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Chiefs vs. Jaguars live discussion: Scouting the Seahawks’ next opponent

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Monday Night Football makes a stop in Florida for the Kansas City Chiefs and Jacksonville Jaguars. Kansas City has clawed its way back to .500 after an 0-2 start, while the Jaguars are 3-1 and probably should be 4-0 if not for a shaky pass interference penalty on Travis Hunter.

We’ve got a little incentive to watch tonight’s game because the Jaguars are hosting the Seattle Seahawks in Week 6. Luckily the weather is not forecast to be unbearably hot or stormy for this weekend’s game, but humidity will always be a factor in that part of the country. Are the Jags for real? They lead the league in takeaways and handed the San Francisco 49ers their only loss of the season. The defense has been the main story for rookie head coach Liam Coen, but thus far Trevor Lawrence has been a steady performer and Travis Etienne Jr is quietly averaging over six yards per carry.

Will Jacksonville improve to 4-1 and share the AFC South lead with the Indianapolis Colts? Or will the Chiefs climb to 3-2 and make their 0-2 stumble a distant memory?

Chat away in the comments! The game kicks off at 5:15 pm PT on ABC and ESPN.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/general/...iscussion-scouting-the-seahawks-next-opponent
 
Seahawks national power rankings roundup, Week 6: Seattle drops after Buccaneers loss

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Last week, after the Seattle Seahawks beat the Arizona Cardinals, many national media sites moved Seattle into the top ten in the league. However, how will that change after the Seahawks lost a shootout in heartbreaking fashion against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Week 5?

It is not too surprising to see the national media move the Seahawks down in their power rankings, however there could be some discussion as to how much they should be dropped. This week, four of the five media sites reviewed (Bleacher Report, Yahoo Sports, ESPN, and Pro Football Talk) all moved Seattle down. However, one of the sites (NFL.com) decided to keep Seattle at the same ranking. Let’s start with the bad news first.

The biggest drop for the Seahawks was by Bleacher Report who dropped Seattle down five spots, from 9th to 14th. However, despite this far drop, Bleacher Report maintains optimism for the Seahawks, noting that they came out on the wrong end of a shootout with Baker Mayfield, and that “there wasn’t a team that looked better losing in Week 5 than the Seahawks.” ESPN, who dropped the Seahawks from 9th to 11th also had a positive tune in their analysis, mainly pointing to Jaxon Smith-Njigba and his dominance this season. (“With 34 catches for 534 yards and 2 touchdowns, he’s [JSN is] 11th overall in fantasy points scored through five weeks.”)

Both PFT and Yahoo dropped the Seahawks down slightly as well. PFT dropped Seattle three spots from 10th to 13th ,while hoping that the Seahawks and Buccaneers will meet again in the playoffs so they can where the throwback uniforms again. Meanwhile, Yahoo dropped Seattle from 8th to 12th in their power rankings.

The one national media site who chose not to drop Seattle down was the one and only,NFL.com, who kept the Seahawks ranked 5th. In their reasoning, NFL.com stated that despite a late interception, Sam Darnold is looking great after throwing for 341 yards and four touchdowns with an 82.4 completion percentage. And because of this offensive success, the Seahawks look to be in a good position in the big picture, despite the loss to Tampa Bay.

Overall, despite the majority of the national media sites moving the Seahawks down, the genuine feel for the team remains positive, especially for the offense. After Week 4, the average power ranking between the five sites (NFL.com, PFT, Bleacher Report, ESPN, and Yahoo) was 8.2. After week five, the average power ranking between these same five sites is 11.0, just outside the top ten, and still within the playoff picture (top 14).

Huge tests remain for the Seahawks with both the Jacksonville Jaguars and Houston Texans next on the schedule before the Bye week. A record of 5-2 is possible after those two games. However, so is a record of 3-4. Two very different records and feelings are possible for Seattle. Time will tell how the national feeling around this team will be entering the week eight bye and into November.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...-roundup-week-6-seattle-drops-buccaneers-loss
 
It’s time for Mike Macdonald to try something different

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Another week, another chart that has the Seattle Seahawks near the top of the NFL in quarterback pressure.

Yay! (right?)

Early on, yes, this was good. But after losing 38-35 to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, there’s growing evidence that Mike Macdonald needs to make a defensive shift to keep up with how the league is countering him.

Baker Mayfield was allowed to run roughshod over the Seattle secondary, juking the likes of Nehemiah Pritchett and Ty Okada into oblivion. He even made Josh Jobe look mortal.

