News Seahawks Team Notes

The first Seahawks unofficial depth chart says a lot about Jalen Sundell

Jalen Sundell.


The Seattle Seahawks’ initial, unofficial depth chart for the 2025 regular season has been released.

We emphasize unofficial because, well, you might be scratching your head seeing Elijah Arroyo rooted to the third-string tight end role behind Eric Saubert, or Byron Murphy II as the only nose tackle. But the actual games should give us a clearer picture as to what we should expect throughout the season.

Weekly-Release-Reg-2025-week-1-Weekly-Release-09-02-2025_01_50_PM.png

The biggest takeaway by far is Jalen Sundell’s presence. While he won the starting center job over Olu Oluwatimi, Sundell was also in competition to start at right guard over Anthony Bradford and Christian Haynes. For as long as Haynes is on injured reserve (and perhaps, maybe still after he’s taken off IR), Sundell is unofficially listed as the next man up at either guard spot.

In Monday’s official post-practice media session, Seahawks head coach Mike Macdonald indicated that should something happen to either Grey Zabel or Anthony Bradford, the next man up is… Olu Oluwatimi to play center, which would then allow Sundell to shift over to guard.

“We got some young guys ready to go step in if somebody couldn’t find their helmet, and then we’ll go from there. But Olu is probably the next guy in the game. Jalen would go to guard, is the plan right now,” Macdonald said.

Sundell went from an undrafted free agent picked up late in the 2024 offseason to serving as a third-string center behind Oluwatimi and Connor Williams. After limited playing time as a rookie, he now finds himself as the No. 1 option at center after a great offseason and preseason, plus he’s the main backup guard. While it’s not a ringing endorsement for the readiness of Bryce Cabeldue or Mason Richman, it’s a rapid ascension for Sundell given he was fighting to make the roster a year ago, and now he’s set to make his first NFL start this weekend against the San Francisco 49ers.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...unofficial-depth-chart-jalen-sundell-nfl-news
 
Seahawks Reacts Survey: Will we see a rookie score a touchdown vs. 49ers?

imagn-26803540.jpg


Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Seahawks fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

It’s that time of year! We’ve got Seahawks Reacts surveys coming at you weekly from now until the end of the season. As usual, the first question is gauging your confidence in the direction of the franchise. You can only answer either “yes” or “no” as it’s a standardized question for all 32 sites.

For the custom questions, there’s a semi-standard one that is simply a game prediction. Will the Seahawks or San Francisco 49ers win, and by how many points? The answers are divvied up by one possession (1-8 pts) and two possessions (9+ pts) for either team.

Lastly, will we see any Seahawks rookies reach the end zone against the 49ers? If so, who will get the touchdown first: Tory Horton, Jalen Milroe, Robbie Ouzts, Elijah Arroyo, Nick Emmanwori, or none? I guess I could include Nick Kallerup in there but as a fourth TE he might be a gameday inactive so I’m leaving him off. I suppose Grey Zabel, Mason Richman, Bryce Cabeldue, Jared Ivey, and Connor O’Toole are all eligible for inclusion but it’s hard for guards to score without recovering a fumble, while Ivey and O’Toole may not get much (if any) playing time.

Answer the questions in the survey below!

Check back later in the week for the results!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ll-we-see-a-rookie-score-a-touchdown-vs-49ers
 
Seahawks-49ers Wednesday injury report: Great news on Tyrice Knight, Tory Horton

Seahawks LB Tyrice Knight.


The Seattle Seahawks have released their first injury report for their Week 1 opener against the San Francisco 49ers, and there’s more good news than bad.

Second-year linebacker Tyrice Knight, who missed the back-half of training camp and preseason with an unspecified medical issue and a knee injury, was not event listed on the injury report. Barring something unexpected, Knight is on course to start alongside Ernest Jones IV for the season opener.

Rookie wide receiver Tory Horton, one of the camp and preseason standouts, also practiced fully after dealing with an ankle injury suffered against the Kansas City Chiefs. That he’s a full participant on Wednesday is a strong indicator that he’ll be all systems go on Sunday.

Wide receiver Jake Bobo was seen in warmups fielding punts on Monday, but full practice participation is still not there yet after his scary collision in the preseason finale against the Green Bay Packers. He was listed as limited, as were Dareke Young and Cody White with shoulder and hamstring injuries, respectively. The bottom-end of the receiver depth chart will need close monitoring for the rest of the week.

Lastly, veteran outside linebacker Uchenna Nwosu was also a limited participant. He’s easing his way back into game shape after offseason knee surgery, which caused him to start training camp on the PUP list. Mike Macdonald has not put a timetable on when Nwosu will make his regular season debut, which is perhaps in part why undrafted rookie Connor O’Toole is on the 53-man roster.

Here’s the full injury report, which has a lot of 49ers listed but mostly as full participants.

Gz9RInCboAAHYJe.jpg

All things considered, a very light injury report for Seattle and zero DNPs. The Seahawks will practice on Thursday and have their game designations following Friday’s practice.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ury-report-tyrice-knight-tory-horton-nfl-news
 
Behind Seahawks enemy lines preview: A big home game vs. San Francisco 49ers

Devon Witherspoon and Christian McCaffrey.


After a long wait, the regular season is back. The Seattle Seahawks open against the San Francisco 49ers at Lumen Field and are considered underdogs by betting markets.

This series of articles will always feature play-by-play analysis, but in Week 1, things are very different. There are many expectations and projections that we will only get answers to as the season progresses. The NFL is not predictable. Who would have thought the Minnesota Vikings would achieve 14 wins last year?

Let’s go!

The teams have changed since the last matchup​


In the last matchup, the Seahawks emerged victorious after a losing streak since Geno Smith took over as the starter. The roster has changed significantly, starting with Geno Smith, who is now with the Las Vegas Raiders and has been replaced by Sam Darnold. The Seahawks’ offense, now led by Klint Kubiak (who will face his brother, Klay, who also took over as 49ers OC for 2025), should become simpler but more efficient, focusing more on the running game, especially after the departures of Noah Fant, Tyler Lockett, and DK Metcalf.

The offensive line appears to have a new identity with John Benton and received a major addition with the arrival of Grey Zabel, the return of Abe Lucas, a stronger Charles Cross, and a “new” center (Jalen Sundell was on the roster, but only as a backup). The unit made a good impression against the Kansas City Chiefs, especially, but, as mentioned at the beginning of the article, preseason performance levels are not reliable indicators, and this game should be the real test.

The running game is also crucial to slowing down the 49ers’ pass rush. Nick Bosa had 17 pressures (2 sacks, 2 hits, and 13 hurries) in the two games last season. He only had three in the last game when he lined up against Abe Lucas and ended the game injured.

Looking at the 49ers’ defense, many changes are evident. Robert Saleh returned to lead the defense in place of Nick Sorensen. If the Seahawks prepared to run the ball during the offseason, the 49ers are preparing to defend against it on defense.

Mykel Williams, Alfred Collins, and CJ West are excellent players defending the run. This gives the 49ers solidity both inside of the line and in the edge, so, this will be a tough matchup against the Seahawks’ rebuilding offensive line.

The 49ers’ defense lost Talanoa Hufanga (S), Maliek Collins (DT), Javon Hargrave (DT), DeVondre Campbell (LB), Dre Greenlaw (LB), and Charvarius Ward (CB). On offense, they lost Aaron Banks (LG), who will be replaced by Ben Bartch, and Deebo Samuel was traded to the Commanders.

The other absences are likely injury-related. Dominick Puni (RG) may be questionable for the game, Yetur Gross-Matos has a knee problem, Brandon Aiyuk is on the PUP list, along with safety Malik Mustapha, and Demarcus Robinson is suspended.

The importance of combating the run Game​


With the absences of Aiyuk and Robinson, the run game becomes even more important for the 49ers. Christian McCaffrey is a unique and spectacular player and will require a lot of attention from the Seahawks defense. The 49ers also traded for Brian Robinson, which raised the bar for their backups.

If you remember correctly, the last game against the 49ers marked a change in the Seahawks’ defense, especially in combating the run game. Mike Macdonald used the Double Edge Blitz to counter the Wide zone-heavy scheme, and this should happen again.

The Double Edge Blitz consists of a 6-1 front (6 players on the DL and only 1 LB). It’s worth noting that this formation won’t always be shown before the snap, as with most MM plays. The natural scenario is to have four DLs with their hands on the ground and add two blitzers coming from the edges of the line. The idea is to eliminate cutback options and force the run inside, where the DLs need to make the play.

