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Seahawks All-22 review: The good and bad from Seattle’s loss to the Rams

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In one of the most anticipated games of the year, the Los Angeles Rams put an end to the Seattle Seahawks’ winning streak and even took over the lead in the NFC West. As important as the matchup was, Sam Darnold did not seem prepared for the challenge and committed four turnovers.

The loss creates an anticlimax for some projections about the remainder of the season, but it’s important to remember that despite the four turnovers, the Seahawks still had a chance to beat one of the best teams in the league. The team must stop stumbling in these matchups against tough opponents — such as the fumble against the 49ers, the interception against the Bucs, and now the four turnovers against the Rams. These mistakes must be corrected if we want to envision a strong postseason for Seattle.

All data used in this article was taken from PFF.


The Bad​

A big problem with the OL​


The season isn’t even over yet and the Seahawks already have a clear picture of their biggest needs for next year: center and right guard must receive significant investment. Even though the OL features good pieces like Charles Cross, Grey Zabel, and Abe Lucas, at many moments they simply don’t fit together — especially in the run game.

It’s worth noting that the Rams’ defense, coached by Chris Shula, lines up in dime more often than any other team in the league. Against Seattle, they increased those numbers even further, forcing the Seahawks to run the football. Even surpassing 100 rushing yards, finding consistency continues to be an issue for this ground game. And certainly, from now on, defenses will likely adjust in similar ways to limit the Seahawks’ offense, reducing their play-action attempts — just as the Rams did (only 9 PA passes).

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and play strength continue to be problems for Charles Cross in his fourth year in the league. He cannot withstand Jared Verse’s speed-to-power and is driven backward, even contributing to Grey Zabel’s knee injury.

As mentioned in last week’s article, Olu Oluwatimi could be an upgrade (even if a small one) over Jalen Sundell. I don’t believe Sundell has been significantly better than Oluwatimi, but it’s clear that center is one of the team’s biggest needs. In this play, he is completely dominated on leverage by Poona Ford and becomes unable to react, giving up the tackle.

Anthony Bradford playing poorly is nothing new, as he was beaten on two stunts that resulted in Darnold interceptions. But this was unquestionably Zabel’s worst game of the year. He appeared on the injury report with a heel injury, and it clearly limited his mobility — as seen on the previous play. On another snap, both guards misjudge their angles at the second level and give up the tackle to both ILBs.

Christian Haynes has been named Zabel’s replacement until the rookie recovers. It’s worth remembering that Haynes failed to beat Bradford for the starting job. On this play, the Rams — correctly — line up their best pass rusher, Verse, against Haynes, who had just entered after Zabel’s injury. Even though he ends the snap on the ground, Verse wins easily, pushing Haynes into Darnold and forcing the QB to move inside the pocket.


Sam Darnold can’t play against the Rams?​


Against the Rams, Darnold was sacked nine times in his playoff start with the Minnesota Vikings. It seems like he traded sacks for interceptions, committing four turnovers in the game. Two of them resulted in touchdown drives for Los Angeles, and another took Seattle out of field-goal range.

But it wasn’t just the interceptions that explain his poor performance. Darnold was slower in his progressions and got stuck on reads in a way much more reminiscent of his 2024 version than the improved 2025 version.

On the play below, even though the Rams have the advantage to defend the first down, Darnold still could have put Seattle in a much more manageable position. Rashid Shaheed runs a slant with complete inside leverage, but Darnold holds the ball longer than he should and throws it behind the receiver, trying to avoid the safety. The bad timing also disrupts the catch point.

Shaheed, by the way, showed in this game that he can be more than just a gadget player. His release is excellent and the cornerback has no chance. This is a touchdown 9 out of 10 times. Without taking credit away from the defender, the pass was underthrown and cost Shaheed his first touchdown of the game.

Now, the painful interceptions:

First INT:
Darnold locks onto Cooper Kupp for the entire play. He doesn’t even notice JSN open deep on the opposite side. Throwing to Kupp wouldn’t have been a bad decision if the QB hadn’t stared him down the whole time, allowing the robber to read his eyes and jump the route. His dropback ends long before the route break, he holds the ball, pressure arrives, and he throws without a base. Everything contributes to the safety Kamren Kinchens making the interception.