Emeka Egbuka shreds Josh Jobe and Ty Okada pic.twitter.com/4sMpz2FzZZ

— NFL Draft Files (@NFL_DF) October 5, 2025

Let’s come back to that play later, because it’s emblematic of what has happened to Seattle. The premise for this article is simple: that for the remainder of the season, being excellent at QB pressure is not good enough.

Under Pressure​


Pushing down on me, pressing down on you….

Coming out of Week 5, the Seahawks have the fifth-best QB pressure rate. They have accomplished this feat with hardly any blitzes, and with hardly any individual winners.

How ironic is it that the #Seahawks have no one on the individual QB Pressures chart below yet they are top 5 in QB pressure rate? #12AsOne

Top 5 NFL Defenses in QB Pressure rate through 4 weeks:

33.8% – Broncos
29.3% – Vikings
28.5% – Bills
27.8% – Steelers
25.3% – Seahawks pic.twitter.com/MEsXvaBXbp

— Setting The Edge (@SettingTheEdge) October 1, 2025

The first problem is that 25.3% and fifth looks great, but it’s actually a massive decline from the first couple games. They took off at the beginning of the season pressuring quarterbacks at nearly 40% of the time.

Pressure Efficiency for NFL Defenses

X-axis: Blitz Rate
Y-axis: Pressure% pic.twitter.com/7tyLzrnrKU

— Seahawks Today (@TodaySeahawks) September 16, 2025

25%, then, is actually quite worrying. The Denver Broncos have remained incredibly consistent. Seattle’s down 13 points.

What happened?

Much of it has to do with the first chart above. The Seahawks – namely Mike Macdonald at the moment – have greatly embodied his philosophies of marrying rush and coverage, as well as “four rush as one.” They are very good at this, and there’s probably nobody better in the league.

What they decidedly do not have, are any individual winners. I think they had some individual winners, but Byron Murphy and Leonard Williams have been quieted somewhat the past two games.

Without an individual performer in the top-30 at pressure rate, the defense is completely reliant on a team-rush approach. Essentially, if Macdonald’s coverage holds up, or the specific stunt/simulated pressure package works, they impact the quarterback. Absent of that, there hasn’t been enough individual wins to consistently get good numbers out of any one player. The primary place we would hope to see this is from the edge, via Boye Mafe or Uchenna Nwosu, or Derick Hall before his injury. We haven’t.

As a result, teams have been able to easily devote the necessary attention to Williams or Murphy, and enjoy an above-average-yet-not-devastating amount of quarterback pressure from the Seahawks.

Which brings up the second issue. Occasional team pressure alone is not enough to win games.

Though the defense is fifth at QB pressure, they’re 12th in the NFL at sacks. That’s a marginal indicator: the pressure isn’t as often being converted into sacks. Here’s a far more devastating number: they’re allowing the fifth-worst completion percentage to opposing quarterbacks at 70.3%

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And look at the teams around them. Not exactly a who’s who of ferocious defenses.

This gets much more at the heart of the problem. Pressure is not a one-size-fits-all statistic. Some type of pressure is more valuable than others. Good NFL quarterbacks can overcome the mere fact that a defender is within a yard at the point of throw, or caused him to navigate the pocket, or hit him immediately after the ball was released.

Hence, 38 points from Baker Mayfield, with only one sack and four incompletions the entire game.

Now I’d like to revisit the play to Emeka Egbuka from the top. It’s the third quarter, tied game and 3rd and 13. Baker Mayfield had 3.7 seconds to release this pass. That’s plenty of time in today’s NFL. It was a four-man rush from Seattle, with Mafe, Williams, Nwosu, and Murphy. That’s their best four or close to it, but all we got was a wholly ineffective stunt from Nwosu and nobody remotely threatened Mayfield.

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This is where Macdonald’s crossroads comes into play. If it is true that Seattle generates a great deal of vanilla pressure, if it is true that they don’t win individual matchups quickly or often, if it is true that their pressure rate is declining, and if it is true that they’re allowing massively high completion rate to QBs, then I don’t think you will survive calling as few blitzes as he is currently calling.

Something else – someone else – has to come in and get more impact on the quarterback. Clearly the injuries to Devon Witherspoon and Julian Love were devastating, but this trend had already started to emerge. I don’t think we can entirely blame it on a banged up roster.

Teams are going to continue to learn how to deal with Seattle’s “pressure” because it’s not generating enough drive killers. They can anticipate exotic looks because it still ends up being just four guys. They can cover Big Cat or Murphy when needed.

