Seahawks rally to beat Redskins 24-14 in NFC playoff

LANDOVER, Md. — Breathe in, breathe out.

Down two scores late in the first quarter with 35 players competing in their first playoff game, the Seattle Seahawks could have panicked.

Instead, they exhaled.

The Seahawks buckled down defensively against Washington’s explosive offense, led by hobbled rookie quarterback Robert Griffin III.

And Seattle’s offense got on track, scoring 24 straight points to lead the Seahawks to a 24-14 NFC Wild Card victory over Washington at FedEx Field Sunday.

The victory marked Seattle’s first playoff road win in nearly 30 years. The Seahawks last win away from home took place on Dec. 31, 1983, a 27-20 victory at Miami in the AFC divisional playoffs.

The Seahawks had lost eight straight before Sunday’s win over the Redskins.

Seattle now travels to Atlanta (13-3) for an NFC divisional playoff contest on Sunday.

“You can’t win this game in the first quarter,” Seattle fullback Michael Robinson said. “And we understand that. You’ve just got to keep fighting and plugging away. It’s all about what that score says at the end of the fourth quarter.”

Washington’s up-tempo offense gave Seattle fits to open the game, as the Redskins grinded out 129 yards in the opening quarter in taking a 14-0 lead.

Griffin completed a 4-yard TD pass to running back Evan Royster to cap a nine-play, 80-yard opening drive.

And after a Seattle three-and-out, the Redskins marched right down the field again. This time, Griffin found tight end Logan Paulsen for another 4-yard score.

“The speed of the game was way ahead of us,” Seattle head coach Pete Carroll said. “We had practiced and tried to get everything right in looking for the tempo. Anything could happen, and it surely did.”

But the Seahawks caught a break. Griffin came into the game nursing a sprained right knee, wearing a bulky brace to provide stability. Griffin appeared to re-injure his knee on a scramble near the goal line, falling out-of-bounds while throwing incomplete to Pierre Garcon.

His injury apparently was made worse two plays later when Seattle defensive end Bruce Irvin spun him to the ground on a late hit after Griffin’s second touchdown pass.

After totaling 129 yards through Washington’s first two drives, Seattle’s defense held the Redskins scoreless and to 74 yards the final three quarters.

Griffin’s gimpy knee gave out with 6:19 to play in the fourth quarter, when his knee buckled while Griffin was trying to pick up a bad snap. Seattle defensive tackle Clinton McDonald recovered the fumble on Washington’s 5-yard line.

Washington’s training staff attended to Griffin. He walked off on his own, but did not return to the game. Griffin finished 10-of-19 for 84 yards, with two touchdown passes and one interception.

“I think that’s a credit to us for attacking him,” Seahawks cornerback Brandon Browner said. “That was us. I take my hat off to our D-line for getting after him. He hasn’t been playing at 100 percent because of the knee for the last three or four weeks. So we wanted to attack him as much as possible.”

Seattle cut Washington’s lead to 14-3 on Steven Hauschka’s 32-yard field goal early in the second quarter.

After forcing Washington to punt for the first time, Russell Wilson drove the Seahawks 73 yards on eight plays, completing a 4-yard pass in the flat to Robinson for a touchdown and cutting the Redskins’ lead to 14-10.

Wilson completed 15-of-26 passes for 187 yards, and rushed for another 67 yards.

Seattle got the ball back when Earl Thomas intercepted a deep pass by Griffin intended for Garcon.

After a 63-yard drive, Hauschka closed out the scoring in the first half with a 29-yard field goal, cutting Washington’s lead to 14-13.

The Seahawks got the ball to open the second half and were in position to take the lead. But Marshawn Lynch fumbled while diving into the pile at Washington’s 2-yard line, and Redskins defensive tackle Jarvis Jenkins recovered the ball.

“He’s too tough to let something like that bother him,” Carroll said of Lynch.

Lynch made up for the crucial error in the fourth quarter, putting the Seahawks up for good on a trademark, 27-yard rumble down the right sideline, bulling his way into the end zone.

Lynch finished with 132 yards on 20 carries, reaching the 100-yard mark for an 11th time this season.

The Seahawks went for two, and Wilson dumped the ball to tight end Zach Miller in the middle of the field for the conversion.

Hauschka, who suffered a calf injury in the first half and was limited to just kicking field goals, completed the scoring with a 22-yard field goal.

Seattle now turns its focus towards the NFC South champion Falcons.

“It says we’re resilient — battle tested,” Robinson said, when asked what the come-from-behind victory means for his team. “I know coming in at halftime, we knew we took their best punch. And it is all about just going out and doing what we do, but do it better and do it longer. And that was the motto this week.”

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