If you are looking for low priced Seattle Seahawks tickets, then you’re going to love what we have to offer. We can give you access to the best seats in the Seahawks Stadium and every other Seahawks game for a lot less than any other ticket outlet prices. In fact, we’ve become one of the top sources of Seahawk tickets because of our great deals and seating, but these tickets usually go faster than we can sell them. Seahawks tickets are always in high demand because the Seahawks have become the most popular team of all major league sports; but you already knew that.
We’re offering you a chance to watch the Seattle Seahawks play live at CenturyLink Field. This stadium, conveniently known as “Seahawks Stadium,” gives you a chance to be close to the action and watch your favorite football team in real style. The stadium’s unique seating decks and partial roof direct exceptional amounts of crowd noise onto the field. This noise contributes to increased false start penalties because the opposing offenses can miss audibles and the snap counts. For this reason, the home team has a competitive advantage over the visiting teams. Therefore, purchase your Viking tickets now and cheer on your team to victory!
With Seahawk tickets, you can watch America’s team make another run for the playoffs and make history. And we offer them at the lowest prices, with access to the best seats in this truly advanced stadium, whether they’re luxury suites or club seats. We’ve also got great seats available for away games so that die-hard fans can make themselves heard and show their support. But these seats aren’t available for very long; in fact, they’re usually the first to go, so better act fast to make sure you can have a slice of Seahawks history.
We’ve got tickets available for all the Seahawks games this upcoming season, including the pre-season games. We make a point of securing tickets for even the most in-demand games so that you can have a shot at watching every game live. As real Seahawks fans ourselves, we know the value of watching a live Seahawks game, and we’re more than happy to share that opportunity with you.
So if you’re looking for Seahawks tickets with the lowest prices and the best seats in the house, then we’ve got exactly what you’re looking for. Feel free to check back for any updates or contact us for inquiries. Just remember, Seahawks tickets sell faster than hot cakes and you’ll need to be quick on your feet to take advantage of this great deal.
The Seahawks showed some life last year, and with the acquisition of QB Matt Flynn from Green Bay, they look to be competitive against any team in the league. This is important, because their schedule looks to be tough.
Opening day will be away against the Cardinals. Week 2 will see them playing their home against the Cowboys. Make sure you buy your Seahawks tickets early for this match up because it will sell out fast. Last year, Dallas was 8-8 and Seattle figures to be competitive against them. Matt Flynn will be making his debut in front of the home fans in what will be a loud and supportive crowd for the Seahawk players.
In week 3, the Green Bay Packers come to town. I expect this game to sell out of Seahawk tickets fast as well. The Packers were clearly one of the best teams in the league last season. With 13 wins in 2011, they will probably have a similar record this year. Matt Flynn was a former back up quarterback at Green Bay and will be anxious to show off his skills against his old team mates.
Week 6 the Patriots are coming to town, and although last year’s Patriot team was good, they may take a step back in 2012. That combined with a stronger Seattle team and this makes for a competitive game. The Seahawks will be coming home after a two day road trip, but they will have played the Rams and Panthers, who are both weak teams. Seattle figures to be ready for New England.
The Seahawks will be at home for week 9 and 10 when they will be playing the Vikings and the Jets. The Vikings only won three games last year and it may not be a competitive game. The Jets however were a five hundred team and showed signs of greatness, but they were simply inconsistent. The game versus the Jets figures to be more exciting than the Vikings game. So make sure you buy your Seahawks tickets earlier for the Jets game because it should sell out quicker.
December 9th the Seahawks will host the Cardinals, and this game will probably have playoff implications. The Cardinals were 8-8 last year and may have an outside chance at a wildcard playoff spot at the time of the season. This game has the potential to be both a good game and an important one.
Week 16 the 49ers come to town. This game may be the most important of the year or it may mean nothing at all. San Francisco won the division last year with 13 wins. The Seahawks figure to be in the hunt for a wildcard playoff spot. Last year both wildcard teams had 10-6 recorded and the Seahawks should be able to do that this year. But the 49ers beat Seattle twice last year and if Seattle is to make the playoffs, they will need to beat the 49ers at least once and this may be the game that makes or breaks the season for Seattle.
