News Seahawks Team Notes

Falcons vs. Buccaneers ‘Thursday Night Football’ live discussion

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The Atlanta Falcons are out of the playoffs after the Seattle Seahawks put them out of their misery last Sunday. Beyond playing for pride and jobs, the Falcons can play spoiler in the NFC South race.

After a 5-1 start, which included a thriller over the Seahawks, the Buccaneers have crashed to 7-6 and their comfortable NFC South lead has turned into a scrap with the Carolina Panthers. Those two will play twice over the final month of the season, but Tampa Bay can at least maintain a tie for first place by winning on Thursday. They’ll have Mike Evans and Jalen McMillan back, while the Falcons still have Drake London out and Kirk Cousins as the starter.

Hey, these are division games, and the NFC South has already given us New Orleans Saints wins over both the Bucs and Panthers. Maybe we’re in for another crazy matchup between these two longtime rivals.

Head over to Prime Video at 5:15 pm for tonight’s game. Join us in the comments section!

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Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...neers-thursday-night-football-live-discussion
 
How the Falcons just proved Seahawks are Super Bowl contenders

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Let’s hear it for Atlanta!

The Atlanta Falcons pulled off a ridiculous comeback against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Thursday night. Neither team is a threat to the Seattle Seahawks, as the Falcons have already been eliminated from the postseason and the Buccaneers are now in significant playoff peril. But it’s now the second time that a team has revealed the Seahawks to be better at football than one might have thought.

Blowouts are rare in the NFL. Let’s define a blowout as a victory of 13 or more points – the amount that Seattle is favored this Sunday against the Indianapolis Colts. Last year’s Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles had five last season. Two of those were against the Dallas Cowboys, which is always hilarious.

The Seahawks now have six 13+point wins in 2025, including back-to-back victories by over 25 points.

It’s getting ridiculous out here.

I want to reiterate something, which is that only really good teams do this. There was strange chatter about Seattle looking ‘bad’ against Atlanta, and other such unfounded nerves.

Whelp, the Falcons might have just knocked a team out of the postseason, on the road, a mere four days after not scoring a touchdown at their own stadium.

That’s not just the first time this kind of thing has happened, either.

The Vikings are the first team to win by a shutout after getting shut out in their previous game since 1992 😯 pic.twitter.com/Lu7oKPd3ac

— NFL on ESPN (@ESPNNFL) December 7, 2025

Not only could the Minnesota Vikings not get a touchdown, they couldn’t even score. Yes, yes, Max Brosmer is not JJ McCarthy. But prior to that game, McCarthy was the worst QB in the NFL.

The point is this: “Who have you really beaten” does not work when the Seahawks are steamrolling teams, in a month absolutely chalk full of upsets and playoff hopes dashed. In consecutive weeks, Seattle beat the living daylights out of a team. And in consecutive weeks, that loser went on to prove that they are, in fact, not the Las Vegas Raiders.

The Seahawks have given up nine points since Thanksgiving, outscored opponents by 54, and this current stretch is for real.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ust-proved-seahawks-are-super-bowl-contenders
 
Julian Love named as one of 3 Seahawks captains against the Colts

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The Seattle Seahawks have announced the names that will serve as captains in a crucial matchup against the Indianapolis Colts on Sunday. Crucial in that the Hawks seek to keep pace with the best record in the National Football Conference and the fight for the #1 seed.

The men that will serve as captains and gameday leaders will be quarterback Sam Darnold on offense, safety Julian Love on defense and fullback/tight end Brady Russell who will continue to be a key cog on special teams.

Our Week 15 captains are in. pic.twitter.com/KnNSiR5SU3

— Seattle Seahawks (@Seahawks) December 12, 2025

This will be Sam Darnold’s 5th game serving as captain. He is the signal-caller of the offense and a central figure in the success of this 2025 Seahawks team. Darnold currently sits in 5th place in QB Rating in the NFL, one of only nine QB’s to score in the triple digits (103.8). Will Seattle try to push the pace against a soft secondary matchup to force a shootout from the Indy side? That could make things VERY interesting, as the Colts could be starting a 44-year-old Philip Rivers, who came into the facility less than a week ago.

Julian Love could be primed to play more of a full-time role after returning from a 2+ month absence (hamstring) last week. He only played 20 snaps in his return but is a rangy and intelligent veteran who can help to mitigate negative elements (poor plays or poor players) in the back end. Love last served as a captain in Week 2.

Brady Russell is stepping up into his third tour of captaincy this season and has logged 9 solo tackles and a fumble recovery. Russell has an outside shot to find some snaps on offense as a TE, with Arroyo and Saubert hurting to varying degrees.

The 10-3 Seahawks clash with the 8-5 Colts on Sunday at 1:25pm PST on CBS.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ulian-love-named-3-seahawks-captains-vs-colts
 
SBNation Reacts results: Seahawks fans weigh in on Super Bowl prospects

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Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Each week we ask questions of the most plugged-in Seattle Seahawks fans and fans across the country.



It’s time for Seahawks Reacts results! The confidence poll gets us started with the obvious belief from fans that this team is headed in the right direction. I’m curious to see if the one percent consists of San Francisco 49ers and Los Angeles Rams fans, with a sprinkling of “clicked the wrong button” from Seahawks fans.

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Now we head to the Indianapolis Colts game, which we now know will have Philip Rivers sensationally starting at quarterback. The Seahawks are favored by two touchdowns, and while our question pertained to whether or not they’d win by at least two possessions (nine points), fans overwhelmingly believe Seattle will cruise past the Colts and Grandpa Phil.

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For our big question of the week, we asked what you believed was the ceiling for the 2025 Seahawks, who are the NFC’s No. 5 seed but are tied for the best record in the conference. They’re really close to the No. 1 seed and have a ton of advanced metrics to indicate they are an elite squad that should be taken seriously as a Super Bowl contender. It looks like most fans surveyed agree that this is a Super Bowl caliber team.

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Let’s take a look at some of your comments to see what you had to say!

Jonetwo

Jonetwo
Ceiling: Sam Darnold and Klint Kubiak game plan
Floor: Sam Darnold and Klint Kubiak game plan

ThinkingBlade

Thinkingblade
My glasses have turned blue and green I think they are going to curb stomp a one dimensional Colts team with their defense. I also think that, particularly if the Hawks get revenge wins against the Rams and 49ers they can make it to the Super Bowl. I think any team that can make it to the Super Bowl can win the Super Bowl and I think the favorite goes to the team that prepares better – and I’m not betting against MM if he has two weeks to prepare.

