Sunday, Nov. 12 1:00pm ET
Jaguars fall short on failed 1-yard pass
 
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JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- Jon Kitna, comeback king? Seattle Seahawks, big-play defense?

Reggie Tongue
A pass interference call against Seattle's Reggie Tongue gave the Jags one more shot at the end zone, but they failed to score as the Seahawks held on.

It looked that way Sunday as Seattle stopped Jacksonville at the 1-yard line with no time remaining to hang onto a 28-21 victory.

The final stop came just moments after Kitna threw a 4-yard pass to Ricky Watters with 2:01 left for the capper to a rally from 14 points behind.

In a crazy ending to a back-and-forth game, Seahawks safety Reggie Tongue got called for pass interference in the end zone with no time left. That brought the ball to the 1 and extended the game by one play.

Mark Brunell looked for Alvis Whitted, but the two got their signals crossed after Brunell audibled on what was supposed to be a quarterback sneak. The ball fell harmlessly, giving Seattle (4-7) the victory.

"Somebody had to make the great plays and had to make a goal-line stand," Seahawks coach Mike Holmgren said. "And today they did it. I'm very proud of them."

TOM DONAHOE'S BREAKDOWN
Question on the Seahawks: Should Mike Holmgren have stayed with Jon Kitna as his quarterback all along?
Donahoe: Coach Holmgren has been determined to find out if, between Kitna and Brock Huard, he has a starting quarterback. He has bounced back and forth between the two, giving each an opportunity. Kitna is back in there because Huard, with his concussion, is not ready to play. It appears that Holmgren's biggest question with Kitna has been his decision-making, but Jon looked very sharp today. He moved the football, threw three touchdown passes and put 28 points on the board. I still think Huard will be back in as the starter when he's healthy, and then Holmgren will have to evaluate whether he has a starting-caliber quarterback on the Seahawks.

Question on the Jaguars: What is it going to take to fix the Jaguars?
Donahoe: The Jaguars were optimistic coming off their bye week and were trying to build on a win over Dallas, so the loss at home today is a disappointing one. Now it is almost impossible for the Jags to get straightened out this year and make a playoff run. The main thing that has hurt the Jags this year has been injuries. It started back in training camp with Carnell Lake and continued on the offensive and defensive lines. There's no question that coach Tom Coughlin will have the Jags playing hard the rest of the season. But the best fix may be getting their injured players back healthy and ready for next season.

Tom Donahoe, ESPN.com's NFL analyst, was formerly the Steelers' director of football operations.

The Jaguars (3-7) saw any hopes of salvaging their season end in a mistake-prone game. The players weren't the only ones to blame.

On the last play, the Jaguars had Whitted in a spot where Pro Bowler Jimmy Smith should have been.

"It was not Alvis' fault," Jaguars coach Tom Coughlin said. "That's my fault."

Coughlin also shouldered blame for a questionable decision with 13:40 left. He passed up the sure go-ahead points and decided to go for it on fourth down from the 1 with the score tied at 21.

Fred Taylor got stymied, and the Seahawks moved from the shadow of their goalposts to regain the field-position advantage. They also recaptured the confidence that had been tilting Jacksonville's way.

"I go for it every time," Coughlin said. "You've got to knock it into the end zone from there. You've had success with the run and you're going to go for it, and that's what we did."

The Jaguars now start thinking about rebuilding, and it seems everybody will be under scrutiny.

"It's everybody's future," Jaguars receiver Keenan McCardell said. "You've got to get better, and if you don't, you can't play in this league, period."

After falling behind 21-7, Kitna led the Seahawks on a 67-yard touchdown drive, capped by a 15-yard pass to Sean Dawkins at the end of the first half.

Jacksonville opened the third quarter with an impressive drive, but committed its only turnover when McCardell fumbled. Seattle answered with another touchdown to tie the game.

On the winning drive, Kitna moved the Seahawks 67 yards in eight plays, including a 29-yard pass on third down to Dawkins, who was in single coverage against rookie Kiwaukee Thomas. Four plays later, Watters caught the go-ahead touchdown.

Kitna finished 22-of-33 for 231 yards and three touchdowns, not bad for a guy who was benched earlier this season, only to regain the job when Brock Huard went out with concussions.

"The thing I wrote down on a piece of paper is that I have to execute better so he'll trust me in continuing to do these things," Kitna said of Holmgren. "What he wants is to make the big plays that keep drives going and to stay away from turnovers. Hopefully, that happened today."

Watters had 66 yards rushing and 61 receiving, and scored two touchdowns as the Seahawks won their second straight after losing five in a row. Holmgren will give them the entire bye week off for that.

"A natural thing that people think is that you're going nowhere and you're packing your bags and going home for Christmas," Holmgren said. "The important thing is that these guys are battling and they're playing hard."

Can the Jaguars say the same?

The statistics say yes. Brunell threw for 340 yards, and McCardell and Smith each surpassed the 100-yard mark for the eighth time, an NFL record. But they will lament McCardell's fumble and a series of key penalties, two of which kept Seattle touchdown drives alive.

"We're having some good individual efforts out there, but the things that lose football games for us are still happening," Brunell said. "We're better than we used to be, but who cares?"

Game notes
Taylor had 103 yards and a 10-yard touchdown run to give the Jaguars their 21-7 lead. ... Seahawks linebacker Chad Brown finished with four tackles and two sacks. ... The Jaguars have allowed more points this season (235) than all last year (217).
 


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