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Super send-off for Seahawks

Circus begins before team lands in New Jersey for game

The Columbian
Published: January 26, 2014, 4:00pm
2 Photos
A huge crowd in SeaTac gives a rousing send-off to the Seattle Seahawks while the team buses go by on the way to the Sea-Tac International Airport.
A huge crowd in SeaTac gives a rousing send-off to the Seattle Seahawks while the team buses go by on the way to the Sea-Tac International Airport. The Seahawks will play the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XLVIII Sunday in East Rutherford, N.J. Photo Gallery

JERSEY CITY, N.J. — Seven days prior to the organization’s second Super Bowl appearance, the Seahawks received their first dose of demand. Things are just getting started.

Sunday started with a packed sendoff from their practice headquarters in Renton. Thousands of fans spilled into the road slowing the bus.

There was also a gantlet of fans along the roads approaching Sea-Tac International Airport.

Seahawks coach Pete Carroll estimated he watched about three hours of film during the 41/2-hour flight to Newark.

Once they arrived, the Seahawks walked through the same doors they did six weeks ago, crunching through the gray curbside snow piles.

Police and their cars lined the streets awaiting the arrival of the NFC champions. Packed into buses, they pulled up to the Westin Hotel on Washington Boulevard in resurgent Jersey City just like they did for the Dec. 15 game against the New York Giants.

A few distinct differences this time. Dozens of officers and security personnel were present. Almost as many cameras were at the hotel entrance. There were cameras when the plane landed, prompting Carroll to wonder the importance of documenting deplaning.

The lobby was filled with “NFC Champions” material for sale. Other booths draped in NFL logos were set up.

That was just the start of the chaos. Once Carroll and six players-Russell Wilson, Richard Sherman, Max Unger, Earl Thomas, Cliff Avril and Doug Baldwin-made it upstairs to the conference room, the first large dose of what this week would be like began.

Sherman’s interview table was engulfed by television cameras before the Seahawks reached the hotel. Reporters stood four deep to get a view and sound from Sherman, who has rocketed to an amplified level of national fame following his postgame interview in the NFC title game. One reporter joked to another, “You’re obstructing my inability to see.”

This is part of the pregame battle to be waged. More press conferences follow Monday, preceding Media Day on Tuesday, a day the Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey view with pride.

The Seahawks, as it has been noted, have little Super Bowl experience. Backup wide receiver Ricardo Lockette was at last year’s Super Bowl while with the San Francisco 49ers. Outside of that, no player has dealt with this scenario.

“We’ve had a process to deal with the biggest occurrences we could deal with,” Carroll said. “If we just started talking about it this week, I don’t think we’d have a chance. But, we’ve been preparing to be a championship team all along.

“We’re not going to try to live up to the moment. We’re not going to try to elevate to this wonderful setting that we’re in. We’re going to try to do the things we know how to do.”

Carroll joked he did not have Lockette make a presentation to the team about how to be prepared. But was serious when talking about another mental element for the Seahawks to deal with.

The NFC title game came with an almost equal amount of pressure considering the opponent. There is no blood lust between the Broncos and Seahawks the way there was with Seattle and San Francisco. Satisfaction with that win and making the Super Bowl is something the Seahawks are guarding against.

“That’s an issue,” Carroll said. ” ‘OK, we got here, we got that done.’ Or just the sense of relief that you’ve arrived here. We had great matchups down the schedule and there were none bigger than the San Francisco matchup. Though we’re young, I think they’ve got a mature perspective of what it takes to perform really well and that’s what we’re relying on.”

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Sherman does not see a problem.

“I’ve never seen experience play in a game,” he said. “We don’t worry about things like that. We didn’t have any experience in the NFC championship either, and we were fine there. And I think us treating every week like a championship experience, like a championship game, has helped us kind of look at every game the same.”

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