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Enemy Reaction, Super Bowl 2026: New England Patriots

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SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 08: A New England Patriots fan reacts as they take on the Seattle Seahawks in the fourth quarter of the Super Bowl LX at Levi's Stadium on February 08, 2026 in Santa Clara, California. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Seattle Seahawks started their regular season by losing to the San Francisco 49ers, ended their regular season by winning the NFC West and top seed over the 49ers in Santa Clara, started their postseason by vanquishing the 49ers at Lumen Field, and ending it with a Super Bowl triumph over the New England Patriots… in Santa Clara. A storybook end to a milestone season for the Seahawks, who now boast two Lombardi Trophies.

It’s the final Enemy Reaction of the 2025 season. Traditionally, I do Enemy Reaction for the Super Bowl regardless of who is playing. The fact that the Seahawks were in it and won it makes this the sweetest one of all. While Pats Pulpit will be the focus for their game thread live reactions, you know that I’ll be pulling from Niners Nation and other SB Nation NFL sites to sprinkle in some knowledge on which fanbases were rooting for which team.


Cooper Kupp sets up opening drive field goal (3-0 SEA)​

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Derick Hall sacks Drake Maye! (3-0 SEA)​

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Devon Witherspoon sacks Drake Maye! (3-0 SEA)​

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Kenneth Walker III turns loss into 30-yard gain, helping set up another Jason Myers field goal (6-0 SEA)​

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Kenneth Walker takes screen pass for 20 yards, leading to another field goal (12-0 SEA)​

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Derick Hall strip sacks Drake Maye, Byron Murphy II recovers! (12-0 SEA)​

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Bonus reaction from 49ers, Vikings, Bills, and Broncos fans!​

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AJ Barner scores first touchdown of Super Bowl 60! (19-0 SEA)​

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Bonus reactions from 49ers, Vikings, Jets, and Raiders fans​

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Uh oh, Mack Hollins quickly responds for the Patriots (19-7 SEA)​

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Julian Love picks off Drake Maye! (19-7 SEA)​

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Bonus reaction from Jets, Giants, 49ers, and Rams fans!​

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Uchenna Nwosu seals Super Bowl 60 with a pick-6! (29-7 SEA)​

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Bonus reaction from 49ers, Jets, Bills, Dolphins, and Broncos fans!​

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Rhamondre Stevenson scores nice, garbage time touchdown (29-13 SEA)​

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The Seahawks win the Super Bowl! (29-13 SEA FINAL)​

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Bonus 49ers meltdown!​

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Cowboys fans congratulate DeMarcus Lawrence

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Vikings fans congratulating Sam Darnold

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Post-Game: Patriots defense deserved better fate (Matt Vautour, Mass Live)​

The Patriots gave up 29 points on Sunday. Seven of those came on an interception return for a touchdown. Seven more were off of a short field set up by a strip sack. Everything else was a field goal.

The New England defense played a huge role in the Patriots getting to this game and they played well enough to give them a chance to win it.

They played championship defense. They deserved better.

They made terrific tackles, athletic pass breakups and kept the pressure on Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold. But they’ll go home empty-handed.

Late in the third quarter, the Patriots were lucky to be down just 12-0 with the ball. Thanks to the defense’s outstanding effort, they had a chance to make it a game with one good drive.

But when Maye dropped back to pass on third and six from the Patriots’ 44, Derick Hall broke through the line and punched the ball out. Hall recovered it at the New England 37. Five plays later, the Seahawks were in the end zone with a 19-0 lead and the game was all but over.

Because of that, Christian Gonzalez’s incredible night will be overlooked by history. He had three pass breakups, including two diving lunges that saved touchdowns.

Post-Game recap: Lack of adjustments on offense was surprising (Ian Logue, PatsFans.com)​

As it was, the Seahawks were having their way with both rookie Will Campbell and fellow rookie Jared Wilson, both of whom spent the entire night getting manhandled. So the fact that there was no adjustment there was probably one of the more surprising developments of the night.

Campbell’s another player who, like Maye, had a solid year prior to getting injured. He hasn’t looked like himself since coming off the injured reserve, and he’ll benefit greatly from a full offseason to both get healthy and get stronger.

The same can be said for Wilson, who also needs to bulk up this offseason. For Wilson, the thought is that he might be the future replacement for Garrett Bradbury at center, which will likely mean the team will continue adding depth on the offensive line this offseason.

For now, it’s disappointing, but for a team that enjoyed a fair amount of good fortune for most of the year, some bad luck and injuries down the stretch ultimately caught up to them. In the meantime, it’s still a young team that ended up with a 2025 season that absolutely exceeded expectations, which should make what happens this offseason even more intriguing heading into 2026.

Post-Game Video: They didn’t belong on the same field (Phil Perry and Bertrand, 98.5 The Sports Hub)​

Post-Game Video: The real best Super Bowl reaction​

This might be the most beautiful video I’ve ever seen pic.twitter.com/n5wd7DYMg4

— Synthetic Sports (@SyntheticSports) February 10, 2026


And so ends the 2025 NFL season. The Seahawks played in 20 of the 285 combined regular season and postseason games, winning 17 and losing three by a combined nine points. This was a historic Seahawks team and while we can debate whether or not they’re as good as the 2013 Super Bowl squad, I believe the 2025 Seahawks just completed the greatest and most exhilarating season in franchise history.

That’s the end for Enemy Reaction this year. Let’s pick this back up in September for more fun, more meltdowns, and ideally the last Enemy Reaction for 2026-27 is a Seahawks Super Bowl victory at the home of the LA Rams.

Thanks for reading and go ‘Hawks!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...tion-nfl-super-bowl-2026-new-england-patriots
 
The 12 mantras that made the Seahawks Super Bowl champions

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SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 8: Mike MacDonald of the Seattle Seahawks lifts the Vince Lombardi Trophy after the NFL Super Bowl LX football game against the New England Patriots, at Levi's Stadium on February 8, 2026 in Santa Clara, California. The Seattle Seahawks defeated the New England Patriots 29-13.(Photo by Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mike Macdonald can be, at times, a man of few words. In fact, he tends to communicate the way he designs blitzes: with precision. Little wasted movement.

But when it comes to ideals and philosophies set to language, he’s a treasure trove. A nearly endless supply of one-liners led the Seattle Seahawks to the Super Bowl. Not throwaway comments, not empty platitudes like….a brand-oriented quarterback.

These were goals and philosophies, and they defined the 2025 Seahawks.

And believe it or not, there were 12 of them.

To fans of Seattle since they hired Mike Macdonald, none of these will be unfamiliar. To those just now discovering there’s a team north of the San Francisco 49ers, we welcome you. Let’s journey through time from Macdonald’s first spring til today. Allow me to introduce you to one of the first phrases ever uttered by the now Super Bowl winning head coach: “Chasing Edges.”

Chasing Edges​

Seahawks players call their head coach and defensive play-caller Mike MacDonald, a ‘genius’. They’ve taken on his mindset and mantra — “chasing edges” — all season long…@NFLGameDay @nflnetwork #Seahawks #12sEverywhere pic.twitter.com/28RYbQRdMd

— StaceyDales (@StaceyDales) February 8, 2026

Chasing edges means attention to detail in such a way that any available advantage one might gain, is gained. It’s everything from the relentless observation of tells and tendencies in opponents, all the way to the belief that becoming the NFL leader in special teams is worth pursuing.

Stacking Plays​


This was the first one I remember from Macdonald’s first training camp. Back then it was “stacking reps,” but to be fair the man had never head-coached an NFL snap before. Once the season started it morphed into stacking plays, and eventually “stacking wins.” Having the background with “reps” helps put the shape to this one. It’s like momentum, but really on an individual level before it translates to the team. Do the thing right, and then do it right again, until doing the right thing the right way becomes the norm. There’s no shortcut to greatness.