Seahawks 6-1 formation – Double Edge Blitz pic.twitter.com/hHkecCc7NP

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 4, 2025

The Seahawks are in a big nickel formation with Julian Love lining up in the slot. The snap is made, and he and Tyrice Knight are sent on a blitz along the edge, also aiming to mark the boot action. Roy Robertson-Harris (an underrated addition from last season) makes an excellent play, forcing CMC to re-plan his route. The RB still considers a more outside cut, but notices Julian Love’s arrival on the edge, giving Byron Murphy time to make the tackle.

Run Defense Group Effort

PS: Ernest Jones makes Trent Williams miss in open space pic.twitter.com/tYgoyLJOdN

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 4, 2025

There’s a subtle touch of the Pete Carroll-era approach to tackling the run game for Mike Macdonald. Carroll, at least in recent years, prioritized creating one-on-one situations for his players to make plays. With Macdonald, the approach seems to be more of a collaborative one.

Final Thoughts​


A final point about the 49ers’ offense is that Brock Purdy is a QB who has shown he can handle pressure and even free rushers, throwing four touchdowns and only one interception in that situation last season. He’ll have Jauan Jennings, who excelled on third down, especially against the Seahawks, and Ricky Pearsall, who had an excellent training camp.

Finally, they should have the healthiest version of George Kittle in recent memory. An excellent test for Tyrice Knight, Ernest Jones, and Nick Emmanwori.

I believe it will be a very close game, but I disagree with the 49ers being favored, considering the Seahawks will be playing at home (despite the controversy surrounding a 49ers fan “invasion” at Lumen Field) and are healthy.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...hawks-enemy-lines-preview-san-francisco-49ers
 
The Field Gulls Seahawks coverage plan for 2025!

gettyimages-2183618346.jpg


While the Seattle Seahawks are kicking off their 50th season this weekend, Field Gulls is entering its 20th season! Hard to believe we’ve been around for that long, but it’s true. I know we have many community members who have been a part of Field Gulls in some capacity for at least close to the site’s inception, but every year we have new readers and users who may be unfamiliar with our work.

As promised on Wednesday when I introduced the staff for the 2025 season, this article is all about what you should expect to see every week from Field Gulls throughout the regular (and, hopefully) postseason for 2025. I’m leaving out obvious things like any injury news, roster changes, game day inactives, practice squad elevations, press conference quotes, game captains, final score write-ups, etc. since those are must-haves if you’re covering a team. You’ll definitely see those each week, but what about other content that helps make Field Gulls stand out?


Pre-Game features​

Behind Seahawks enemy lines​


Field Gulls’ lead Seahawks film analyst Alexandre Castro will take a closer look at an upcoming Seattle opponent, using a mixture of statistics and film study for his analysis. This is Alexandre’s second season with Field Gulls and we look forward to more great technical breakdowns from him!

5 Qs and 5 As​


This is not a weekly feature, but it’s one that you’ll see conducted throughout SB Nation as a means of getting that special opposition insight from someone who follows the team regularly. John Gilbert or myself usually answer the five questions, and we cross-post our work between Field Gulls and the opposition site. It’s one of the long-standing SB Nation traditions!

5 predictions​


I don’t remember what spawned this series last season, but it’s going to be a regular staple. Each week I make five predictions related to an upcoming Seahawks game, separated into five categories: bold, Seahawks offense, Seahawks defense, opposition, and final score. Usually these go wayward within 10 minutes after kickoff, but that doesn’t deter me one bit.


Game Day Threads​

Seahawks game threads​


One change from years past is reducing the game threads from quarters to halves. We believe the site loads fast enough now that we can handle dividing game threads into halves. That could change if there are issues brought up by community members, but this also means less hopping around when things can get frantic between quarters. We encourage new members to participate in the game threads, but behave yourselves because we know tensions can get a little heated when the Seahawks aren’t doing so well.

Non-Seahawks game threads​


We will have open threads for all non-Seahawks regional windows (early game, late game, or all of Sunday depending on when Seattle plays), as well as all nationally broadcast games. Those will remain on the front page even with the addition of The Feed on the side.


Weekly editorials and analysis​

Winners and Losers​


One of our staples at Field Gulls is the Winners and Losers column, which takes me way too long to do but it’s worth it. It’s a deep breakdown of who fared well, who did not, and any other notes I can think of after a game. These are much more fun to do when the Seahawks win.

Enemy Reaction (if the Seahawks win)​


I’ve done this at Field Gulls for a really long time, including before I ever joined the staff. This is a popular series that takes a look back at the game’s biggest highlights through the real-time reactions of the Field Gulls and opposition game threads. There’s additional post-game written and video content also included in every Enemy Reaction. You don’t know how badly I want a textbook Niners Nation meltdown this Sunday… sort of like last year.

Seahawks All-22 film review​


Alexandre Castro will recap the most recent Seahawks performance through the All-22 lens. Last year he had separate columns for Seahawks rookies and then the rest of the game, highlighting the good, the bad, and the ugly. If we can get a lot less ugly and a lot more goodly from the Seahawks, it’d be deeply appreciated.

Ted’s Talk​


Ted Zahn has never done a TED or TEDx Talk to my knowledge. As a fellow Nintendo nerd, I’d love to hear a TED talk on the cultural importance of Mario Kart 64, but I digress. Ted does, however, have “Ted’s Talk” on Field Gulls, which gives us his weekly musings and observations, win, lose, or (in the case of the Seahawks’ preseason opener) draw.

Four Down Territory (NEW!)​


New Field Gulls staff writer Michael Thompson will have a weekly op-ed that has a structure that’s as simple as you think. Four major takes (and, when warranted, “going for two” bonus takes). Take a look at Michael’s most recent column from the Green Bay Packers preseason finale for a preview of what’s to come.

Words of Prey (NEW!)​


Jacson Bevens is retired from Cigar Thoughts write-ups, which is a real bummer for us and Seahawks fans everywhere. Field Gulls lifer John Fraley has stepped up graciously to do his own post-game column called “Words of Prey.” His debut ahead of the 49ers matchup just published earlier this week.


Live and recorded podcasts (NEW!)​


Well, technically not “new” because we had the Field Gulls Podcast for several years, but the next best thing is having a staff member with his own podcast. Bryce Coutts, creator of The Hawks Eye podcast, will have regular post-game live streams on YouTube that will also be hosted on Field Gulls. You can watch Bryce’s thoughts on the game and interact in either the Field Gulls comments section or the YouTube live chat. Some weeks will have guest co-hosts, such as myself for the San Francisco 49ers game. These podcasts will be a few hours after the end of Seahawks games, so we also have time to react to any news from the post-game press conferences.

Bryce will have other game week content (some of which will have accompanying articles), including “Seahawks Aftermath” with Michael Thompson on Mondays, “3 Keys to Victory” the day before Seahawks games, weekly opponent previews, and a twice-monthly “State of the Hawks” segment with yours truly as a co-host.

The last Wednesday of every month will also have The Seahawks Syndicate live stream with myself, Bryce, Brandon Cain of The Hawk’s Nest, and Dan Viens of Seahawks Forever in a roundtable panel.

Miscellaneous​

Seahawks snap counts and observations​


This has been handled typically by John Gilbert, but sometimes others like myself or Tyler Alsin step up to the plate to review the NFL’s gamebook, which contains information on who played how many snaps on offense, defense, and special teams.

Weekly player fine report​


The NFL is big on #accountability for its players whenever an infraction is committed. Saturdays at 1 pm PT is when the league’s fine book gets updated, so any time the Seahawks and/or their opponents get dinged and therefore docked money, we’ll have the report out and any accompanying footage. Sometimes the TV broadcast doesn’t catch things live, like this fine for messing with Jake Bobo.

The Feed (NEW!)​


What was once FanPosts and Fanshots is now The Feed, and we’ll have some fun stuff populating The Feed throughout the season. As a registered user, you can also add to The Feed like Kenyon Maric did with this vintage videos of Marshawn Lynch in high school. I’ll even throw in some throwback content like the 1976 media guide for the first ever Seahawks preseason game, which was against the 49ers.


Sign up!​


If you’re reading this and do not have a Field Gulls account, go to the top right of the home page and create one for free. Those pesky ads will be drastically reduced the moment you’re logged in, and you can start commenting on our site and posting in The Feed once your account is live.

Field-Gulls-09-04-2025_01_09_PM.png

Thanks for reading and go ‘Hawks!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/general/149441/the-field-gulls-seahawks-coverage-plan-for-2025
 
What if it all goes right? The best case scenario for the 2025 Seahawks

gettyimages-2192558176.jpg


Sunday, January 25, 2026:

“And we welcome you to Lumen Field here in Seattle, Washington for the 2026 NFC Championship game here on FOX, between the Seattle Seahawks and the defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles. Hello everyone, I’m Kevin Burkhardt, this is Tom Brady, and we got a good one here tonight.

