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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Seahawks’ adjusted goal: a winning record

Associated Press

RENTON, Wash. – Matt Hasselbeck is goal-oriented. Right now, that leaves him and his Seahawks in an altered state.

Seattle’s captain and three-time Pro Bowl quarterback has stopped talking about the goals the team set this summer – winning the NFC West for the fifth time in six seasons, or at least returning to the playoffs after a one-year absence.

Now, with postseason hopes still almost nonexistent despite two straight wins that have the Seahawks at 5-7 with four games remaining, Hasselbeck is rallying his team around a more modest goal – a winning season.

“That’s absolutely what we’re still playing for,” he said after leading the game-winning drive in the final minute of a 20-17 victory over San Francisco on Sunday. “The way to do it, though, is one game at a time, one practice at a time, one play at a time, just doing all the things we said before the season is so important.”

Admittedly, it’s a modest goal now. Yet for a team that was 4-12 last season and just forced out its president and general manager, Seattle will take it.

“It would be easy to look at all the mistakes we’ve made, and look at the big mountain we have to climb to accomplish it, and get discouraged,” Hasselbeck said. “So we just have to stay focused.

“If a (winning season) happens, it happens. We can control a good part of that.”

It would take stretching the winning streak to an improbable six games, plus a combination of flops in front of them too numerous to mention, for Seattle to steal a wild-card berth with a 9-7 record in the jumbled NFC. Losing both games to first-place Arizona (8-4) takes away virtually all hope of winning the division.

So coach Jim Mora isn’t motivated by even the faintest of postseason prospects.

“No, not really,” Mora said Monday. “I mean, every once in a while, sure, you give it a little thought, but really what we’re trying to do is focus on the next game and getting better.”

That next game is Sunday at Houston (5-7). And getting better includes the constant concern over the health of the indispensable, 34-year-old quarterback.

A sore shoulder may cost Hasselbeck some practice time but not the start against the Texans.

Hasselbeck, who missed 21/2 games earlier this season with broken ribs, got his throwing shoulder – already aching for weeks – driven into the turf on a third-and-1 scramble in the third quarter. San Francisco’s Dashon Goldson hit him low, and Takeo Spikes came in across his back for a blow Hasselbeck felt on his ribs.

The double whammy left him down momentarily, but not out, and he came back to lead the win.