Operation​


After we stacked some stuff, the next thing that stood out that summer was the word “operation”. He said it throughout camp, and it seemed a special interest after the team’s – and his – first preseason game.

“Great first start,” Macdonald said. “I’m just proud of the mentality, the focus that we had, the intent, it felt like the guys played really hard, felt like they were focused. It’s a first game, so the first time doing all the operation stuff for real, and I thought our operation was clean for the most part.

Macdonald is highly process-oriented, and this is the phrase. Every football coach knows about the operations of football, but Macdonald lives here. To him, it is absolutely not better to be lucky than good. It is better to be foundationally solid, so that his team is the most likely team to produce the best result, because their preparation has been the best.

Shocking Effort​

Boye Mafe created the fumble and Derick Hall scooped it up, but the #Seahawks wouldn't have scored their defensive touchdown Sunday if not for the incredible play CB Devon Witherspoon made that coach Mike Macdonald calls a "shocking effort."https://t.co/Nj3qsgBHLB

— Seattle Sports (@SeattleSports) October 21, 2024

I’m not sure if Macdonald walked in the door with this one or not. We didn’t hear it right away. But it’s how the staff describes what they want to see on tape. Your high school coach probably yelled ‘hustle’ or such at you; Macdonald calls his guys to shocking effort.

The New England Patriots felt the full force of shocking effort on Sunday. They were not able to replicate.

Twelve As One​


Obviously not something he picked up in Baltimore or Michigan. A move that endeared Macdonald far more to the city of Seattle, it’s both a nod to the home field advantage the Seahawks have reclaimed and the synergy of the team, primarily on defense. He describes it:

“When you play together and you really try to create it like you’re playing against more than 11 guys – that’s what we want our fingerprint to be. That’s our identity.” “The guys have bought in on that. It’s about really playing for the guy next to you.”

Vulnerability​


This is the one that I don’t believe Macdonald would claim as any sort of team mantra, but I’d push back on that. This was felt first, because, among other things, Macdonald is a terrible liar. Stick a microphone up there and he acts like he’s incapable of it. The result is at times awkward pauses and grasping for words, but it’s because he’s always looking for the true words. There are times when he speaks after a 10-point win and he’s openly upset about a bad call he made that put his safety in a bad position.

It was felt in 2024, and in 2025 it became a mindset. Leonard Williams led the way this year talking about “brotherhood” and “love,” and a team atmosphere that is just so starkly different than the 2013 champs.

Ready Squad​


Now we’re changing institutionalized titles? Apparently. It came out that Macdonald doesn’t use the term practice squad. Those extra 16 guys are the “ready squad.” They even made shirts.

The result? A guy like Ty Okada started 11 games this year and made 65 tackles.

Loose and Focused​


You might not have heard this one as much until Super Bowl week. They don’t bring it out as often, it seems like more of a locker room thing than a public philosophy.

Loose and focused pic.twitter.com/oD73GUtcsx

— Dipti (@diptimahapatra) February 8, 2026

I do love the way Macdonald talks about the idea, however. He’s said it should be fun to go to work. But not to go to have fun, but because it’s fun to be great at what you do alongside others who are great at what they do. It’s kinda like word hard play hard, but with less letters. The Macdonald way.

M.O.B. Ties​


This is when leadership created the culture that creates itself. Coach didn’t come up with this one, the players did.

It’s Mission Over Bullsh-t, and it’s particularly interesting when you hear Jaxon Smith-Njigba talk about liking the phrase. Seattle employs the absolute unicorn of best wide receiver in the league that’s also not a diva. Let the play do the talking.

You didn't hear the Seahawks make much noise this week, or this year in general. Wasn't their style. One of their rallying cries became M.O.B. Ties — Mission Over Bullshit. Players came up with it as a reminder to stay focused on what matters. Mission accomplished, if you will.

— Brady Henderson (@BradyHenderson) February 9, 2026

The Dark Side​


Speaking of team-generated, how about their own nickname?

BEWARE THE DARK SIDE 😈

The Seahawks defense DOMINATED in the Super Bowl 🏆 pic.twitter.com/zOOmgqf7Lm

— PFF (@PFF) February 9, 2026

And then finally, a two-for-one special. In the NFC championship game interview, Mike Macdonald dropped a line that instantly became a classic, shirt, hat, probably a tattoo somewhere, and a follow-up that’s embodied the team since day one.

We. Did. Not. Care

"WE DID NOT CARE" pic.twitter.com/DPMRleTNg2

— Seattle Seahawks (@Seahawks) January 26, 2026

Lovable, overthinker-of-things Mike Macdonald. Never change, coach.

It’s About Us


Both lines were in response to Michael Strahan asking about the Seahawks preseason rankings. We did not care became the meme, but “it’s about us” is just as powerful of a follow-up. This team is internally motivated.

That’s rare for pro sports.

Motivation’s got to come from somewhere to compete at the highest level. In a lot of instances, external motivation can appear easier. You’d be hard-pressed to find a member of the 2013 Seahawks that wasn’t more externally motivated than internally. Every dude on that team seemed to have it out for somebody, some player, some former coach, Michael Crabtree, Skip Bayless, Jim Harbaugh, Russell Wilson – I’m sorry I just started listing Richard Sherman enemies again didn’t I?

That’s just not how this team worked. It’s about “us” (them). External motivation isn’t bad, but I would argue Macdonald found the more powerful path. These guys didn’t do it to prove others wrong, they did it for each other. The Seahawks are world champions because they believed they were this good, and they wanted to prove that and achieve that for their brothers.

Pretty cool stuff this year, 12s. What an unbelievable ride and a privilege to experience the culture that Mike built.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...as-made-seattle-seahawks-super-bowl-champions
 
Mike Macdonald has perfect response to not winning Coach of the Year

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SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 08: Head coach Mike MacDonald of the Seattle Seahawks celebrates with the Vince Lombardi Trophy after defeating the New England Patriots 29-13 to win Super Bowl LX at Levi's Stadium on February 08, 2026 in Santa Clara, California. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mike Macdonald may not have won Coach of the Year at NFL Honors during Super Bowl week, but he did win the Lombardi Trophy, which is a little bit more important in terms of career achievements.

At the Seahawks’ Super Bowl celebration on Wednesday, Mike Macdonald was introduced by former Seahawk and longtime radio play-by-play voice Steve Raible as someone who “should’ve been recognized as NFL Coach of the Year.” As Coach Macdonald approached the podium, the fourth-youngest head coach to ever win a Super Bowl provided a mic drop before he could even get into his speech.

“I think I’ll take this trophy instead,” Macdonald said.


Of course, the Coach of the Year award went to New England Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel, while Assistant Coach of the Year went to Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels. Macdonald finished third in the voting behind Vrabel and Liam Coen of the Jacksonville Jaguars. While the Patriots and Jaguars went from 4-13 disasters to division champions, the Seahawks were clearly the NFL’s best team and that has been reason in the past to award Coach of the Year. Evidently Seattle exceeding its own low preseason expectations wasn’t enough in the eyes of voters.

The last time a Seahawks coach won Coach of the Year was Chuck Knox in 1984, when Seattle built off of its surprise AFC Championship run in 1983 by finishing 12-4 the following year. Unfortunately, they were eliminated in the Divisional Round. Mike Holmgren, Pete Carroll, and now Mike Macdonald have all led the Seahawks to a Super Bowl appearance and yet none came away with an extra AP NFL award.

“We love the 12s. You guys are the best in the world, and now we’re the best football team in the world. World champs!” Macdonald added.