The Eagles, led by MVP Jalen Hurts, are looking to get back to the Super Bowl and defend their crown, but they’ll have to do it on the road, something they’ve never done as a franchise. On the other side we have Seattle, the feel good story of the year. Few thought that Seattle would be in the playoffs when the season started, let alone hosting the NFC championship game, but here we are. Tom, how’d they do it?”


We had a feeling, didn’t we? It was only a preseason game, but when the Seahawks ran all over the Kansas City Chiefs back in August, the we saw that the potential was there. In week one, the vision became a reality as Kyle Shanahan’s former pupil, Klint Kubiak, gave him a taste of his own medicine. A dominating 34-10 victory in which the Seahawks ran for over 200 yards, set the tone that they were going to be a threat in the NFC West.

The journey to one of the most magical seasons in franchise history really all started with the defense. Mike Macdonald’s second year jump was true to form, as the Seattle Seahawks boasted the number one scoring defense in the league, while finishing third in both turnovers and sacks. The ascension to superstar corner by Riq Woolen made his massive contract extension worth it, as Seattle’s top ranked secondary allowed up and coming stars in Byron Murphy (6 sacks) and Derick Hall (16 sacks) to take this defense to a whole new level.

While pressure and picks caused havoc on opposing offenses, Seattle’s ground and pound approach led way to a top nine offense, built around their dynamic duos at running back, tight end and wide receiver.

In a contract year, Kenneth Walker finally stayed healthy, he bought into the wide zone scheme, and ran for over 1,600 yards. While he racked up the yards, Zach Charbonnet was a touchdown machine, totaling 15 scores. With so much “12” personnel, the two tight end sets with A.J. Barner and Elijah Arroyo caused fits for defenses all year, as they each caught over 30 passes and scored four touchdowns each.

The homecoming for Cooper Kupp proved to be much more than just about jersey sales and nostalgia, as Kupp actually had a better season in Seattle than his previous with the Rams. Cooper became one of the best #2 wideouts in the league and a much better compliment to Jaxon Smith-Njigba than DK Metcalf was. Kupp would finish the year with 71 receptions and 750 yards with 8 touchdowns. It was his game winning overtime touchdown over the Rams in LA that really broke their back, and made him a Seahawks legend.

While the running game and complimentary pieces were huge, it was the trio of JSN, Sam Darnold, Jalen Milroe that allowed this offense to perfectly compliment the dominant defense and hit 13 wins for the second time in franchise history.

JSN’s evolution to being the number one guy and one of the best wide receivers in the whole NFL was a complete game changer. His 108 receptions were a franchise record and his 12 touchdowns were second most in franchise history. With an offensive line that healthy and consistent, Sam Darnold was able to hit JSN and his targets consistently, proving that he was closer to the man we saw in Minnesota than with the Jets.

As he guided this offense in a Alex Smith style way, Jalen Milroe provided the juice with being the example for the Kubiak’s ground and pound attack. He only averaged eight snaps a game, but his talent was undeniable (six rushing touchdowns, two throwing touchdowns) and it really does feel like Seattle may have two potential franchise quarterbacks.

As the season progressed, it became quite clear that Seattle would be focusing on playoff positioning, rather than worrying about their division rivals. The Cardinals finally came to the conclusion that Kyler Murray is a purgatory quarterback as they finished 8-9 again. The 49ers were once again ravaged by injuries, and you have to wonder what their future looks like with Trent Williams retired and stars like Nick Bosa and Christian McCaffrey unable to play more than ten games each. The Rams at times looked like a true division threat, but their top heavy roster folded by December as Matt Stafford started to look closer to broadcasting than another Super Bowl.

Who would have thought that the Seahawks would have already clinched the NFC West before their Thursday night game against Los Angeles in Week 16? Seattle Seahawks, NFC West champions…been too long.

As the NFC cannibalized itself, the Seahawks took advantage of a weak division and weak schedule to stun the football world and take home the No. 1 seed in the NFC. Facing MVP runner up Baker Mayfield and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the Divisional Round of the playoffs, it was an emotional experience seeing a Seahawks home playoff game with fans for the first time since 2016. The fans were not disappointed, as Devon Witherspoon’s pick-six in the final minute sealed a 31-20 victory and brought the Seahawks to their fourth NFC Championship game in franchise history.

We had a feeling, but to see the Seahawks, a year ahead of schedule maybe, but here at home and hosting the NFC championship game against the Eagles? It really does feel like everything went right.The media is saying that the Eagles will win, and that Seattle had a great Cinderella run, but that the clock has struck midnight. Isn’t that’s why they play the game though? The Seattle Seahawks are 60 minutes away. Sixty minutes from dethroning the defending Super Bowl champions. Sixty minutes away from going to play a Super Bowl against the Buffalo Bills, in San Francisco’s stadium of all places.

It’s been a magical season, a magical ride. Here’s to hoping for a little more magic.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...-the-best-case-scenario-2025-seattle-seahawks
 
Seahawks Week 1 final injury report: Bradford a go, but no Bobo

gettyimages-2231095726.jpg


The long wait is finally over for fans of the Seattle Seahawks, as the offseason officially comes to a conclusion with the start of the regular season.

For the Seahawks that means a Week 1 matchup against the division rival San Francisco 49ers in the less than friendly confines of Lumen Field, where the team posted a 3-6 record during the 2024 season under first year head coach Mike Macdonald.

When Seattle takes to the field Sunday, they will do so without two of the core members of their special teams units, as the team has ruled wide receivers Jake Bobo and Dareke Young out.

Seahawks injury report.
Jake Bobo ( concussion) Dareke Young( hamstring ) and Uchenna Nwosu (knee ) are all out for Niners games . @Seahawks @CascadiasportsN pic.twitter.com/MEtNPm35Yq

— MazvitaMaraire (@MazvitaMaraire) September 5, 2025

As noted by Mazvita Maraire, Bobo has yet to be cleared following a concussion suffered in the preseason finale, while Young is dealing with a hamstring injury.

Also not playing will be edge rusher Uchenna Nwosu, which likely comes as no surprise to most, given the limited amount of time since he came off of the PUP list late in training camp.

In addition, it is noteworthy that after not participating in practice on Thursday due to a back issue, starting right guard Anthony Bradford was not given a designation, meaning he is expected to play as long as no new injuries pop up between now and kickoff.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...hawks-injury-report-bradford-a-go-but-no-bobo
 
Seahawks elevate pair of veterans for Week 1 against the 49ers

gettyimages-1295576844.jpg


After months of waiting through the offseason, through free agency, the draft and the doldrums of summer, the moment fans have been waiting for is just a day away.

Sunday the Seattle Seahawks will host the San Francisco 49ers at Lumen Field to open the 2025 regular season, with second-year head coach Mike Macdonald looking to extend the one-game winning streak he currently holds against, Kyle “I can’t close out the Super Bowl to save my life” Shanahan.

When the two teams take the field, Seattle will have at its disposal the services of a pair of veterans elevated from the practice squad at positions where depth isn’t great.

The @Seahawks elevated two players from the practice squad for tomorrow’s game vs. San Francisco. #GoHawks https://t.co/UqCQjA09I5

— Seahawks PR (@seahawksPR) September 6, 2025

As noted in the team announcement, the first of the players elevated is Quinton Bohanna, whose bulk in the middle will likely be needed as the team is without a true nose tackle on the roster, as Macdonald and the Seattle defense look to stop the Niners from controlling the game on the ground.

The Seahawks also elevated Shaquill Griffin to the gameday roster, adding depth in the secondary. Griffin, of course, entered the NFL as a third round pick of Seattle in the 2017 NFL Draft, before spending the last four seasons with the Jacksonville Jaguars, Houston Texans, Carolina Panthers and Minnesota Vikings.

And now it’s on to the gameday inactives Sunday afternoon.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...pair-of-veterans-for-week-1-against-the-49ers
 
Christian McCaffrey will play for 49ers against Seahawks, per report

gettyimages-2185293846.jpg


San Francisco 49ers running back Christian McCaffrey will play against the Seattle Seahawks in Week 1, according to Adam Schefter. His status had been up in the air since being added to the injury report earlier this week with a calf injury.

McCaffrey was listed as questionable on the Week 1 injury report giving him a 50/50 chance to suit up. He barely practiced on Friday but said he was feeling great in the locker room. Then he participated in the walkthrough Saturday and was trending toward being in the lineup. The 49ers RB only appeared in four games in 2024 with multiple injuries.

To compound matters for the season opener, two other 49ers backs are on the injury report; Isaac Guerendo and Jordan James.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ll-play-for-49ers-against-seahawks-per-report
 
Winners and Losers from Seahawks 13, 49ers 17

gettyimages-2234190986.jpg


The wait is finally over. We have real, regular-season information on the 2025 Seattle Seahawks. Sam Darnold, Klint Kubiak’s offense, the Jalen Milroe package, all of it was unveiled Sunday afternoon.

