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NFL : ATS Matchup
Sunday 9/14/2014Line$ LineOU LineScore
SEATTLE
 
SAN DIEGO
-5  

+5  
-200

+170

45
 
21
Final
30

SEATTLE (1 - 0) at SAN DIEGO (0 - 1)
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Week 2 Sunday, 9/14/2014 4:05 PM
Board OpenLatest
269SEATTLE-6-5.5
270SAN DIEGO4544
ADVANCED TEAM STATS
SEATTLE - Current Season Performance
 Straight UpAgainst SpreadTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsW-LO-UScoreHalfYardsYPPTOScoreHalfYardsYPPTO
All Games1-0+11-01-036.017.0398.0(6.1)1.016.010.0255.0(4.7)1.0
Last 3 Games1-0+11-01-036.017.0398.0(6.1)1.016.010.0255.0(4.7)1.0
SEATTLE - Current Season Statistics
 RushingPassingTotal
 PPGHalfFDTOPATT-YDSYPRCMP-ATTPCTYDSPYAATT-YDSYPPYPPT
Offense (All Games)36.017.025.033:2037-207(5.6)19-2867.9%191(6.8)65-398(6.1)(11.1)
Opponents Defensive Avg.36172533:2037-207(5.6)19-2867.9%191(6.8)65-398(6.1)(11.1)
Defense (All Games)16.010.019.026:4021-80(3.8)23-3369.7%175(5.3)54-255(4.7)(15.9)
Opponents Offensive Avg.16101927:4021-80(3.8)23-3369.7%175(5.3)54-255(4.7)(15.9)
SEATTLE - Turnovers, Penalties and Special Teams Statistics
 Turnovers LostThird DownsFourth DownsKickoff ReturnsPunt ReturnsPenalties
 INTFLTODIFF#-MADEPCT#-MADEPCTKR-YDSYPKRPR-YDSYPPRPEN-YDS
Stats For (All Games)0.01.01.00.011-436.4%1-1100.0%3-60(20)2-3(1.5)4-69
Opponents Avg. Stats Against011211-436.4%1-1100.0%3-60(20)3-2(1.5)4-69
Stats Against (All Games)1.00.01.0 12-650.0%1-00.0%4-89(22.2)0-0(0)8-65
Opponents Avg. Stats For101 12-650.0%1-00.0%4-89(22.2)0-0(0)8-65

SAN DIEGO - Current Season Performance
 Straight UpAgainst SpreadTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsW-LO-UScoreHalfYardsYPPTOScoreHalfYardsYPPTO
All Games0-1-11-00-117.03.0290.0(4.8)1.018.06.0403.0(6.4)2.0
Last 3 Games0-1-11-00-117.03.0290.0(4.8)1.018.06.0403.0(6.4)2.0
SAN DIEGO - Current Season Statistics
 RushingPassingTotal
 PPGHalfFDTOPATT-YDSYPRCMP-ATTPCTYDSPYAATT-YDSYPPYPPT
Offense (All Games)17.03.015.028:1124-52(2.2)21-3658.3%238(6.6)60-290(4.8)(17.1)
Opponents Defensive Avg.1731528:1124-52(2.2)21-3658.3%238(6.6)60-290(4.8)(17.1)
Defense (All Games)18.06.022.031:4926-109(4.2)24-3764.9%294(7.9)63-403(6.4)(22.4)
Opponents Offensive Avg.1862232:4926-109(4.2)24-3764.9%294(7.9)63-403(6.4)(22.4)
SAN DIEGO - Turnovers, Penalties and Special Teams Statistics
 Turnovers LostThird DownsFourth DownsKickoff ReturnsPunt ReturnsPenalties
 INTFLTODIFF#-MADEPCT#-MADEPCTKR-YDSYPKRPR-YDSYPPRPEN-YDS
Stats For (All Games)1.00.01.01.015-640.0%1-00.0%0-0(0)2-17(8.5)6-47
Opponents Avg. Stats Against101-115-640.0%1-00.0%0-0(0)17-2(8.5)6-47
Stats Against (All Games)0.02.02.0 13-646.2%0-00.0%3-49(16.3)0-0(0)5-23
Opponents Avg. Stats For022 13-646.2%0-00.0%3-49(16.3)0-0(0)5-23
Average power rating of opponents played: SEATTLE 18,  SAN DIEGO 26
SCHEDULE AND RESULTS
SEATTLE - Season Results
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateOpponentScoreSULineATSTot.O/URushingPassingTORushingPassingTO
9/4/2014GREEN BAY36-16W-4.5W46.5O37-20719-28-191121-8023-33-1751
9/14/2014@ SAN DIEGO            
9/21/2014DENVER            
10/6/2014@ WASHINGTON            
10/12/2014DALLAS            