He’s Coach of the Year in our hearts. And he’s a Super Bowl champion, too.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ect-response-to-not-winning-coach-of-the-year
 
The ‘F–k You’ that saved the Seahawks’ season

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SANTA CLARA, CA - FEBRUARY 03: Ernest Jones IV #13 of the Seattle Seahawks speaks with the media ahead of Super Bowl LX on February 3, 2026 at the San Jose Convention Center in San Jose, CA. (Photo by Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

I remember this press conference vividly as I had it streaming live in the background while writing my postgame recap for the Seattle Seahawks’ 21-19 loss to the Los Angeles Rams. Once I heard Ernest drop the first “F Bomb”, I did a double-take. After the second one, I was grinning from ear-to-ear and backed up the stream so I could hear it a few more times.

The "F.U. Heard 'Round the World". Turning point of the #Seahawks season. https://t.co/2XYAYapmUU

— Weapon Next/Logan Lynch/Ted Zahn (@WeaponNext) February 9, 2026

THIS was the attitude I wanted to see for this Seahawks team. Ernest Jones IV put the blame on the defense’s shoulders after they played a hell of a game (actually, their best performance in the three-game series with the Rams by a long shot). He stood up for his quarterback and doubled down on it. Jones was pissed off and annoyed that they lost, probably more than most given Los Angeles was his first NFL home. He let his emotions show in a genuine way that all of the fans connected with. It wasn’t a stunt. It wasn’t forced.

Instead of backpedaling and sweeping it under the rug, the Seahawks social media posted the unedited version for all to hear. That in itself was a statement. Mike Macdonald’s version of the Seattle Seahawks are a passionate crew who hold themselves to the highest standards. The day following the loss, the Jones sound clip was picked up and all over the media. Were they still talking about Sam Darnold’s four interceptions? Yes, but likely not as much as they would have if Jones hadn’t said what he did.

And you know what? That became a rallying cry for the team. At a time when the defense could’ve thrown the offense under the bus, Jones’ comment galvanized the team. They knew how good they were, even in the loss. They had just lost the turnover battle 4-1, didn’t capitalize in the red zone, and were still in position to win against one of the best teams in the NFL. The Seahawks players and coaches knew that they had the talent to be the best team in the league if they could rein in the turnovers.

Spoiler alert: they did.

Seattle ripped off 10 straight wins en route to their second Super Bowl championship. Ernest Jones and the rest of the Dark Side defense flipped the double birds to the rest of the NFL as they choked their opponents out one by one. The Seahawks defense stood behind Sam Darnold and he repaid them in kind against the Rams, dragging them back from behind in their second regular season matchup and outdueling Matthew Stafford in the NFC Championship game to put the Seahawks in the Super Bowl.

I truly don’t think Seattle makes it that far if Jones hadn’t said that now-famous quote. His feelings represented how the rest of the team and coaches felt. The raw emotion with which he said it caused the turning point for the Seahawks season, and led to a Super Bowl title. What better way to commemorate that feat than giving Jones the mic again at the celebration?

If you got anything to say… pic.twitter.com/mlaKAFlWaf

— Seattle Seahawks (@Seahawks) February 11, 2026

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...est-jones-f-you-saved-seattle-seahawks-season
 
Congrats to Seattle on the championship run. That was a dominant performance in the Super Bowl - holding an offense to just one legitimate touchdown drive while the defense creates turnovers and scores? That's championship football right there.

Gotta say, as a neutral observer, the Ernest Jones moment after the Rams loss was fascinating to watch unfold. You could tell that wasn't manufactured leadership - dude was genuinely frustrated and channeled it in a way that clearly resonated with his teammates. The fact that the organization leaned into it rather than making him walk it back says a lot about the culture Macdonald has built there.

The "12 mantras" piece is interesting too. "Chasing edges" and the process-oriented stuff reminds me a bit of how Quin Snyder approached things here in Utah - that obsessive attention to detail and preparation. When players actually buy into that kind of system rather than just nodding along, you get results like this.

Four picks in the draft is light, but when you're picking 32nd because you just won it all, that's the best problem to have. Schneider will probably find a way to move around anyway - he always does.

Curious to see how they handle the offseason with cap implications from the championship roster. Keeping that defensive core together should be priority one.
 
Raiders interview Seahawks assistant to be Klint Kubiak’s offensive coordinator

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RENTON, WASHINGTON - JUNE 03: Wide receivers coach Frisman Jackson of the Seattle Seahawks looks on during practice at Virginia Mason Athletic Center on June 03, 2024 in Renton, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s been only a matter of days since the Seattle Seahawks crushed the New England Patriots 29-13 en route to the second Super Bowl in franchise history, and with the victory parade already in the books, attention has turned to setting the coaching staff for the 2026 season.

The first order of business for Mike Macdonald when it comes to filling out his 2026 coaching staff will, of course, be to replace offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak, who is now the head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders. The next step in the process, though, might be replacing the coaches from the Seattle staff that Kubiak could take with him to Las Vegas.

The other names on the coaching staff most commonly linked to the Raiders seem to be Rick Dennison and John Benton, both of whom were on staff with Kubiak with the Minnesota Vikings in 2021 and the New Orleans Saints in 2024. While those two are the most commonly mentioned names, it appears that a different member of the offensive coaching staff is the first to interview with the Raiders.

The Raiders are interviewing Seahawks WRs coach Frisman Jackson for their offensive coordinator job, per source.

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) February 12, 2026

Frisman Jackson joined Mike Macdonald’s initial staff in 2024 after having split the previous four seasons with the Pittsburgh Steelers and Carolina Panthers, and was the wide receivers coach at all three stops.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ks-assistant-to-be-kubiaks-oc-frisman-jackson
 
The strongest, weakest position groups for Seahawks in free agency

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SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 8: Rylie Mills #98 of the Seattle Seahawks reacts after a sack during the second quarter of the NFL Super Bowl LX football game against the New England Patriots, at Levi's Stadium on February 8, 2026 in Santa Clara, California. (Photo by Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Seattle Seahawks are fully in offseason mode, even if fans aren’t just yet. Interviews are heating up, futures contracts signed, big boards probably being assembled.

Seattle has, in general, a positive position heading into the spring negotiations in a few weeks. Multiple quality starters remain under contract in 2026. Two position groups stand out, one at the top, and one much more vulnerable.

Strength: Defensive Line​


This unit absolutely wrecked the New England Patriots to win the Bowl. It’s deeper than most, more versatile than all. And one new addition stands out as a serious encouragement to the 2026 roster: Rylie Mills. The man who got his first sack in the Super Bowl and nearly broke his teammates.

"First sack in the Super Bowl? That's crazy."

Rookie @Seahawks DE Rylie Mills had a milestone moment in the biggest game of his life. 💙@insidetheNFL Super Bowl LX Mic'd Up on X pic.twitter.com/hRbI0V7Ulh

— NFL (@NFL) February 11, 2026

Mills tore his ACL 13 months before walking the 95th pick of the draft (whom many of you wanted) backwards into Drake Maye’s face. He’s played in seven total NFL games now, half of them taking place in these playoffs.

The best unit on the field will now in effect be adding a talented player next season. It serves as a massive safety net for the potential decline – or opportunity of rest – of someone like Jarran Reed. It’s crazy to think that Seattle could improve at one of the most important position groups in football without doing a thing.

It still seems likely that Boye Mafe would not be a high return priority, but the interior of the line is the best in the NFL, and the cap situation is such that a high-end pass rusher would be an attainable and obvious need, potentially even improving the entire line next season.

Weakness: Corner


Josh Jobe and Riq Woolen in the same offseason. This will be interesting. Coby Bryant is hitting the market as well. That’s a big hit to the secondary, but the uncertainty at corner is big. Both Jobe and Woolen’s markets are fairly unknown. Jobe would likely be easier to retain but doesn’t project well as the CB1. And if he were to get valued somewhere like the New York Jets did with D.J. Reed, Seattle may be out of luck.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers serve as the best example for as good as Mike Macdonald is, he still needs actual NFL-caliber players in the backfield. That was the most-injured game for the Seahawks secondary, and they got the most owned. Nehemiah Pritchett is probably not the way the team wants to go.

