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Seattle Seahawks

Seahawks’ unsung make big plays

Chris Matthews recovers onside kick that led to Seahawks taking lead in fourth quarter.
Tim Booth Associated Press

SEATTLE – The last time Seattle punter Jon Ryan recalled throwing a pass that led to points, he was tossing a 2-point conversion for the University of Regina.

Steven Hauschka couldn’t recall attempting an onside kick in his four seasons with Seattle.

And Chris Matthews only spent four weeks on the Seahawks’ active roster.

While Russell Wilson and Marshawn Lynch will deservedly get the bulk of the attention for Seattle’s fourth-quarter comeback and eventual 28-22 overtime victory over Green Bay in the NFC championship on Sunday, the Seahawks would not have been in position for the comeback if not for special teams.

Seattle’s win – that clinched a second straight Super Bowl trip – was filled with unlikely characters coming through in key moments.

Tight end Luke Willson wasn’t even supposed to be involved in the 2-point conversion he caught to give Seattle a 22-19 lead. DeShawn Shead, with all of 89 defensive snaps in the regular season, was forced into action in the second quarter when All-Pro Earl Thomas left with a shoulder injury.

And Jermaine Kearse capped it all with his 35-yard touchdown catch in overtime.

“It just shows the character throughout, from top to bottom, for the entire team,” said backup tackle Garry Gilliam, who caught a 19-yard touchdown pass from Ryan – who played his college ball in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan – in the third quarter for Seattle’s first points.

“At any given time, anyone can make a play,” Gilliam added. “Given the opportunity, you’ve just got to do it.”

Seattle didn’t put the fake field goal into its game plan until Thursday.

Seattle noticed how hard the Packers crash their edge rushers on field-goal attempts and wanted to take advantage of the pursuit. The original design was for Ryan to keep the ball and run, using his athleticism to try and get the corner.

But when A.J. Hawk came up toward Ryan, he threw to the wide-open Gilliam.

Gilliam was a tight end at Penn State before making the switch to tackle his senior season, believing that was the best chance at having a professional career.

“I saw the guy that would have been covering me shoot down, so I was like, ‘Well the ball has to come to me at that point,’ ” Gilliam said. “So at the point, just catch it and score.”

The fake field goal was the jump-start Seattle needed. They were trailing 16-0, had just 120 yards of total offense and had committed four of their five turnovers.

While the fake field goal was the start, the onside kick was the difference. Wilson had just scored with 2:09 left to pull within 19-14. Hauschka said little is done in practice with onside kicks. The hope is to get the ball in the air and hope for a fortunate bounce.

“I thought he was going to catch it,” Hauschka said of seeing Brandon Bostick initially get his hands on the ball. “And then, it’s got a lot of spin on it. I guess you’re lucky. It’s a 50/50 ball after that.”

It was Seattle’s first successful onside kick since Oct. 4, 2009, at Indianapolis.

Matthews was the recipient of being in the right spot. He was in camp with Seattle, released at the end of August and then on and off the practice squad at various times of the season. He was signed to the active roster in early December, appearing in three games without catching a pass.

“They set me up in the best position to succeed and I wanted to take full advantage of it,” Matthews said.

“Hopefully I did what I had to do.”