Seattle Survives Arizona Rally with Assist from the Rulebook
This looked like one of those games that crawl to the finish line. Seattle looked like it had things handled for most of the night, and then out of nowhere, Arizona strung together a furious rally to erase a 14‑point hole and tie it up with less than 30 seconds left in the game.
Just when it felt like overtime was inevitable, the Cardinals botched a kickoff under the league’s new “landing zone” rule, handing Seattle prime field position at the 40. From there, Sam Darnold calmly hit a couple of big-time throws, set up Jason Myers, and the veteran drilled a 52‑yarder at the horn. Ballgame. Arizona’s comeback fell just short, and the Seahawks walked out with a 23–20 win that had no business being that close.
Chaos in the Desert: From Cruise Control to Cardiac Finish
Seattle Laid the Foundation, Brick by Brick
For about 50 minutes, the Seahawks looked like the team with the answers. Mike Macdonald’s defense set the tone early — tight, physical, and fast to the quarterback. Kyler Murray spent most snaps feeling bodies brush past his shoulder pads. Seattle finished with six sacks and a heap of additional hits, and it showed up in the rhythm of the game: Arizona couldn’t stack successful plays. Through three quarters, the Cardinals’ offense was sitting on 138 total yards and three points.
The pass rush rotation really told the story. Uchenna Nwosu notched a pair of sacks, Leonard Williams bullied the interior, and the rest of the group kept mixing in looks that left Arizona’s line guessing. Even when Seattle wasn’t actually bringing extra heat, the mere threat of it forced the Cardinals to play on edge. That’s why Kyler’s release time sped up — not because the game plan called for quick hitters, but because survival mode kicked in.
As for the run defense, it was about as sturdy as you’ll see. With James Conner sidelined, Arizona leaned on Trey Benson and Emari Demercado, with Kyler sprinkling in keepers. The result? Just 89 rushing yards total, and most of those were Kyler scrambling around with no one open down the field. Outside of that, every designed run felt like pushing a boulder uphill.
Offense Did Its Job… Mostly
Seattle’s offense wasn’t a fireworks show, but it was unmistakably functional and, at the right moments, creative. Sam Darnold finished 18‑of‑26 for 242 and a touchdown, but the box score undersells how he managed leverage and downs. Darnold had six first downs through the air, compared to just 2 for Murray on the other sideline. Klint Kubiak asked him to live in the middle — play‑action keepers, boots, and those rhythm throws that set up the explosive later. You saw it on the last drive of the first half: a pocket scramble, eyes up, and an improvisational rope to tight end Elijah Arroyo for 32; then Darnold took off himself for 24; then the red‑zone control to finish.
Tight ends were a feature, not a safety valve. Rookie A.J. Barner found the end zone on a 16‑yard seam where Darnold manipulated the backside safety with his eyes. Arroyo added chunk gains that don’t look sexy on the highlight reel but matter to coaches because they flip field position. Meanwhile, the backs did the grunt work: Kenneth Walker III banging out the tough 4‑ to 6‑yarders, Zach Charbonnet punishing edges as the clock manager.
But for as good as the structure was, Seattle let Arizona breathe. A Coby Bryant interception should’ve been a backbreaker. Instead, the return turned into a fumble right back to the Cardinals after friendly fire. Later, a Jaxon Smith‑Njigba holding call nuked a pretty Charbonnet touchdown run that would’ve stretched the lead to three scores. Those two snapshots really showed Seattle’s only real problem in this one: finishing.
Arizona’s Night: From Sputters to Sparks
If you only watched the last two drives, you’d think the Cardinals found an identity. The trick is figuring out why it took so long. Some of it is Seattle’s defense, no question. Some of it was self‑inflicted.
Early‑Game Issues
Receiver‑QB misfires. The two early interceptions on Harrison Jr. targets weren’t identical mistakes, but they were cousins. The first came on a route MHJ inexplicably pulls up early, pulling Murray’s ball right into a safety’s lap. The second was a slant that hit him in the hands and turned into a tip drill. That’s not a talent problem, that’s chemistry.
Protection stress. Six sacks allowed isn’t solely on the line — a few were coverage sacks, some were Kyler holding to find explosives that weren’t there. But the broader point remains: too many snaps where the first read was smothered and the pocket wasn’t clean enough to get to the third.
No run game on demand. Without Conner, Arizona doesn’t have the “we need four yards right now” call they trust. Benson has juice, Demercado is useful, but the staff hasn’t found the sequencing that sets them up to succeed on early downs. That shows up in third‑and‑8s and drives stalling out and ending with field goals rather than touchdowns.