It sucked.

0-1 is how Seattle starts the season, and there were Winners and Losers (besides the 49ers winning and the Seahawks losing). Let’s get to them!


Winners


Jaxon Smith-Njigba. What a strange conversation this offseason about him and Cooper Kupp, the loss of DK Metcalf, and a “prototypical WR1”. It seems, a very good wide receiver is friggin a very good wide receiver. Going 9-124 (with one lost fumble, though), he was every bit as effective as his strongest moments of last season.

The Defensive Line. I’m now officially sold (re-sold?) that this unit is the strength of the team. My goodness. The obvious highlights include Leonard Williams picking up exactly where he left off last year, but across the board these guys played some solidly disruptive football. Say what you want about how the game ended, but the West Coast’s best player had 69 yards rushing and 3.1 Yards per Carry. They held up.

Julian Love. For the first sack of the 2025 season, AND first blocked field goal, you get a Win! And what a sack it was, beating Christian McCaffrey inside for a 12-yard loss. Juicy.

Byron Murphy. On the previously mentioned sack, Murphy was already in the backfield of his own accord, providing clean-up duty. I wanted to give him a shout-out here because he’s the 16th overall pick from last year, and his relationship with stats is always going to be complicated.

Ernest Jones. For the first interception of the 2025 season, YOU get a win! Also, holy vertical leaps, batman.

Ernest Jones IV with the @Seahawks INT!

SFvsSEA on FOXhttps://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/LLPzjquZ9O

— NFL (@NFL) September 7, 2025

Josh Jobe. For making Brock Purdy look like the very average quarterback he is, congratulations on interception number two of the day and season.

Demarcus Lawrence led the team with two Tackles for Loss, so that’s pretty cool I guess.

Jason Myers. If you take only one thing away from that game, it should be that the kicker superiority resides in Seattle. Laughably so.

Losers​


Anthony Bradford hype. This hurts so bad. I wanted as much as anyone to believe, but some things can only change so quickly. He was better, definitely better, than the dreadful moments of 2024, but two big whiffs in the first quarter alone kept the Seahawks from scoring.

Coby Bryant in coverage. Similarly, two misses in coverage on the first drive helped account for the 49ers’ opening touchdown drive.

Whoever was guarding George Kittle. If he hadn’t left, this score probably would have been even more lopsided.

Kenneth Walker. Clearly he has lost his grip on the starting/primary back role. One can only remain unavailable for so long in this new Macdonald/Kubiak regime. Besides that, he had 24 total yards on 13 touches, which averages out to be a pile of crap per carry.

The second half run game in general. Uninspiring, ineffective. Like the Matrix trilogy, Zach Charbonnet started off promising, and only got worse. 3.9 YPC is certainly better than Walker, but not good at all.

Cooper Kupp. Two catches for 15 yards and notably absent the whole day. Throw in how bad his drop was, on third down after a turnover, wide open, and that’s a pretty terrible look for the team’s *checks notes* second-best receiver of the day.

Klint Kubiak? I don’t know, but that looked different than preseason right? Two things stood out that I did not care for – play action seemed diminished, and all these phenomenally inept pitch plays. Running up the middle was at least ept, the toss right for 1 yard repeatedly could disappear next week thank you.

Field Goal Decision. 4th-and-1 on the 19 with 3:24 left and as we’ve already established, the worst kicker in the free world on the opposing sideline. As mediocre as the Seattle run game became, it actually seldom had a 0-yard run. Only Ken Walker had those, and let’s be honest the ball would have gone to Charbonnet. Going for touchdown and less time seems (not even in retrospect) like the superior option than 3-points and more time against a Kyle Shanahan offense you’ve now forced into touchdown mode. Bad bad bad.

Undecided. Trending bad if we’re being honest.​


Riq Woolen. Some penalties, some bad coverage (including on the winning TD), and what in the world was that early hesitation against Ricky Persall drive the sideline on the final drive? That was the longest play of the game, and totally unnecessary. On the other hand, he saved a touchdown in the front right corner with an incredibly close and tip. Woolen remains Woolen.

Sam Darnold. You may have quite a lot to think or say about Darnold. My biggest gripe by far is actually the 13 targets to Smith-Njigba. Only 9 targets to the entire rest of the team. Three of those were to Walker for four total yards. I don’t know how this Klint Kubiak offense is supposed to run, but Darnold did not run it. That was a horrendous use of options. I call it the Justin Jefferson syndrome, and as good as JSN is, that strategy is not invincible, nor is JSN quite at Jefferson’s level. However, this has virtually nothing to do with Smith-Njigba himself, and more to do with the fact that Darnold was, by and large, not under pressure. We’ll get numbers later, but he only took one sack. The offensive line looked pretty good. That being said, this is Week 1. The San Francisco defense is probably decent. This is certainly not panic, but neither was that enjoyable. I had hoped – and gone on record – that Darnold shouldn’t matter all that much in this offensive scheme, but if he’s going to insist on leading the team to 3-10 on third down, he might matter quite a bit. Unfortunately.

(Editor’s note: Thanks to Tyler for stepping in for me for Winners and Losers this week)

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...osers-seahawks-13-49ers-17-jsn-woolen-darnold
 
Words Of Prey, Week 1: Seahawks pick on Purdy but can’t stick the landing

gettyimages-2234185960.jpg


If Week 1 was made for overreactions, then the Seattle Seahawks opener was made for Week 1.

Mike Macdonald trusts his defense too much. Kyle Shanahan is cooked after the opening script. Sam Darnold won’t lose you games, nor will he win you any. Brock Purdy got paid and promptly turned back into a pumpkin. Despite all the talent, Riq Woolen is a space cadet. The OL still can’t do its job, not when it matters. Niners remain snakebit for health. Will Seattle ever be able to run the ball in the red zone? Should’ve paid Geno. Maybe DK too. Home-field advantage, schmadvantage. Fire John Schneider.

I’m joking, or mostly joking; okay it’s right-down-the-middle joking now that I reread the paragraph. Still, always good to chuckle a little because as far as defense mechanisms go, humor remains undefeated.

Another defense mechanism? The scheme Macdonald unleashed on a hamstrung 49ers offense. Well, at least after the opening drive ended, a merciless 95-yard affair that culminated in a too-too-easy George Kittle quick-out TD at the goal line that felt as fated as any score ever. I s’pose that in one sense, the Seahawks defense delivered on its promise of 2024, by turning in an three-hour microcosm of last season. Started it off with significant trouble on third downs (check), committed costly penalties (check again), failed to produce turnovers in bunches or at all (triple check) — then mostly solved every problem of their own creation the rest of the way.

Bottom line, the defense did enough to win Week 1. They held the 49ers in neutral at 10 points for 40 consecutive minutes of game play. They picked the formerly charmed QB twice. They even ran Purdy from hash to hash on the eventual game-winning touchdown, which was entirely preventable and probably falls incomplete four out of five times. They put themselves and their teammates in a position to win. They were 2011 Felix Hernandez, roughed up for two unlucky runs in the first, then dominant until a late solo shot, putting in seven strong innings but saddled with the ugly 3-1 loss.

Drives two through eight for the Niners went: punt, punt, missed FG, pick, blocked FG, FG, pick. That’s called handing the ball (hint hint, Klint) to your offense with instructions to put the game away. Instead, the Seahawks turned those six opportunities to run all of 33 plays, score all of three points, and give the ball away once themselves.

It was, to apply all the bluntness deserved, quite the stretch of unwatchable football.

However, at halftime, not all was bleak: Seattle’s pass rushers were winning at the line of scrimmage, and winning big. Per the broadcast, the Seahawks pressured Purdy on 13 of 18 dropbacks in the first half, the highest rate of Brocky’s career. And while the harassment didn’t result immediately in a turnover, it felt like only a matter of time. Or times.

Yes, times. “Unwatchable” is a bit unfair, because Julian Love, Ernest Jones, and Josh Jobe made it real watchable on three occasions.

Julian Love, playmaker pic.twitter.com/Q5fZipA19f

— Dugar, Michael-Shawn (@MikeDugar) September 7, 2025
Ernest Jones with the pick after what had looked like a slow start to the half. Time to stick some points on the board #Seahawks 💙💚

Andrew Jai Presly (@andrewjaipresly.bsky.social) 2025-09-07T21:54:46.574Z
I know we're all busy being sad but Josh Jobe has such soft hands you guys

John Fraley (@johndavidfraley.bsky.social) 2025-09-08T00:45:06.854Z

Playmakers make plays. Jobe is only 10 starts into his pro career after minimal playing time with the Eagles. But that’s two interceptions now in Seattle for a dude with surprisingly reliable hands. Love is Love, always around the ball, swooping in with a virtuosic violence that his smoothness and grace mask. Jones is the fulcrum, the no-longer-missing piece of the defensive puzzle. He’s become as irreplaceable a Seahawk as Spoon or JSN.