Second INT:
Darnold once again fails to make any progression. He locks onto JSN, who doesn’t win the route, and still forces the throw. The pressure — caused by a stunt that Lucas/Bradford failed to pick up — affects accuracy, but even so, there was no throwing lane.

Third INT:
Kinchens appears to be bracketing JSN, as he did several times earlier. The corner slows down the WR, which lets the safety turn his eyes back to the QB. Darnold stays locked onto that side and never looks at the levels concept on the opposite side, which was far more promising. Elijah Arroyo could have executed a better release? Yes. But even so, Darnold’s decision was terrible.

Fourth INT:
Another well-executed stunt by the Rams humiliates Bradford, who ends up turned toward his own quarterback. Darnold initially escapes, but then forces a throw to Arroyo, who wasn’t expecting it and was already slowing down. The pre-snap read was correct, but he hesitated, threw late, and the play resulted in yet another interception.


The Good​

Defense was a bright spot​


You can argue that the Rams’ offense wasn’t playing at full strength because they were ahead. I don’t dismiss that idea, but it’s important to remember that even in similar situations they put 42 points on the 49ers.

The Rams’ run game is extremely strong. Their offensive line imposes physical dominance with Steve Avila and Kevin Dotson, and the details Sean McVay adds to each run concept turn a simple inside zone into something far more layered.

Seattle allowed two explosive runs of 30 and 34 yards. If you remove those from the box score, the Rams would have run 20 times for 55 yards — an average of 2.75. One of them came from a positioning mistake that created a huge gap between the LT and TE, combined with a missed safety tackle.

This play is an example of how promising Seattle’s run defense can be: Emmanwori seals the edge; Derick Hall defeats the RT and forces the RB to redirect; inside, a stunt between the DTs allows Leonard Williams to destroy both the center and the guard, creating a clear path for him and Murphy.

The Seahawks responded well to the Rams’ 13 personnel. Even in nickel, they used a 6-1 front to reduce the impact of double-teams. Coby Bryant missed some important tackles in this game, but on this snap he executes a great one. Ernest Jones reacts quickly to the possible play-action — a clear result of thorough tape study.

More frustrating than the four Darnold interceptions was giving up a touchdown on fourth down after several outstanding goal-line snaps. Murphy penetrates the backfield immediately, still keeping an eye on the fake. The RB has only one path, but Nwosu sheds the TE block and finishes the play.

I personally didn’t believe Nwosu would be able to contribute this year after consecutive injuries. I’m glad to be wrong. He remains a leader on this defense and played one of his best games against the Rams, far beyond what the box score shows.

The secondary also deserves praise. At around six seconds on the play, look at the Rams’ options: Woolen, Jobe, Witherspoon, Emmanwori — all are in tight coverage. That gives time for the four-man rush to get home with Lawrence, and Stafford misses the checkdown.

Once again, the secondary and defensive linemen are connected. The pressure comes quickly with Lawrence, so even with quick passing concepts and Riq Woolen’s good coverage on Davante Adams, and the clearout options with Josh Jobe and Devon Witherspoon, they were covered.

Remember: this defense was without Jarran Reed, without Julian Love, and with Ernest Jones clearly not at 100%.


Final Thoughts​


There’s a saying in Brazil — and there’s probably something similar in the U.S. — that goes: “You can see the glass as half full or half empty.” I think that perfectly summarizes the Seahawks’ performance.

While the team continues to struggle against true contenders (last year they beat only two teams above .500) and often finds new ways to lose, this time it was the turnovers that derailed the game. If against the Bucs the depleted defense had no answers, against the Rams the offense committed four turnovers, reached the red zone three times, and settled for field goals.

The defense managed to contain one of the league’s best offenses. Of the 21 points allowed, 14 came from short fields created by Darnold’s turnovers — two drives that combined for fewer than 30 total yards. Despite giving up two explosive runs, the run defense adjusted well throughout the game. And, finally, the Seahawks still had a chance to win on an extremely difficult field goal — but the opportunity was there, even if Jason Myers’ kick sailed off target as soon as it left his foot.