Macdonald has been an exemplary adapter in his brief NFL career. It might be time to do so again.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...nald-try-something-different-seahawks-defense
 
Half dozen Seahawks defensive starters miss practice Wednesday

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During the offseason, hopes among fans were high for a rejuvenated Seattle Seahawks defense in 2025, and those hopes have been realized on the field when the defense has been healthy.

Unfortunately, the caveat regarding health has been important, and as the group has watched a number of injuries take their toll during the first five weeks of the season, the performance of the unit has been correspondingly impacted.

Thus, as Mike Macdonald prepares his team for yet another cross country road trip to the Eastern Time Zone for a Week 6 matchup against the Jacksonville Jaguars, there was no shortage of defensive players on the injury report Wednesday. Specifically, a half dozen defensive starters did not take part in practice Wednesday, with a pair of other key defensive names limited.

Seahawks practice report lists Devon Witherspoon, DeMarcus Lawrence, Ernest Jones IV, Derick Hall, Josh Jones and Julian Love as injury-related non-participants

Riq Woolen and Nick Emmanwori were limited participants. pic.twitter.com/hAXZTFNt55

— Dugar, Michael-Shawn (@MikeDugar) October 8, 2025

The good news is that Jarran Reed had the day off for non-injury related reasons, so his status should not be in doubt for the game against the Jaguars. However, the same cannot be said for Derick Hall, Ernest Jones, Demarcus Lawrence, Julian Love and Devon Witherspoon, meaning that the Thursday and Friday injury reports could shed significant light on how the defense might look Sunday. Add in Tariq Woolen and Nick Emmanwori being limited, and it’s possible Aden Durde’s group could be in for a rough go of things against Jacksonville.

On the other side of the ball, the offense is largely healthy, with swing tackle Josh Jones not practicing due to injury. That should at least mean the offense is healthy enough to keep performing at a very high level, which could prove necessary should the defense once again be unable to stop the opponent, as was the case in the Week 5 loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...arters-miss-practice-wednesday-jaguars-week-6
 
Seahawks All-22 review: The good and bad from the loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers

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A win against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers could have been very important for the Seattle Seahawks’ postseason projections. Unfortunately, it seemed to slip through their fingers, with the team losing on a field goal with 00:00 on the clock, after one of the most worrying defensive performances under Mike Macdonald.

All data used in this article was taken from PFF. Let’s review the film!

The Bad

There is a problem in the pass rush


If you’re a regular reader, you know how many times I’ve raised concerns about the team failing to convert pressures into sacks and, especially, not being effective in applying pressure on the edges. This issue was somewhat obscured once the defensive tackle’s work was yielding results. The injuries to Derick Hall and DeMarcus Lawrence brought this issue to light.

The Seahawks faced offensive linemen who yielded a lot of pressure when they played the Pittsburgh Steelers, New Orleans Saints, and Bucs. The team should have explored the side more with Broderick Jones, Taliese Fuaga, and Charlie Heck. Heck had yielded eight pressures in two games. The Seahawks forced five pressures on him, but only hurries and a sack on a blitz.

A total of 12 pressures and one sack was the pass rush production against the Bucs, who played without their right guard and right tackle. No hits on the QB; the pressure was inconsistent. This gave Baker Mayfield time in the pocket to attack a secondary full of backup players of questionable quality. Furthermore, it further exposed the Seahawks’ inability to keep the QB in the pocket, as warned in our preview article for this game.

Boye Mafe, #53, Right EDGE

Wins quickly using a euro-step move, but slows down (for no apparent reason) getting to the QB and misses the sack; pic.twitter.com/J1hE3AfBvV

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

On this play, Boye Mafe, still searching for his first sack of the year, uses a euro-step, escapes the right tackle, but seemingly for no reason slows down before reaching the QB, allowing Mayfield to escape and gain yards.

Byron Murhpy (#91, LDT) wins against double-team. The pressure gets to the QB but there is no integrity in the Seahawks' gaps and the QB manages to escape. pic.twitter.com/18CY2VHGOs

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

Here we have Byron Murphy with excellent footwork, beating the guard and putting pressure on the QB. However, once again, the Seahawks fail to keep the QB in the pocket, and Mayfield not only escapes the sack but also gains yards.

Derick Hall with great power move pressure the QB but Mafe is moved on the other side and creates a lane for Mayfield scramble. pic.twitter.com/ZsBMdrY5wA

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

Derick Hall manages to use power move right side, but on the other side, Boye Mafe, after attempting another euro-step, is moved by Tristan Wirfs easily, leaving the edge open for Mayfield to escape and buy time.

