Without Thomas, Seahawks' Vaunted Defense Looking Vulnerable

TIM BOOTH, AP Sports Writer

RENTON, Wash. (AP) — Until a month ago, the Seattle Seahawks never knew what it was like without Earl Thomas on the field.

Now they're finding out how much Thomas means to everything they try and accomplish defensively.

"Earl's a unique player. He's an extraordinary player, he's proven that," coach Pete Carroll said. "No matter what position a guy plays, you miss that unique quality."

Since Thomas was injured early in Seattle's Week 13 win over Carolina, the Seahawks have become vulnerable against the pass.

In the final four games of the regular season, the opponent passer rating against the Seahawks was 105.0. In the first 12 games, it was 77.9. And while that final four-game stretch included stellar games by Aaron Rodgers and Carson Palmer in a pair of Seattle losses, it also included performances by Jared Goff, Case Keenum and Colin Kaepernick that didn't lead to wins against Seattle but were probably better than most expected.

Now come the pass-happy Detroit Lions in the NFC wild-card round on Saturday.

"I wouldn't say vulnerable, you know, they're a heck of a defense," Detroit quarterback Matthew Stafford said. "They do a great job. Obviously, Earl brings a mentality to them. He's an extremely aggressive player. Trusts his eyes probably more than any safety I've ever seen and you know, the young guy they've got filling in for him doesn't as much, but I mean they've got a great defense."

Steven Terrell has been the one asked to step in for Thomas, even if there is no way to properly replace one of the best free safeties in the NFL. It's the most Terrell has played in his brief NFL career. Before this season, Terrell had one career defensive tackle in his two seasons with the Seahawks.

"Just the experience, learning through the good, the bad, the indifferent, whatever. It's just getting better and seeing where I'm at," Terrell said. "You kind of see where you're at in the preseason but playing this year in the regular season it's been a good opportunity."

The experience Terrell is getting appears to be coming at a cost to Seattle's defense.

In the first 11 games of the season, the Seahawks allowed 10 passing touchdowns. In the final five games, including the Carolina game when Thomas was injured early in the second quarter, they allowed six. Perhaps more telling is the lack of interceptions. Seattle's last interception came on the first play of its 40-7 win over Carolina. Since Thomas was hurt, the Seahawks have zero picks.

The breakdowns have been noticeable: Ted Ginn Jr. getting deep for a 55-yard touchdown in the minutes after Thomas was injured; Davante Adams getting open for a 66-yard TD; J.J. Nelson running free through Seattle's secondary, once for an 80-yard touchdown. They're the kinds of big plays the Seahawks secondary simply has not allowed in the past.

Not all those plays are on Terrell. He's made mistakes, but at the same time quarterbacks have appeared more aggressive in challenging Seattle's secondary with Thomas not there.

If anything, the past month has highlighted how much Thomas' presence has impacted Seattle's defensive success.

"The thing I've been focused on is not trying to be Earl because I can't be Earl. I can only be the best version of me," Terrell said. "That part hasn't been too hard because I've been who I am and my teammates have been giving me good feedback. Just be you, be the best you that you can be and that helped out a lot. When you replace an All-Pro player it's definitely something you don't do every day. It's a great opportunity though."

The challenge for Seattle may not be so much this week, but what lies ahead should it get past the Lions. Detroit averages 37 pass attempts per game but only 7.3 yards per attempt. But a Seattle victory sets up a matchup with Atlanta and the third-best pass game in the NFL.

That's down the road. The Seahawks have enough to worry about with Detroit.

"Earl is Earl, and now it's Steve's opportunity," Seattle cornerback DeShawn Shead said. "And Steve is a great player as well but you can't ask Steve to be Earl. Steve is Steve and he does a great job."

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AP Sports Writer Larry Lage contributed to this report.

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