This page will contain wikis about Seattle Seahawks, as they become available.

Seattle Seahawks

Conference NFC
Division West
Founded 1976
Home Field Qwest Field
City Seattle, Washington
Colors Metallic blue, Navy blue, Slate grey, white, and lime green
Head Coach Mike Holmgren
All-Time Record (W-L-T)
(At Start of 2005 Season)
217-245-0

The Seattle Seahawks are a National Football League team based in Seattle, Washington.

Founded: 1976
Home field: Qwest Field (formerly Seahawks Stadium, 2002-present)
Previous home fields:
The Kingdome (1976-1993; second half of 1994 season-1999)
Husky Stadium (First half of 1994 season due to repairs at The Kingdome; 2000-2001)
Uniform colors: Metallic blue, Navy blue, Slate grey, White, and Lime green
Helmet design: Metallic blue with a stylized hawk's head inspired by Northwestern tribal art
Division championships won: 1988, 1999, 2004
Owner: Paul Allen
Mascot: Blitz, a large blue bird wearing a team uniform (number 0).

Franchise History

Seahawks logo (1976-2001)

The Seahawks joined the league in 1976 as a member of the NFC West division. A year later, they switched conferences with their expansion partners, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and joined the AFC West. They played in the American Football Conference until 2002, when, with league realignment, they were returned to the National Football Conference.

Recent Achievements:

Players of note

Pro Football Hall of Famers

Current players

Retired numbers

Not to be forgotten


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Recent Achievements:. The film has also been deemed "culturally significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry. They played in the American Football Conference until 2002, when, with league realignment, they were returned to the National Football Conference. The film is consistently in the Internet Movie Database's top 250 films, and was #30 on the American Film Institute's 100 Years, 100 Movies and #67 on its 100 Years, 100 Thrills. A year later, they switched conferences with their expansion partners, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and joined the AFC West. John Huston won the Academy Award for Directing in 1948 for his work on The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. The Seahawks joined the league in 1976 as a member of the NFC West division. The film is the origin of a famous line, often misquoted as "We don't need no stinking badges!" The correct dialog (see also Stinking badges) is:.

The Seattle Seahawks are a National Football League team based in Seattle, Washington. Traven. Chad Brown. The film was based on, and is quite faithful to the novel of the same name (1927 in German, 1935 in English) by enigmatic author B. Franco Harris. The Treasure of the Sierra Madre was one of the first films to be shot almost entirely on location (though the night scenes were filmed back in the studio). Jim Zorn. The old-timer accurately predicts trouble but is willing to go anyway.

Williams. The Treasure of the Sierra Madre is a 1948 John Huston film in which two down-and-outers (Humphrey Bogart and Tim Holt) in Mexico (bothering director John Huston for money in fun opening cameo) hook up with an old-timer (Walter Huston, the director's father) to prospect for gold. John L. Ricky Watters. Curt Warner (not to be confused with the Cardinals' Kurt Warner).

Shawn Springs. John Randle. Joe Nash. Franco Harris.

Jacob Green. Joey Galloway. Kenny Easley. Dave Brown.

Brian Bosworth. Brian Blades. 80 Steve Largent (brought out of retirement for a portion of the 2004 season for Jerry Rice, who received Largent's blessing). 12 (dedicated to Seahawks fans, the so-called "12th man").

Grant Wistrom. Marcus Trufant. Darrell Jackson. Matt Hasselbeck.

Shaun Alexander. Steve Largent (also a former member of the United States House of Representatives). Franco Harris. Carl Eller.

Won their third division championship in 2004, when they claimed the NFC West title. Some current players were either very young children or not even born when the last 49ers shutout occurred. While the 49ers were in a position to score in the 4th quarter, an interception and a fumble recovery sealed their fate. This marked the end of the 49er's league record 27 year streak without a shutout - the last such game being Atlanta in 1977.

On September 26, 2004 the Seahawks shutout the San Francisco 49ers 34-0.