HawkHawk

HawkHawk
Winning the Super Bowl is the ceiling at this point. Not a guaranteed, but absolutely possible. Three losses by a total of 9 points. It will take better run blocking and play calling, and beating the FTRs and FTNs.

The best three teams in the NFC are in the West. Absent some Lambeau Field shenanigans, the NFC representative will be one of those three. The best teams in the AFC can make a close game of it against the NFC (especially Houston with their defense it’ll stay close), but it’s the NFCs year, so let’s get past the Rams and 9ers.

ChuckKnoxGuest

ChuckKnoxsGuest
The Sky’s the limit but the Rams are the ceiling Seattle has to bust through.

PLeem

PLeem
I put the ceiling at win the Super Bowl (though I don’t think that will happen). But if the Hawks get there, of the current top 3 seeds in the AFC (Pats, Broncos and Jags) none of them scare me offensively and the only great defense among them is the Broncos, who probably have the weakest offense of the 3.

The team I would be most worried about in the AFC is the Bills. They can be hit and miss, but when Allen is rolling he’s very likely to be the best QB in the AFC playoffs this year.

On the NFC side, I really think it’s going to be one of the three teams from our division. Either us, FTR or FTN. Philly is a mess. Green Bay is streaky, especially Jordan Love. So he could be tough if he’s on a heater.

I think we’ll get to the NFC title game, but lose a close one to FTR where they will beat the Pats in the Owl (unfortunately).

Thanks for answering our questions! We’ve got a short week coming up so expect a shortened survey next week.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...s-seahawks-fans-weigh-in-super-bowl-prospects
 
Seahawks vs. Colts: All you need to know for Week 15

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The Seattle Seahawks (10-3) have won three straight and are looking for their 11th win for the first time since 2020. Their opponents are the Indianapolis Colts (8-5), who were seemingly on their way to an unexpectedly brilliant year before injuries hit them at the worst possible time. The biggest plot twist is the injury to Daniel Jones, which has ended his season early and despite having rookie Riley Leonard on the roster, 44-year-old Philip Rivers is set to return to the Colts and make his first start in five years. He’s unretired for the most unlikely of comeback stories, but he’s doing so against one of the NFL’s best defenses.

While the Colts are trying to stay in the division race and therefore the playoff hunt, the Seahawks want to move a step closer to a postseason berth and possibly get the NFC’s No. 1 seed. This is by no means a game worth overlooking even though Rivers is starting; winning this one is hugely important ahead of a Thursday night home rematch with the Los Angeles Rams.

Down below, you can find everything you need to get ready for the game, which starts 1:25 pm PT on CBS. There will be regular game and injury news updates in our coverage stream, as well as all of our post-game content. Make sure you check out The Feed for more game day and post-game content and conversations, too! A Seahawks win means a post-game GIF party!


Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...apolis-colts-nfl-week-15-game-coverage-stream
 
Winners and Losers from an uncomfortably close Seahawks win over Colts

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The Seattle Seahawks almost had one of the most embarrassing losses of the season. Key word is almost.

Credit to 44-year-old Philip Rivers for not looking woefully out of his place in his first start in five years (well, up until his final throw of the game), but the Seahawks would’ve been summarily and maybe justifiably dismissed as serious Super Bowl contenders. They had to gut this victory out against a desperate Indianapolis Colts side and did so without scoring a touchdown.

Let’s get to Winners and Losers for Seahawks 18, Colts 16.


Winners​


Jason Myers is our hero

Six field goal attempts, six makes, and a valuable win thanks to the leading field goal maker in the NFL this year. What more needs to be said? Also huge props to him for not botching the final kickoff and forcing the Colts to burn time with a return that was inefficient in terms of field position and time off the clock.

Rashid Shaheed is getting more involved in the offense

Shaheed’s punt return decisions could use some work, but we’re finally starting to see that chemistry build between Shaheed and Sam Darnold. He finished with 5 catches for 74 yards on 7 targets, continuing his strong offensive performance from last week. The game-winning drive was just about all Shaheed: kick return + a pair of catches to get Seattle into field goal range.

Mike Macdonald’s timeout usage was masterful

By calling timeouts the minute the Colts crossed midfield, Macdonald preserved time for the Seahawks in case the Colts made a field goal without picking up another first down. Had the Colts had another first down, the timeouts wouldn’t have mattered, but his defense stopped Jonathan Taylor on 3rd and 7 and left Sam Darnold with enough time to score again. I’ve been critical of Macdonald holding onto his timeouts too much at the end of halves, but he nailed situational football on this occasion. I might as well give Brian Eayrs a game ball since he’s a research analyst for Seattle and informs Macdonald of these choices.

Jaxon Smith-Njigba is back above the century mark

Chasing Calvin Johnson’s record looks like a lost cause unless he really unleashes hell on Earth over the final three weeks, but he still had 113 yards on 7 catches. His one bad play was an uncharacteristic dropped pass on a Sam Darnold dime over the middle. JSN is still far and away Seattle’s best offensive weapon and he continues to have one of the great seasons in Seahawks history.

Cooper Kupp gets more involved

Kupp caught 5 passes for 46 yards, which may not seem like much, but it’s his first time with that many catches since October. There’s still a little bit of life left in Kupp as a chain mover who rarely makes negative plays with the ball in his hands.

Sam Darnold delivers when it matters most

Was that a great game from Darnold? I thought he was good enough; he didn’t really put the ball in harm’s way (outside of yet another fumble, this time on a scramble) and essentially led two game-winning drives in a quarter. Apart from wanting a 3rd and 2 completion to assure the Colts never get the ball again, he executed that one-minute drill very well. Darnold is showing some accuracy issues a bit that weren’t there at the start of the season, which I partially attribute to an offensive line struggling a little bit more as of late.

Nick Emmanwori was the best defensive player

The rookie keeps wowing. He recorded a “sack” that was mostly Philip Rivers falling, getting up, then falling again with Nick in the area ready to deliver the boom on a man twice his age. Emmanwori also sniffed out a screen pass for minimal gain in the fourth quarter, recorded a tackle for loss, and recorded two passes defensed early on. If this is E-Man’s floor then he’s going to be a perennial Pro Bowl talent. His ceiling? One of the best defensive players in the NFL.