The last game of the season will be at home against the Rams. St. Louis only won two games last year and this game doesn’t look to be competitive, but it could be this game that sends the Seahawks to the playoffs with a victory. So make sure that you have your Seahawks tixs for this game and show your support.
The 2012 Seattle Seahawks Schedule
Sept. 9: Seahawks vs. Cardinals
Sept. 16: Seahawks vs. Cowboys
Sept. 24: Seahawks vs. Packers
Sept. 30: Seahawks vs. Rams
Oct. 7: Seahawks vs. Panthers
Oct. 14: Seahawks vs. Patriots
Oct. 18: Seahawks vs. 49ers
Oct. 28: Seahawks vs. Lions
Nov. 4: Seahawks vs. Vikings
Nov. 11: Seahawks vs. Jets
Week 11 Bye
Nov. 25: Seahawks vs. Dolphins
Dec. 2: Seahawks vs. Bears
Dec. 9: Seahawks vs. Cardinals
Dec. 16: Seahawks vs. Bills
Dec. 23: Seahawks vs. 49ers
Dec. 30: Seahawks vs. Rams
After week five, the Seattle Seahawks are challenged with 11 injured players and 6 more lost to injury reserve. This has the Seahawk Tickets off to a luke-warm start at 2-3. Fortunately for Seattle, many of these players are expected to return to battle in week seven and hopefully help take this surprising team of 2010 back into another playoff run. These players alone may not be enough, they will need your support to help build momentum. Buy your Seahawks tickets now and support your team.
Deon Butler – Leg
Butler began the season on the Physically Unable to Perform (PUP) list due to a broken leg. If he is able to pass evaluations, the receiver may qualify for an exemption to return for game seven of the 2011 season. In his first two pro seasons, Butler only had 51 catches for 560 yards. His lackluster seasons and the nature of his injury raise serious questions about his return.
LeRoy Hill – Hamstring
Outside linebacker LeRoy Hill suffered a hamstring injury against the New York Giants that was described as “minor”. After the bye week, expect him to return against the Cleveland Browns. The seven year veteran had a solid performance with 29 tackles, a sack and a fumble recovery before suffering this injury. Fans that purchase Seahawks tickets should expect his solid play to continue upon his return.
Tarvaris Jackson – Pectoral Strain
This could be the worse news for Seattle as their starting quarterback is being evaluated for surgery. His pectoral muscle nearest his throwing arm was torn and could need repair. This leaves backup Charlie Whitehurst taking snaps with the first team in practice. He is definitely out week seven against the browns and beyond that his status is unknown. If his muscle needs surgical repair, that would end the season for the 6th year veteran out of Alabama State.
Roy Lewis – Knee
Fourth year corner Roy Lewis has has played in only 23 games over his first 3 seasons. After starting this year on the Physically Unable to Perform (PUP) list, Lewis is up for evaluation. If cleared, the earliest he can return is the upcoming game after the bye against the Browns.
Jameson Konz – Knee
The rookie tight end tore his ACL during week one and is expected to eventually be put on IR ending his season. Konz was not a starter and was not expected to be a significant part of the Seahawk offense.
Marshawn Lynch – Ankle
The all-purpose running back had his best days with Buffalo in 2007 and 2008. Through the first five games of the 2011 season he had only 239 rushing yards. Lynch is still considered to be an important Cog in the Seattle offense as he could have a breakout game at any time. Look for the bye week to give him the rest that he needs and his return is likely during week seven vs. the Browns.
Other players looking to return during week seven vs. Cleveland include rookie defensive back Byron Maxwell (knee), tight end Zach Miller (concussion), starting corner Marcus Trufant (back/bruised sacrum), and wide receiver Mike Williams (concussion) Expect corner Marcus Trufant to be the biggest contributor to a defense that could use depth at the corner position.
Tight end Cameron Morrah remains on the PUP list and is being evaluated for a week 7 return. Six other players are lost for the season and will remain on injured reserve.
The Seattle Seahawks were looking to improve .500 on the year, with a week 4 win, over the Atlanta Falcons following a disappointing 1-2 start to the season. Coming in to the week with an identical 1-2 record, a week 4 win was equally important for the Falcons.
