Those bounce-back victories are just a few examples of the many, many times the Seahawks have responded well to adversity. Since 2012, the year the Seahawks added Wilson and Bobby Wagner and began a streak of eight straight winning seasons, Seattle is 30-7 coming off of a regular-season loss. Carroll and his players have noted on a few occasions when that topic comes up that the key to their success after a loss is that nothing really changes from when the Seahawks win. Just as they usually do a good job not letting success go to their heads, the Seahawks are good at processing losses quickly and not letting those linger.
“I think it's our mindset,” Wagner said “The way that we go about it is just to try to live in the moment. You let the whatever happened happen, the good and the bad. You don't want to have a great game and let that linger into the weekend and you think about last game and miss the game that’s in front of you. It's the same thing with a loss. When you have a loss that didn't go your way, or it was a close game, or you got blown out, you just let it go. You take what you need to take from it, you learn what you need to learn from it, and then you move on. That's our mindset. That's what we try to have everybody think, and I feel that's probably why we're so successful after a loss, is because we're able to move on from it and not let it linger into the next game.”
But no matter how hard the Seahawks work on being consistent in their approach every week, human nature can occasionally creep in when the team is rolling, as the Seahawks had been, so while nobody wanted to lose last week, a silver lining can come out of getting beaten pretty thoroughly while there’s still time to recover.
“I don’t want to say you need those things to happen to you, but it’s not necessarily a bad thing,” said linebacker K.J. Wright, the team’s longest-tenured player. “We were rolling, five-game winning streak, and we got hit in the mouth. And sometimes when you’re in a boxing match, you get hit in the mouth, you see how you respond. And I believe this is going to be a time where we can really show how we can respond as a team, and that loss was not necessarily a really bad thing… That was just demoralizing pretty much from beginning to end. You’ve just got to be like, it was one of those nights, and we have to make sure that the next week, we just fix whatever issues we had.”
Only Sunday’s game will show if the Seahawks learned the right lessons from last week’s loss, but if practice was any indication, the team is handling it well.
“It was really directed, focused,” Carroll said Friday of the practice week. “We practiced hard—we backed off today because we worked so hard the last couple days. We’re in good shape and we’re ready to go. We’ve done the things that we do, and I think everybody’s really tuned in to making sure that we come back and play really good ball this week. It showed throughout the week. We’re in good shape.”
Not long after last week’s loss, Wagner stood in the long tunnel leaving the Coliseum, his back against a USC-Cardinal painted wall, and gave a measured response to an ugly game.
“We just have to learn from it,” he said. “Understand that every team is fighting, it’s not going to be easy, every team is going to fight us in the end. We have to focus on the little things and do the little things right. The leadership has to make sure we learn from this, and we will.
A few minutes earlier, cornerback Shaquill Griffin vowed that “it’s going to be a totally different team come North Carolina.”
The Seahawks need to play well Sunday to make those words mean anything, but their history under Carroll suggests that one bad game in December isn’t likely going to be this team’s undoing.
"last" - Google News
December 15, 2019 at 12:21AM
https://ift.tt/2PYfXXJ
Seahawks Look To Bounce Back From Last Week's Loss: “Hopefully That Helps Us” - Seahawks.com
"last" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2rbmsh7
Shoes Man Tutorial
Pos News Update
Meme Update
Korean Entertainment News
Japan News Update
No comments:
Post a Comment