Go Hawks!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...review-good-and-bad-from-seattle-loss-vs-rams
 
‘Unacceptable’ – Sam Darnold’s message on the Seahawks’ turnover issue

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Before the Seattle Seahawks’ game against the Los Angeles Rams, Sam Darnold had been a revelation for the Seahawks, guiding them to a 7-2 record behind 17 touchdowns and over 2,000 passing yards.

Yet after another disastrous performance against the Rams, in which Darnold fired off four interceptions in a 21-19 losing effort, the journeyman quarterback was back in the maligned public spotlight. Those four turnovers made the Seahawks the most turnover-prone team in the NFL, with 20 in their 10 games this season.

Though Darnold’s play has been put under a microscope in the last week, he didn’t mince words when asked about the team’s issues at his Thursday press confernce.

“It’s unacceptable,” Darnold said. “We understand as an offense, we have to be better, I have to be better at protecting the football. We’re doing everything that we can in practice, and when the game comes to try and take care of the football.”

After his four-interception day, Darnold’s 10 interceptions are the third-most in the NFL, behind only Tua Tagovailoa and former Seahawks quarterback Geno Smith. Of the Seahawks’ 20 turnovers, 19 have come from the offense; who could forget Coby Bryant’s fumble on his interception against the Arizona Cardinals. Seattle leads the league in lost fumbles with nine.

Of the 19, 14 are credited to Darnold, although a bad snap from Olu Oluwatimi and two tipped passes at the line of scrimmage have contributed to that high number. In his press conference, Darnold said he needs to do a better job identifying coverages pre-snap and not sticking to one read.

“For me, I’ve got to go through my progressions, listen to my feet and be able to not necessarily get stuck on one or two guys,” Darnold said. “When I say getting stuck on a progression, I mean just seeing one side of the field and feeling like there’s a chance someone’s going to get open, rather than just moving on and clicking through my progressions as I normally do.”

Despite an uninspiring start last week, it seems Darnold hasn’t come close to losing the faith of the locker room after Ernest Jones IV’s fiery statement following the loss.

“It’s football, man,” Jones said. “He’s our quarterback. We’ve got his back, and if you’ve got anything to say, quite frankly, f—k you.”

Darnold said Jones’ words meant a lot to him and credited the Seahawks’ locker room for helping him push past those mistakes. Now on his fifth team in nine years, Darnold said the current locker room is one of the best he’s been a part of.

“The way that everyone comes together, fights for each other,” Darnold said. “I think it’s very evident the way we play football on Sundays.”

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...rnold-message-seattle-seahawks-turnover-issue
 
Behind Seahawks enemy lines, Week 12 preview: Seattle takes on Titans, No. 1 pick Cam Ward

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The Seattle Seahawks’ loss against the Los Angeles Rams needs to generate lessons learned, but it can’t reverberate forever. The focus needs to be on the Tennessee Titans. The Tennessee team has only one win this season, against the Arizona Cardinals, in a bizarre game.

The last 8 Seahawks-Tennessee games have been decided by one possession. The idea is that this game will be different, but in sports anything is possible, especially in a highly competitive league like the NFL.
It’s a game to regain confidence and get back in the hunt for a playoff spot.

Let’s Go!


Titans Roster Analysis​


There are no 100% bad rosters in the NFL. The Titans have Jeffery Simmons, one of the best DTs in the league. Furthermore, there are other useful/interesting players on the roster. Cody Barton is a good LB, Arden Key a good EDGE, rookie safety Kevin Winston has stood out. On offense, Elic Ayomanor and Chimere Dike are good receivers, as is rookie Gunnar Helm.

On the offensive line, there’s still Kevin Zeitler and Peter Skoronski. Both were in the conversation about being traded, including to Seattle, but both remained with the Titans, especially Peter, who is a young player to protect Cam Ward in the future.

Causing discomfort for the rookie QB​


The Seahawks are among the teams that apply the most pressure in the league. The pressure, even if it doesn’t result in a sack, disrupts the processing of QBs, especially rookies. The center allowed the most sacks at his position, Dan Moore is the offensive tackle with the most sacks allowed, and JC Latham, with half the snaps of Moore, is in the top six in sacks allowed. Good opportunity for the edge rushers.

