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sggatecl
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http://espn.go.com/nfl/playoffs/201...-bowl-xlviii-ex-lions-teammates-go-everything
NEW YORK -- The view from the Westin Hotel overlooks the Manhattan skyline, and the food is scrumptious and the beds are soft. This is what it must feel like to be a king: Everywhere the Seattle Seahawks go, there are police escorts and fawning fans hanging to their every word. Their sendoff in Seattle last weekend was a scene out of a movie, with tens of thousands of well-wishers lining the streets and overpasses during their route to the airport. They passed by boaters holding up a sign. "GO HAWKS," it said. "Everything was done first-class," said Seahawks receivers coach Kippy Brown. "It's hard to put into words."
Perhaps no one appreciates these moments more than Brown. Five years ago, Brown, along with Seahawks defensive end Cliff Avril, Broncos linebacker Paris Lenon and Denver center Manny Ramirez, were in a much darker place. They were part of a Detroit Lions team that played 16 games and lost every one of them.
The odds of making a Super Bowl are long, but what those 2008 Lions did was unprecedented. No other team in the history of the NFL has gone winless since the league went to a 16-game format in 1978. It's a topic, not surprisingly, that none of them wanted to focus on this week. You play a season and you move on, Brown says.
But the fall of 2008 was hard to forget. The country was deep into a recession, and Detroit was one of the hardest-hit cities. Unemployment soared as the auto industry collapsed, and soon, many in the Lions' organization would be looking for jobs, too. It became popular for fans to hold signs at Ford Field requesting a government bailout for the Lions.
"I didn't realize how bad it was until the offseason," Avril said, "and not wanting to tell people that I played for the Lions at the time. It was crazy, but we're here at the Super Bowl [five] years later, and everything happens for a reason."