Leonard Williams keeps dominating

I didn’t think the Seahawks defensive line was all that great today, eespecially with some of the successful run plays allowed and lack of pass rush, but Big Cat had several runs stops, two tackles for loss, and two QB hits/pressures.

Coby Bryant is a closer

Four interceptions on the year for Coby, and now he’s picked off 44-year-old Rivers and 42-year-old Aaron Rodgers.

Losers​


Klint Kubiak’s offense is running on borrowed time

Over the last 12 quarters of play, the Seahawks have had a burst of points in the 2nd half against the Atlanta Falcons and that’s about it. One offensive touchdown versus the Minnesota Vikings, none in the first half against Atlanta, and none in the whole game versus the Colts.

The lack of a cohesive dropback passing game without play action is glaring. Sam Darnold is the best in the business by EPA/play when using play action and average at best without it. When the Seahawks are put in unfavorable game scripts, Kubiak’s group has a hard time digging themselves out of tough situations. They’re seemingly fine in tempo/hurry-up situations, but it’s clear to me that the Seahawks offense is struggling in prolonged stretches that could prove catastrophic in the playoffs.

The running game may just be a lost cause

No explosive runs for the Seahawks. None. The offensive line got whipped up and down the field and struggled to open holes for either Kenneth Walker or Zach Charbonnet. On this day, Charbonnet was more effective with 31 yards on 8 carries to Walker’s 17 on 9, but combine those two and you get three yards per carry. That ain’t gonna get it done.

I’m not sure there’s really anyone to pinpoint, either. Seattle just lacks the people movers to dominate in the trenches and create space for their backs.

Brady Russell replaces Robbie Ouzts and blows his audition

Dropped an easy pass and made no impact in his limited snaps as a blocker. Either play Ouzts (despite his lack of effectiveness as a fullback) or don’t play a fullback at all. Russell is definitely not a fullback and his hands are as bad as they were in preseason.

Josh Jobe struggles on a day when the Colts barely had a passing attack

Jobe gave up the only touchdown on a crosser to Josh Downs, was fortunate not to get beaten deep on a play where Downs lost track of the ball, allowed a back shoulder crosser to Alec Pierce that allowed the Colts a chance to get into field goal range, and was the victim of a BS pass interference call. Ultimately, I think Jobe is a good player but he’s lived a charm life in terms of some plays breaking in his favor when he was otherwise beaten (see: Darnell Mooney touchdown last week). Riq Woolen should be getting the main snaps in base defense over Jobe; this isn’t to bench Josh as much as it’s to play Riq more.

Pass rush underwhelms against banged up Colts offensive line

Indianapolis lost their starting right tackle before the game started and then Bernhard Raimann went down in the first half. Rivers was getting the ball out quickly as expected, but the conservative pressure plan meant that Rivers was rarely put in bothersome spots throughout the afternoon. I know I sound like a broken record, but the Seahawks defense would really be upgraded by having a standout edge rusher and not a by-committee approach. Boye Mafe is almost destined to be elsewhere next season.

Adrian Hill’s crew only let one team play aggressively

I don’t get how Josh Jobe’s PI was PI but Jaxon Smith-Njigba could get hugged before the two-minute drill without a whistle. In fairness, the penalty count was light and not lopsided, but if you’re going to let physical play happen then make it happen both ways.

Final Notes​

  • Rylie Mills got his first NFL snaps, which surprised me. I didn’t expect him to go in cold with zero training camp and preseason reps. I’m curious to see what the snap counts were and whether this was pseudo-load management to not overwork the main guys ahead of Thursday’s game.
  • A.J. Barner continues to be a security blanket as a receiver for Sam Darnold, but I’d like to see him utilized more in the intermediate passing attack.
  • Zach Charbonnet has had pass protection issues three straight weeks, which is uncharacteristic given that’s been a strength of his. The one sack allowed was to Laiatu Latu, and while he’s Indy’s best pass rusher, Charbonnet’s rep was sub-optimal.
  • The Colts didn’t have a great offensive performance. They averaged 3.7 yards per play, barely moved the ball after halftime, but the key for them was field position. Seattle’s offense failed to flip the field on multiple occasions when backed up, and Rashid Shaheed’s just gotta not fair catch punts inside his 10.
  • Seattle’s streak of not allowing a 100-yard rusher continues. If the leading rusher in the NFL can’t do it, who can? Hopefully not Kyren Williams, who came really close in the first Seahawks vs. Rams tilt.
  • Perhaps the biggest win for the Seahawks was having few injury issues outside of Abe Lucas and Derick Hall, both of whom returned to the game after heading into the medical tent.
  • Beat the Rams and you’re in the playoffs. The No. 1 seed is still in sight, but getting into the playoffs is the first thing to do and winning on Thursday night clinches a spot with room to spare.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...rs-seahawks-vs-colts-jason-myers-nfl-analysis
 
Snap Reactions: Seahawks squeak out close win as Bryce Cabeldue inactive

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So far in the 2025 season the Seattle Seahawks have won five games by 20 or more points, with rookie offensive lineman Bryce Cabeldue playing a key role in each of those victories.

Specifically, Cabeldue has logged offensive snaps in exactly five contests this year, with those five games being:

  • Week 3 vs the New Orleans Saints (44-13)
  • Week 9 vs the Washington Commanders (38-14)
  • Week 10 vs the Arizona Cardinals (44-22)
  • Week 13 vs the Minnesota Vikings (26-0)
  • Week 14 vs the Atlanta Falcons (37-9)

Cabeldue’s absence on offense has been glaring in the other nine games the Seahawks have played, with the team failing to win any of those games by 20 or more points, and even losing three of those matchups.

Thus, whether or not the showdown Sunday with the Indianapolis Colts in Week 15 action was destined to be a close game as soon as the Seahawks announced their inactives for the game.

called it before the game even kicked off. pic.twitter.com/5cVkJCnyOQ

— John P Gilbert (@JohnPGilbertNFL) December 15, 2025

In any case, if Mike Macdonald wants to play the game on All Madden mode by keeping Cabeldue on the sideline, as head coach that’s his right to do so, even if it makes the lives of fans more stressful on Sunday afternoons.

