Seattle, WA
This Week in Seahawks History: Not just ‘The Tip’
This will be a weekly article series throughout the season looking back on what happened for the Seattle Seahawks 40, 30, 20, and 10 years ago this week.
In this edition, we have the NFC Championship rubber match with the San Francisco 49ers. It means a bit more now that Pete Carroll is no longer the coach of the Seahawks.
40 Years Ago
Finished with a record of 11-8, losing in the AFC Championship game.
30 Years Ago
Finished with a record of 6-10, missed playoffs.
20 Years Ago
Finished with a record of 10-7, losing in the NFC Wild Card round.
10 Years Ago
Sunday, January 19, 2014
Game Log
CenturyLink Field in Seattle, Washington, the site of the NFC Championship game for the 2013 season. This was an NFC West showdown between the Seattle Seahawks and the San Francisco 49ers, with each team holding serve at home during the regular season. You’ve got Pete Carroll vs Jim Harbaugh, Russell Wilson vs Colin Kaepernick, and…Richard Sherman vs Michael Crabtree? We’ll get to that one later on.
The game started off in nearly the worst possible way. Seattle got the ball first and their opening drive lasted all of one play as Russell Wilson fumbled on a sack from future preseason Seahawks Legend Aldon Smith. who recovered the fumble at the Seattle 15. Credit to the Seahawks defense, as they held the 49ers to a 25-yard FG from Phil Dawson to limit the damage to a 3 point deficit. Three punts later and it was already the 2nd Quarter with SF starting a drive on their own 14. After the drive was extended on a 3rd down defensive holding penalty by Richard Sherman, Colin Kaepernick got loose for consecutive scampers of 12 and 58 yards to set the 49ers up inside the red zone. Frank Gore got them to the doorstep, but Anthony “Boobie” Dixon was the one who plunged in from 1 yard out – after the play was called no gain and overturned on review – to put SF up 10-0.
Seattle finally got things going on offense on the ensuing drive, helped along by a 51-yard completion from Wilson to Doug Baldwin to the SF 11. Sadly, the drive went backwards from there and the Seahawks settled for a 32-yard Stephen Hauschka FG to pull within one score at 10-3. Seattle forced a punt on the next drive and the Seahawks had the ball near FG range at the end of the 2nd Quarter but turned the ball over on downs. SF kneeled the ball to take the game to halftime with the 49ers leading 10-3.
The Seahawks defense forced a punt on the first drive of the 2nd half giving their offense the ball near midfield and Seattle started feeding the Beast(mode). After Marshawn Lynch gained 16 yards on the first two carries of the drive, Wilson found Baldwin for 4 yards to set up 3rd and 1. Lynch exploded for a 40-yard TD run to tie the game at 10-10. All of that momentum was lost on the next drive when SF drove down the field and capped it off with a 26-yard TD pass from Kaepernick to Anquan Boldin to regain the lead at 17-10. Doug Baldwin ripped off a nice 69-yard kickoff return to set the Seahawks up in prime position. They advanced into the red zone but sputtered again and ended up with a 40-yard FG from Hauschka to claw closer at 17-13.
After another punt, Seattle took over on offense again at their own 38. The Seahawks were moving the ball well until Wilson took a 16-yard intentional grounding penalty right at the end of the 3rd Quarter. He got 15 of those yards back on 3rd and 22 with a pass to Zach Miller which would prove to be crucial as Seattle chose to go for it on 4th and 7 at the SF 35. Wilson barked out the hard count and Aldon Smith jumped, giving Seattle a free play. Russ went for it all and threw a beautiful moon ball to the end zone where it was cradled expertly by Jermaine Kearse for a go-ahead 35 yard TD to give the Seahawks their first lead of the game at 20-17. On the next drive, the potent combo of Cliff Avril and Michael Bennett struck again with Avril strip-sacking Kaepernick and Bennett recovering the ball and returning it 17 yards to the SF 6.
Full disclosure – with all of the crazy happenings that will come later in the game, I totally forgot about these intermittent drives where Seattle could have possibly iced the game.