The Seahawks won the coin toss and elected to receive the opening kickoff. Things got off to a good start for the Seahawks as quarterback Tarvaris Jackson completed a 7 yard pass to fullback Michael Robinson to open the drive. Following a 1 yard run up the middle, and an incomplete pass on third down, the Seattle Seahawks had to punt the ball away.
After a booming 57 yard punt, the Falcons took possession on their own 28 yard line to begin their first drive of the game. The Falcons then proceeded to pick apart the Seahawk defense while engineering a 12 play, 72 yard drive, which resulted in a one yard touchdown pass from quarterback Matt Ryan to tight end Tony Gonzales. The extra point attempt was good, and the Falcons scoring drive took 7:40 off the clock. Both teams had one more drive a piece each resulting in a punt, and the Seahawks finding themselves down 7-0 at the end of the first quarter.
Picking up where they left off, the Falcons scored a second quarter touchdown, on a 21 yard run over the left guard to cap a four play, 37 yard drive, and put Atlanta up 14-0 after the completed extra point. On the following possession the Seahawks clawed their way back in to the game, on a well executed 52 yard pass, from Jackson to wide receiver Sydney Rice. The kick after by Steven Hauschka was good making it 14-7 Falcons.
Atlanta immediately responded with a scoring drive of it’s own, when Turner bulldozed for another touchdown on a one yard run on second down, at the Seahawks one yard line. The kick after was good . Following a 47 yard Falcon field goal with :25 left in the half the Seawaks found themselves down down 24-7.
The Falcons received the kick to open the second half and went 60 yards on five plays to kick a 50 yard field goal. Being down 27-7 and needing to turn things around in a hurry, The Seattle Seahawks went to the no huddle offense and responded with a touchdown on a 10 play 61 yard drive. The kick was good and it was 27-14.
After stuffing the Falcons on the next drive and forcing a punt, the Seahawks were marching down field with 4:48 left in the third quarter when Thomas DeCoud picked off a Jackson pass, intended for Zack Miller, in the end zone and brought it back to the Atlanta five yard line.
Seattle caught the break they needed when after dominating defensive play again, they forced a short punt which Leon Washington returned 33 yards to the Falcon 11 yard line. On the next play Marshawn Lynch took it 11 yards over the left side for the touchdown bringing Seattle to with in 6 points at 27-21 with 3:07 left in the third quarter.
After keeping the ball through the end of the third, the Falcons opened the fourth quarter with a 42 yard field goal from Matt Bryant. Once again in the no huddle offense, Seattle drove 59 yards in 9 plays, capped by a Jackson Touchdown pass to Ben Obomanu from the shotgun.
They held Atlanta on the next possession, getting the ball back on their own 15, down 30- 28 with 1:49 left in the game. With an 8 play drive and 8 seconds left, the Seattle Seahawks found themselves with an opportunity to win the game on a 61 yard field goal attempt by Hauschka. The straight kick by Hauschka fell short of the goal post, giving the Falcons the win, with the final score being 30-28.
It wasn’t so long ago that the Name, “Ben Roethlisberger” was mentioned in discussion as one of the National Football League’s top young quarterback. Today, another young athlete by the name of Aaron Rodgers has edged in on that turf. In the second-week match up between the Seahawks and the Steelers, Roethlisberger displayed why he remains deserving of inclusion within the aforementioned debate regarding the league’s top pig-skin tossers. After a questionable shot to the knees that left Roethlisberger in a deal of pain, he managed to rebound and throw for an admirable 298 yards and a touchdown. The Steelers couldn’t have used the valiant leadership at a more appropriate time, still feeling sore from an atrocious opening week loss. With all the talk of the Steelers, I have yet to mention the Seahawks, in large part due to the fact that nothing noteworthy is to be said. The lethargic Seahawks (0-2) are yet to achieve a victory, and were equally starving to put points on the board against the Steelers on Sunday. “We’d didn’t score a point, period,” said Seahawk’s quarterback, Tarvaris Jackson, “and that is just embarrassing.”