As for the Seahawks who did play, it was Jalen Sundell reprising his role as the starting center after returning from injured reserve, with Olu Oluwatimi not even seeing the field on special teams after having started the last four games. Sundell at center meant those fans who had hoped that he could come back and play right guard and send Anthony Bradford to the bench were disappointed to once again watch Bradford play every offensive snap for the Seahawks.

Also notable as the end of the season rapidly approaches is that in the wake of Eric Saubert’s recent contract extension, Brady Russell handled the fullback duties with Robbie Ouzts a healthy scratch and A.J. Barner and Nick Kallerup taking the tight end snaps in Elijah Arroyo’s absence.

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On the defensive side, Julian Love continued to work his way back into a starting workload, playing 49 of 60 defensive snaps, while Ty Okada saw his playing time reduced to just 11 snaps. In addition, after coming off the nonfootball injury list, rookie defensive lineman Rylie Mills saw the field for the first seven snaps of his NFL career, though he did not record any box score stats.

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On special teams it was, as it is every Sunday, the Brady Russell and Mike Morris show, with D’Anthony Bell, Velus Jones and Patrick O’Connell also logging 20 or more special teams snaps.

Also, perhaps worthy of note is the fact that three members that make up the middle of the 2024 Seahawks draft class, third rounder Christian Haynes, fourth rounder Tyrice Knight and fifth rounder Nehemiah Pritchett only saw the field on special teams.

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And now it’s on to the Los Angeles Rams on Thursday Night Football for all the marbles.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...-close-win-as-bryce-cabeldue-inactive-week-15
 
Dolphins vs. Steelers ‘Monday Night Football’ live discussion

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Hey, remember when the Miami Dolphins were way out of the playoff picture? I mean they still are, but they’re not as far as they could be after starting the season 2-7. They’ve won four in a row to claw to 6-7, albeit starting at elimination with a loss against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Maybe the Dolphins wish they were in the AFC North, where 7-6 is enough for the Steelers to lead a sorry division.

No matter what Pittsburgh does, they lead the division entering Week 16. A loss means they’re tied again with the Baltimore Ravens at 7-7, but with the crucial head-to-head over Baltimore earned last week. DK Metcalf was a big part of that, catching 7 passes for 148 yards in by far his biggest game as a Steeler.

ESPN has you covered at 5:15 pm PT. We’ve only got 48 more regular season games after this one.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...teelers-monday-night-football-live-discussion
 
Jason Myers on pace to break all-time NFL field goals single-season record

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It is officially Jason Myers appreciation season. After putting up all 18 points for the Seattle Seahawks last week against the Indianapolis Colts, Myers is starting to get praise from all around the national media. From appearances on the Pat McAfee show, to winning NFC Special Teams Player of the Month for November, to breaking the Seattle Seahawks franchise record for field goals made, to even gaining attention from Fantasy Football sites.

An interesting note about Fantasy Football and Jason Myers; Myers has more fantasy points (177.0) than Nico Collins, Chase Brown, Ceedee Lamb, Justin Jefferson, and more. Myers would rank as the 20th best quarterback in fantasy football, the 15th best running back, 7th best wide receiver, and 2nd best tight end.

This national attention is surely warranted. However, there is another record that came about the news cycle this week that is well within Myers’ reach. Pro Football Talk noted that Myers is now on pace to break the NFL record for most field goals made in a season. The record is currently held by David Akers in 2011, who kicked 44 field goals with the San Francisco 49ers that season. Myers, who currently is 37 for 42 on field goals this season and leads the NFL in makes and attempts, is only eight field goals away from breaking the record. With three games to go, that is well attainable.

For Seahawks fans, Myers breaking the record would be very exciting. However, for that to happen, that would likely mean the offensive struggles in the red zone would continue. If Seattle can squeak out three wins and get the number one seed, and Myers break the record at the same time, that would be great. However, this may be a one or the other type of scenario. Myers’ leg will be put to the test very soon as the Seahawks take on the Los Angeles Rams on Thursday Night Football. Last time the Seahawks and Rams met, Myers hit 4/5 field goals (the infamous miss being a 61-yard attempt).

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...s-nfl-all-time-field-goals-record-david-akers
 
Four Down Territory: Jason Myers beats Philip Rivers, 18-16

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Well, it wasn’t quite Rocky vs Apollo, but the heavyweight (sorry, that was mean) battle between the Seattle Seahawks’ much maligned kicker and Rivers doing his best Dennis Quaid “The Rookie” impression was some of the best bad football I can remember.

It was a historic day in Seattle for a lot of reasons. We saw a Seahawks team that looked like they may have been looking ahead to their date with the Los Angeles Rams, instead find themselves in the fight of their lives as the 44 year old gunslinger had Seattle on the ropes. The all-field goal performance brought Seattle their first 11 win season since 2020, and only their fourth win in 50 seasons in which they failed to score a touchdown.

It was a wacky one to say the least, so let’s break it all down.

First Down: Thank you, Jason Myers


Mr. Smelling salts to the rescue! On a night where the offense found itself stuck in quicksand, and never able to break through to the end zone, it was Myers who carried the day, and kept Seattle in the hunt for the NFC West title. A career best six-for-six on field goals made, Myers’s game winning 56-yard field goal was his second game winning kick of the season.

It hasn’t always been roses for Jason in Seattle, but 2025 has been a real breakthrough season. The 11 year veteran is 37 for 42 on field goal attempts, both career highs. He’s also a perfect 42 of 42 on extra points. This year has been a revelation for Seattle’s special teams unit, and it was cool (although stressful) to see Myers have his special moment in a special season.

Second Down: Thank you, Phillip Rivers


I was fortunate enough to be at the game Sunday, and you could just feel that we were about to watch something special when Phillip Rivers walked out onto the field.

No, he didn’t look like the guy that used to cook NFL defenses to a Hall of Fame career, but he was an absolute gladiator that entered a brutal arena and walked out upright and with the respect of the entire sporting world.

He’s a little crazy, but you kind of have to be to do what he did. I still find it equally terrifying and inspiring that he almost pulled that upset off. He truly is an inspiration to never being afraid to say yes to a challenge, no matter the odds.

