He hoisted the Lombardi Trophy high overhead as he rode down Fourth Avenue in Seattle with his fellow receivers, never thinking for a second that his time with the Seahawks was done.
And when the championship parade ended at CenturyLink Field, Golden Tate sipped from a bottle of champagne and stood on stage smiling and laughing as Seahawks coach Pete Carroll, general manager John Schneider and owner Paul Allen spoke.
For four years, Seattle was Tate’s home, the city that raised him from a “stupid rookie” to one of the most underrated playmakers in the league. And now that free agency was approaching, he didn’t want to leave.
He loved the fans and the organization and the city, and as confetti fell that day, there was no place else Tate wanted to be.
“Actually, after the Super Bowl, I was so confident I was coming back, I was showing up to the facility, just never cleaned my locker out, left all my stuff in there,” Tate told the Free Press last week. “I thought, ‘I’m going to be back. I know.’”
For most of February 2014, Tate was in and out of the Seahawks’ Renton headquarters. He hung out with the team’s equipment guys, had multiple conversations with the affable Carroll and traded text messages with Schneider “way more than I had during the season.”
The tenor of the conversations always was the same, with Carroll and Schneider telling Tate how much they appreciated him and wanted him back, and both sides vowing to make it happen.
By the time March rolled around, Tate had settled into the California beach house he was renting for the off-season. He invited his sisters for a spring-break trip that happened to coincide with free agency, never expecting he’d be making travel plans of his own.
But business is business in the NFL, and when contract talks with the Seahawks fizzled, Tate found himself suddenly boarding a flight to Detroit, where a five-year contract and a new beginning awaited.
“My emotions, I didn’t know what to feel,” Tate said. “I thought for so long, ‘I’m going to be a Seattle Seahawk the rest of my life. I’ve done everything I possibly can.’ And it didn’t work out, unfortunately. They had just paid Percy Harvin, so they had a large sum of money invested in him, and I wasn’t looking for $60 million like he was. It just didn’t work.”
Things didn’t work for Tate and the Seahawks collectively.
But separately, as Tate prepares for his return to Seattle on Monday for the Lions’ prime-time showdown with the Seahawks on Monday Night Football, no one can complain.
The Lions got what turned out to be the steal of free agency in Tate, who caught 99 passes last year to lead the team to the playoffs.
The Seahawks used the money they saved on Tate to help sign Richard Sherman and Earl Thomas to contract extensions last spring, then made their second straight trip to the Super Bowl.
Tate posted career numbers in his first season with the Lions (99 catches, 1,331 yards) and has settled in nicely to his new home.
“I’m thrilled for him,” Carroll said in a teleconference with Detroit reporters last week. “I’m thrilled for our guys. To me, he’s one of our guys. That’s just the way I look at it. Our guys watch our players that are in other places and we enjoy just seeing how they do. We don’t want them to do it against us, of course, but we love to see them have success in other places.”
Reaping benefits
Long before he was a Pro Bowl receiver, Golden Tate III dreamed about becoming exactly that.
“Ball” was the first word he spoke as a baby. As a 6- or 7-year-old, he prayed every night that he would be a professional athlete. And he spent his days growing up in Nashville, Tenn., playing football, baseball, basketball, hockey or whatever other game he could find in the neighborhood streets.
If not an athlete, Tate said he wanted to be a police officer growing up. Or a professional fisherman.
Some of his fondest memories as a youth are the Fridays he had in kindergarten and first grade, when his parents picked him up from school with a Happy Meal from McDonald’s and drove straight to Percy Priest Lake or Old Hickory Lake.
“With fishing poles hanging out of our Jeep and tackle boxes and the worms and crickets,” Tate said. “Going to catch bluegill and perch and bass and catfish, just used to love it, man. It was family time. You didn’t have cell phones then, all you had was each other.”
Tate traveled the South playing AAU baseball as a youth, with his grandmother usually in the driver’s seat and two coolers packed with sandwich meat and yogurt and Gatorade by his side.
He was drafted twice as an outfielder — in the 42nd round by the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2007 and in the 50th round by the San Francisco Giants in 2010 — but gravitated more toward football, the sport that his father, Golden Tate II, starred in at Tennessee State.
A running back in high school, Tate started two games at receiver as a freshman at Notre Dame and blossomed at the position the next two years. He left school after his 93-catch, 1,496-yard junior season, and the Seahawks made him a second-round pick in their illustrious 2010 draft class that included Russell Okung, Kam Chancellor and Thomas.