SAN DIEGO - Season Results
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateOpponentScoreSULineATSTot.O/URushingPassingTORushingPassingTO
9/8/2014@ ARIZONA17-18L3W45U24-5221-36-238126-10924-37-2942
9/14/2014SEATTLE            
9/21/2014@ BUFFALO            
9/28/2014JACKSONVILLE            
10/5/2014NY JETS            
10/12/2014@ OAKLAND            
KEY GAME INFORMATION
SEATTLE: Under head coach Pete Carroll, the Seahawks have churned out yards behind a zone-blocking scheme, first overseen by Alex Gibbs and now by Tom Cable. They use a lot of inside zone plays to free up Marshawn Lynch for yardage between the tackles. Lynch took a huge workload last year, and could give way to Christine Michael and Robert Turbin a bit more often this season. Seattle also gets a lot of rushing yards out of quarterback Russell Wilson, who takes the option to run on a lot of designed rollouts. The red zone is typically all Lynch all the time, as he had nearly two-thirds of their red zone touches. That won't change this year.
Seattle utilizes Wilson's mobility by moving the pocket around a lot'Wilson also moves when it isn't by design due to his lack of size and Seattle's shaky pass protection. They'll move Percy Harvin around and feature him in catch-and-run situations as the likely focal point of the passing game. The other receivers, some mix of Doug Baldwin, Jermaine Kearse, Sidney Rice and rookie Paul Richardson, will work downfield. They'll use Zach Miller as a check- down option, while Lynch is occasionally used in the screen game. When they throw in the red zone, Miller was most often their top weapon in the end zone.
Seattle led the NFL in scoring defense, total defense, red-zone defense and interceptions in 2013. The 'Legion of Boom' may miss cornerbacks Brandon Browner and Walter Thurmond, but All-Pro cornerback Richard Sherman and free safety Earl Thomas still remain. The front seven is still stacked with defensive ends Michael Bennett and Cliff Avril, who combined for 16.5 sacks for the Seahawks last season.
SAN DIEGO: Veteran offensive line coach Joe D'Alessandris kept San Diego's man-blocking scheme for the most part intact during his first season with the Chargers. They've also turned to a full committee approach. Ryan Mathews will once again lead the rotation as long as he stays healthy. Danny Woodhead will most passing downs and, surprisingly considering his size, stays on the field in many red-zone situations. Donald Brown will have a significant role as well, spelling Mathews and Woodhead on all three downs. The trio will continue to rotate inside the 20 with Woodhead getting the most touches.
Philip Rivers found new life last year under offensive coordinator Ken Whisenhunt. Whiz took the head job in Tennessee, but new OC Franck Reich ascends from quarterbacks coach and should keep the game plan intact. There are a lot more quick throws in this offense, keeping Rivers upright and also giving San Diego's playmakers a chance. Keenan Allen is the No. 1 target, often working the same side of the field as tight end Antonio Gates, the second receiver. Woodhead will continue to have a big role as an underneath target, stealing chances from slot receiver Eddie Royal. Allen emerged as a big threat when they threw deep in opponent territory last season, partially because teams still focus coverage on Gates. Woodhead remains a big receiving threat around the goal line, and second TE Ladarius Green appears ready for a bigger role. Malcom Floyd will be the deep threat if he can stay healthy. If not, Vincent Brown will assume that role. John Pagano's 3-4 defense doesn't give up many points, but they finished 30th in takeaways last year and ranked 23rd in both total defense and sacks. With no significant free agent additions, rookie CB Jason Verrett is the only real upgrade here.
PREVIEW
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PA SPORTSTICKER PRO FOOTBALL PREVIEW (SEATTLE-SAN DIEGO) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

*Seahawks-Chargers Preview* ===========================

By JEFF BARTL STATS Senior Writer

What many viewed as a 20-point domination of a fellow NFC contender in the league's season opener last week didn't feel the same to the reigning Super Bowl champions.

