Beyond Alexander (a deserving MVP) carrying the offense, I can't say I've seen remarkable things about them. They beat up a god-awful division and were several close calls away from being 10-6 instead of 13-3 (pointing to the Giants, Titans and first 49ers games in particular)
The Seahawks had only 192 third-down snaps in the regular season, the second-fewest in the NFL, behind only Indianapolis.
Seattle led the league in scoring drives of 80 yards or more, a testimony to the patience and consistent playmaking skills of Pro Bowl quarterback Matt Hasselbeck, but also to his ability to keep the Seahawks out of precarious situations. That is, in part, why the Seahawks had just 17 turnovers, second fewest in the league.
The Seahawks, who averaged 6.25 yards on first down, just aren't in very many disadvantageous down-and-distance situations.
TEAM OFFENSE TM PER GAME AVERAGE
Total Yards
WAS 330.6
SEA 369.7
Yards Passing
WAS 194.1
SEA 216.1
Yards Rushing
WAS 136.4
SEA 153.6
TEAM DFFENSE TM PER GAME AVERAGE
Yards Allowed
WAS 297.9
SEA 316.8
Pass Yds Allowed
WAS 192.6
SEA 222.4
Rush Yds Allowed
WAS 105.4
SEA 94.4
That was all from ESPN but if you have watched the Seahawks play all season you can tell that they don't make very many mistakes, have a good enough defense and the offense can hang with anyone. Hasselbeck also is a pro bowl QB with 3459 yds, 24 TDs 9 INTs and a 98.2 QB rating. Playing the 49ers and Cards twice this year certainly helped but it wasn't all they did. I'm of the mind that you win against the good teams and more or less dominate the bad which they have done minus the two close ones against SF and the Titans.