Anyway, moribund offense and opportunistic defense set the stage for a 10-10 standoff late. Seattle ended up with possession after Jobe’s leaping snag at 7:06 of the fourth and commenced what teased everyone to believe in a game-clinching drive. Kenneth Walker for eight yards right away, Darnold to the sideline for five more, new set of downs. Walker eats up five, Charbonnet powers for seven, new set of downs. Walker stymied in the backfield, short gain, Cooper Kupp (remember him?) for six, NOT new set of downs. Fourth and one at the SF 19. Sure didn’t take the new season very long to hand MM a decision that would engender and nourish an entire week of debate.

I liked the kick decision well enough. But when a rival gives you a chance to essentially put the game away by converting 4th and 1 in the red zone, you should do that thing. I would’ve gone for it myself but it’s not my job on the line. And there are as many reasons in favor of kicking as in opposition.

  1. The defense was eating (remember, 40 minutes scoreless! and 3 points allowed since the opening drive)
  2. Niners kicker Jake Moody was writing a new chapter for his future bestseller ‘Adventures in Kicking’
  3. Jason Myers wasn’t gonna miss from there
  4. You just had to protect the end zone against a QB you’d picked twice already, who was working without his two favorite targets, behind an offensive line you were dominating.

It didn’t work out that way.

Woolen slowed up covering Ricky Pearsall two plays later for reasons unknown, and the Niners had their biggest explosive of the afternoon at the worst possible time. Improbably, on the next third down, third-string tight end Jake Tonges slipped across the entire defense and happened to be in ball’s way in the corner of the end zone.

A loss is never a single player’s fault. That’s not how football works and I don’t want to hear anyone blaming Woolen for an 0-1 start. You can say it, but doesn’t mean I have to listen. It’s more like this: when a team opens the door and basically dares you to do what you do best, you should do that thing. Yet at the moments of highest leverage in this game, one of the most gifted Seahawks on defense did not do what he does best, and the play callers on offense went to a well that was dry from the start.

The hope we all felt blossom with Jaxon Smith-Njigba’s 40-yard haul at 1:13 was extinguished all of two plays later. First it was Walker up the middle for an uninspiring/unsurprising zero yards considering his body of work to that point. And then, the foreseeable disaster from putting the game in Darnold’s hands on a medium-slow developing pass play. Nick Bosa managed to out-leverage Abe Lucas right into the ball, which once it found the ground, had eyes only for the wrong guy at the wrongest time. And that’s game.

You tell me the Hawks are gonna come up with two interceptions, the second of which sets up a drive to the opponent’s 20, in a tie game, with three minutes to play, where they get a fourth and one decision? I think Seattle’s winning that game more often than not.

And I think they’re winning it most days regardless of Macdonald’s decision to kick.

They’re also winning it on a day when not all three of the fumbles end up in the 49ers’ paws. Fumbles aren’t all luck, you need to hang on to the rock, period, but if you can stomach to watch the Bosa recovery, it’s worth noting he was surrounded by four guys in blue.

Bosa doesn't get to Darnold but instead pushes Lucas right into his arm. Gets the bounce surrounded by four blue jerseys. Ballgame.

John Fraley (@johndavidfraley.bsky.social) 2025-09-07T23:06:02.687Z

As will no doubt often be the case, the Seahawks needed one more fortuitous bounce, one more well-timed play call, or one more ounce of boldness on fourth down to be rewarded. But they came up on the short end of all three of those outcomes, and lost an extremely winnable contest to an extremely defeatable opponent.

PREY/PREDATOR

New column, new feature. Every game I’ll pick one way to fill each category, more if I’m feeling frisky. Like birds, it’s an evolving idea, so feedback is welcome.

Prey

Cooper Kupp: three targets, two catches, 15 yards. Yes he was there for a crucial final-drive reception. But that third-down drop. And otherwise he was pretty dang invisible. It’s one game. It also begins to confirm more than a few priors.

Lumen Field crowd: we got sandbagged, again, by a fourth quarter that looked set up for victory, again, plus for believing the preseason tight end hype, a-GAIN. Two catches for seven yards.

The Seahawks are 3-7 in their last ten home games, but the crowd can’t make Woolen stay in stride or make Bosa lose leverage against Lucas. The crowd can’t make Macdonald and Kubiak draw up better plays on first and second down after SF braindeadedly gifted Seattle with a full third of the yards needed to win outright at the end.

Prey and predator both

Riq Woolen. Man, he was right there. To break up the pass to Pearsall and again moments later to Tonges. A play on the ball directly, either time, and the game is altered in a very beneficial fashion. He was preyed on in the final two minutes, but only because he was his own worst predator. Maybe don’t eat your own tail in Week 2.

Predator

Julian Love, on this sack. That play was a couch-leaver.

Julian Love brought PRESSURE. 💥

📺: FOX pic.twitter.com/2fiYuscN07

— Seattle Seahawks (@Seahawks) September 7, 2025

Jake Tonges, I guess, for doing his best impersonation of that spider species that builds a trap door and when nobody is looking, in the dead of night, scurries out to snatch its unsuspecting dinner and feast on it underground, never to be seen again.


Unfun fact: today Tonges made the first three catches of a career than began in 2022.

Future Prey?

This was fun, though. A little light trolling by the team account, and a little willingness to experiment on the first drive. Please, sirs, can we have some more.

Jalen Milroe is in at QB.

— Seattle Seahawks (@Seahawks) September 7, 2025

Anyway, now that the season is officially over, should be easier to relax and enjoy football the rest of the way. Mock draft anyone?

Sorry, kidding, we have a real sign-off. Wherever they take us, if the Seahawks must go, let us go with them.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...-49ers-brock-purdy-but-cant-stick-the-landing
 
Monday Night Football open thread: Vikings at Bears

gettyimages-2190315738.jpg


What is so alluring about this matchup that it ends up on national television almost every year? Seriously, the Bears have not warranted that type of attention over the years.

This year might be different. Caleb Williams’ second season will be his first with former Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson, who’s made his way over to the Bears as their new head coach. Will the Bears have a watchable offense? Will the Bears actually threaten a playoff spot?

Meanwhile, the Vikings boasted a 14-3 record under Sam Darnold and somehow didn’t win the NFC North or even a playoff game. Very Vikings of them. But their Darnold replacement is none other than national championship quarterback J.J. McCarthy, who reigned victorious with Michigan over the Washington Huskies two seasons ago (sorry, I have to mention it). McCarthy tore his meniscus in preseason as a rookie, so it was essentially a medical redshirt year. It’ll be interesting to see if McCarthy can keep the Vikings offense cooking, because their defense figures to be a good one again, albeit with legitimate question marks at cornerback.

5:15 pm PT is the kickoff time for this game and it airs live on both ABC and ESPN, so take your pick. It’s the same game. The ManningCast is on ESPN2 and hopefully Mr. Beast isn’t one of the guests.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/general/149642/monday-night-football-open-thread-vikings-at-bears
 
Mike Macdonald gives unfortunate update on Nick Emmanwori

Nick Emmanwori.


One of the bright spots of the Seattle Seahawks’ opening week loss to the San Francisco 49ers was Nick Emmanwori. The versatile rookie safety recorded the team’s first tackle for loss of the 2025 season.

Nice tackle by Nick Emmanwori pic.twitter.com/PU8tqdWR66

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 8, 2025

It was the fifth play of the season. It was Emmanwori’s final defensive play.

Mike Macdonald says Nick Emmanwori has a high ankle sprain and injured reserve is in consideration for #Seahawks.

Team will make that decision next few days if needed. Looking at this as week to week situation.

— Corbin K. Smith (@CorbinSmithNFL) September 8, 2025

Emmanwori exited the game with a limp and an unknown ankle injury, which Mike Macdonald initially thought might not be a high-ankle sprain.

That tune changed on Monday afternoon, with the worse diagnosis coming true. No decision has come yet as to whether he will miss a good portion (minimum four weeks) of the season, but it’s certainly a huge loss in potential opportunity for the promising second-rounder. After looking a bit lost early this summer, fans may have been surprised to see Emmanwori climb off the pile first after tackling Christian McCaffrey behind the line of scrimmage for a two-yard loss.

Hopefully he’s able to get back on the field this year, and continue to find his fit in the Macdonald defense.