This journey he is on will delay his inevitable trip to Canton for another five years, so enjoy these bonus final games we are witnessing. Hopefully he pulls off some magic against the 49ers as well.

Third Down: Sam Darnold delivered


Was this Sam Darnold’s best game as the Seahawks quarterback? No, but I believe it was his most important. On a night the Seahawks couldn’t score a touchdown, there was no running game, and the offensive line was getting bludgeoned, Sam had to fight through it as a potential franchise quarterback. The results may not have been sexy, Darnold finished 22/35 for 271 yards. He had zero turnovers, only took one sack, and led six scoring drives.

Most importantly, when the Seahawks needed him most, Sam led two go ahead drives in the final minutes to help save the Seahawks. He wasn’t perfect, but he delivered when it mattered most. Sometimes, you just have to find a way to win, and for Seattle to reach their goals, you can make a strong case he will need to deliver when it matters most, in every game here on out.

Fourth Down: ‘Black Sunday’ and its effect on Seattle


Sunday was really a dark day for the NFL, outside of Seattle. Horrific injuries that will have a massive impact on this playoff season, and possibly 2026.

In Kansas City, the dynasty came crashing down, with Patrick Mahomes tearing his ACL as the Chiefs were eliminated. In Denver, the Green Bay Packers blew a second half lead to the Broncos while losing star edge rusher Micah Parsons to a torn ACL. In Los Angeles, the Rams might be without star wide receiver Davante Adams for their battle with Seattle, after he appeared to suffer a hamstring injury running for a deep ball.

The odds of the Chiefs making the playoffs were slim, but the consequences of losing Mahomes may have massive repercussions for that franchise and the entire AFC going forward.

In the NFC, no Parsons really changes the ceiling of what this Packers team is capable of. All of the sudden, they have gone from sneaky top seed contenders, to possibly missing the playoffs.

For the Rams, the potential loss of Adams against the Seahawks is big. While he only caught one pass in the previous meeting in LA, it was for a touchdown, and he definitely alters the game plan for the Seahawks when he’s on the field. If he can’t play, I expect the Rams will have to adjust, with Puka Nacua drawing all the attention.

It’s the type of loss that could swing a game that looks incredibly tight, which in turn could swing the NFC West and the entire playoff landscape.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...nalysis-jason-myers-beats-philip-rivers-18-16
 
5Qs & 5As: Previewing Seahawks-Rams rematch with Turf Show Times

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NFL action in Week 16 starts off with the most anticipated game of the week.

For those who have grown accustomed to Thursday Night Football in December bringing meaningless matchups between the likes of the Tennessee Titans and Jacksonville Jaguars or the like, this week the game features the only two teams in the NFC with 11 wins in the Seattle Seahawks and Los Angeles Rams.

Joining Field Gulls to preview the game is Evan Craig of Turf Show Times, and since readers didn’t click on this post to read the pre-question fluff, here are the five questions posed and the answers provided.



1. The Rams offense has been very potent for much of 2025, but struggled mightily in the first matchup against the Seattle defense. Should we expect the Rams to do anything different offensively in Week 16 as they look for better offensive production in the rematch?

The first meeting was strange because it happened during a stretch when the Rams had gotten off to multiple double-digit leads against their opponents. L.A. had a 14-3 lead versus Seattle in the first quarter and proceeded to score a single touchdown the rest of the way. It was the opposite of the problem they had at the beginning of the season, when they would start slowly and then pick up as the game progressed. The Rams started hot against the Seahawks and cooled off considerably after.

What the team might do to have better production this time around would be to run the ball more. Kyren Williams nearly had a 100-yard performance, and that was around the time when the offense was still figuring out how to get second-year back Blake Corum involved. My thinking is the offense will run more early and often. Williams and Corum have each amassed 70+ rushing yards in the last three games, with the Michigan product having scored 4 touchdowns in that span. The running game has evolved into more of a two-headed monster, so expect to see a lot of that dynamic duo on Thursday to help L.A. move the chains.

2. Most of the talk about the Rams has been the performance of the offense so far this season, but L.A. is third in the league in points allowed. What has been the driving force behind that?

The run defense has been a significant contributor to the unit’s overall success this season. It was a focal point during the offseason, hence why they brought in defensive tackle Poona Ford from the Chargers this offseason. L.A. has only allowed one 100-yard rusher this season, and that was the Ravens’ Derrick Henry. It’s been really impressive to see the Rams hold star rushers like Saquon Barkley, Christian McCaffrey (2x), Jonathan Taylor and Jahmyr Gibbs in check and then some. The turnaround in that department was very much needed, considering how badly Barkley gashed them in two meetings last year. Outside of the Panthers game from a few weeks ago, the Rams have been generally elite against the run.

3. It seems there’s a very good chance Davante Adams won’t be able to play Thursday. He was not very effective in the first game as he played through an oblique injury. If he can’t go, who will take his snaps?

That is a very good question, and one that I don’t think even the Rams have an answer to yet. L.A.’s depth at wideout will certainly be tested with Davante Adams out. There isn’t a set WR3 who could quickly step into that role. Young receivers Jordan Whittington and Xavier Smith have combined for just 31 catches on the year. For comparison, running back Kyren Williams is close to that mark with 27 catches. Tutu Atwell, a speed demon and presumed deep threat when the coaching staff decides to use him, has been injured and out of the lineup for most of the season. It’s anyone’s guess as to how McVay decides to divvy up the missing snaps. I’d fully expect a WR2 by committee with Adams likely out this week.

4. Former Seahawks tight end Colby Parkinson has more touchdowns this season than in the prior five years of his career combined. What’s changed for him, or has it simply been that defenses are more focused on the likes of Adams and Puka Nacua and Parkinson is benefiting from not having a lot of attention focused on him in the red zone?

I think all the focus on Puka Nacua and Davante Adams is the main reason for Parkinson’s success. The Rams’ offense runs through those two playmakers, so eventually, someone else is going to slip through the cracks and take advantage of what the defense is giving them. Parkinson is that player, and it’s honestly been really surprising to see. For much of the early part of the season, the Rams couldn’t get any production from their tight ends. It was genuinely flat-out embarrassing how little they were contributing to the offense. So, needless to say, the recent scoring outburst from Parkinson has been a welcome surprise.