Here we have the example of Jayden Daniels. Deebo Samuel’s route, #1, is open behind Tyrice Knight. Easy read and simple pass, but Daniels was under pressure so many times during the game that it makes him hesitate, and this allows the sack to happen.

This affects even more experienced QBs. Matt Stafford, seeing no options due to the good work of the secondary, tries to trigger the checkdown, but without success, due to the pressure.

Here we see Cam Ward’s processing. He basically has two open routes. He hesitates, and this allows the pressure to arrive and turn what would be a gain into a sack.

Again, with the free dig, Ward tries to improvise nonsensically, and still manages to connect, but in a much more complicated play, throwing from his own end zone.

Another opportunity for the offense​


The Seahawks have 20 turnovers. If that number doesn’t change, their playoff run will be threatened. Even in easier games, the offense has found ways to give the ball away to the opponent. The Seahawks are the favorites, but one way to try to complicate this game is with turnovers.

Furthermore, it’s another opportunity to attack with outside zones and finally create CONSISTENCY in the running game.

The interior of the Seahawks offensive line should have problems​


Jeffery Simmons may not play, but if he does, he will be the biggest obstacle for the interior of the offensive line. Olu Oluwatimi is a backup, Anthony Bradford is one of the worst starters in the league, and Christian Haynes couldn’t even beat Bradford in the competition for the starting RG.

Despite the imminent nightmare, I wouldn’t rush Grey Zabel’s return in this game.

Final Thoughts​


The Seahawks need to focus on this game. The only way they can lose is with turnovers or by going in with the idea that everything is already won. The team has demonstrated this focus before, let’s see if they can do it again.

I believe the defense has already shown that it deserves the trust. They played good games even with absences. Now it’s time for the offense to show if it’s capable of keeping this team in the game when necessary.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ew-seattle-takes-on-titans-no-1-pick-cam-ward
 
Seahawks linebacker Tyrice Knight fined by NFL for hit that concussed him

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Talk about insult to injury, that’s the case for Seattle Seahawks linebacker Tyrice Knight.

The second-year player has already been ruled out of Week 12 against the Tennessee Titans due to a concussion suffered against the Los Angeles Rams, and it turns out the NFL was not pleased with how he got himself injured.

Knight was fined $6,406 for unnecessary use of the helmet following a huge kickoff return tackle on the Rams’ Xavier Smith, who himself was concussed on the play. Neither player returned to the game, but Knight is the one who takes the hit to his wallet.

Tyrice Knight concussed himself and the Rams player on this hit and then got fined for illegal lowering of his helmet. pic.twitter.com/Q3Uj8m1yfa

— Mookie Alexander (@mookiealexander) November 23, 2025

Meanwhile, Jarran Reed was docked $14,491 for unsportsmanlike conduct after bumping into the Rams’ Byron Young. In other words, Knight was fined for a play that caused him to leave the game, while Reed was fined while not even suiting up for the game. Presumably Reed thought this shove by Young on Kenneth Walker was unnecessary.

Seahawks Week 11 fines:

Tyrice Knight — $6,406 for unnecessary roughness/use of helmet. That play ended up concussing Knight, who is out this week.

Jarran Reed — $14,491 for unsportsmanlike conduct

J Reed was fined for bumping Byron Young (0) on the sideline on this play. pic.twitter.com/5SmwLivuSg

— Dugar, Michael-Shawn (@MikeDugar) November 22, 2025

The Rams did get one fine for a hip drop tackle. Cornerback Cobie Durant was dinged $17,389 for this third quarter play on A.J. Barner, which wasn’t flagged because officials never flag this play. It’s very much an infraction penalized after the fact and not in the moment.

Cobie Durant was fined for a hip drop tackle on AJ Barner that, as usual with this penalty, wasn't called on the field but always gets fined after the fact. pic.twitter.com/Qt1CdhXsRD

— Mookie Alexander (@mookiealexander) November 23, 2025

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...tyrice-knight-fined-by-nfl-for-concussion-hit
 
Seahawks vs. Titans 1st half live discussion: Take care of business, please

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This hasn’t been said much lately, but the Seattle Seahawks should absolutely crush their opponent. They’re 7-3 and one of the best teams in the NFL, while the Tennessee Titans are 1-9 and… well, they’re not one of the best teams in the NFL. Seattle is essentially a two-touchdown favorite on the road, which is not very common.