They may have found sympathy from the Steelers, who in week one were demolished by the Baltimore Ravens in week(35-7). That would be, of course, before they emerged the victors of this battle, and by no small margin. Roethlisberger would get his only touchdown of the game from a perfectly thrown fade to Mike Wallace in the endzone – complimenting a nine-play, 71-yard drive in the fourth quarter with just 3:30 seconds of play left. His other shining moment came in the third quarter, when he threw a 53-yard bomb after recently getting walloped by Seattle’s Raheem Brock. Brock incited a flag (for roughing the passer) from officials, as well as gasps from the crowd when he dived toward Rothlisberger’s legs just as he let go of the ball late in the second quarter. Teammates surrounded their quarterback while team staffers tended to him and gingerly guided him off the field, making way for backup quarterback, Charlie Batch. Ben’s absence would last just three plays.
Rothlisberger would return to the game, but throw an incomplete pass that would force Pittsburgh to settle for a field-goal and set the score at 17-0 going into halftime. The Seahawks were playing without their beloved wide-receiver, Sidney Rice, who was out for the second straight game with a shoulder injury. Although his presence would have lessened the damage, it is doubtful that it would have prevented Pittsburgh from keeping the Seahawks winless. One positive for Tarvaris Jackson was that he didn’t turn the ball over at all – something that many other professional players would likely envy. Unfortunately, he was also unable to make big plays, racking up only 159 yard – not enough to put a dent in the Steel armor of their opponent. In fact, his measly yardage is reflected in the fact that his longest passing completion was good for only 17 yards. That lack of dynamic play had better be improved if the Seahawks want to put a halt to the kind of punishment they received at the hands of the Steelers.
If the bad play continues, Seahawks tickets will be available at very low prices and the demand will continue to slide. As hot as tickets to a Steelers game are, bad play will effect prices more than anything.
Last year the Seattle Seahawks won the NFC Western Division Title with the worst win and loss record in NFL History (7-9) only to lose the Chicago Bears in the in their second game of the post season. This year the Seahawks started Week 1 by hosting the division rival San Francisco 49ers. San Francisco dominated under new Head Coach Jim Harbaugh 33-17. Things did not get any better in Week 2 when the Pittsburgh Steelers trounced the Seahawks in Pittsburgh 24-0. In Week 3 the Seahawks welcomed the division rival Arizona Cardinals to Seattle and pulled off a win 13-10. Last week they hosted the Atlanta Falcons and lost a close game 30-28.
After the first 4 games the Seahawks are 1-3 and yet find themselves in second place behind the 3-1 San Francisco 49ers with three quarters of the 2011 season still to go. In Week 5 The Seahawks travel to take on the New York Giants 3-1. The Giants are looking good this year and Seattle has improved a lot over the last couple of weeks. This could be a good one to watch. After a bye in week 6 the Seahawks go to Cleveland to take on the Browns. Cleveland is getting better all the time with young QB Colt McCoy at the helm. You don’t want to miss this one.
In Week 8 the Seattle Seahawks will host the Cincinnati Bengals. The Bengals are competing better than thought will rookie QB Andy Dalton. Should be a good game, but the Seahawks will have every opportunity to win this one. In Week 9 the schedule gets a little tougher as the Seahawks go to Dallas to play the Cowboys. The Cowboys have shown some heart this season, which makes this game a must see. In Week 10 the Seahawks may face their biggest regular season challenge since the Pittsburgh Steelers when they host the Baltimore Ravens. If they can keep pressure on Ravens QB Joe Flacco and stop the screen pass they can pull an upset. Seahawks tickets will be very popular for this game.
In Week 11 the winds of opportunity change as the Seahawks travel to play the division rival Rams in St Louis. St Louis has been plagued by injuries this season. The Seahawks lost in St Louis last year 20-3. In Week 12 Seattle hosts the Washington Redskins who have shown remarkable signs of life early in the season. This will be a good match up. In Week 13 the Seahawks will move on to Philadelphia to take on the Eagles on Thursday Night Football. Any time you are playing against a QB like Michael Vick you have to be ready for any thing, but the Eagles have yet to prove they are a dream team. In Week 14 the Seattle Seahawks will host the St Louis Rams for their second game of the season on Monday Night Football. They beat the Rams in Seattle last year 16-6 to clinch the division.