Another reason Parkinson has stood out lately is that he’s been the primary TE receiving threat with Tyler Higbee on IR for the past month. However, Higbee has a chance to return for the first time since the last matchup against the Seahawks. I don’t expect him to be much of a factor, though, since he did next to nothing when healthy. It might be somewhat premature to believe Parkinson has finally arrived in Hollywood, but I fully expect Sean McVay to continue riding the hot hand by giving the veteran more opportunities.

5. What’s your prediction for the outcome of the game and why?

The Rams have been Sam Darnold’s kryptonite in his last three games against them, between time with the Vikings and Seahawks. I don’t expect Darold to have as rough a game this time around, but the pass rush might force him into multiple mistakes. Seattle has an excellent roster across the board, yet they still seem quite inconsistent at times and have a tendency to play down to their competition, as evidenced by their nail-biting win over the Colts this past weekend. Give me the Rams in a close one, 24-20.



Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...wks-rams-rematch-with-turf-show-times-week-16
 
The Seahawks Syndicate: What does Seattle need to make a Super Bowl run?

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We’re less than 24 hours away from the biggest game of the Seattle Seahawks’ 2025 season, and one of their biggest in years. A win over the Los Angeles Rams puts them in control of the NFC West and on the cusp of capturing the NFC’s No. 1 seed. A loss could send them down to third place by the end of Week 16 behind the Rams and San Francisco 49ers, all but assuring that any path to the Super Bowl would have to go through the Wild Card.

While the Seahawks have racked up four wins in a row and sit at an impressive 11-3, there have been concerns on the offensive side of the ball, particularly the run game struggles and the lackluster opening halves over the past few weeks. A narrow win over a fading Indianapolis Colts team starting freshly unretired Philip Rivers at quarterback may not have been the most confidence-boosting performance ahead of a showdown with the Rams, who have yet to lose against Seattle with Matthew Stafford as starter. To make matters worse, there will be no left tackle Charles Cross for the next few weeks.

The Seahawks Syndicate podcast is back for a special mid-month edition to preview the Rams game. Yours truly is joined by Bryce Coutts (The Hawk’s Eye podcast and Field Gulls staff), Dan Viens (Seahawks Forever podcast and former Field Gulls podcast host), and Brandon Cain (The Hawk’s Nest podcast and this episode’s host) comprise the four-person panel for our insights and opinions on our favorite football team. We’ll discuss Seattle’s Super Bowl prospects, the keys to the Rams game, and take a long-term look at the offensive line and the future of the right guard position.

Watch the video below live at 7 pm PT and if you’re on YouTube, please feel free to join the live chat so you can submit any questions and comments that may make the show! If you drop comments in the Field Gulls comments section I’ll also be keeping tabs, so you won’t be ignored! If you’re not catching this live, do not fret! I’ve read your feedback too, so after the recording we will update the article with timestamps so you’re not fumbling around for the topic you’re looking for.

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Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seahawks...-what-do-seahawks-need-to-make-super-bowl-run
 
Winners and Losers from the Seahawks’ monumental comeback vs. Rams

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Did all of that just happen? On the surface, the Seattle Seahawks beating the Los Angeles Rams was far from a crazy thought. Even winning in a shootout, however unlikely, didn’t seem far-fetched. To win a game down 30-14 with under 10 minutes left and then still have to rally from a touchdown deficit in overtime to grab first place in the NFC West (and the NFC as a whole)? To quote former child star Dickie Roberts, that is “nucking futs.”

Winners and Losers time after the Seahawks’ remarkable, improbable, stupendous 38-37 comeback over the Rams to grab control of the division.


Seattle Seahawks Winners​


Sam Darnold may still be seeing ghosts, but he exorcised some demons

Perhaps the Darnold we saw is the Darnold we should expect. He will gunsling and make some terrible decisions that lead to turnovers. He’ll be panicky in the pocket when coverages are heavily disguised post-snap and the first read is covered. But he’ll also throw lightning strikes to Jaxon Smith-Njigba in the middle of the field, overcome some pressure in his face to make throws on the run, and he just led a signature drive that in itself might have been the biggest moment of his entire NFL career.

Last year, the NFC North and the No. 1 seed could’ve been Minnesota’s and he didn’t show up against the Detroit Lions. We know the story of the prior two starts versus the Rams, including the four-interception game with Seattle. The anger toward Sam was probably at its highest point on that awful interception in the red zone, which looked like the dagger turnover.

But he battled. And battled. And he threw the two-point conversion that put the Seahawks within eight. He threw the touchdown to A.J. Barner to cut the deficit to two. Darnold went 5/6 for 49 yards and a touchdown in overtime, not including the winning throw to Eric Saubert. Are there worries about his high turnover rate and issues in pure dropback situations? Sure. But this was as big a game for him individually as it was for the team, and much like the team, he delivered at the end after an immense struggle through three quarters.

Klint Kubiak also saved his best for last

Getting almost 300 yards after halftime on one of the league’s best defenses is not something I will knock Kubiak for. We saw a successful screen pass to a running back for 46 yards. That, in itself, is a miracle worth putting him in the Winners column. A criticism of this offense was that it’s not built to come from behind; a frontrunner, if you will. Well, they came from behind albeit with a special teams assist, and it allowed Kubiak to call a relaxed overtime script knowing he had all four downs to work with. No, let’s not keep firing offensive coordinators.

Kenneth Walker III silenced his critics for a night

Who would’ve guessed K9 would be second in receiving yards behind Jaxon Smith-Njigba? He had 64 yards on three catches and 100 yards on 11 carries, including a 55-yard touchdown to give the Seahawks the lead on the opening drive of the second half. Walker turned a 3rd and 16 give-up play into a first down, for crying out loud. Did you not see his effort to tackle Josh Wallace to prevent a pick-6? Sure, the Seahawks gave up a TD anyway, but Walker showed tremendous hustle.

Walker should’ve gotten the ball more but I’ll save that complaint for another day. Great game for the embattled fourth-year running back.

Jaxon Smith-Njigba came alive in the second half

Congrats to JSN for being Seattle’s all-time single-season leader in receptions, breaking his tie with Tyler Lockett after matching his 100 catches in 2024. The 2025 version of JSN made it to 104 with two games to spare, even after being shutout in the first half. He finished with 8 catches for 96 yards and the overtime touchdown, continuing to showcase to the entire NFL that he is one of the best in the business and will be for years to come.

