clock pst game.  Â
Go HeeeeeHawks...
Lets hope the Seahawks make a good playoff run and not choke in the early rounds and put to rest the choke ghost of games past...
I remember watching the 1977 game where the Seahawks scored 56 point against O.J. and the Bills. I believe we play the Bills next---ironic. I hope this performance continues next week---this time they have no "Juice."
 @desslock250 Well, not that Juice, anyway.... let's hope they don't have the other kind of juice.Â
I think one of the keys to yesterday's win was Skelton thinking Fitzgerald was the only receiver on the team. "Wait 'til Fitz is open, wait 'til Fitz is open- AW CRAP!" Bad things happen when you expect a sinlgle player to carry the team. Mercy is what kept that from being a 72 to 0 game. I hope that momentum can keep going!
I do agree with you that it could have been a much higher scoring game. The only thing the Seahawks didn't do was to put fans on the field.
 @melvin Forgot to address the first part. Arizona's entire team expects Fitz to do it all, not just whoever is under or behind center.
I think the QBs just got overwhelmed to the point they couldn't think straight with our swarming defense charging right at them before they've even dropped back. Especially Lindley being a rook, and I think it's only Skelton's second year.
 @melvin I would far rather have my butt handed to me in a 100-point loss than have my opponent let up on me.Â
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Pete split this one exactly right. He pulled our starters to protect them and get the backups some live action, but he didn't have guys pull up short on the field which is how serious injuries could happen and would have been disrespectful to the Cardinals.Â
Too bad they didn't do this all year. One game doesn't make a season. They are still 5th in the wildcard run. They will have to win all of the rest of their games to get in the play offs.
 @DDG You know they publish the standings, and even break down the current playoff standings on ESPN.  Currently they are 5th and have the #1 wildcard spot.  They also hold the head to head tie-breaker over most if not all the teams right behind them.
@DDG It's not how you start it's how you finish. Right now the Seahawks are one of the hottest teams in the league. If they can keep it up and not get injured there is no telling how far they could go.
@DDG Wrong. They are only showed 5th, because Green Bay, SF and NY have not clinched the division. Once they do, we will be tied with Chicago at 8-5 (currently), but we get nod because of head to head tie breaker with them. So essentially if the season ended today, we own the wild card.
 @DDG Wrong, wrong, wrong. We are first in the NFC Wildcard run and if we win out and the Niners lose to the Patriots in NE next Sunday night then we win the NFC west and host a Playoff game. Mathematically we can still get the #1 seed in the NFC although that is very unlikely.
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They do not need to win out.
Revenge........is.......SWEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEET!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@vanceox No, that wasn't revenge. Revenge would have been doing it to the Steelers.
 @TheBronze  @vanceox To the Stealers in the Super Bowl, of course!
It was fun to watch the stress-free BLOWOUT for a change. Everytime i went to grab a beer, Hawks would scored...i'm hungover now. ;)Â
 @Brokesince08 HA, I had the fortune to watch the game in a pizza restaurant with a bar and I can tell you, most patrons were well on their way to a terrible Monday morning by the third quarter.Â
SEEE-HAAAAAWKS
It's funny how little credit the Seahawks get. We demolish a team 58-0 and don't even get a headline on ESPN. Also, the highlights on the web are a mere 30 seconds or so. Don't you just love how ESPN favors the east coast to their dying day? I wish those idiots weren't so biased but oh well. We'll quietly dominate and make our own headlines, then ESPN and others will have no choice but to give us the due respect. Go Seahawks!
 @Koreanman012 It's as much laziness as bias. We're three hours behind so they might have to stay up past their bedtimes to do their jobs and give all teams equal coverage.Â
Arizona started off on fire and it wasn't getting much love, either. Nor has San Francisco despite some strong wins in the national spotlight.Â
 @Koreanman012 THIS is the reason Seattle gets the rep it does. Get over your persecution complex already, it's getting old. Act like a major sports city, and maybe we'll BE a major sports city.
MVDad seems to have small dick syndrome, common amongst SF fans. Being a fan of a team from the gayest city in America will do that to you.Â
@MVDad @Koreanman012 We are a major sports city. Koreanman's attitude has nothing to do with East Coast bias. I repeat. Nothing.
