The mood inside the Seahawks’ headquarters shifted from frustration to optimism this week, with the team fresh off a 34-14 win at Atlanta that at least temporarily put to bed some of the lingering issues that emerged during Seattle’s recent three-game losing streak.
After underutilizing running back Kenneth Walker III, the Seahawks gave him the ball 14 times, and he ran for 69 yards and a touchdown. That provided some balance for an offence that has leaned heavily on Geno Smith’s arm, with the Seahawks averaging an NFL-high 270.9 passing yards per game.
The Seahawks (4-3) also saw their run defence step up after a bumpy few weeks. They allowed just 39 rushing yards in the second half while forcing three turnovers.
With a victory under their belt and another new player on defence – linebacker Ernest Jones IV was acquired from Tennessee on Wednesday – Seattle has reason to look forward to its matchup on Sunday against the visiting Buffalo Bills (5-2).
The Seahawks will have to bring their A-game against the Bills and quarterback Josh Allen, who has a new, reliable target in receiver Amari Cooper.
The Bills have been a one of the NFL’s steadiest teams in the eight seasons since general manager Brandon Beane and coach Sean McDermott took over in 2017. They’ve made five consecutive playoff appearances and won four straight AFC East titles.
“You look at all the stats that drives winning, and all the take-away differential, field position, how well they’ve been running the ball, how well they’ve been playing situational football and defence, their special teams unit, the team doesn’t beat themselves,” Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald said. “I think if you can kind of create that formula, that’s going to be a tough team to beat on any given day.”
Allen is the only starting quarterback in the NFL without an interception this season, and he’s just the second after Alex Smith in 2017 to have 12 or more touchdown passes and no interceptions through seven games.
“[He’s] just becoming a great decision maker,” McDermott said. “He’s been very intentional about it and it’s important to him. He knows the value of playing clean football that way and protecting the house.”
All five of Buffalo’s wins have come against teams that have losing records entering this weekend.
No picks
Allen acknowledges a little bit of luck has gone into his interception-free start to the season. “They’ve dropped a couple, which helps,” said Allen, who has gone 286 attempts, including playoffs, since he last threw a pick in Buffalo’s 2023 season finale. Allen said he’s been making better decisions and has been more attuned to the game plan, without being overly conservative. “You’re going to have to take some risks,” said Allen, who threw a career-high 18 interceptions last season. “I’m not sitting back there not trying to throw interceptions.”