Eric Saubert, you won’t ever have to buy a drink in Seattle again

A contract extension last week, a hero on Thursday night. Officially, Saubert has no catches since 2PCs do not count, but we all saw what he did in overtime. If the Seahawks win the NFC West, this journeyman blocking tight end will be part of Seattle sports lore forever.

Rashid Shaheed had the most impactful 0-catch game an NFL receiver could possibly have

Two weeks of being a major factor in the Seahawks offense had me bullish on Shaheed taking flight against the Rams in the passing game. He had no catches, yet he was so important to the win. His 58-yard punt return touchdown set the stage for the comeback, and his second (and final) touch was a 31-yard run on an end-around. Even without the gaudy stats in terms of receiving numbers, Shaheed has already made his presence felt with big plays over the last three weeks.

Zach Charbonnet had the most heads-up play ever

Charbonnet’s night was not particularly effective outside of an opening drive touchdown run and a key third down conversion in overtime, but hot damn is he going to be remembered for what I’m seeing in our comments section as, “The Zachwards Pass.” If he doesn’t pick the ball up on that two-point conversion, the play is over and the Seahawks probably don’t win. Because he had the ball in a clear recovery across the goal line, we got the weirdest two-point conversion in the history of football.

Cooper Kupp redeems himself after being in the ‘Losers’ column all night

It felt like Kupp was a double agent through three quarters. His normally resolute blocking was a mess. He lost a fumble for the first time in three years and cost the Seahawks a shot at points before halftime. Then he caught a two-point conversion for his first points at Lumen Field as a Seahawk. He made a classic Kupp sideline grab in overtime that put Seattle in the red zone. Three catches for 39 yards hardly sets the world on fire but Kupp had his moments in the comeback.

A.J. Barner is your favorite tight end’s favorite tight end

That route he scored on his touchdown was a thing of beauty. He faked inside on the bootleg and turned his hips quickly outside for the first non-red zone score of his NFL career. For whatever reason, I love the hell out of his touchdown celebration. Barner is what I hoped John Carlson would be if he was given a clean bill of health. If anything, the disappointment with Barner has been some of his blocking reps, which is supposed to be a strength of his.

Mike Macdonald is coaching a playoff team in Year 2

The Seahawks looked like they’ve made the right hire to replace Pete Carroll and continue the tradition of extremely bizarre prime time games. Last season he missed out on the postseason with a 10-7 record. This year he’s in the playoffs with two games to spare and on the cusp of getting the No. 1 seed. On a night when his normally outstanding defense was mostly cut apart, his team showed unreal resolve and found a way to win. The beast may not have been slayed for good because they may yet face the Rams again in the playoffs, but Macdonald was brought over in part to do what the Seahawks seldom did against Sean McVay and Kyle Shanahan in Pete’s final years: beat them. There’s still the matter of the 49ers game at the end of the year, but to beat McVay in the type of game that is out of Seattle’s comfort zone? Priceless. Congrats to Coach Mike. He has his signature win at long last.

Josh Jones fared well in Charles Cross’ absence

Outside of maybe the second Darnold interception where I’m unsure if he busted the protection, Jones did not look out of place on the offensive line. Many of the pressures and blown blocks seemed to be not from Jones or even Anthony Bradford, but Grey Zabel, Jalen Sundell, and Abe Lucas. Jones has shown himself to be a versatile swing tackle and he performed in a way that should make Seahawks fans feel comfortable about not having Cross for perhaps the rest of the regular season.

Nick Emmanwori defends every blade of grass

The biggest demerit I can give E-Man is getting caught peeking on the Terrance Ferguson touchdown. Otherwise, he had 11 tackles and drew a key holding penalty in the fourth quarter on Davis Allen that partially led to the missed field goal by Harrison Mevis. Emmanwori’s best play was stopping Puka Nacua a yard short of the end zone on 3rd and goal, which was followed up by the disallowed touchdown for ineligible player downfield. He was tested by McVay in ways he likes to test inexperienced players, and I’d say Emmanwori graded out well. If he didn’t miss so much time I’d say he’d be the leader for Defensive Rookie of the Year, but that may go to Carson Schwesinger of the Cleveland Browns. E-Man thankfully cleared concussion protocol, so he should be good for next week.

Leonard Williams and Byron Murphy II were the standouts on the defensive line. Again.

The Seahawks run defense was struggling in the first half through the run game equivalent of a dink-and-dunk offense. In the 2nd half, the Rams were held to 34 yards on 15 carries. ‘Big Cat’ and Murph are as good an interior line tandem as there is in the game. They were instrumental in the better run reps and were able to affect some Matthew Stafford dropbacks on the few times the arguable MVP-elect was pressured.

The best Seahawks assistant coach of 2025 may actually be Jay Harbaugh

I’ll expand on this on Friday. How often has special teams, which was a major liability last year, been a deciding factor for the Seahawks in a positive manner this season? Six field goals from Jason Myers last week, now a punt return touchdown this week. Hot seat? What hot seat? I was just kidding with that stuff last year. Seattle ended up with the undisputed best Harbaugh in the coaching family, obviously.

Seattle Seahawks Losers​


Grey Zabel has a “rookie game” night to forget

Outside of the opening drive touchdown in which he led the way for Kenneth Walker on that 46-yard screen pass and then opened a hole for Zach Charbonnet on his touchdown run, Zabel looked every bit like a rookie out of his depth against a ferocious defensive front. That was undeniably his worst pass protection game of the season and probably his worst game in totality of his young career. Kobie Turner dominated him throughout the night and it was disappointing to watch, but he’s also a rookie who’s otherwise been quite good this year so I’m not upset.

Coby Bryant had a brutal night before leaving with an injury

I hope Bryant’s injury isn’t serious given how awkwardly a big man buckled his right knee, but prior to that unfortunate incident he was having a tough one. Matthew Stafford and Sean McVay clearly saw it fit to pick on Bryant, Josh Jobe, and Drake Thomas most of the night, and Bryant was getting exploited on intermediate and deep routes while taking bad angles on missed tackles. I don’t think it’s the worst thing in the world if he misses time given it’ll just mean Ty Okada is back into the starting lineup.