Emmanwori was replaced by Ty Okada, who struggled and allowed a touchdown to George Kittle and only played six snaps. The team has Jerrick Reed II and D’Anthony Bell as other options on the practice squad should Emmanwori miss extended time.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ck-emmanwori-injury-update-ankle-ir-candidate
 
Seahawks ran NFL’s statistically most stale offense of Week 1

gettyimages-2234190827.jpg


This is one of those moments where the statistics support the eye test.

If you watched the Week 1 loss and thought the Seattle Seahawks offense was lifeless and boring, you get a prize! Statistically, the Seahawks were the least “interesting”* team in the league.

*Interesting defined as: cool, successful, full of touchdowns, and also any semblance whatsoever of pre-and-post-snap razzle-dazzle.

Week 1 pass-game efficiency hack report:

Heavy pre-snap motion use:
– Chargers
– Browns
– Jaguars

Heavy play action use:
– Colts
– Rams
– Packers https://t.co/dTvBWtBgB6 pic.twitter.com/OIFeg8BX8J

— Jacob Gibbs (@jagibbs_23) September 8, 2025
Offensive and defensive explosive play rates: pic.twitter.com/jZrvRjXGg3

— Sam Hoppen (@SamHoppen) September 9, 2025

Here’s what happened.

After one of the most exciting preseason games of the summer – Week 2 against the Kansas City Chiefs – Seattle was the most statistically vanilla offense in the first game that actually mattered.

Boasting the 5th-fewest amount of pre-snap movement, and the lowest rate of play-action, this was not what anyone expected from Klint Kubiak.

That expectation is supported, for the record. Kubiak’s Saints had the highest play-action in the league in the first two weeks of last year.

The end result was the second chart you see, an offense with three explosive plays in the passing game, and none at all in the run game.

So – why did it happen?

Assigning Blame Speculating Responsibility​


This is not a John Gilbert hit piece; we don’t assign blame here.

But we can certainly ask. And wonder. Here are some options for why the coordinator who built his career on multiple-tight end, play action, outside boot mid-level passes did not coordinate an offense with a single one of those.

  1. He forgot. Seems unlikely, but let’s not strike it just yet.
  2. Sam Darnold cannot run such an offense. This would be pretty terrible, if true.
  3. The offensive line cannot run such an offense, much less any offense, because they are the Seahawks.
  4. The head coach told him to do something different.
  5. The running backs’ ineffectiveness ruined the game plan.
  6. Out-coached by Robert Saleh.
  7. Somehow Riq Woolen is responsible.


If you watched that game and thought the offensive line was as bad as even game one of last year, I can’t help ya. If you think Mike Macdonald actually wants to run the most uncreative offense in the league, I can’t help ya.

It’s six and two with a five sprinkle in my mind, but it’s a little more complicated than that.

Heading into Sunday, I would have said what I’m sure many of you would have said: the biggest talent advantage between the two rosters should have been the offensive line/run game vs the San Francisco massively depleted defensive line. Gone are the stars, in are the questionable rookies. And yet, 67 total rush yards between the two backs, and Ken Walker was utterly useless.

It’s at least partly true that Walker flat out refuses to run what’s given to him, much like his (and my personal favorite) predecessor Rashaad Penny.

NFL NextGen Stats has an efficiency % for RBs. Measures decisiveness. Lower the efficiency, the more north-south running.#Seahawks Kenneth Walker had NFL's largest efficiency % wk 1. Most east-west, least decisive runner up field.

Also had the lowest rushing yds over expected

— Gregg Bell (@gbellseattle) September 9, 2025
Screenshot-2025-09-09-at-2.27.44-PM.png

But more than that, when 11 of the first 15 plays were run plays, it was clear that the Seahawks truly thought they were going to be able to march through the teeth of the 49ers defense far more than they did. And this is where Kubiak was wildly outcoached. Saleh surprised him. I’ve seen the absolutely glowing tape-reviews of Fred Warner already, and while guys like linebacker Dee Winters and DT Jordan Elliott were a real surprise. They thought the simple run game was going to be far more effective in the first half than it was. Some of that is Anthony Bradford’s fault, some of it Walker’s, some of it nobody’s.

Additionally, Sam Darnold is new to everything here in Seattle. And while I believe Kubiak is and will be good this year, few have been as quickly successful with quarterbacks as Kevin O’Connell has been in Minnesota. For the first game here, with a new roster, playcaller, and virtually no preseason game reps, you could tell Darnold was pot-committed to his first read far more often than not. That read was Jaxon Smith-Njigba.

I don’t believe Darnold is incapable of running a high-motion, play-action offense. Nor of throwing the ball to like a freaking tight end or something. I don’t think they placed a high emphasis on that this week. Nor was Darnold as comfortable as (dear Lord we hope) he will be later in the season.

Where do they go from here? Chime in below: do we see more of the same out in Pittsburgh, or will this self-correct rather quickly?

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...41/seahawks-ran-nfl-most-stale-offense-week-1
 
Seahawks Reacts Survey, Week 2: DK Metcalf revenge game incoming?

DK Metcalf.


Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Seahawks fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Week 2 of Seahawks Reacts is here, and I can safely predict that following last week’s loss to the San Francisco 49ers, the weekly confidence question we have throughout the season is going to have a noticeable decline from the 96% from last week. Maybe you can prove me wrong by spite-voting “yes,” but I don’t want to influence your vote.

As usual, we also have our weekly predictions question. The Pittsburgh Steelers are next on the docket for Seattle, with the Steelers coming off an unexpectedly and wildly entertaining 34-32 shootout win over the New York Jets. Will Seattle pull off the road upset, or will the Steelers begin the Aaron Rodgers era at 2-0?

And finally, is a DK Metcalf revenge game in the cards? After four catches for 83 yards in his Pittsburgh Steelers debut, DK is set to take on his former team following March’s high-profile trade. That extra second-round pick Seattle gained was more or less how Seattle got safety Nick Emmanwori, who will presumably not play this Sunday due to his ankle injury. Anyway, Metcalf will be one of the key pieces of Pittsburgh’s passing attack throughout the season, and it’ll be interesting to see how the Seahawks defend their former teammate. But will DK score a touchdown against the Seahawks, or will he be kept out of the end zone?

Answer all the questions in the poll below!

Check back at the end of the week for the results.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...urvey-week-2-dk-metcalf-revenge-game-incoming
 
Seahawks injury report: Devon Witherspoon sits out Wednesday practice for Steelers game

gettyimages-2234191951.jpg


While the main story regarding the Seattle Seahawks secondary is the possibility of a lineup change involving Josh Jobe and Riq Woolen, there’s another developing story to monitor ahead of Week 2 against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

At Wednesday’s practice, starting corner Devon Witherspoon was listed as a DNP due to a knee injury. This was presumably following his collision with Coby Bryant on Josh Jobe’s fourth quarter interception of Brock Purdy in the Week 1 loss to the San Francisco 49ers. Witherspoon did play the remainder of the game.

On the plus side, Uchenna Nwosu and Jake Bobo practiced in full after being limited all of last week and not playing against the 49ers. Mike Macdonald indicated that Nwosu has a chance to play this week, and if Bobo is practicing in full then he has cleared concussion protocol and should be on his way back on the field soon.

Meanwhile, safety Nick Emmanwori was an expected DNP after injuring his ankle in his NFL debut. He’ll potentially go on injured reserve by this week with a high-ankle sprain. Ernest Jones, Julian Love, Jarran Reed, and Dareke Young were the remaining limited participants, with only Young not playing the week prior.

As always, the Wednesday practice (or, at least, the first practice of the three) is usually the least important on the worry radar. We’ll obviously following ‘Spoon the closest heading into Thursday’s practice.

Here’s the full practice report for both teams:

Here’s the Seahawks’ first injury report of the week. Most notable is that Uchenna Nwosu and Jake Bobo were full participants after being limited all last week, and Devon Witherspoon didn’t practice today with what is apparently a new knee injury. pic.twitter.com/SVCnIO3hVD

— Brady Henderson (@BradyHenderson) September 10, 2025

Incidentally, Steelers safety DeShon Elliott is unlikely to play against the Seahawks with a knee injury, but Joey Porter Jr. is one to watch at the cornerback position.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...-practice-nfl-seahawks-steelers-injury-report
 
Mike Macdonald noncommittal on starting Riq Woolen vs. Steelers

gettyimages-2231209257.jpg


After last week’s rough 4th quarter performance against the San Francisco 49ers (notably giving up a 45-yard catch to Ricky Pearsall as well as the game-winning touchdown to Jake Tonges), many have speculated whether Riq Woolen will keep his job as a starter moving forward. Well were there is smoke, often there is fire.

Today, when asked by reporters if Woolen will start this weekend against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Seahawks head coach Mike Macdonald responded with, “We’ll see.

