Share

Dolphins Begin Season With Loss in Seattle

Wilson suffered a sprained ankle early in the third quarter of Sunday’s 12-10 victory over Miami, but after a few anxious moments as he had it examined and worked on, Wilson returned to play the rest of the game.

Advertisement

He looked like his offense: He lacked zip.

“He’s a tough dude”, Baldwin said, via the Times. Wilson limped through the possession before getting examined on the sideline and having his foot and ankle taped.

Whether you believe Golden Tate caught Russell Wilson’s desperation pass on Monday Night Football in 2012, or you think it was picked off, it still goes down as a Seahawks win in the record books and one of the most freakish ones you’ll ever see. “He’s just great at it”, Seattle coach Pete Carroll said.

Asked Monday morning on Seattle’s 710-AM radio if Wilson had a high-ankle sprain that are more problematic, Carroll said Wilson has “a little bit of everything”. “It doesn’t matter what it is”, Carroll said.

The play, which came on second-and-goal, was scheduled to be a run. The Seahawks converted a pair of fourth downs on the drive and capped the winning march with a 2-yard touchdown pass to Doug Baldwin with 31 seconds left. “The one way that you can put yourself in a good position is you have to execute what your game plan is and you can’t get caught up in what’s going on outside of the field”. The Dolphins play the New England Patriots on Sunday at 1 PM EST.

Carroll said the team is discussing the possibility of adding a veteran quarterback.

Williams must now pass all steps of the mandatory league concussion protocol before he can return to practice, so his status for the next game is certainly in question. “You believe in your guys”. Before that, though, the Dolphins had a chance to end it with Seattle facing fourth-and-four at its own 47-yard line.

Then, out of nowhere, the Dolphins went 86 yards on seven plays. Miami ended with 222 yards and 11 first downs.

Advertisement

The Kansas City Chiefs also linked arms before their game and cornerback Marcus Peters, who’s an Oakland native, raised his fist saying he supported Kaepernick’s efforts to raise awareness of the justice system. He liked that he had to try and finish this thing because he wanted to see if he could do it. “The biggest thing that we talked about the entire week was that bad things happen”.

Doug Baldwin: Seahawks will stand, interlock arms during anthem