The free agency market also plays in both of these directions. Should Seattle target a pass-rusher, feeling their interior solidified, it’s a good market. Trey Hendrickson headlines a strong group, with six edge rushers in ESPN’s top-30 free agents. Comparatively, there are three corners, and one of them is Riq Woolen.

If I had to guess today, of the nine players coming on the market, I would say the postseason sent Kenneth Walker III’s stock way, way up, and Woolen’s down. Mark me down for Jobe returning, Woolen not, and Mike Macdonald on the hunt for a premier outside corner to prevent defensive regression.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...free-agency-strongest-weakest-position-groups
 
Former Ravens DC Zachary Orr set to land with Seahawks

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Oct 26, 2025; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator Zachary Orr during the game against the Chicago Bears at M&T Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images | Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images

Earlier Friday it was reported that the Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks were set to add former Baltimore Ravens assistant coach Daniel Stern, who was looking for a new employer after the Ravens opted to move on from John Harbaugh after missing the playoffs.

However, according to a report from Clarence Hill, that’s Stern is not the only former Ravens assistant set to join Mike Macdonald’s staff in Seattle.

Per sources, Former Baltimore Ravens DC Zachary Orr is headed to the Seattle Seahawks as an inside linebackers coach. Orr will be reunited with Mike Macdonald who preceded him as Ravens DC.
He had a opportunity to take the same position in Dallas

— Clarence Hill Jr (@clarencehilljr) February 13, 2026

As Hill notes in his post, Zachary Orr was the defensive coordinator for the Ravens the past two seasons, a title he assumed when Macdonald left Baltimore to become the head coach of the Seahawks two years ago.

Joining Macdonald’s staff as the inside linebackers coach makes perfect sense for Orr, as that was the role he occupied in 2022 and 2023 under Macdonald. No word yet on what this means for Kirk Olivadotti, who has been the Seahawks inside linebackers coach the past two years.

In any case, Field Gulls will work to keep readers up to date on all the developments regarding the Seahawks coaching staff.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...c-zachary-orr-hired-seattle-seahawks-nfl-news
 
How John Schneider’s ‘other’ trades with Broncos helped Seahawks win Super Bowl

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SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 8: AJ Barner #88 of the Seattle Seahawks catches the ball for a touchdown during the fourth quarter of the NFL Super Bowl LX football game against the New England Patriots, at Levi's Stadium on February 8, 2026 in Santa Clara, California. (Photo by Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

If nothing else, the Seattle Seahawks’ Super Bowl triumph should close the book on the Russell Wilson trade. The first three seasons of post-Russ results indicated that while Seattle got a nice haul out of the blockbuster deal, they were still treading water as a non-contender. After the 2025 offseason masterclass, the Wilson trade was indeed instrumental in Seattle’s newest championship window. Devon Witherspoon or Derick Hall winning Super Bowl MVP would’ve been the perfect encapsulation.

But we’re not here to talk about the Wilson trade, of which Witherspoon and Derick Hall made outsized impacts . There were some other deals Schneider made with the Broncos that had a season-long impact on Seattle’s success, as well as an outsized success in the Super Bowl win over the New England Patriots.


A.J. Barner​

SAM DARNOLD TO AJ BARNER TOUCHDOWN!

Super Bowl LX on NBC
Stream on @NFLPlus + Peacock pic.twitter.com/sCoEyewllX

— NFL (@NFL) February 9, 2026

It is distinctly possible that Barner could end his rookie contract as the Seahawks’ all-time leading receiver at the tight end position. He wasn’t even the top tight end at Michigan—Colston Loveland looks like he is the real deal with the Chicago Bears—but he’s shown himself to be a well-rounded traditional tight end. Barner may not have the gaudy stats like Trey McBride or prime Travis Kelce or George Kittle, but he blocks well, has excellent hands, and he’s shown himself to be the warmest of security blankets for Sam Darnold.

In the Super Bowl, Barner had four catches for 54 yards and Seattle’s only offensive touchdown. It was a fitting performance after quietly finishing second on the team in receptions and touchdowns and third in receiving yards.

How he was acquired: The Seahawks were slated to pick at No. 102 overall early in Round 4 of the 2024 draft. John Schneider traded down to No. 121, gaining another pick in the process. Denver took Oregon receiver Troy Frankling, while the Seahawks selected Barner at No. 121.

Michael Dickson​

Frick it, Michael Dickson Super Bowl highlights 🔥@Seahawks | @mdcksn | @NFLAUNZ pic.twitter.com/yiSXKnWC4k

— NFL (@NFL) February 10, 2026
"That's why he is the best."

Not much was happening in that first half, but Australia's very own Michael Dickson stood up when it mattered most for the Seahawks to put them in good field position when required 💪#NFL | #SuperBowl pic.twitter.com/C7HcPgSioX

— SEN 1116 (@1116sen) February 9, 2026

Michael Dickson was pressed into action a little more than hoped for, but the Aussie was his usual phenomenal self. Facing a dangerous returner in Marcus Jones, he downed the Patriots inside the 10 three times out of seven punts, and Jones’ two returns went a grand total of four yards. He also saved a Jason Myers field goal attempt by corralling a low snap from long snapper Chris Stoll in time to hold and spin the laces out for Myers to boot his kick through the uprights.

This was one of those games where field position mattered quite a bit, and Dickson flipped the field repeatedly against a Patriots offense that could do next to nothing for the entire Super Bowl.

Dickson was second-team All-Pro in 2025 and tied for his career low in touchbacks with three.

How he was acquired: Trading up for a PUNTER?! This is what the Seahawks did in 2018 after giving up picks 156 and 226 to the Broncos to select Dickson at 149. Dickson remains the only All-Pro at any position selected in the fifth round from that draft class.

Denver drafted Troy Fumagalli (out of the league in two years) and running back David Williams (never played for Denver) with its picks from Seattle.



Another way to look at this is Witherspoon, Hall, Dickson, and Barner were among the top performing Seahawks in Super Bowl 60 and all of them were directly acquired from traded Denver draft picks.

Regardless of who’s in the front office for the Broncos, they might as well hang up the phone when Schneider comes calling. The solace for Denver is that they quickly got out of the Wilson deal and have rebuilt the roster to the point of being contenders again… but they still have to wait to be Super Bowl champions again.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...trades-broncos-helped-seahawks-win-super-bowl
 
Klint Kubiak promoting ex-Pete Carroll assistant to Raiders defensive coordinator

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LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - AUGUST 17: Defensive line coach Rob Leonard of the Las Vegas Raiders speaks to players before a preseason game against the Dallas Cowboys at Allegiant Stadium on August 17, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Chris Unger/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The first major coordinator hire for former Seattle Seahawks play-caller and Las Vegas Raiders head coach Klint Kubiak does not involve anyone from Mike Macdonald’s staff. Instead, he’s opted to promote someone who was on Pete Carroll’s Raiders staff.

With Patrick Graham leaving the Raiders to be DC of the Pittsburgh Steelers, it looks like his successor will be run game coordinator/defensive line coach Rob Leonard.

Raiders are finalizing a deal to promote run game coordinator/defensive line coach Rob Leonard to defensive coordinator, per sources. Leonard worked closely last season with Pro Bowl DE Maxx Crosby, whose future in Las Vegas remains uncertain. pic.twitter.com/lzrNvlTzIp

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) February 14, 2026

The Raiders interviewed Seahawks safeties coach Jeff Howard prior to this impending promotion. Any loose thought of defensive backs coach Karl Scott getting a DC gig elsewhere has already been put to bed.