Macdonald’s statement itself is eye opening. On Monday, when asked about fellow cornerback Josh Jobe’s performance on Sunday, Macdonald stated that Jobe, “played physical, played smart, played disciplined, and finished his plays right.” Macdonald additionally stated that Jobe is “competing for more snaps.”

Jobe notably had more snaps in last week’s game against the 49ers once Nick Emmanwori went down with an ankle injury. Once Emmanwori went down, Devon Witherspoon stepped into the nickel position, which caused Jobe to come in to play more outside cornerback snaps. In total Jobe had 61 snaps on defense to Woolen and Witherspoon’s 76 snaps. With Macdonald’s recent statements, it would make sense to see Jobe eat into more of Woolen’s snaps.

What that could look like will be telling. If Seattle runs nickel packages, it makes sense for Witherspoon to play the nickel and likely have Woolen and Jobe play the boundaries. However, if Seattle is not in nickel, and only plays two corners, will Jobe be across from Witherspoon instead of Woolen? Could Nehemiah Pritchett or Derion Kendrick even get some snaps over Woolen? It will be tough to tell how Macdonald plans to deploy the cornerback snaps until Sunday against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

The timing of this potential benching is interesting as well. Seattle goes to Pittsburgh where they will see a familiar face, DK Metcalf. It would make sense that Seattle would want their biggest physical asset at cornerback (Woolen) to play against the athletic freak, Metcalf. However, if Woolen is not finishing plays like he needs to, Macdonald may be inclined to play Jobe or Witherspoon across from Metcalf instead.

Woolen, when asked about Macdonald’s comment stated “he’s the head man so whatever he say goes. I’m not going to go against it..” Woolen has been benched twice before (once last December due to a team rule violation, and once prior in 2023 by Pete Carroll due to tackling issues.) Time will tell if this Sunday will be the third benching of Woolen in as many years, as well as how long the benching will last; one snap, one drive, or perhaps more.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...riq-woolen-josh-jobe-seahawks-corner-nfl-news
 
Behind Seahawks enemy lines, Week 2: A big road game in Pittsburgh

Jaxon Smith-Njigba.


The Seahawks’ 2025 schedule is packed with games that should be very close. While the disappointment is real, the Seahawks were defeated by a blunder on the 49ers’ final drive, yet they still had a chance to win the game. It may not have been a brilliant game, but it was a close one, and now the Seahawks turn their attention to an important early-season road matchup versus the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Let’s Go!


The Seahawks could start 0-2 for the first time in seven years​


The Seahawks have started the season 0-2 only three times since John Schneider became the team’s general manager:

  • 2011: The Seahawks lost to the 49ers and Steelers in Weeks 1 and 2, respectively. The only difference is that both games were away games. Seattle missed the playoffs that year with a 7-9 record;
  • 2015: The Seahawks finished the year 10-6, made the playoffs, beat the Vikings in that scorching game (thanks, Blair Walsh), and were defeated by the Panthers in the Divisional;
  • 2018: The Seahawks lost to the Broncos and Bears on the road and again finished the year 10-6. They qualified for the playoffs but were eliminated by the Cowboys in the Wild Card round.

On the two occasions we made the playoffs, we were led by Russell Wilson as QB, essentially in his prime. It’s hard to believe that Sam Darnold will carry this team on his shoulders like RW3 did.

From 1990 through the 2023 season, 279 teams have opened 0-2. Only 32 of them made the postseason. That’s 11.5%, an incredibly low number. The NFL expanded the playoffs to include 14 teams beginning in 2020, so the odds should be slightly better moving forward.

Of those 279 teams, only 17 won their division (6.1%) and three won the Super Bowl (1.1%). In NFL history, only the 1993 Dallas Cowboys, the 2001 New England Patriots and the 2007 New York Giants have ever won a Super Bowl after starting 0-2.

Running backs need to be contained​


The title may seem strange given that the Seahawks gave up 3.3 yards per carry on 36 attempts. Their performance against the run game was excellent and needs to be maintained, especially considering the Steelers recorded 20 carries for just 53 yards and no touchdowns.

However, in the passing game, the team seemed to lack the same efficiency. Christian McCaffrey had 73 receiving yards, and fullback Kyle Juszczyk had 32 more. The Steelers have Jaylen Warren in their backfield, who has a new contract as of a few weeks ago. Obviously, he isn’t the same threat as CMC, but he’s a good receiver out of the backfield. He can be a backup for the experienced QB when the pressure is on; Warren had 22 yards and 2 touchdowns against the Jets.

Jets keep the Steelers' run inside. pic.twitter.com/eO4TTjl9rG

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 11, 2025

One of the reasons they severely limited the Steelers’ running game was by forcing the RBs to cut back. This allowed the DTs and LBs to make tackles.

Seahawks Penny Package. pic.twitter.com/O9yNz4e8ke

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 11, 2025

One of the Seahawks’ successful ways of containing the run is the Penny Package. It’s a Vic Fangio-style call that strengthens the run game even with two safeties deep.

A defensive subpackage that utilizes a five-man defensive line, typically with three defensive linemen and two standing edge rushers (one of them usually an iLB), to create a 5-1-5 alignment (five defensive linemen, one linebacker, and five defensive backs).

The goal of the Penny Package is to make double-blocking difficult and create as many one-on-ones as possible. The idea is for the edge defenders to force the run inside, and the iLBs to win their one-on-ones to make the tackle.

The Steelers’ simple offense proved effective.​


Even without a consistent running game, the Steelers’ offense was extremely efficient. Aaron Rodgers threw for 244 yards and 4 TDs, averaging 8.1 yards per pass and throwing no interceptions.

Just one game and DK's YAC potential has already been explored at Pitts. pic.twitter.com/81caoEBMzp

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 11, 2025

There’s been much discussion about the DK Metcalf-Josh Woolen or Josh Jobe matchup, with verticality in mind. However, Arthur Smith has already used DK extensively in situations to gain yards after the catch. This was something the Seahawks rarely explored in the WR’s final years.

Smith’s offense did something I expected Kubiak to do: they were simple and efficient. Below is a good example.

Steelers first TD pic.twitter.com/5U5QnptvKR

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 11, 2025

This is the play that led to the Steelers’ first TD. Play-Action under center brings a receiver closer to the line, intending to further sell the run. The second level of defense takes the bait and leaves open space for the TD.

Exactyly the same play getting the second level defense out of position pic.twitter.com/dOdhjIIO8f

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 11, 2025

They call the exact same concept, the same play, and score another TD, this time with Calvin Austin. This shows that what makes a good offense can be simple, a very different approach than Kubiak’s last Sunday.

Why try to complicate the simple? pic.twitter.com/vZQiipVOMT

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 9, 2025

Pass rush consistency​


While the Steelers’ passing attack impressed, the offensive line was significantly underwhelming. Both in the rushing game (with only 53 yards) and in quarterback protection (they conceded 8 pressures but 4 sacks during the game.

Unable to turn pressures in sacks. pic.twitter.com/LyhrhpHybw

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 9, 2025

The Seahawks’ defensive line, despite 21 pressures and 7 hits, managed only 1 sack (on a defensive back blitz). This has been an issue since last year; the team has a good pressure rate but has trouble converting them into sacks.

Broderick Jones allowed 3 sacks… pic.twitter.com/qJQ7w80HRg

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 11, 2025

Of the 8 pressures conceded, 6 came from OTs Broderick Jones (4 including 3 sacks) and Troy Fautanu (2). This is an excellent opportunity for Derick Hall, Boye Mafe, Demarcus Lawrence, and perhaps Uchenna Nwosu, if he is available for this game.

Boye Mafe had a great game. Very consistent with inside moves. If Brock Purdy hadn't thrown a beautiful pass with great anticipation, this would have been a sack. pic.twitter.com/q1hmJu5ZBr

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 11, 2025

Boye Mafe had five pressures in the game and a win rate of almost 24%, lining up against Trent Williams. It was a great performance (and one that was little talked about during the week).

Klint Kubiak’s offense needs a turnaround​


The Steelers-Jets game was evenly matched (34-32) and a joy to watch. The Jets’ offense thrived thanks to their offensive line. The Steelers managed just one sack and, unexpectedly, gave up 182 rushing yards and 3 TDs in an almost unrecognizable game by Cam Heyward and Alex Highsmith.

#Seahawks OT Charles Cross pitched a shutout on Sunday

Gave up zero pressures on 25 dropbacks, including 17 TPS reps. Had some nice reps neutralizing Nick Bosa

88.7 PFF pass block grade, 86.5 TPS PFF grade pic.twitter.com/GF0L4WRD2X

— Jake (@DraftDayTrade) September 9, 2025

The Seahawks’ offensive line stood out, with Charles Cross not letting up any pressure in the game and performing very well against Nick Bosa, and a good debut for Grey Zabel and Jalen Sundell as starters. The right side of the line failed to replicate its strong preseason performances in either half of the game.

