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Seattle Seahawks bag top seed on NFL final weekend
Sam Darnold's Seattle Seahawks beat the San Francisco 49ers 13-3 with a dominant defensive display Saturday, capturing the NFC top seed and earning a favorable route to the Super Bowl.
The win hands Seattle a first-round playoff bye, and home-field advantage in the post-season knockout rounds leading to next month's NFL championship spectacle.
"Our defense picked us up. They have been all year. They've been doing a great job," said quarterback Darnold.
The Seahawks yielded only 53 rushing yards against a highly rated 49ers offense, while Seattle's Kenneth Walker III personally rushed for 97 yards to help secure the NFC West division title.
"Incredible," Walker said. "We worked so hard from day one... we've been grinding up till now. But we got a lot of work to do, so we can't get satisfied."
For the 49ers, the loss means hitting the road for next weekend's wild-card round, and a trickier route to Super Bowl LX, which is being held at their home stadium in Santa Clara, California, on February 8.
With so much at stake, and both teams arriving at the regular season's final weekend on six-game winning streaks, a fiercely contested clash was assured -- but Seattle started far more explosively.
Zach Charbonnet ran for a 27-yard touchdown, Darnold peppered pinpoint throws, and a swarming Seahawks defense did not give up a first down in the first quarter.
Seattle's early dominance was not fully reflected in the 10-3 half-time score.
Quarterback Brock Purdy's 49ers offense appeared to finally cut loose in the fourth quarter.
But an eight-play drive collapsed yards from the end zone, with an interception deflected off Christian McCaffrey.
As the clock ticked down, a worn-out and injury-depleted San Francisco defense struggled to cope with Seahawks' rapid rushing game, led by Walker and Charbonnet.
Seattle kicker Jason Myers missed a 26-yard field goal late on -- his second miss of a windy night -- but the Seahawks were not made to rue his profligacy.
- 'From my own couch' -
Earlier Saturday, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers held off Carolina 16-14 in a rain-soaked and error-strewn clash, keeping their playoff hopes alive to the season's bitter end.
The win prevented the Panthers from locking up the NFC's last post-season berth and leaves both teams anxiously watching Sunday's results to learn which one progresses.
"We just found a way to win right there -- tough divisional opponent, and we did everything we could today," said Bucs quarterback Baker Mayfield.
"Sit back and see what happens tomorrow," said Mayfield, who threw for a touchdown, completing 16-of-22 attempted passes for 203 yards.
Despite both teams ending the regular season with an 8-9 losing record, one is still guaranteed to win the historically weak NFC South division.
Whether the Bucs or the Panthers advance now depends on the outcome of a clash between two teams with no hope of reaching the playoffs -- the Atlanta Falcons and the New Orleans Saints.
Tampa Bay, who have won the NFC South for the past four years and started this season well before imploding, will be rooting for the in-form Saints.
Carolina must rely on inconsistent Atlanta. If the Falcons win, a three-way tie atop the NFC South at 8-9 would send the Panthers through on head-to-head results.
Tampa Bay scored on the opening drive and never relinquished the lead, as torrential downpours contributed to messy interceptions and fumbles.
Jalen Coker's late touchdown gave Carolina hope, but the Buccaneers held on.
A grinning Mayfield joked he will now learn his playoff fate "from my own couch."
D.Johnson--AT