The Comeback Formula (That Can Travel)
When the Cardinals finally flipped the switch, it looked like this: quicker tempo, more empty, trust Harrison in isolation, let Murray stress the edges with his legs, and add one chaos play per drive. The 29‑yard scramble was the best example — what should've been an uneventful play turned into a back‑breaker. The fourth‑down grab by Michael Wilson was exactly the kind of “somebody make a play” downfield answer that bad offenses never find.
And Harrison’s touchdown wasn’t just a highlight. It was a declaration. Witherspoon was in phase. The throw required touch and confidence. Harrison won the ball with strong hands and body control that few can match. For a player who had really struggled to start the year and didn't have the year anyone was hoping for last season either, that sequence mattered.
The Walk‑Off: How Seattle Closed It
Start at the 40, two timeouts, :28 left. That’s basically the dream setup if you’re a play‑caller. You don’t need miracles — just two or three clean plays. And Seattle had exactly the guy to lean on: Jaxon Smith‑Njigba, who had been quiet all night until it really mattered. On the second snap, Darnold saw the coverage he wanted and dropped a gorgeous back‑shoulder ball to JSN for 22. The timing was perfect — out of his hand before JSN even turned — and the placement was one of those throws you teach in clinics, low and outside where only your guy can grab it. JSN did the rest, getting his body turned and his elbows out of bounds to stop the clock.
From there, Seattle kept it simple. Zach Charbonnet got the nudge run to line things up in the middle of the field. Timeout. Then out came Jason Myers, who had already missed from just one yard further back earlier in the quarter, but looked locked in, sniffing on a smelling salt on his way out to the field. Snap, hold, swing — pure. Seahawks 23, Cardinals 20.
The Rule You’ll See on Film Cut‑Ups All Week
Let’s be clear on the kickoff rule, because it decided the map for the final 28 seconds. The NFL’s revised format sets a landing zone from the goal line to the 20. If a kickoff fails to reach that zone — think of a dropped‑short pop that lands at the 2 or a squib that dies at the 15 after hitting a blocker — the receiving team doesn’t have to start with a return. The ball is placed at the 40‑yard line. It’s designed to discourage “mortar” kicks that pin a returner and to reduce high‑speed collisions while preserving returns that begin in that defined area.
Arizona’s kick landed short. Intentional or not, it’s a tactical error at this exact moment in a tie game. Kick it deep into the zone, make Seattle burn time moving 35‑plus yards to get to realistic field‑goal range. Instead, the Seahawks got a free 15–20 yards of field position relative to a standard touchback. It’s not why Myers nailed the 52 — he still had to make a big‑boy kick — but it’s absolutely how Seattle could play the sideline and keep its timeouts in pocket.
This is going to be a special‑teams coaching point for the rest of the year. In tight games, the margin isn’t just which team has the better kicker; it’s which team better manages the new kickoff geometry.
Big Picture Takeaways: Where Do They Go From Here?
Seahawks (3–1)
You don’t apologize for surviving on the road, not in the division, and certainly not on a short week. Seattle leaves knowing two truths can live together: they controlled most of the night because their defense is real, and they still almost let it slip because finishing drives isn't their specialty. That’s fixable. The mini‑bye is a gift. Clean up the red zone. Keep the tight‑end involvement high. And keep the “closer” label ready for JSN when Kupp starts to open things up.
There’s a bigger picture forming, too. Under Macdonald, this team's going to be able to win in January because it can win a game on defense and a couple of throws. The walk‑off doesn’t change that; it confirms it. If Darnold keeps stacking late‑game drives like this, Seattle’s ceiling is higher than the “tough out” label they started the year with.
Cardinals (2–2)
This one hurts because it showcased both sides of what Arizona is right now. The ceiling? High enough to punk good defenses for a quarter when Kyler hits the NOS button and Harrison becomes unguardable. The floor? Long stretches where protection questions and timing issues invite three‑and‑outs.
They need an identity on early downs without Conner. That doesn’t mean abandoning the run; it means sequencing it so the backs aren’t asked to create something from nothing. It means scripted touches for Harrison to get him in rhythm before the contested catch moments. And it means Kyler stealing three first downs a game with his legs by design, not just by necessity.
On special teams, the lesson is simple: Don't squib kick late in the game anymore. Pat McAfee talked about the difficulty of that particular style of kick, and although it's great for getting the clock going, it's too unpredictable to use in big moments with the new penalties. In a tie game with less than 30 seconds left, the wrong kind of short kick is an unforced error you just can’t make.