With this field position, Seattle scores 9/10 times, right? Well…
Lynch got 1 yard on the first play. Then, Alvin Bailey false started. Following this was an incomplete pass. On 3rd and goal from the 10, Wilson found his buddy Jermaine Kearse who fumbled near the goal line where it was recovered by Lynch at the 1. Navarro Bowman’s knee was collateral damage in the scrum, and he would miss the entire 2014 season. Seattle went for it and the exchange between Wilson and Lynch was fumbled and slapped around until it was recovered back at the 15 yard line. If only they had known about the “tush push”!
Never fear, as two plays later Kam Chancellor picked off Kaepernick at the SF 40 about halfway through the 4th Quarter. As usual, Seattle was moving the ball until they shot themselves in the foot when Wilson fumbled the snap on a screen play and threw it away – but not before Kearse was called for offensive pass interference. At least the Seahawks were able to get a 47-yard Hauschka FG out of that drive to extend the lead to 23-17 with 3:43 remaining. It looked as if the Seahawks defense would tap the 49ers out, but they converted on 4th and 2 to keep the drive alive. They then strung together positive plays and before you knew it, SF had a 1st and 10 at the Seattle 18 with 0:55 seconds left trailing by a mere 6 points. This was when perhaps the most iconic play in a season packed with them unfolded.
“The Tip”
Kaepernick took the snap and looked to his right the whole way. He uncorked the ball to the side of the end zone, where Michael Crabtree was matched up with Richard Sherman. Sherm needed all of his massive wing span to get a hand on the ball, where it was corralled by Malcolm Smith for the game-sealing interception. The stadium absolutely exploded and Sherman got a taunting penalty for running up to Crabtree and sticking his hand out for a handshake. Who gives a crap about an extra 10 yards when you ice the game like that? Three glorious kneel downs later and the Seahawks were headed to their 2nd Super Bowl in team history, facing the Mile High-flying Denver Broncos who had already punched their ticket earlier in the day.
Russell Wilson was 16/25 for 215 yards, 1 TD, 0 INT. Marshawn Lynch had 22 carries for 109 yards and 1 TD. Doug Baldwin had 6 catches for 106 yards. Jermaine Kearse had 2 catches for 44 yards and 1 massive TD.
Michael Bennett had 1.0 sack, 1 FF, and 1 FR. Cliff Avril nearly matched that with 1.0 sack and 1 FF. Kam Chancellor and Malcolm Smith had 1 INT each. Bobby Wagner also deserved a shout out with 15 tackles.
Here are the full playoff results for the week:
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Remember that old saying “defense wins championships”? That was definitely true for the Seahawks against the 49ers, but will it carry over to the Super Bowl? Even if you already know, it will be fun to relive it!
Seattle, WA
Seattle’s first homicide of 2026 is a case that began more than 50 years ago
SEATTLE – In 1973, a 19-year-old man was shot near Garfield High School, a tragedy that left him paralyzed for the rest of his life. The medical examiner has now officially ruled his recent death a homicide — a rare “delayed death” directly linked to those decades-old injuries.
Prosecutors say the case is legally closed because the suspects are now dead. Still, it raises a question: What happens to cases that don’t end with an arrest?
Local perspective:
Detective Rolf Norton has dedicated his career to finding answers in cases many assume are over. Norton refuses to call them “cold cases.” He insists they are not forgotten or “sitting on the shelf collecting dust.”
For Norton, they are not over — just unfinished.
Norton has been with Seattle police for 31 years, including the past 24 in homicide.
What they’re saying:
“There is no greater mission working homicides is what I wanted to do when I first got hired,” Norton said.
Waking up every day, he said, is easy. The challenge, fulfillment, significance and importance are why he doesn’t hesitate when he talks about murder investigations.
“There is no other crime that comes to the level of homicide. It’s the Fifth Commandment; it’s the foundation of society. It begins and ends with ‘We won’t kill each other,’ and to be tasked with investigating those crimes is really a great honor,” Norton said.
A Seattle native and graduate of the University of Washington, Norton worked as a legal assistant for the King County Prosecutor’s Office before being hired by Seattle police in 1994, when the city had about 500,000 residents.