I don't think Abe Lucas choose the best pass sets against Bosa. On this play, he expected help from the TE, but he still seemed very passive and, just like in the fumble play, was easily moved back.

and yes, is a great opponent anyway, but I think Lucas could be better than this pic.twitter.com/nNLGCQNYoL

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 10, 2025

The team needs to maintain its running game, especially to control the clock and utilize play-action much more frequently, a departure from the only two attempts in the last game. Take the Steelers, for example. Even with the just 50 yards and lacking a real threat in the running game, they called 10 play-action passes. This totals 33% of the team’s passing plays.

And the Steelers will likely have to put Jalen Ramsey in to man-guard JSN. Sam Darnold and Klint Kubiak will need to find other ways to attack without focusing solely on the receiver who had 124 yards last game.

Good call here.

JSN sell the run and find the space pic.twitter.com/d5gXFQKWv2

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) September 9, 2025

Here’s a good example of play-action in action (the Seahawks only called two PA plays, and on one of them, Darnold improvised a run). PA under center, and notice Jaxon Smith-Njigba’s movement selling the run. This forces the defender to position himself even more inside to combat the run game. Tory Horton runs a clear-out to open up space for JSN, who adjusts and makes the catch. It’s worth noting that Cooper Kupp’s backside dig was also open.

Final Thoughts​


We’re only in Week 2 of the season, and the game already has great significance for the team’s future. Starting 0-2 isn’t a good sign, as we explained at the beginning of this article. Furthermore, this creates pressure to win at all costs in the match against the Saints, which, given their current status, should be a “winnable” game.

After New Orleans, the Seahawks have a TNF game against the Cardinals, and after that they face the Bucs, Jags, and Texans. Therefore, more important than the victory is the team making a “quality leap” on offense to give us hope of winning in future games. What we saw last Sunday wouldn’t even give us the confidence to beat the Dolphins (with all due respect), who were defeated 33-8 by the “Indiana Jones” Colts.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ahawks-enemy-lines-week-2-preview-vs-steelers
 
NFL film analyst breaks down Seahawks run game struggles in one pivotal play

gettyimages-2234780030.jpg


The Seattle Seahawks entered Week 1 against the San Francisco 49ers with optimism surrounding a new offensive system under coordinator Klint Kubiak. Instead, the season opener exposed an immediate concern: Seattle’s inability to establish the run. Seattle’s backs were routinely met in the backfield, finishing with one of the least efficient rushing performances of the opening weekend.

To examine what went wrong, I sat down with Coach DC from All 22 Films, a coach and analyst who has built a strong following for his detailed NFL tape study on YouTube. His perspective helped uncover both schematic and executional issues that left Seattle unable to generate consistency on the ground.

Our discussion began with the numbers before turning to the film itself. Using the All-22 angle, Coach DC walked through several plays where San Francisco’s defensive line anticipated Seattle’s blocking concepts and controlled the line of scrimmage. Missed assignments and minimal push from the offensive line compounded the issue, leaving the Seahawks without rhythm in the rushing attack. One play he believed summed up Seattle’s woes generating a rushing attack was the play before Sam Darnold’s fateful strip-sack fumble. Kenneth Walker received the ball on a 1st and 5, gaining just a yard after being tackled by Nick Bosa (who’d have a much bigger, game-sealing role on his next snap).

Nick Bosa skating his way to the tackle pic.twitter.com/YDXBUmTygO

— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice) September 9, 2025
Seahawks-Run-Game-Shut-Down-by-49ers-w-Coach-DC-of-All-22-Films-YouTube-09-12-2025_01_34_AM.png

“The play that sticks out to me a little bit as far as things not being ready for prime time yet, even though it’s week one, is the play before the strip sack,” Coach DC said.

“The motion across by Walker, I think puts him almost a full step, maybe even more than a yard slow. And as a consequence, [Nick] Bosa is able to close down. And you’re asking me about the run game. So, you know, week one, sometimes you have small issues to iron out. Any time you’ve got motion attached to the guy who’s getting the ball, whether it’s a jet sweep, a fast sweep, toss, whatever, there is some risk there of timing. And that play to me is one that I think kind of illustrates that; the timing will get better. Number one, or they’ll stop motioning the guy who’s going to get the ball, in this case, Kenneth Walker. But I think I’m more on the side of crediting the 49ers defense.”

Seahawks-Run-Game-Shut-Down-by-49ers-w-Coach-DC-of-All-22-Films-YouTube-09-12-2025_01_15_AM.png

“Walker is slow here. And I don’t mean he is personally slow but just the mesh here. Couple of things: What’s the threat for Bosa? I mean, Darnold keeping it out here? Not much. But you need something to hold or deal with Bosa. What some teams have done recently or in other situations is motion a receiver down to try to cut him off and dig him out. You can’t do that because Walker’s in motion, right? So, the design of the play is somewhat limiting in my opinion, but I still really like it.

“They’re trying to hit it downhill here. And I think you’ve got what you want from this offensive line. Looks a pretty good wall to me, right? It’s a gap scheme. So, you’re getting the counter kick by the guard and then the F or tight end, whatever people want to call him, working up. But I think Walker’s slow here getting to the mesh. I just think it’s taking too damn long. And as a result, Bosa is able to close down.

Seahawks-Run-Game-Shut-Down-by-49ers-w-Coach-DC-of-All-22-Films-YouTube-09-12-2025_01_40_AM.png

“And I get it. Some people will say you’re reading into it too much. Bosa can close down because Darnold’s no threat to keep it. Well, that’s a factor, too, you know, but I think that I think that Walker is a little slow here and there is the possibility if he if he’s a little bit quicker on this that he clears Bosa and and now we’re in business to see what happens.”

(The quoted part of this article starts at about 5:20 and includes film at the 13:19 mark.)

Another key theme was the absence of offensive balance. Seattle rarely leaned on play-action or boot action to keep the 49ers front guessing. Without forcing linebackers or safeties to hesitate, San Francisco was able to play downhill and attack gaps aggressively, eliminating rushing lanes before they developed. The lack of complementary calls made the offense increasingly predictable and easier to defend.

Looking ahead, we turned the conversation toward Week 2 and another difficult matchup against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Coach DC emphasized the importance of adjusting the approach against edge rushers T.J. Watt and Alex Highsmith. One solution he pointed to was leaning on counter runs to use the Steelers’ aggressiveness against them. He also highlighted the need to involve tight ends more in the passing game — both to give quarterback Sam Darnold quick outlets and to prevent Pittsburgh’s front from dictating the pace of play.

For Seahawks fans searching for answers after Week 1, this breakdown offers clarity. Seattle’s offense has work to do, but with targeted adjustments, the path forward is clear: diversify the attack, lean on play-action, and use scheme to neutralize elite defensive fronts.

Video​

Subscribe to The Hawks Eye podcast!​


Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ahawks-run-game-struggles-in-one-pivotal-play
 
Devon Witherspoon doubtful, Nick Emmanwori out for Steelers matchup

imagn-27028500.jpg


The Seattle Seahawks opened the season by losing a game they almost certainly feel they should have won.

Holding a 13-10 lead with just under three and a half minutes remaining, the defense was unable to hold on to the lead, allowing the division rival San Francisco 49ers to come from behind and grab the victory.

The loss makes the Week 2 road trip to take on DK Metcalf, Aaron Rodgers and the rest of the Pittsburgh Steelers even more important, but the Seahawks could be without two key members of the secondary.

It was all but given that second round pick Nick Emmanwori would not play due to the ankle injury suffered early in the season opener, but on Friday starting cornerback Devon Witherspoon was designated as doubtful for the game with a knee injury.

Nick Emmanwori out, Devon Witherspoon is doubtful for Sunday's game in Pittsburgh. Everyone else, including Uchenna Nwosu, Jarran Reed and Julian Love are good to go. pic.twitter.com/gaQQYjZZSw

— John Boyle (@johnpboyle) September 12, 2025

The good news for Seattle fans is that outside of Emmanwori and Witherspoon, no other members of the team were given any kind of designation, meaning everyone else is good to go. That includes both receivers who play key roles on special teams who missed Week 1 in Jake Bobo and Dareke Young, along with Uchenna Nwosu. Nwosu, of course, spent much of training camp on the physically unable to perform list, after logging just 473 defensive snaps over the past two seasons combined.

The final injury report with practice participation will be posted here once it is published by the team.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...n-doubtful-nick-emmanwori-out-steelers-week-2
 
Back
Top