Leonard joined Vegas in 2023 under Josh McDaniels and was one of the few retained by Coach Carroll after Antonio Pierce was fired at the end of 2024. For as bad as the Raiders were, their run defense was one of their few strengths.

The Raiders also hired Joe Woods as pass game coordinator, having previously worked with him when they were on the New Orleans Saints.

I think what we can get at is there’s a high probability that the Seahawks will not have many (if any) current Mike Macdonald assistants defect to Vegas to join Kubiak, which is great news in terms of staff continuity for the Super Bowl champion Seahawks.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...-assistant-raiders-defensive-coordinator-role
 
SBNation Reacts results: Seahawks fans view 2025 season as greatest in franchise history

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SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 08: Seattle Seahawks fans hold up a flag with the #12 in the stands during Super Bowl LX between the Seattle Seahawks and the New England Patriots at Levi's Stadium on February 08, 2026 in Santa Clara, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

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 the final Seahawks Reacts of the 2025 season! Need I remind everyone that the Seattle Seahawks won the Super Bowl? It’s the second Lombardi Trophy in the Seahawks’ expanding cabinet of championship hardware, and based on how surveyed fans responded, the second Super Bowl was sweeter than the first. Almost two-thirds said that this year was the greatest in Seahawks franchise history, even over the Legion of Boom team that gave the Seahawks their first Super Bowl in 2013.

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Any recency bias (and non-response bias, for you statisticians) aside, it’s easy to see why the 2025 Seahawks would be viewed as having the best season in franchise history. While the 2013 Seahawks had a far more impressively emphatic Super Bowl victory and hammered Peyton Manning and the record-setting Denver Broncos offense, they were also one of the top contenders to win it all to begin with. Hardly anyone could’ve foreseen the 2025 Seahawks being an eventual champion at the start of the regular season. Playoff team? Sure. Super Bowl winner? Audacious.

The 2013 Seahawks did vanquish the San Francisco 49ers in an epic NFC Championship Game, but the 2025 Seahawks one-upped themselves by taking two of three from the Rams and 49ers, effectively winning the NFC West twice. And yes, even though this New England Patriots team has zero resemblance to the one that beat the Seahawks in Super Bowl 49, it’s super sweet to even the score.

Please note that we did not phrase the question as the 2025 Seahawks being better than the 2013 Seahawks, but the way this season panned out absolutely felt better in the moment and will likely hold up over time.

As for the other question, it was a no contest. Devon Witherspoon’s masterful performance in coverage and as a blitzer was enough to make him Seattle’s defensive MVP—perhaps he was a stat correction away from being the game MVP?

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Thanks to everyone for your responses! We’ll have offseason Reacts surveys but not at the same frequency as the regular and postseason. Stay tuned for more Seahawks coverage on Field Gulls in the months to come!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...s-view-2025-season-greatest-franchise-history
 
Quarterbacks coach Andrew Janocko leaving Seahawks to join Klint Kubiak’s Raiders

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Feb 11, 2026; Seattle, WA, USA; Seattle Seahawks quarterbacks coach Andrew Janocko and offensive line coach John Benton react during the Super Bowl LX parade. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Ng-Imagn Images | Kevin Ng-Imagn Images

When former Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak accepted an offer to take the helm of the Las Vegas Raiders, the question of which assistant coaches he’d try to poach from the Super Bowl champions was top of mind for many.

As of Sunday, it seems he’s found his first, hiring Seattle’s quarterbacks coach, Andrew Janocko, to be the next offensive coordinator of the Las Vegas Raiders, according to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport. He worked alongside the new Raiders’ headman in New Orleans in 2024 and spent time on the Minnesota Vikings staff for three seasons from 2019 through 2021.

The #Raiders are set to hire #Seahawks QBs coach Andrew Janocko as their new offensive coordinator, per The Insiders, filling a big role for new coach Klint Kubiak.

Janocko was with Kubiak in New Orleans and Seattle and now Las Vegas. pic.twitter.com/B7t11ohdXE

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) February 15, 2026

Janocko’s new role with the Raiders will be his first offensive coordinator job, although he’s worn many hats throughout his time as an assistant coach in the NFL. With over a decade in the NFL, he’s spent time coaching offensive lines and wide receivers with a primary focus on quarterbacks.

Earlier in the week, Janocko interviewed for the same position with the Seahawks to replace Kubiak. However, with Seattle hiring Brian Fleury on Sunday, that door was closed, and Janocko looked elsewhere for a promotion.

Janocko came to Seattle alongside Kubiak and helped renovate the offense behind quarterback Sam Darnold. He’ll be tasked with doing the same and bringing some stability to a Raiders team that is going on its fourth offensive coordinator in four seasons.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...leaving-join-klint-kubiak-raiders-oc-nfl-news
 
Inside covering Seahawks Super Bowl week, part 1: Do you know the way to San Jose?

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When the Seattle Seahawks beat the Los Angeles Rams to win the NFC Championship Game, I was overcome with emotion in a way that I’ve never felt after any Seahawks victory in over 20 years as a fan. The Seahawks going back to the Super Bowl was one thing, but this also meant that I was going to my first Super Bowl in my hometown of the San Francisco Bay Area.

I’ve been with Field Gulls in some paid writing capacity since the end of the 2016 season, the Managing Editor/Team Producer since 2020, and a full-time employee with SB Nation since 2022. I’ve had the misfortune of experiencing no playoff wins and more postseason misses than makes since that 2020 promotion, with the plight of the 2022 Denver Broncos marking our genuine site traffic hallmark in recent years. The 2025 season has been personally challenging due to a serious family health matter, so to go from spending the bulk of the year writing and covering Seahawks games from medical facilities to actually being on location for the Super Bowl was a genuine once-in-a-lifetime moment. I’ve otherwise never covered the Seahawks as credentialed media before.

In the interest of not wanting to split this into more than two parts, I’m leaving a lot of stuff on the cutting room floor to get to the more relevant bits of what it was like to cover the Seahawks down in Northern California.


Bay Area Geography 101​

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Due to prior commitments, I did not fly until Tuesday morning, which meant missing Monday’s media night in San Jose. It did not seem like I missed much. There are a surprising lack of direct flights from Portland to San Francisco, and the costs to fly into San Jose skyrocketed before I could book, so Portland to Oakland International Airport was the choice. I’m no stranger to this airport growing up in the East Bay as a child, so there was a grand sense of nostalgia flying in.

I check into my hotel in Emeryville, which is right across the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, and in my elevator is a Jacksonville Jaguars player, which I’m 99 percent sure is Brian Thomas Jr. There’s a reason why there are any NFL players in that hotel, which I’ll explain in Part 2.

For those of you unaware of Bay Area geography, the Super Bowl was in Santa Clara and the Seahawks and New England Patriots were staying in San Jose. Their respective press conferences were at the San Jose Convention Center and Santa Clara Marriott. The Media Center, my workstation for the week and literally thousands of others, is at the Moscone Center in Downtown San Francisco. The Moscone Center is also the same locale for the Super Bowl Experience for fans.

Even without traffic, San Francisco and San Jose/Santa Clara are not particularly close to each other. This is a shitty, shitty commute.

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For context, Moscone Center to the San Jose Convention Center is roughly in the same ballpark as Lumen Field to Joint Base Lewis-McChord. Damn near everything except the game, practices, and press conferences were in San Francisco. If the NFL ever holds a Super Bowl here again there needs to be a serious logistics re-think.

Anyway, I pick up my game week credential at Moscone Center and spend the rest of Tuesday afternoon at the Super Bowl Experience with my SB Nation colleagues David Fucillo, Jeanna Kelley, and RJ Ochoa. It’s the first time I’ve met any of them face-to-face and we had a ton of fun hanging out together and collaborating on assignments. More on that to come in Part 2.