The Seattle Seahawks rightly possess expectations of themselves that exceed the norm, and their confident yet banged-up defense is stressing improvement heading into Sunday's road matchup with the San Diego Chargers.

Seattle held Green Bay's offense to 255 yards - fewer than its league-leading average of 292.3 allowed per game in 2013 - and sacked Aaron Rodgers three times in last Thursday's 36-16 home victory.

But the Seahawks allowed a first-quarter touchdown, matching the amount they gave up in 19 games during their championship run last season, and Rodgers connected on 69.7 percent of his passes after opposing quarterbacks completed 59.0 percent in 2013.

Those out-of-character occurrences irked Pro Bowl cornerback Richard Sherman.

"It was off. We weren't up to par. We weren't up to snuff, and I think everyone feels that way," Sherman said. "We've got to play better."

After an overall solid effort didn't impress them, the Seahawks must move forward without another member of a secondary regarded as one of the deepest in the league. Tharold Simon missed the opener due to knee surgery and will be out at least four weeks, and fellow cornerback Jeremy Lane injured his groin against the Packers and will miss at least eight weeks.

Safety Kam Chancellor is confident the back unit will be just fine.

"(I) have no concerns at all. We always say no weak links," Chancellor said. "Anything we know, anything we see on the field, we share with our backups, we share with each other. So everyone is on the same beat (and) if anyone goes down a guy can step right in, step in with confidence and finish the game."

Rookie Marcus Burley, acquired in a trade with Indianapolis on Aug. 30, stepped in for Lane and is expected to remain in that role.

"We really liked the kid coming in and did a fantastic job of being ready to play in that game down the stretch," coach Pete Carroll said. "We have no other alternatives that we would think of at this point."

Seattle has had plenty of time to prepare for the Chargers, who let an 11-point, third-quarter lead slip away in Monday's 18-17 loss to Arizona. Philip Rivers threw for 238 yards and a touchdown, but a snap sailed over his head in the fourth to put San Diego out of field-goal range and helped the Cardinals get in position to score twice in the final 12 1/2 minutes.

Coach Mike McCoy stressed those types of mistakes can't happen again.

"Against a good football team that's coming here on Sunday, you can't give them the opportunities," McCoy said. "You've got to put them away when you have the chance."

Perhaps the biggest positive that came from the defeat was the performance of Malcom Floyd, who caught four passes for 50 yards and a touchdown. He missed the final 14 games of last season after suffering a neck injury.

"(We need to) just move on," Floyd said. "It's time to get ready for the Seahawks. We have another tough game coming up. Their secondary is pretty good, and we're fortunate enough to have gone against great secondaries this preseason as well as (Seattle) to get a taste for them. So it's sort of promising looking ahead to the next game."

That preseason matchup with Seattle didn't go very well, though, especially for the Chargers defense. Russell Wilson went 11 of 13 for 121 yards, ran for two touchdowns and led scoring drives on each of the four series he played in the Seahawks' 41-14 win.

Wilson threw for 191 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions, posting a 110.9 rating, while Marshawn Lynch rushed 20 times for 110 yards and two scores.

Percy Harvin had 59 yards receiving and 41 on the ground, and the Chargers realize they will have their hands full with the Seattle offense as they look to avoid their first 0-2 start since 2008.

"The big thing is we learn from our mistakes," linebacker Dwight Freeney said. "We would love to win every single game that we play but it just doesn't happen. So we have to focus on what we need to get better on."

Seattle has won six of the last seven meetings, winning the most recent one 27-20 on Sept. 26, 2010, despite Rivers throwing for a career-high 455 yards.

The previous five meetings each were decided by three points or fewer.

Game Notes:


Last Updated: 5/6/2024 4:34:11 AM EST.


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