One game doesn't make the season.
@DDG We are 8-5 right now. You act as if that is a horrible record or something. 8-5 is actually a good record with three games to play.
And these guys were the pre-season pick to seriously contest with the 49er's for the division championship. Shows you what pre-season football is worth, eh?
Nevertheless, EPIC win, fellahs! Great game!
And naturally, the only thing ESPN will talk about tomorrow is RGIII's injury... Unless, of course, they accuse the 'Hawks of running up the score... *sigh*
Wouldn't it be a kick in the gluteus if the Rams' tie with SF is what propels us into the playoffs? I almost want to send those guys a Thank You card...
 @svensson Well we are right on the Niners tail and we are competing quite well with them. Chances are we will beat them at home and if they continue their problems we have a good shot at taking the division form them. Not sure how you think that the Hawks are not competing with the Niners.......
 @tandras Pretty sure he was referring to AZ being picked to compete with SF.
@jb_22 @tandras Yep, that's who I was referring to initially and I hope my replies clarified some of it.
@tandras I'm not saying that we're not competing with them, just saying that the pre-season fortune-tellers didn't think we would. What I'm most concerned with is that our division record is pretty louzy at the moment.
We have our last away game next week at the Bills in Toronto and they're still grasping at Playoff straws, then our final two at home vs. the Niners and Rams... two teams that have already beaten us once this season. I'm not one to chalk a win out of a game we haven't played yet, but our chances are good. We're playing our best football at just the right time and everyone is buying into the program.
As for the Niners, they have a tough game next week at the Patriots and then they play us at CenturyLink and get the Cards at home.
All in all, I've got us with about a 55% chance for the division and an 85% chance for the playoffs in a wild-card slot.
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Why were the Seahawks playing against the St. Louis Cardinals anyways? ;)
 @DarkRenegade Well, considering they've moved from the NFC East, it's actually progress. :^D
And with Kansas City in the AFC West, they don't feel cheated or left out or anything.Â
Keep it going and rolling!!
I guess that they don't have the unwritten "running up the score" rule in football like they do in baseball, eh? Â Ha ha!
 @UtterReality I'm not a Seahawk fan, but a quick look at the box score will tell you they DID NOT run up the score. Lynch had 11 carries. Wilson threw 13 passes. It's just that the Cards are so awful it was like a scrimmage. If Skelton drops the ball, are they not supposed to fall on it? If he throws it right to a defender, are they not supposed to catch it? If they don't tackle a running back, is he just supposed to fall down? The Cards have now passed the Eagles as the worst team in the league.
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@UtterReality well they did put in the 2nd and 3rd stringers. What else do you want them to do, lol.
HELP WANTED: Quarterback. Some experience preferred. Apply at University of Phoenix Stadium, Scotsdale AZ.
 @Vexorg Glendale, not Scottsdale. The high society folks in Scottsdale would never allow such a thing in their back yard.
@Cavalier Oops, apparently actually looking up things is difficult.
 @Vexorg  @Cavalier It was still funny and besides, maybe you've hit on something here: the real Cardinals quarterbacks and offensive linemen could be frustratedly driving around Scottsdale trying to find the practice field.Â
Such an OUTSTANDING can of "Whoop Ass" opened today by our HAWKS!!! Way to take the kids to school fellas!!!
I think the Cardinals sent the cheerleaders in to play... The team needs a good long vacation with really soft pillows to sit on after that spanking..... Way to go Hawks!!!
S Rice The man that always gets up
S Rice you cant keep him down
S Rice takes the hardest hit in the NFL and cant be kept down
S Rice is up
S Rice is tough
S Rice takes a hit like no other
S Rice the NFLs best ball handler
S Rice never lets go
S Rice hands of glue
S Rice  well you get the idea can someone take over where I have stopped ?
Â
S Rice Seahawks MVP
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 @armchairquaterback I don't know...I'm thinking team MVP might just be Lynch.
 @stamperzann  @armchairquaterback Or Wilson......
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@Wolfen don't be a homer.