In Week 15 the Seahawks are off to the windy city of Chicago to take on the Bears who eliminated them from the post season last year. Seattle may want to initiate a little pay back in this game. In week 16 they host their division rival the San Francisco 49ers for their second game of the season. They beat the 49ers in San Francisco last year 31-6. Week 17 will have the Seahawks in Arizona for the second game against their division rival Arizona Cardinals. Seattle won this one in Arizona last year 36-18. There are still plenty of exciting games to be played on the Seattle Seahawks schedule this year. Make sure you buy your Seahawks tickets now and reserve your chance to see a live game.
The Seattle Seahawks have reason to rejoice in the Head Coach and Executive Vice President of Football Operations whom they hired on January 11, 2010. Pete Carroll was born on September 15, 1951 in San Francisco, California. He would attend the University of Pacific where he played the position of Free Safety for 2 years. Although he attempted to make the World Football League Honolulu Hawaiians professional team; he did not make the cut due to problems with his shoulder and his size. This worked out better for the football coaching world.
Pete Carroll would be a graduate assistant for his Alma mater, the University of Pacific. He would help coach the wide receivers and defensive secondary for 3 years while he earned his Masters degree in physical education. He then moved on to become a secondary coach at the University of Arkansas under head coach Lou Holtz. The next year Carroll was off to Iowa State University as a secondary coach and then on to Ohio State as a secondary coach as well. The next 3 seasons after that he was the defensive coordinator at North Carolina State University before becoming the assistant head coach and offensive coordinator at the University of Pacific. Pete Carroll was picking up valuable experience from some of the best coaches in football and one day soon it would pay off.
In 1984 Carroll moved to the NFL as a secondary coach for the Buffalo Bills. The next season he began his 4 year tenure with the Minnesota Vikings as a secondary coach till 1989. He then spent 3 seasons as the defensive coordinator with the New York Jets. In 1994 he became head coach of the Jets. Although he would lose his position after finishing 6-10 the first season; he was still picking up valuable experience. He would move on to be the defensive coordinator of the San Francisco 49ers for 2 years and then as the Head Coach of the New England Patriots in 1997. The Patriots would win the AFC East his first season, but he the next 2 seasons were dismal. His record as a head coach in the NFL was 33-31, but he decided to go back to coaching college.
For the next 9 years he would be the head coach of the USC Trojans. Before leaving USC after the 2009 season he would amass an 83-19 record winning 2 national championships in the process. Carroll left the Trojans due to a NCAA rules violation of hiring two many coaches on his staff. On January 11, 2010 he signed a 5 year contract to be the Head Coach and Executive Vice President of Football Operations for the Seattle Seahawks. Pete would make many changes very quickly on his new Seattle team. One of the big changes was how much he would help the franchise increase the sale of Seahawks Tickets. The Seahawks finished with a 7-9 record last season, but that was enough to win the NFC Western Division. He would go on to beat the reigning Super Bowl Champion New Orleans Saints in the first round only to lose to last years Super Bowl Champion Green Bay Packers.
Pete Carroll has a great sense of humor, but he sets specific guidelines on the field that have to be followed to a tee. The Seahawks are 2-3 this season, but in Week 5 they pulled a major upset over the New York Giants winning 36-25. Pete Carroll has the ability to inspire and motivate through his belief that he does not want his team to be the best at what they do, but the only one doing it. Pete Carroll is a winner and that will continue to bring excitement and energy to the Seattle Seahawks and their loyal fan base for years to come.
Seahawks Stadium, the home ground of Seattle Seahawks, is now known by the name CenturyLink Field. The multi-purpose stadium is located in Occidental Avenue, Seattlte, Washington. The stadium, originally known as Seahawks Stadium, was renamed in June 2004 as Qwest Field after the telecommunications company Qwest acquired the naming rights. In 2011, the name of the stadium was again changed to CenturyLink Field, following the acquisition of Qwest by CenturyLink.