We’ve seen this year’s Seahawks smoke out the New Orleans Saints, Arizona Cardinals, and Washington Commanders by a combined 126-49. Drew Lock came in for mop-up duty in all of these wins, something we’d rarely seen in more recent Seahawks seasons. Even the “easy” games turned into either needlessly close wins or horrific losses. Perhaps Year 2 under Mike Macdonald turns over a new leaf in not taking these games lightly.

Win and win convincingly.

FOX has the game at 10 am PT. Join us in the comments section for spirited and hopefully cheerful discussion.

SEA!!!

Head to the comments section to join the conversation! Don’t be shy! You can sign up for a commenting account below and we have full-time moderators and Alaric10000 to enforce the Community Guidelines.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/game-day...s-titans-1st-half-live-discussion-nfl-week-12
 
Pete Carroll fires Chip Kelly as Raiders coaching disaster continues

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Pete Carroll may be feeling the heat of a level of losing he’s never experienced and a level of incompetence that may not sit well with upper management.

The former Seattle Seahawks head coach has had a wretched first (and only?) season in charge of the Las Vegas Raiders, and for the second time in a few weeks he’s resorted to firing an assistant coach. Before you guess, offensive line coach Brennan Carroll has kept his job for now.

Just a couple of weeks ago, it was special teams coordinator Tom McMahon. Following a pathetic 24-10 loss to the Cleveland Browns in Shedeur Sanders’ first start, offensive coordinator Chip Kelly is out.


As noted in this ESPN article, “Las Vegas was 30th in points (15.5), total yards (269), rushing yards (81.4), EPA (minus-61.40) and red zone efficiency (46.2%), respectively.” To make these stats more damning, Kelly was reportedly the NFL’s highest paid offensive coordinator, having come over from college football after winning a national championship with Ohio State’s loaded offense.

If you recall last year’s offensive coordinator search, Kelly was reportedly interviewed by the Seahawks before he took the Ohio State job and Seattle ultimately hired Ryan Grubb, who crashed and burned back to the college ranks. Safe to say that after his first season with the Philadelphia Eagles, it’s been all downhill for Kelly at an NFL level.

Meanwhile, the Raiders started uphill with what now looks like a “Week 1 randomness” upset on the road over the New England Patriots, and have since barrel rolled into a sewage lagoon at 2-9. They’re all but guaranteed to once again be last in the AFC West, while the No. 1 overall pick is a possibility given their remaining schedule and the recent competitiveness of the 1-10 Tennessee Titans (the only other win of Pete’s Raiders tenure).

Carroll famously fired offensive coordinator Jeremy Bates after one season with the Seahawks, but he otherwise never ousted any of his assistants midseason. Moves such as this with a record he’s never experienced before may be an indicator that he’s pushing any button to avoid his own departure.

Here’s what Silver and Black Pride’s Bill Williamson had to say following the latest Raider embarrassment:

This team is just not competing. They haven’t won since Week 6 and they have been beaten by double digits six times. They have scored 10 or fewer points in five times. The Raiders clinched their fourth straight losing season in the process of the Browns’ defeat.

They just can’t compete. It’s just all so bad.

Two more losses will give Carroll his worst ever season as either a college or NFL head coach. With the Los Angeles Chargers and Denver Broncos coming up next, I’d say he’s two weeks away from hitting that 11-loss mark.

The next question is whether or not he’ll bench Geno Smith, who has been a bottom-of-the-NFL quarterback by most advanced metrics this year and apparently is taking his frustrations out on Raiders fans.

GENO FLIPPED OFF RAIDER FANS AS HE LEFT!!!
📷 Raiderjessie408@MLFootball pic.twitter.com/QUhCLx3mor

— Joshua Jacopetti (@THEGOATtwo09) November 24, 2025

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...hip-kelly-raiders-coaching-disaster-continues
 
Ted’s Talk: Seahawks don’t slam door on terrible Titans, still win

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The 2025 Seattle Seahawks have been a very good team, seemingly standing on the precipice of breaking through to greatness. And yet, there are some clear flaws that could prove fatal later on this season if Seattle can’t get things corrected.