Seahawks DL unable to keep the QB in the pocket. pic.twitter.com/T0tOr71mZG

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

Final touchdown for the Bucs. The Seahawks decide to send only three to pressure. Mafe has some initial success, but again gives up a lane to Mayfield, who spent too much time in the pocket navigating his progressions. When you have Josh Jobe, Ty Okada, and especially Nehemiah Pritchett in your secondary, this can be fatal.

Execution and planning problems/adjustments in defense


The Seahawks had 10 days to plan for the game and failed. Even knowing they would be missing players, the team had no alternatives to protect themselves. During the game, it became clear that the Bucs were exploiting the areas where Drake Thomas, Jobe ,and Okada were located. This changed somewhat when Pritchett entered and gave Tampa another option.

The Seahawks failed to adjust to this. They failed to slow down Emeka Egbuka and failed to find different ways to effectively pressure Baker Mayfield. These planning errors and lack of adjustments, as well as the absences, led to numerous execution errors, making things even worse for the Seahawks.

Seahawks disguise a Tampa 2 showing only one deep safety. This is a tough task for Ernest Jones. pic.twitter.com/0pbERLmsdO

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

Here, the Seahawks start the snap with a Cover 1 shell. Post-snap, the changes begin. Derion Kendrick will defend one half of the field, and Coby Bryant will drop between the two deep defenders’ zones, thus forming a Tampa 2. This will require Ernest Jones to quickly reach the numbers, a difficult task for the LB. The idea was that the disguise would slow down Mayfield’s processing and give time to Jones to reach it. However, the QB quickly recognized the opportunity and easily got the first down.

Josh Jobe was saved here. pic.twitter.com/QqBK2NuJLd

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

The Seahawks blitzed and dropped Byron Murphy and Nwosu into hook zone coverage, aiming to eliminate the short pass option in the middle of the field. However, Mayfield was targeting the zone with Jobe and Okada in coverage. The safety took a while to get downfield, and the pass was successfully completed. The key point of the play is that Josh Jobe would have given up a TD here, being quickly beaten by Egbuka at the line of scrimmage. Luckily, Mayfield got his first read on the play.

Seems that Nwosu and Thomas are in the same zone here. pic.twitter.com/k6y3vd7DsJ

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

The Seahawks call a simulated pressure that is a defensive tactic that creates the illusion of a heavy blitz while actually rushing only four players. Macdonald is a master at this, but he has been decreasing the use of this and stacked boxes, which, in my view, is a mistake. Returning to the play, the team essentially puts eight in the box, sending Nick Emmanwori in the QB hunt and dropping Uchenna Nwosu. The point is that Nwosu’s drop defends the same zone as Drake Thomas; one of them missed, and this gave the pass a chance to connect.

Seahawks are in Quarters and Ty Okada are poaching the post from the other side. pic.twitter.com/pXRHk9nGQP

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

I’ve watched this play many times, seen and read many analysts talking about it, and still, I’m not entirely convinced by the call here. What I think happened is that it was a Quarters with Jobe defending the deep field (1/4)(which I don’t think is a good idea; he’ll always need the help of a safety) and being easily burned by Egbuka’s route. The one who could have helped would have been Okada, but the safety was in Poach coverage.

Poach is a defensive strategy where the weak-side safety reads the number 3 receiver and gets involved in coverage, either by taking the receiver’s vertical route or taking the post route if the number 3 receiver doesn’t go vertical. That’s exactly what happens here, with the big catch being given up.

The Good

Signs of improvement on the Offensive Line


The Seahawks’ offensive line has been featured heavily in the “Bad” section of this article, but against the Bucs, I saw some improvement. Pass protection was still quite inconsistent, with nine pressures conceded and three of the five starters receiving a PFF grade below 50 in Pass Block.

Olha o pé do Bradford no final da jogada kkkkkk.

Maluco perdeu o snap feio e tentou derrubar o cara hahahaha.

É muito bagre, obrigado, John Schneider. pic.twitter.com/GLJKlr1Dlc

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 6, 2025

We still had some pretty poor plays like the one above, where Anthony Bradford loses easily and seems to use his foot to trip the defender in a bizarre move.