The Super Bowl Media Center​

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The Super Bowl Media Center is off limits to the general public. You have to have your credential on you at all times, with wallets, phones, watches, and backpacks subject to screening prior to entry. The NFL also uses facial recognition technology to grant access, so presumably if you had any horrifically botched plastic surgery that doesn’t match the head shot in the credential application, there might be some trouble.

Moscone Center’s ground floor is where all of the television and radio action is. Media row/Radio row has all the big names you could imagine: Pro Football Talk, CBS Sports, FOX, ESPN, The Pat McAfee Show, The Jim Rome Show, Bleacher Report, NFL Network, etc. There are scores of other booths for smaller companies and radio stations, plus international outlets like the Irish NFL Show. The Seattle representation in the much smaller spaces was Seattle Sports 710 and Hawkblogger, which were against each other.

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Radio Row is like one giant exhibit for talking heads and their celebrity special guests.

View Link

As for the Media Workroom, which is located two floors up, it’s not that fancy.

There are table-long power strips so everyone can have their devices plugged in, as well as free refreshments (water, soda, sports energy drinks, coffee, tea, the usual fare) and cinnamon pretzels to keep us nourished. Those who’d rather work on elevated tables with high chairs can have their needs satisfied, provided they sacrifice their power outlets.

View Link

This room is filled with videographers, photographers, beat writers, and content creators from all around the world. Bob Condotta, Michael Shawn-Dugar, Bob Stelton, and Dave Wyman are among the local contingent I see throughout the week. I’ve done Bob Stelton’s show a few times back when I covered the UFC and boxing, so I chat with him for a few minutes before plopping myself down to pretend to get some work done.

One unfortunate aspect of the Media Workroom is that the free Wi-Fi is being put to the test by, well, everyone. My iPhone does a hell of a job finding AirDrop targets that aren’t my laptop, and upload/download speeds are not exactly the quickest. It’s nevertheless relatively quiet since everyone is focused on their respective tasks. There is plenty of international media from Canada, Brazil, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Australia, and many other countries.

By the way, it’s a good thing that media can bring their own food and drinks because this is the alternative:

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Seahawks press conferences​

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To take the sting out of an insufferably long trip, the NFL provides free media shuttles to travel to San Jose from Moscone Center. The Seahawks press conferences are scheduled for 10:45 am PT until noon, which also means the length of the trip is twice as long as the actual presser. It’s almost a completely full bus to go to the San Jose McEnery Convention Center.

We arrive (miraculously, given Highway 101 was inert) at about 10:15 am after an 8:30 am departure. Getting from my hotel to Moscone requires leaving at about 7:30 am because gridlock on the Bay Bridge is fierce starting at about 6 am. As usual, there are security checkpoints: show your credential at entrance, once inside place your backpack in the container for screening, head upstairs unless you’ve done something naughty. There’s a huge room where podiums are set up for 10 Seahawks players to get their scrum sessions in with reporters and whomever else wants to join in on the fun.

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Media members are provided with a sheet of available coaches and players to talk to. What’s workspace for the media will soon be converted to meet-and-greets. There are over two dozen tables with name tags for players and coaches to make them easily identifiable. Out in the hallway there’s candy and beverages with ice and cups provided. Beer? Not on your life.

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In a separate room, Mike Macdonald and Sam Darnold get the main stage. There is seating for, I don’t know, about 100 people? Not to mention ample standing space on the side, away from the camera crew. Unfortunately, that many reporters and only 15 minutes of questions means the odds of getting the microphone to ask a question are slim. The selection process is seemingly arbitrary based on hands raised, and naturally while waiting in the queue for Macdonald on Wednesday I was out of luck by two questions. Efforts on Thursday did not go any better. No big deal to me.

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Once Mike and Sam are done speaking, we all head back into the adjacent room where there are scrums for the big names and 1-on-1s for everyone else. It’s very much a first come, first served deal. Everyone from television broadcasters to social media content creators can just walk up, introduce themselves, get the cameras (or, for some people, just audio recorders) ready, and the interviews commence!

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It’s a little chaotic but never out of order. With only 45 minutes to work with, my strategy is to take the roads less traveled; not that I’m star-struck or afraid to interview Klint Kubiak or Kenneth Walker or Riq Woolen, but I know that I’m wasting time if they’re going to be regularly occupied with other people.

Over two days, I conducted 1-on-1s with Brandon Pili, Ty Okada (my personal favorite interview), Charles Cross, Abe Lucas, Bryce Cabeldue, Jay Harbaugh, Drake Thomas, Rylie Mills, A.J. Barner, George Holani, Rashid Shaheed, and Leslie Frazier—all of those excerpts have been posted on Field Gulls social media or on this site. None of the interviews lasted longer than seven minutes and with only a few exceptions, I did not prepare my questions well in advance. Just about everything is off the cuff from my memory bank while honoring the flow of conversation. Pili was someone I’d eyed for the local angle of him being a high school graduate not too far from where I live in Portland, and during the Super Bowl I believe local interest stories are always valuable.

Seahawks nose tackle Brandon Pili has a local connection to the Pacific Northwest:

He became a highly regarded high school prospect when he transferred to Westview High in Portland/Hillsboro.

Here's what he told me about that experience on his way to playing at USC. pic.twitter.com/STIq6yQGgV

— Mookie Alexander (@mookiealexander) February 4, 2026

I have prior interview experience as a track and field and combat sports writer, so this part of the job is not foreign to me. The only thing I wish I could’ve done more of was talk deeper Xs and Os with coaches, but it’s not a deep regret. As someone with zero journalism classes ever taken, my perspective is to just treat athletes and coaches like normal human beings; they have an expertise that I don’t but that doesn’t mean acting in a manner of awe or like you’re a teenager seeing The Beatles in concert.

Outside of the Seahawks roster, I did get to meet Brian Nemhauser aka Hawkblogger for the first time, as well as Tacoma News Tribune’s Gregg Bell, and FOX 13’s Aaron Levine (to whom I referenced his stint on Jeopardy, ESPN’s Dream Job back in the day, in addition to watching him as a kid growing up in the Seattle area, and I’m delighted to say he’s Field Gulls familiar!). It’s also an honor to have a few minutes of light conversation with J.A. Adande, formerly of ESPN’s Around the Horn and the current Director of Sports Journalism at Northwestern University. Somehow, someway, I did not bring up the fact that Field Gulls was once cited on ATH by Clinton Yates back in 2018, which was wild to catch live.

I suppose the highlight of press conference week is who I ended up filming without interviewing. Nick Emmanwori freaked everyone out with his ankle injury in practice on Wednesday. Mike Macdonald eased concerns before anyone could even ask a question on Thursday. Emmanwori was not scheduled for a podium spot on Thursday, but suddenly he got the first podium while A.J. Barner got the boot—this is, no lie, how I got to interview Barner.

After the Darnold press conference, I head back for the main room before the players and coaches enter. I’m walking around and just biding my time, then I see Emmanwori and immediately hit the record button. No editing needed, no cropping, just upload instantly to the Field Gulls Twitter account. It’s pure happenstance I’m on the side of the room where I can get the clearest possible view of his walk.

Here’s Nick Emmanwori, literally a minute ago. pic.twitter.com/kpJGYFD0ue

— Field Gulls (@FieldGulls) February 5, 2026

Always be phone ready, ladies and gentlemen. You never know if a star player’s gait is one of the most important things you’ll ever film.



That’s all from Part 1, and I applaud you if you made it this far. Part 2 is all about the other (very fun) Super Bowl week activities, the big survey conducted, and how I covered the game without being at the stadium as originally hoped/intended. See you soon, and if you have any questions about my trip then ask away in the comments!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...wl-week-part-1-san-jose-press-conferences-nfl
 
Rick Dennison latest Seahawks coach set to leave for Raiders

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Feb 2, 2026; San Jose, CA, USA; Seattle Seahawks offensive advisor coach Rick Dennison during Opening Night for Super Bowl LX at San Jose Convention Center. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

The Seattle Seahawks are set to lose one more offensive assistant coach to Klint Kubiak’s Las Vegas Raiders staff.

CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz reported on Monday evening that run game coordinator Rick Dennison is expected to leave Seattle for Vegas in an undisclosed role. Dennison has not only worked with Klint in prior stops with the New Orleans Saints and Minnesota Vikings, he was a longtime assistant under Gary Kubiak and a teammate of his when they played for the Denver Broncos.

The #Raiders are expected to hire #Seahawks run game coordinator and senior offensive advisor Rick Dennison, sources tell @CBSSports.

Dennison has 30 years of NFL coaching experience, including as an offensive coordinator with the Bills, Broncos and Texans. pic.twitter.com/p8Zy0ezEGU

— Matt Zenitz (@mzenitz) February 17, 2026

Dennison was hired by the Seahawks last season, working as a run game coordinator for the first time since the 2019 and 2020 seasons in Minnesota.

Seattle is poised to keep most of its coaching staff from 2025, most notably offensive line coach John Benton and defensive backs coach Karl Scott. The only departures thus far are Kubiak (obviously) to the Raiders as head coach, quarterbacks coach Andrew Janocko as Klint’s offensive coordinator, and now Dennison in a TBD role (if not some sort of advisory position). It’s unlikely we’ll see many more depart, whether it’s the Raiders or anyone else in the NFL. If Seattle wants to directly replace Dennison as a run game coordinator, Justin Outten could perhaps get a promotion from “specialist” to coordinator outright.

Best wishes to Rick after picking up the fourth Super Bowl of his coaching career.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...wks-coach-leave-klint-kubiak-raiders-nfl-news
 
Seahawks News 2/17: Big contract decisions looming for Seahawks

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Jan 17, 2026; Seattle, WA, USA; Seattle Seahawks cornerback Riq Woolen (27) celebrates following an NFC Divisional Round game against the San Francisco 49ers at Lumen Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Ng-Imagn Images | Kevin Ng-Imagn Images

In Today’s Links: how the Seattle Seahawks can repeat as Super Bowl champs, per Seaside Joe; the ‘Hawks get mic’d up for SB LX, how the Klint Kubiak offense will have carry-over to the new Brian Fleury offense, clocking our squad’s blue chip players, a look at the salary cap, and much more! Thanks for being here. It’s only Tuesday, and there is only more ahead. Go, ‘Hawks!

Seahawks News


How Seahawks repeat: Step-by-Step – Seaside Joe
The 4 steps to a Seahawks Super Bowl repeat

Should the Seahawks re-sign Walker? Barnwell’s take – Seattle Sports
Among the Seattle Seahawks set to become unrestricted free agents next month, the biggest name is running back Kenneth Walker III.

Seahawks Mic’d Up: Super Bowl LX – Part 1 | Seattle Seahawks – Seahawks.com
The Seahawks earned their second Super Bowl title in franchise history with a 29-13 victory over the Patriots.

Why Seahawks’ train isn’t going to stop despite new OC in Brian Fleury – The Seattle Times
The Seahawks lost a star OC in Klint Kubiak, but in the NFL winning generally comes down to the head coach, GM and core players, which all return next season.

Analyzing Where Seahawks Land Among Best NFL Players – si.com
The Seattle Seahawks had a few of their best players recognized. But are they underrated?

Seahawks hiring Brian Fleury to replace Klint Kubiak as offensive coordinator: Source – The Athletic
The Seattle Seahawks are hiring San Francisco 49ers tight ends coach Brian Fleury as offensive coordinator, The Athletic confirmed Sunday, to replace Klint Kubiak, who left to become the Las Vegas Raiders’ head coach.

Seahawks Playbook Podcast Episode 728: Seahawks Salary Cap Show – Seahawks Playbook Podcast
Seahawks fans, thanks for joining Bill Alvstad and Keith Myers as we discuss and breakdown the key components and Seahawks free agents that will make up the salary cap decisions that John Schneider will face in the coming weeks.

NFC West News


Cardinals Free Agency Tracker: EDGE K’Lavon Chaisson – Revenge of the Birds
There is a saying in the NFL: Build from the lines out.

49ers hire veteran DBs coach from Raheem Morris’s old staff – Niners Nation
The 49ers are adding a familiar face for Raheem Morris’s staff.

What if Rams don’t hire an offensive coordinator? – Turf Show Times
The Rams are the NFL’s only team without an offensive coordinator. Could Sean McVay go coordinator-less again in 2026?

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...7-big-contract-decisions-looming-for-seahawks
 
Key dates for the Seahawks 2026 offseason

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Jun 11, 2025; Renton, WA, USA; Seattle Seahawks offensive line units take part in drills during mini-camp at Virginia Mason Athletic Center. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Brashear-Imagn Images | Stephen Brashear-Imagn Images

Little more than a week has passed since the Seattle Seahawks handily thumped the New England Patriots on the way to claiming the title as World Champions and hoisting the second Lombardi Trophy in franchise history.

With the Super Bowl in the rear view mirror, that, of course, means that the offseason has arrived. Thus, for those fans curious about what the offseason schedule looks like, the key dates for the Seahawks over the five months until they report for training camp include the following:

  • Today through March 3: Teams may use the franchise or transition tag on pending free agents
  • February 23 – Mar 2: 2026 NFL Combine in Indianapolis
  • 12:00 noon New York time on March 9 through 3:59:59 pm New York time on March 11: Legal tampering period
  • New NFL League Year, free agency begins: March 11 at 4:00 pm
  • March 29 – April 1: League Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona
  • April 17: Last day restricted free agents may sign an offer sheet with another team
  • April 20: Seahawks may begin their offseason program
  • April 23-April 25: 2026 NFL Draft in Pittsburgh, PA
  • May 1: Deadline for Seahawks to exercise fifth-year options of Devon Witherspoon and Jaxon Smith-Njigba
  • May 19-May 20: League Meeting
  • Late July: Report for training camp

In any case, at the end of the day the offseason has arrived and there is no meaningful football for more than six months, and as is the case every offseason, Field Gulls will work to keep readers up to date on all the happenings surrounding the team.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...key-dates-for-seattle-seahawks-2026-offseason
 
The Seattle Seahawks are for sale

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Jan 17, 2016; Charlotte, NC, USA; Seattle Seahawks owner Paul Allen on the field prior to facing the Carolina Panthers in the NFC Divisional round playoff game at Bank of America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

It’s been barely a week since the Seattle Seahawks hoisted the Lombardi Trophy for the second time in franchise history, thumping the overpowered and overmatched New England Patriots 29-13 to lay claim to bragging rights as the best team in the league for the next year.

And now the franchise is officially for sale, with the team making an announcement Wednesday morning that the process of selling the team has begun, with investment banking firm Allen & Company retained to facilitate the sale.

Estate of Paul G. Allen Begins Sale Process for Seattle Seahawks pic.twitter.com/Toj3CjClzP

— Seattle Seahawks (@Seahawks) February 18, 2026

The team had been held in the estate of Paul Allen since his death in late 2018, with his sister Jody Allen filling in as acting owner since that time.

There has been no shortage of debate about when the team might be put up for sale, with reports on the eve of the Super Bowl indicating that the process of selling the team would be put up for sale after the season had concluded.

The season has now concluded, and the Seahawks are officially for sale.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-seahawks-news/163301/the-seattle-seahawks-are-for-sale
 
NFL fines Seahawks’ Josh Jobe for Super Bowl scuffle with Stefon Diggs

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Feb 8, 2026; Santa Clara, CA, USA; Seattle Seahawks cornerback Josh Jobe (29) looks on before Super Bowl LX against the New England Patriots at Levi's Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Seattle Seahawks cornerback Josh Jobe was probably fortunate that he wasn’t ejected for his actions in the team’s dominant Super Bowl win over the New England Patriots, but he’s not so fortunate that he’ll escape any form of punishment.