“Flash me back to 1994 — I take a look, and then take the blindfold off. In 2026, I’ll look around, and I won’t recognize it,” Norton said.
Policing has changed, too — no body cameras then, no doorbell cameras, and certainly no security footage on every block.
“If the Green River Killer had been active in 2026 instead of 1983, we would have had him after number one or number two, because we would have had him on camera,” Norton said, referring to the serial killer who terrorized the region in the 1980s.
Dig deeper:
DNA technology has also evolved dramatically over the past two decades, from limited testing in the late 1990s to breakthroughs in genetic genealogy that help identify suspects decades later.
“In the past, it’s been more about, ‘We have this result. What can we do with it? How can we interpret it? How can we make it better?’ Now it’s — we go back to the start, starting from scratch. It’s crazy, and I’m excited with the optimism that all this brings,” Norton said.
Even with new tools, not every case has an ending.
“I’m on a one-person mission to change the vernacular. I can’t stand the word ‘cold case,’” Norton said. “I don’t call them cold cases because I’m working them.”
He says they are not binders that have sat untouched for decades at the bottom of a vault.
“If you walked into my office, I probably have 100 case files, and they’re all piled up in a very organized manner for me,” Norton said.
These are not just files — they are the names of someone’s loved one. Norton says he takes them home mentally and, at times, physically.
“There’s been some cases where I’ve printed out the original follow-up that the initial detectives produced, and have left them at every sleeping area in my house, and sometimes just pick it up and start reading saying, ‘What did I miss?’” Norton said.
Why you should care:
One of the cases he has carried for a decade is the killing of 14-year-old Tanya Frazier, who was kidnapped, sexually assaulted and murdered in 1994. An arrest was finally made last year, more than 30 years later.
“I’m pleased we got to where we are today, that we have made an arrest, but the process isn’t done,” Norton said.
Another case is “Baby Boy Doe,” found dead in November 1997 in a north Seattle gas station trash can after his mother delivered him and left him to die. Despite police sharing images of the mother walking toward the restroom, the case remained unsolved for years.
“I come to the photos of Baby Doe in a garbage can and it’s mind-blowing. Frankly, it’s life-changing, you see something that you immediately want to file away and never go back to, but you can’t because you have a job, a mission, and no one is looking out for baby doe, except for us,” Norton said, describing the crime scene photos publicly for the first time.
The mother, Christine Warren, was convicted in January 2023, but for years many believed the case would never be solved.
“It’s important to know that this child wasn’t forgotten,” said Casey McNerthney of the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office.
McNerthney said the same goes for the case of Joseph Garrett, even though it cannot be prosecuted.
Garrett was 19 when, according to a brief three-paragraph article in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, he was shot in the shoulder during a fight with another teen near Garfield High School. The bullet lodged in his spine, paralyzing him.
“It’s encouraging to see that Ralph Norton would see how police was on top of this one,” McNerthney said. “Many of the cases that people assume aren’t being looked at are actually on his desk.”
He also offered a warning.
“If somebody thinks they’ve gotten away with it because it’s a few years, or even a few decades in the past, they’re wrong. If you never know when that knock on the door will come, and at some point it will come,” McNerthney said.
For families, he added, time feels different.
“We know that for the surviving family members in these cases, every day is like the day they found out,” McNerthney said.
Norton acknowledges that being the face of that pain is not easy.
“You’re the face of the worst thing that ever happened to them and the family members, and you don’t always have good news,” Norton said.
When asked how he moves forward in each case knowing many remain unsolved for families, Norton said, “I think you need to focus on the process and not the result, and you need to be cognizant of what you can address today.”
The odds are not always in his favor.
“It’s tough. These cases are unsolved not because of a lack of effort. They’re unsolved because they’re difficult,” Norton said.
When asked what he would say to families still waiting for answers, Norton did not pause.
“I remember, we remember, I won’t quit. We won’t quit,” Norton said.