Seahawks OL against stunt pic.twitter.com/iEIXf10Zcx

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

But there were improvements, mainly with the offensive line working as a unit, rather than “every man for himself.” The Bucs called two stunts on their defensive line, and the Seahawks blocked masterfully. On the left side, Gray Zabel passes the defender to Charles Cross and moves very well to catch the looper, making excellent contact. On the other side, Braford is aggressive against Vita Vea, which helps Abe Lucas, but could open up space for the looper (#5). However, center Jalen Sundell diagnoses the play and is already waiting to help the right tackle.

The main improvement was in the running game. Until then, it seemed like 80% of the Seahawks’ rushing production came from miracles and big plays made by Ken Walker. In this game, the starting lineup took significant strides, executing better and imposing themselves more physically. As a result, Walker didn’t have any runs for lost yards.

Seahawks Duo Run pic.twitter.com/2HPM7FE1G1

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

A sign of the physical imposition. The Seahawks call it the Duo run here, which consists of using double blocks to open up space, and the RB has to read MIKE and “run away” from him. The team had tried this type of run without much success because the double blocks didn’t create gaps and made it easier for the linebackers to get to the RB in the backfield. The Seahawks create two gaps in the play above. Lavonte David (#54) attacks one of them, but this time Zach Charbonnet has another option and manages to advance with the run.

Anthony Bradford run block pic.twitter.com/tP38z01eZd

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

Nothing too fancy here, nor a huge improvement. However, Sundell manages a good block to open the gap, along with Bradford, who shows off his strength by blocking the DL with just one hand.

Cooper Kupp amazing blocks pic.twitter.com/RE1KrDcuaF

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

The team rightly used Walker more in the outside zone and reaped the rewards. Excellent blocking by Abe Lucas, who is recovering from a poor game against the Cards, will be crucial for the development of the rest of the OL, especially Bradford. Furthermore, AJ Barner and especially Cooper Kupp provide key blocks to secure more yards for the RB.

Ken Walker Run pic.twitter.com/OMxugC7l46

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

Once again, good teamwork in this Duo run. The gap is opened for the RB’s advance with blocks from Eric Saubert and Cooper Kupp, demonstrating why he is one of the best WRs blocking for the run game.

Sam Darnold kept the Seahawks alive in the game


Darnold’s interception late in the game cost us the victory. However, the Seahawks only reached that point with a chance of winning thanks to the five TD drives he led.

Darnold numbers were 28 of 34, 341 yards, 4 TDs, and the interception. Speaking about the play after the game, Darnold took responsibility, saying he should have called a different protection and that he tried to throw the ball away. This last point is the only thing that I’m concerned about.

Yes, he was under pressure, but the decision to throw the ball away like he did is highly questionable because it could have resulted in a deflection in both the Seahawks’ OL or the Bucs’ DL, as it did. Darnold tried to throw the ball away this way on other plays and continues to be risky.

Sam Darnold int pic.twitter.com/0x5H3fUiKQ

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

I believe Darnold thought Lavonte David (#54) would come on the blitz, which is why the protection call was zone to the right side and man to the left side (despite Zabel’s signal before the play pointing to #8). The blitz actually comes from the other side, and the OL executes its assignment correctly. The blitzer is left to the RB who blocks well, but there’s also a DB on the blitz (something the Bucs often do is send a CB on the blitz in condensed formations on the opposing offense), and it’s the QB’s responsibility to recognize this. Under pressure, Darnold tries to throw the ball away, but hits the DL’s helmet, resulting in the interception.

Sam Darnold misses the TD and was almost picked here pic.twitter.com/0FosXPjCmq

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

Of the four incomplete passes thrown by Darnold, this is the most concerning. The QB was very lucky on this play. Horton makes the quick cut, and it should have been a TD if the ball went closer to the pylon. Darnold’s pass is poor and gives the CB a chance to not only deflect the pass, but also turn it into a 99-yard pick-six. The Seahawks scored the TD on the next play, but the game could have been different if it had been 20-0 instead of 13-7.

Sam Darnold choose to be conservative and not risk the pass to Horton by going to the checkdown with Barner. pic.twitter.com/3BBmzneIhf

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

One trend I’ve noticed with Darnold is that he’s been very conservative on most of his passes. On this play, he looks to Horton, who would have been free as the play progressed. I believe Darnold has made other, more difficult passes than this one, but the QB prefers to go to the next read, and AJ Barner, who had a great game, gets the first down.

Sam Darnold dot. pic.twitter.com/jJ8F6PRtfB

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

Play action, there’s a bit of confusion in Barner and Kupp’s routes, and Darnold throws a nice pass even without a good base, moving to the left, flipping his hips and, under pressure, he completes a good pass for JSN. He’s been doing very well in these situations, throwing against the body’s movement.