The NFL fined Jobe a combined $18,444 for two separate reasons on what’s otherwise the same sequence of events. Jobe first hit Patriots receiver Stefon Diggs while out of bounds and after the play was over. Diggs took exception and a scuffle ensued, with Jobe appearing to throw a punch at Diggs’ helmet. Somehow, someway, Jobe was never flagged and the game continued. New England would eventually score its first touchdown of the game just two plays later.

Josh Jobe shoves Stefon Diggs out of bounds, and things get heated.

OMG 😳 pic.twitter.com/QpzecLD4b0

— SM Highlights (@SMHighlights1) February 9, 2026
#Seahawks Josh Jobe throws a punch at Stefon Diggs right in front of an official 😳 pic.twitter.com/3bZuxW8CiP

— Hailmarypass (@Hailmarypass_) February 9, 2026

The first $9,222 fine was for the late hit, while the other $9,222 fine was for “Striking/kicking/tripping/kneeing.” No one else was fined from Super Bowl 60.

Outside of that incident, Jobe had a superb performance, allowing only three catches for 11 yards on 10 targets, while also recording seven tackles. Jobe is set to become an unrestricted free agent next month.

And just because it’s worth repeating, the Seattle Seahawks won the Super Bowl.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...wks-josh-jobe-super-bowl-scuffle-stefon-diggs
 
Seahawks give Justin Outten a promotion

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DENVER, CO - AUGUST 27: Offensive coordinator Justin Outten of the Denver Broncos coaches during pregame before the game against the Minnesota Vikings at Empower Field At Mile High on August 27, 2022 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Tafoya/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Fresh off a resounding victory over the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LX, the Seattle Seahawks are continuing to build out the coaching staff that will look to defend the title of World Champion in 2026.

To that end, according to a report from NFL insider Jeremy Fowler of ESPN Thursday morning, the Seahawks have tabbed Justin Outten for a promotion.

The Seahawks have promoted assistant Justin Outten to run-game coordinator, per source.

Outten, a former Denver OC, interviewed for Seattle’s coordinator job last week. https://t.co/7Td8DrXYJS

— Jeremy Fowler (@JFowlerESPN) February 19, 2026

Outten joined the Seahawks staff in 2025 as the run game specialist and assistant offensive line coach, and the Las Vegas Raiders had requested to interview Outten for an opening on their staff after hiring Klint Kubiak as head coach. However, as the move would have been a lateral, Seattle block Outten from interviewing, and are now set to retain his services to replace Rick Dennison, who has reportedly accepted a role with Kubiak and the Raiders.

This comes after Outten interviewed for, but lost out on, a promotion to offensive coordinator for the Seahawks, and if the sole title he will hold is run game coordinator it would create an opening at assistant offensive line coach. The logical way to fill that role would be a promotion for Quinshom Odom, but whatever the team does to fill out the remaining spots on the staff, Field Gulls will work to ensure readers remain up to date on all the Seahawks related news.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ustin-outten-a-promotion-run-game-coordinator
 
What new Seahawks offensive coordinator Brian Fleury said in his first press conference

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SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 05: Brian Fleury attends Tight Ends and Friends at Public Works on February 05, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Shy McGrath/Getty Images) | Getty Images

For the third year in a row, there’s a new Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator in town. Not all OC hires are the same, however, and former San Francisco 49ers tight ends coach Brian Fleury isn’t here to rescue a struggling offense like his predecessor Klint Kubiak, but to build off of Kubiak’s success as a Super Bowl champion play-caller turned Las Vegas Raiders head coach.

Beyond working under Kyle Shanahan since 2019, Fleury has prior familiarity with some current Seahawks coaches and players, most notably quarterback Sam Darnold and tight end Eric Saubert when they were both on the team in 2023, as well as offensive line coach John Benton. While he’s never held an OC role at any level of football before, Fleury has been considered an up-and-coming assistant coach whose promotion to offensive coordinator status was seemingly inevitable.

Fleury held his first press conference as Seahawks OC on Thursday, with head coach Mike Macdonald alongside him. Here are some of the more intriguing quotes from his media session. (Transcript provided by Seahawks Media)


Thanking the San Francisco 49ers organization​


“I want to take an opportunity to really thank the York family and the San Francisco 49ers organization for seven great years. That’s a long time for us. My family and I have never been anywhere that long, and we have a lot of lifelong memories and experiences from that, both inside and outside of football. I also want to thank Kyle Shanahan for the opportunities he gave me in the building to take ownership of new roles and develop me to the point where I’m sitting here today. Now to answer the question, the opportunity means a lot. I mean, I think there’s only 13 of these non-head coach play calling jobs on the planet. So, to be considered for one was an honor, and now to be sitting here next to Mike [Macdonald], I can’t really express it any better than that.”

What the Seahawks offense will look like under Fleury​


“It looks very similar to the one that just won the Super Bowl. It’s more about how you play than what you’re actually doing schematically. We’re going to be fast, violent, and aggressive in every way that we possibly can. Put pressure on defenses, both schematically and from a tempo standpoint, and just always have that type of mindset.”

Brian Fleury’s prior play-calling experience​


“I’ve called defense and special teams, both at the collegiate level. I have not called offensive plays, but have always been preparing to. The thing about offensive play calling to me is the preparation is done ahead of time. You’re thinking through the situations and putting plays in a list format of when you get to 2nd and one inside the 30-yard line, what are you going to call? So, the preparation aspect of it I’ve already done, now it’s just a matter of analyzing the information in real time and getting to the right play call on the sheet.”

Expect a lot of continuity from the Klint Kubiak offense to the Brian Fleury offense​


“I do think one of the advantages of taking this job is there is going to be a lot of continuity. I’ve already started to dive into everything that Klint was doing here last year, and the goal would be to maintain as much of that as possible. But there’s also areas where we can supplement that with things that we’ve developed and done in San Francisco under Kyle that Klint wasn’t there for or maybe didn’t implement as much. So, that’s going to be the goal, to keep as much as we can the same, but I think there’s definitely areas where we can grow, some different ways we can challenge the players that they should be looking forward to when they get back here.”

Will Brian Fleury call plays from the booth or on the field?​


“My vision would be to call it from the field, but I would like to do both in the preseason. There’s just something to be said for having face-to-face conversations with every position group, and I also think that it’s important if you have things in mind and you’re anticipating calling stuff to preview it with those groups. That’s something I would like to be able to do in person, which that would be the disadvantage from calling it from the booth. I’ve spent a number of games up there and I do think that taking some of the sensory out of it helps and calms things from a play caller standpoint. I think ultimately I’ll end up wanting to do it from the field for those reasons.”

If Brian Fleury’s defensive background shapes his offensive philosophy​


“Yeah, it 100% does. And I was fortunate to work in a bunch of different styles of defense. So it just makes it easier for me, I think, to diagnose how the defense is operating, how they’re built, what the coverage structure is, how it works with the fronts, and what that allows me to do is probably quicker than maybe some other people get to ways to unlock that both formational and structurally, and again, put pressure on them to create conflicts.”

Mike Macdonald addresses Brian Fleury’s lack of offensive playcalling experience​


“Going into it, I do think it’s a bit overrated. At some point, all play callers have to be first time play callers at some point. You could tell how Brian thinks about the game. Look, you’re going to have to grow into any new role, but we have a lot of great people around here and a lot of great opportunities for him to get ready to go. I’m really confident he’s going to be off and running sooner than later. I’m excited about it. It’s going to be a fun process to build this thing.”



The full video of Fleury’s press conference can be seen below.

Video​


Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...-said-first-seattle-seahawks-press-conference
 
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