The secondary got shredded even before the injuries

Woof. They got worked. Josh Jobe really shouldn’t have been matched up with Puka Nacua as much as he was, and even with two passes defensed he continues to have some troublesome moments in coverage. Devon Witherspoon was very good all game but even he got had by Puka on a deep ball in the fourth quarter. As mentioned earlier, a tough one for Coby Bryant. Given the lack of Davante Adams, it was a little disheartening to see the Seahawks pass defense get smoked by receivers who’d rarely been targeted all year.

Boye Mafe can’t line up offside every week and still get no sacks

I think Mafe has sealed his fate in Seattle. Michael Bennett could get away with repeated offside and encroachment penalties because he was extremely productive and one of the key pieces of the Super Bowl defenses. Mafe’s productivity in a contract year has dipped and he’s lined up in the neutral zone two weeks in a row.

Mafe and Derick Hall are getting outperformed by Uchenna Nwosu and Tank Lawrence, and while Hall still has a year left on his deal and has been better than his one sack suggests, I know a position that could be a priority upgrade on this defense in the offseason.

Klint Kubiak is not completely off the hook, even on a 415-yard night

Kudos to Kubes for the two-point conversion playcall, which worked to perfection. The sequencing of his calls is driving me insane, though. They had 2nd and 3rd and 1 in the opening quarter and threw it both times to no avail. Put A.J. Barner under center and push for the Barnyard and do it twice if you have to. The consecutive screens to Walker and JSN on the third-to-last drive of the game was outrageously bad. While I don’t want to defend Darnold for his first interception, the route combo spacing was Ryan Grubb-esque. There’s a chasm between Kubiak’s pure dropback game and his outstanding work with play action, and that’s just not getting fixed this season. He’s still a plus coordinator to me.

The fans who left early

I don’t totally blame you because the weather has been miserable and outright dangerous over the past week, so getting home might have been a challenge for many. And come on, after that Darnold interception with less than nine minutes left? That seemed like a dagger. But you missed a hell of a comeback.

Final Notes​

  • I have none; c’mon folks I wrote almost 2,500 words already on a cinematic masterpiece deserving of 4,000. That’s one of the best Seahawks games ever and it should be etched in our brains for eternity. I know I’m leaving a ton of stuff on the cutting room floor but it’s 11 pm and much of Friday will be dedicated to giving you the rarest of rarities: A two-part Enemy Reaction. Part one will cut off right when Puka Nacua scored the touchdown to make it 30-14, and part two will start with the interception by Kobie Turner that seemingly was the nail in the coffin for the Seahawks. See you all on Friday, and thanks for an unbelievable night of comment activity on Field Gulls. Seahawks playoff football is back in our lives, and next month we hope it’s back at Lumen Field.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...awks-vs-rams-comeback-thursday-night-football
 
Jaxon Smith-Njigba has Seahawks single-season receptions record all to himself

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Amongst all the chaos after the Seattle Seahawks defeated the Los Angeles Rams was the fact that Jaxon Smith-Njigba is now the sole franchise record holder for most receptions in a season. Prior to the 2025 season, the record was a tie between wide receivers Tyler Lockett and Smith-Njigba who each had 100 receptions (Lockett in 2020, Smith-Njigba in 2024).

Last year there was a lot more attention to this record when Smith-Njigba was chasing it down. However, with Smith-Njigba’s monster 2025 season, many fans had their eyes set on a loftier goal. Even after a few quieter weeks (if you can even call them that), Smith-Njigba does still have a shot at Calvin Johnson’s single season receiving yards NFL record. To accomplish that, Smith-Njigba would need to average 164 yards per game for the last two weeks.

However, in the meantime, Smith-Njigba and Seahawks fans alike can celebrate a franchise receptions record that Smith-Njigba has already earned, and in only fifteen games. Currently Smith-Njigba has 104 receptions on the season. However, with two more weeks to go, and a number one seed in the balance, Smith-Njigba will surely add many more receptions to that number. And soon enough, Smith-Njigba will start seeing his name in the all-time Seahawks career records books. Only in his third year, Smith-Njigba is already 10th in Seahawks history in career receptions with 267, and 12th in career receiving yards with 3,395.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ingle-season-receptions-record-all-to-himself
 
Post-game aftermath: What did the Seahawks show you the most in their win over the Rams?

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The Seattle Seahawks didn’t just win on Thursday night — they showed resilience.

Seattle’s 38–37 overtime victory over the Los Angeles Rams was emotional, chaotic, and ultimately revealing. These are the kinds of games that test more than talent. They test belief, composure, and whether a team can respond when momentum constantly shifts.

On tonight’s episode of Seahawks Aftermath, going live at 7pm PT, I’ll be joined by Field Gulls managing editor Mookie Alexander to break down one of the most intense wins of the season and what it says about this Seahawks team as the playoff picture comes into focus.

From the opening kickoff through overtime, this game lived on a knife’s edge. Momentum swung repeatedly. Opportunities were missed. Adjustments had to be made on the fly. Yet each time the pressure increased, Seattle answered.

Sam Darnold’s poise under pressure stood out late, as he navigated high-leverage moments with calm and control. Kenneth Walker III delivered a massive performance, setting the physical tone and giving the offense a stabilizing force when things threatened to unravel. On the defensive side, the unit once again earned its “DarkSide” reputation — tightening in critical situations, generating key stops, and showing discipline in overtime.

That doesn’t mean this was a perfect performance. There were stretches where Klint Kubiak’s play-calling struggled to find rhythm, forcing players to win through execution rather than flow. That tension — between resilience and refinement — will be a central theme of tonight’s conversation.

This was a rivalry game that demanded composure. Seattle didn’t blink. The Seahawks bent, adjusted, and ultimately responded in the moments that mattered most.

The bigger question now is what this win represents. Is it simply another dramatic chapter in a chaotic rivalry, or is it further proof that this team is learning how to win under pressure?

That’s the lens we’ll bring to Seahawks Aftermath — honest analysis, context, and perspective — along with reactions and questions from The 12s live in the chat.

If you want to understand not just how the Seahawks won, but why their resilience matters moving forward, tonight’s show is one you won’t want to miss.

Live podcast at 7 pm PT​


Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ow-to-you-the-most-in-win-vs-los-angeles-rams
 
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