The Seahawks played for over 20 years at the Kingdome, after it was founded in 1974, sharing the facility with the Seattle Mariners (Major League Baseball team). Like the other baseball teams, the Mariners wanted a retro ballpark to be built for them, leaving the Kingdome to the Seahawks. A $120 million renovation/upgradation plan for the Kingdome was announced in October 1994 in the event of the Mariners moving into the new ballpark. However, the plan did not materialize as Ken Behring, owner of the Seahawks, wanted to move to Los Angeles for the 1996 season. The NFL opposed the move. In 1997, Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, bought the Seahawks and wanted to demolish the Kingdome and build a new stadium on the same site. The voters approved the funding for the construction of two new stadiums in 1997. The Mariners moved into Safeco Field in 1999 and the Kingdome was demolished in 2000 to build the Seahawks Stadium between 2000 and 2002. The 1,500,000 sq ft project was designed by the architectural firm Ellerbe Becket, in association with Loschky Marquardt & Nesholm Architects of Seattle.
The CenturyLink Field is configured in a horseshoe shape, which helps sightlines and makes seahawks tickets all have good sightlines and has 67,000 seats in three tiers. The seating capacity can be expanded to 72,000 for special events. The northern end of the stadium is open. In the stadium, there is a 13-floored tower with a scoreboard at the top and 3,000 bleacher seats, known by the name Hawk Nest. The CenturyLink Field is one of the first stadiums to have luxury suites that provide in-your-face experience. There are about 82 luxury suites and over 7,000 club seats. The unique features of the stadium are the overhanging roof design and the rainbow tri-chord trusses at a height of 260 feet above the field. The roof covers 70% of the seats, providing protection to the spectators during bad weather conditions. The exterior of the stadium is of red brick, brick-accented colored concrete, etc. that blend with the surrounding facilities. Another unique feature is that the CenturyLink Field is home to the largest solar array in the state. The 2.5 acre array is expected to cut the energy costs of the stadium by 21%. The food and beverage facilities are fantastic with Café Appassionato and drinks available from stands at every section of the stadium.
When Seahawks plays its games on the home ground, the crowd is notoriously loud. It is this noise that has contributed to the team’s home field advantage with an increase in false start penalties against the visiting teams. The most vocal fans sit in the north end zone bleachers so that their sounds get amplified by the bleachers and make these tickets as some of the most sought after. The opposing offenses can miss audibles and the snap count. The Seahawks stadium, the first to implement a FieldTurf artificial field, has also been home to many college and high school American football games.
After a rocky start to the 2011 NFL season, fans begin to wonder if buying Seahawks tickets was the right thing to do. Last season, after slipping into the playoffs in Pete Carroll’s inaugural year as head coach and winning a surprising playoff game over the defending Super Bowl champion New Orleans Saints, the Seahawks were chosen as one of the frontrunners for the upcoming 2011 Superbowl. Starting the season off with two brutal losses was not what fans intended as they started their season. The Seahawks were finally able to break their losing streak when the Arizona Cardinals came to town.
First, division rival San Francisco handed them a 33-17 loss at Candlestick Park. Then the Seahawks traveled to Pittsburgh and were routed by the Steelers, 24-0. Fans were beginning to question allowing veteran quarterback Matt Hasselback to escape to free agency, and new quarterback Tavaris Jackson was becoming the target of a great deal of criticism.
The criticism of Jackson continued through the first half of Seattle’s contest with Arizona, and Jackson went into the locker room at halftime to a resounding chorus of boos echoing through CenturyLink Field. At that point it was 10-6, Cardinals, but Jackson had looked hopeless and Cardinals’ receiver Larry Fitzgerald appeared to be in for a big day.
To the surprise of the Seattle crowd, the Seahawks secondary stepped up in the second half to shut down Fitzgerald. Jackson managed the game well in the second half and scored an 11-yard touchdown on a run in the third quarter. An interception of Arizona quarterback Kevin Kolb in the final minutes of the game sealed the first victory of the season and is sure to create a buzz for Seattle Seahawk tickets.
Next week, things don’t get any easier for Seattle as the Atlanta Falcons come to town. Atlanta has had its share of troubles this year as well, losing two out its first three games after making it to the NFC Divisional Playoffs last year. Seahawks news is sure to be cautiously optimistic this week as the team prepares for another big test.