Tate played sparingly as a rookie in a move that he now says was the best thing that could have happened to his career. He knew little about running proper routes then, and less about taking care of his body and how to go about football in a professional way.
“My first season in college I only caught (six) passes, and so my second and third year were my seasons,” Tate said. “I thought I had it figured out, but little did I know. Looking back at it, you got to thank Coach Carroll, because who knows if he rushes me into that situation of being a starter or being the guy, who knows mentally (how I would have handled it). I don’t think it would have, but mentally that could have screwed me up for the rest of my career, me doubting myself.
“But because they didn’t put the pressure on me, they were patient with me, it let my learning process be natural. When I was ready, I think we all reaped the benefits of it.”
Tate led the Seahawks with 64 catches for 898 yards during their Super Bowl season of 2013, but he was largely considered a complementary player on a team that relied heavily on its defense and running game.
Beyond the money — the Lions offered “significantly” more in free agency than the Seahawks, and Tate acknowledged that “if the deal was that close in numbers, I would have stayed in Seattle” — Tate said he was attracted to the Lions in part by the chance to play alongside Calvin Johnson and Matthew Stafford on an up-and-coming team in a pass-friendly offense.
Of course, Johnson missed three games and parts of two others with ankle injuries last year, Stafford has thrown 18 interceptions in his last 20 games, and the Lions are off to an 0-3 start and have the NFL’s 27th-ranked offense.
“I’ve never been 0-3,” he said. “And I think this is the most talent we’ve had here in a long time, and this is one of the most talented teams I’ve been on in my career. And I want to win. I could have gone to one of these very, very bad teams and had nothing at all and got paid a lot of money, but I wanted to come here because I see a bright future. I see all the pieces that we need to win.”
Zero regrets
The Lions went 11-5 last year, and Tate made the Pro Bowl for the first time in his career.
But while he was in Arizona playing in the league’s annual All-Star scrimmage, his former team was across town preparing for its second straight Super Bowl.
One night, Tate went to dinner with Seahawks receiver Jermaine Kearse and some other friends, and he ran into Schneider, who was dining at the same restaurant with his wife, Traci, and Fox reporter Jay Glazer.
Tate said Schneider has told him on multiple occasions that he made a mistake letting the receiver go and still believes in him as a player, but that didn’t make watching his former team in the Super Bowl any easier.
“There was definitely envy,” Tate said. “I’m extremely happy here and I have zero regrets at all, but you can’t tell me, just like I’m here now, I very easily could have been back on that team playing in another Super Bowl. I could have. But it is what it is. That’s what life is. It’s choices you make.
“I don’t look back. I’m still excited about where I am and love where I am and the long-term future of this organization. But you can’t help but to be like, ‘Damn.’”
Last week, Tate made headlines by saying on his weekly radio show on WMGC-FM (105.1) that opposing defensive players have told him after every game this year they knew what plays the Lions were calling.
Many took those comments as a shot at offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi, but Tate said that wasn’t the case. He said he still believes in Lombardi and the offense.
“I think we all just need to be a little bit better,” he said.
That starts Monday night in Seattle, where the Lions will try to turn their season around against one of the best defenses in the NFL.
Chancellor and Thomas, Tate’s draftmates from 2010, still are patrolling the Seahawks’ secondary, and Sherman is so good that he usually shuts down whatever receiver he’s covering.
Tate said he and Sherman used to have epic battles in practice, and he’s ready for those memories and others to flood back when he steps on CenturyLink Field.
“I’m going to try my best to keep my emotions under wraps and use my emotions to help our team, not draw negative attention, or any more negative publicity,” Tate said.
Coach Jim Caldwell said he’s not worried about that with Tate, who teammates describe as the ultimate competitor.
“There’s emotion there. It brings back memories. So these guys are human. They’re not inhuman. They’re not robots,” Caldwell said. “So they do feel it and they do sense it, but I think they’re pros, too. And so I do think that they can manage and they can handle the stress and the excitement and all of those things that kind of go along with it.”
Tate, second on the Lions with 15 catches for 161 yards, is plenty excited for Monday night’s game. But there’s no stress or nervousness. At 0-3 and with a chance to help save the Lions’ season, there’s no time for that.
“Obviously, I want to win this game, and I tried not to worry about this game until the week got here,” Tate said. “But you can’t help but to think, ‘It’s my old team, man. Guys who drafted me, everyone who helped me get to here.’ This is a chance for me to go out there in that stadium and handle business. That’ll be great for us to do.”