Seattle’s inability to close out games at times, regardless of the opposition, reared its ugly head once again in their 30-24 road victory against the Tennessee Titans. Seattle seemingly had the game in the bag, going ahead 23-3 in the third quarter. It looked like those games against the Washington Commanders and the second game against the Arizona Cardinals where they would storm out to a big lead and slam the door shut on the now 1-10 Titans. Instead, they allowed a punt return TD to make the score 23-10.

Later, Seattle would go up 30-10, only to give up a TD drive shortly after to make it a two-score game once again at 30-17. The offense had the ball back with around six minutes left and a chance to close out the game. However, Seattle couldn’t get the job done and punted the ball back to Tennessee who would go on a scoring drive to make the game 30-24 with under one minute left. At least the defense made them work for it a bit and drained the clock. Tennessee’s onsides kick attempt failed due to a penalty, and the Seahawks snuck out with a narrow victory. We’ve already seen this story too many times this year, and it has me worried that it will come back to bite them come playoff time.

Seahawks Droppings

  • Seattle keeps getting bit by the injury bug at the safety position, this time with Ty Okada going out with an oblique injury. He’s acquitted himself quite well to the starting lineup after a few shaky initial outings filling in for Julian Love. As Love is eligible to come off IR this week, Okada’s absence may not have to be felt. If Love isn’t ready, the already razor thin safety depth will be tested even further.
  • Hats off to Cam Ward. There were a lot of off script plays that he made today against the Seahawks defense. Those are the types of frustrating plays that will annoy Mike Macdonald just as much as those of us watching it, but sometimes you just need to tip your cap to the other guys. Except for the poor tackling on a few of them, that’s another recurring problem.
  • Seattle’s special teams units have generally been excellent this season, but that 90-yard punt return was awful. No one on Seattle’s coverage units were even remotely close, and Macdonald seemed pretty miffed about no one having the edge. Was this due to the rash of injuries and having backups to backups playing?
  • Speaking of backups, with Ernest Jones IV sitting out against his most recent former team and Tyrice Knight unavailable due to a concussion, we were treated to the LB duo of Drake Thomas and Patrick O’Connell. They combined for 19 tackles, 2 TFL and 1 sack. Not too shabby!
  • Jaxon Smith-Njigba is so damn good. It’s only November, and he’s already set the franchise record for receiving yards in a season after having 8 catches for 167 yards and 2 TDs. He can’t be stopped…at least I hope that’s the case because the other receivers haven’t really stepped up. Tory Horton is out for another 3 games at least, Cooper Kupp is good for only a few catches a game, and Rashid Shaheed has yet to make much of an impact. I’d like those boys to take some of the heat off of JSN, but at this point I have to say that he might not even need it.
  • Lastly, it was awesome to see Grey Zabel back in the lineup and make it through the game. I was worried last week after the game (and rightfully so) that he may have to miss some time with his knee injury. Everyone lucked out, and I’m SO glad that Zabel is fine. He’s one of the keys to a successful postseason run for the Seahawks.

The Seahawks are 8-3, and in the thick of the NFC West and playoff races. They also have plenty to work on if they want to have a chance to go deep in the postseason, including recapturing that killer mentality that they showcased in the middle of the season. End of game performances like today’s against good teams down the stretch isn’t going to cut it.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...awks-dont-slam-door-terrible-titans-still-win
 
NFC Playoff Picture: Seattle Seahawks pressure the Rams with Week 12 win

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The Seattle Seahawks won convincingly on Sunday and the Los Angeles Rams play Sunday night. Seattle can’t pass the Rams because of tiebreakers, but they solidified their spot as the fifth seed and put pressure on L.A. at the same time.

The Philadelphia Eagles lost to the Dallas Cowboys, so the Seahawks and Eagles are tied at 8-3. No one is running away with the top spot in the NFC this year. Philly fell to second in the NFC with the loss, and the Rams kept it that way by winning on Sunday night.

The Chicago Bears won late to stick in the third spot overall in the conference.

The Green Bay Packers won to stay just behind Seattle.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers lost on Sunday night to the Rams, and Tampa is suddenly tied with the Carolina Panthers atop the NFC South.

The San Francisco 49ers beat the Carolina Panthers, so the NFC West continues their strong start.

