Due to the 'Hawks apparently blowing out opponents on National prime time games at home. The NFL decided to force the 'Hawks go on the road on the prime time games. Take a look: Week 1: Thursday, Sept. 4, Green Bay, 8:30 p.m. Week 2: Sunday, Sept. 14, at San Diego, 4:05 p.m. Week 3: Sunday, Sept. 21, Denver, 4:25 p.m. Week 4: BYE Week 5: Monday, Oct. 6, at Washington, 8:30 p.m. Week 6: Sunday, Oct. 12, Dallas, 4:25 p.m. Week 7: Sunday, Oct. 19, at St. Louis, 1 p.m. Week 8: Sunday, Oct. 26, at Carolina, 1 p.m. Week 9: Sunday, Nov. 2, Oakland, 4:25 p.m. Week 10: Sunday, Nov. 9, NY Giants, 4:25 p.m. Week 11: Sunday, Nov. 16, at Kansas City, 1 p.m. Week 12: Sunday, Nov. 23, Arizona, 4:05 p.m. Week 13: Thursday, Nov. 27, at San Francisco, 8:30 p.m. Week 14: Sunday, Dec. 7, at Philadelphia, 4:25 p.m. Week 15: Sunday, Dec. 14, San Francisco, 4:25 p.m. Week 16: Sunday, Dec. 21, at Arizona, 8:30 p.m. Week 17: Sunday, Dec. 28, St. Louis, 4:25 p.m.
It is lil bit tongue and cheek... but the 'Hawks easily have the best home field advantage in the NFL. That place is insane joint which is funny considering how laid back Seattle is as a city. They deserve to have prime time games in front of their fans for winning the SB and being a dominant team at home.
how is Seattle vs Denver not a prime time game....That is literally top 2 game of the season right behind SEA vs SF
It's still 8 games away, 8 at home. I thought there was going to be a different ratio of that, just for the Hawks or something.
But the Seahawks definitely got hosed with their schedule having their PT games on the road besides the annual opening game for the Champs. A stadium , crowd , team like Seattle should be showcased on the national stage for the whole country.
Aren't schedules already set? The NFL just figures out the dates. They played San Diego at home four years ago. So now they have to play them in SD. They played the Broncos in Denver four years ago. So now they'll get to play them at home.
And both games not in prime time. The fox of CBS national game of the week is right on par, opponents wise, with SNF.
I guess I don't understand the benefit here to the teams or the fans. If I'm going to the stadium, why do I care if the game is in the afternoon or in primetime? If nothing else, Monday is even more of a pain due to work and traffic (an 8PM Central Time game would be 6PM on the west coast). And If I'm watching from home, why do I care if the game is at home or on the road? The point of primetime games is entirely about the TV audience of the rest of the country - not that of the teams, which will be watching their teams whenever they are on regardless. The idea is to get everyone else to watch. Seattle's home games are generally not very exciting, so why put them on national TV?
The only people who are affected by this are the season ticket holders. SNF/MNF = more money for resale
Its the premise of punishing them for being so dominant at home... which is clearly what the NFL is doing. No other elite NFL team is getting similar treatment. Last loss they had in primetime was 2007. Last close game at home in primetime was the fail mary game in 2012. Primetime games are as much a showcase of the city to the nation as it is simply a football game (at least the SNF game tends to be). I know Texans SNF games in Houston meant more to the "prestige" of the game for the local fans, and there was significant hype in the city, vs. their road SNF games. Same thing when the Oilers used to be on MNF.
You're assuming that prime time games on the road are some kind of punishment - I don't think that's the case at all. The goal of primetime games is to put exciting games on TV. Seahawks home games tend to not be exciting, thus they aren't on national TV. I don't see why this is a problem - the TV network's job is not to "reward" or "punish" a team. It's to provide the best experience for their national audience. The showcasing the city is silly - they show a handful of shots of the skyline during a game - that doesn't showcase a city. I don't even know what "prestige of a game" means.
If you don't think a home SNF or MNF game is more important to the city than a road SNF or MNF game is, I'm not sure what else to tell you. Living in Houston, I've seen first hand evidence over 30+ years that it IS a bigger deal. It also does take more effort for teams to travel/play road night games vs. day games. Every single road team would gladly give up the national TV spotlight in order to play that game at noon or 3. The bottom line is that there's never been a Super Bowl defending champion to have only one home prime-time game the subsequent season.
Never discount home field advantage with a relentless beast of a defense on a national stage with fans in a frenzy from drinking , tailgating and being the only game on TV.