Great call and execution in redzone pic.twitter.com/EZ4yMFWTDz

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

Another example of his good arm. It’s worth noting that the play starts with Kupp on the left and JSN in the backfield. Kubiak does a good job keeping the defense guessing until very close to the snap. JSN wins the slant, and Barner and Kupp’s routes open up space for the pass, which lands in the middle of four defenders. Great TD!

Sam Darnold awesome TD pic.twitter.com/oYAO8CsZS7

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

4th & 2, the Seahawks call play-action, and Kupp appears to be the QB’s first target, but he’s well covered. Barner was essentially on the first down line, and I think he would have been Darnold’s option, but the pressure came with Charbonnet’s blocking error. Darnold stood firm in the pocket, keeping his eyes downfield. The Bucs defense stopped on the play, waiting for the sack, leaving Horton free to score his third receiving TD of the season.

AJ Barner TD created by awesome Kupp's work on his route. pic.twitter.com/5FRijHCH5X

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

Once again, the Seahawks called a Rub Route in the red zone. This was an excellent way to attack the Bucs’ man coverage, which was frequently used in this area of the field. A Rub concept or pick play is a play in which a receiver intentionally runs a route that creates contact or is intended to delay the defender guarding another receiver, hindering the defender’s ability to cover the designated player and leaving the second receiver open. Kupp is fantastic in this play. Note that he stops just as the defenders cross, creating more separation for Barner, who has excellent control to stay in the field, break the tackle, and score the TD, which could have been the game-winning TD.

Cooper Kupp on 3rd downs pic.twitter.com/TGS8H6XfjE

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) October 8, 2025

Finally, I’d like to commend Kupp’s work. We’ve struggled so often against him on third downs when he was with the Rams. It seems we’re now using that to our advantage. Kupp appears to be Darnold’s first read. The WR beats rookie Jacob Parrish’s good coverage at the line of scrimmage. However, he stumbles and loses his balance. Darnold stands firm, waiting for him to recover, and throws the ball away from the defender, where Kupp has to stretch his arms and get the first down. Darnold’s stellar performance was that he remained calm in the pocket and had the patience to connect with the WR.

Final Thoughts


The most important thing from this game is that lessons were learned. Macdonald’s defense needs to perform better, and the quarterback needs to be able to make adjustments during the game. The injuries exposed the lack of depth in many areas of the defense. This was something overlooked by John Schneider, who will need to work his magic to adjust the roster with the season underway and no surplus draft capital to do so (the Seahawks will not have compensatory picks in the upcoming draft).

Much of what was done worked, but there is still room for improvement. The NFC playoff spots will be highly contested, and any detail could determine whether the team misses the postseason. The time to fix things is now.

Go Hawks!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...e-good-and-bad-from-loss-tampa-bay-buccaneers
 
Seahawks Week 6 Thursday injury report: DeMarcus Lawrence, Nick Emmanwori practice fully

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Let’s start out with the positive injury news for a change. DeMarcus Lawrence practiced fully and looks like he’ll return against the Jacksonville Jaguars after hurting his thigh early in the Thursday Night Football contest against the Arizona Cardinals in Week 4. His possible presence will be even more welcome considering Derick Hall’s oblique injury suffered against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers which will keep the third-year EDGE out against Jacksonville.

Safety Nick Emmanwori was also a full participant after being limited on Wednesday. Emmanwori returned against the Buccaneers and was a large part of the defensive game plan. He tweaked his ankle during the game, so it’s good to see him back fully.

Ernest Jones and Jarran Reed both sat out Wednesday’s practice. Jones was limited on Thursday while Reed was a full participant. The other potential good news is Riq Woolen as a limited participant for two days in a row while he looks to clear concussion protocol.

On the less optimistic side of the injury news are the aforementioned Derick Hall, Josh Jones, Julian Love, and Devon Witherspoon, all of whom missed practice on Thursday. It’s trending towards another week without Love and Witherspoon, and we all saw how that played out last week.

Check out the full injury report below.

Seahawks with a better injury report than Wednesday. But Love and Witherspoon are each still a DNP. Seahawks will release a game status report Friday before leaving for Jacksonville: pic.twitter.com/w6zwt44X4v

— Bob Condotta (@bcondotta) October 9, 2025

Maybe Tank’s return on the defensive line will spur more pressure on Trevor Lawrence to help out the back end of the defense. If not, this could be another long week.

Game designations will be announced on Friday.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...emarcus-lawrence-nick-emmanwori-practice-full
 
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