Norton has reviewed more than 600 unsolved cases dating from 1907 to 2020. During a recent interview, he shared a list of 13 names — cases for which he is the lead detective and continues to update families.
He is waiting for DNA technology to keep improving, hoping it will one day give families closure. While he does not promise resolutions, he wants families to know their loved ones are not far from his reach.
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Download the free FOX LOCAL app for mobile in the Apple App Store or Google Play Store for live Seattle news, top stories, weather updates and more local and national news.
The Source: Information in this story comes from original reporting by FOX 13 Seattle reporter Alejandra Guzman.
Seattle, WA
Paul Allen’s estate begins process to sell Seattle Seahawks
SEATTLE — The Seattle Seahawks are going up for sale in accordance with the wishes of late team owner Paul Allen.
Allen’s estate announced Wednesday that it has begun the process of selling the team, which is just coming off its second Super Bowl victory in franchise history.
Investment bank Allen & Company and law firm Latham & Watkins will lead the sales process, which is estimated to continue through the offseason. NFL owners must then ratify a final purchase agreement.
The estate said the sale is consistent with Allen’s directive to eventually sell his sports holdings and direct all estate proceeds to philanthropy.
The Seahawks have been in the Allen family since 1997, when Paul bought the Seahawks for $194 million from then-owner Ken Behring.
Since Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, died in 2018 from complications of non-Hodgkin lymphoma at 65, the Seahawks and NBA’s Trail Blazers have been owned by his sister, Jody. The estate agreed in September to sell the Trail Blazers to an investment group led by Carolina Hurricanes owner Tom Dundon.
–By Andrew Destin/The Associated Press
Seattle, WA
Burien, WA cold weather shelter expected to hit capacity as temperatures fall
BURIEN, Wash. – With a wintry mix of precipitation falling in parts of the Seattle metro area Tuesday, many of those experiencing homelessness were trying to figure out where they could go to stay warm overnight.
“For the most part, there are a lot of resources with churches, but not so much with the city,” said Matthew McMillen, who lives in an RV.
McMillen spent the day in Kent. Though he has an RV, it’s not heated.
“You have got a shell that’s metal, so inside it’s probably another 10 – 20 degrees colder inside,” McMillen said.
He says there is no guarantee he won’t be forced to move from its parking spot.
“They treat you like a criminal, having a motorhome. Mine is licensed and insured, and I still get chased around,” McMillen said.
“They are just getting aggressive. I get it, homelessness brings crime, but not everyone out here is like that,” said Thomas Arviso of Kent, who was hoping to stay with a family member overnight. “For the most part, just trying to get by.”
At the Highline United Methodist Church in Burien, Pastor Jenny Partch and other volunteers were stepping in to help get a cold weather shelter ready inside the church.
“When we open, the word spreads pretty fast,” Partch said.
“There is a 9-bed women’s shelter here in Burien, and that’s it in terms of shelter in the area. So, the need is great,” Partch said.
They expected 50–60 people overnight at the church’s cold weather shelter based on the number of people who needed help in January. There were people waiting outside on Tuesday night when the doors opened, eager to get out of the cold weather.
“We believe in what Jesus told us. When we feed someone or clothe someone or give them shelter, we are doing it to Jesus himself,” said Partch.
She says the need is great in South King County since the unhoused population has “exploded” over the past five years.
“It gives them a space where they start to feel like somebody cares and they want to make changes in their lives, so it’s that first step of what could come next for them,” said Partch.
Shelter beds at Highline United Methodist Church in Burien (FOX 13 Seattle)
The church will be open from 7 p.m. to 9 a.m. starting Tuesday and running through Friday morning. Pets and couples are allowed.
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Mom urges son’s killer to come forward after Seattle shooting in Pioneer Square
Young 12’s lost football at Seattle parade leads to call from Seahawk, community response
To get the best local news, weather and sports in Seattle for free, sign up for the daily FOX Seattle Newsletter.
Download the free FOX LOCAL app for mobile in the Apple App Store or Google Play Store for live Seattle news, top stories, weather updates and more local and national news.
The Source: Information in this story came from original FOX 13 Seattle reporting and interviews.
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