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The infamous decision by Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll to tell his then-offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell to throw the ball on the goal-line in Super Bowl XLIX was a career-changing play for not only New England Patriots cornerback Malcolm Butler, but also running back Marshawn Lynch. 

In a recent interview with the I AM ATHLETE podcast, Lynch revealed his thoughts on the historic game-winning interception. Sure enough, he's still haunted. And mad.

“So when it comes to the play call, and that was the type of situation. Yeah, I’m hot as [expletive]. I’m boiling,” Lynch said. “And the only thing I can do was think, ‘I need to get in his face, for I’m about to laugh at [him] so hard.’ Because I know for a fact, like, if we run that ball four times and we don’t score, everybody on our team, from the front office to the [expletive] janitors will say, ‘Well, (expletive). Yup, well, we deserve to lose that [expletive].’

Lynch running the football with the game on the line is one of the biggest "what ifs" in NFL history. If the play call was a run, the Patriots potentially never win the Super Bowl, the first of the last three won with legendary quarterback Tom Brady.

This article first appeared on FanNation Patriot Maven and was syndicated with permission.

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