NFC standings during Week 12​


The Washington Commanders were on a bye this weekend.

1. Los Angeles Rams (9-2)
3. Philadelphia Eagles (8-3, 7-2 AFC)
3. Chicago Bears (8-3, 5-2 AFC)
4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-5, 2-0 NFCS)
5. Seattle Seahawks (8-3)
6. Green Bay Packers (7-3-1)
7. San Francisco 49ers (8-4)
8. Detroit Lions (7-4)
9. Carolina Panthers (6-6, win over DAL)
10. Dallas Cowboys (5-5-1, loss to CAR)
11. Atlanta Falcons (4-7, win over MIN)
12. Minnesota Vikings (4-7, loss to ATL)
12. Arizona Cardinals (3-8)
14. Washington Commanders (3-8)
15. New Orleans Saints (2-8)
16. e-New York Giants (2-10)

The New York Giants were eliminated from playoff contention with the loss.

NFC West standings after Week 12​


The Rams won on Sunday night. The 49ers played on Monday night, winning to keep pressure on the rest of the division. The Seahawks won their matchup Sunday to keep pressure on both teams. The Cardinals lost a heartbreaker.

1. Los Angeles Rams (9-2)
2. Seattle Seahawks (8-3)
3. San Francisco 49ers (7-4)
4. Arizona Cardinals (3-8)

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...e-seahawks-pressure-the-rams-with-week-12-win
 
Seahawks Snap Reactions: Grey Zabel goes the distance vs. Titans

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One of the more impressive and encouraging things from the Seattle Seahawks’ 30-24 win over the Tennessee Titans was the mere fact that Grey Zabel even played. What looked to be a significant knee injury against the Los Angeles Rams turned out to be something minor, yet something that could’ve reasonably been construed as causing him to miss at least one game. After all, Zabel was limited in practice all week for the Titans game and listed as questionable.

Zabel played all 48 snaps without issue.

The first-round rookie left guard didn’t have to rotate with Christian Haynes or come out of the game for any reason, although I’m sure an actual blowout win could’ve resulted in some rest had the Seahawks been up by more in the fourth quarter. Nevertheless, the starting offensive line played every snap together, continuing what’s mostly been season-long in-game continuity.

Looking at other snap count notes on offense, Cody White is clearly preferred to Jake Bobo as the WR4. White outsnapped Bobo 11 to 5, a week removed from Bobo being a healthy scratch versus the Los Angeles Rams. It’s very possible that Bobo’s roster spot is in jeopardy if/when Tory Horton and Dareke Young return late in the season. Bobo doesn’t return kicks, his offensive involvement has been reduced from previous seasons, and there are other options for additional blocking that he otherwise would be providing in the run game.

There was also a clear shift in Kenneth Walker III having snaps like a lead running back instead of the season-long 1a/1b strategy with Zach Charbonnet. Walker doubled Charbonnet in snaps played, which is a sign that Mike Macdonald wasn’t kidding about more opportunities for K9.

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As for the defense, Drake Thomas and Coby Bryant didn’t leave the field one time. Nick Emmanwori played 74 of 76 snaps, while Devon Witherspoon was also north of 70. Riq Woolen may not be a starter anymore, but it’s not like he’s playing way fewer snaps than Josh Jobe at this point. The injury to Ty Okada meant extended playing time for D’Anthony Bell at safety. Leonard Williams and Byron Murphy II led the way on the defensive line in terms of game time.

Patrick O’Connell played 42 snaps in his first NFL start, so obviously the Seahawks didn’t just pair him and Thomas for the whole game, and indeed Seattle played 25 snaps of Dime (6+ DBs) and had a lot of Nickel (5 DBs) looks in which they also had five defensive linemen/outside linebackers and thus only Thomas played as a middle linebacker.

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Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...-reactions-grey-zabel-goes-distance-vs-titans
 
Seahawks waive cornerback Derion Kendrick

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The Seattle Seahawks have made a somewhat surprising move, letting go of a cornerback who made a couple of big plays early in the season.

Derion Kendrick, claimed off of waivers by the Seahawks after roster cutdown day in August, was waived on Tuesday in the team’s sole transaction. Considering no one was signed to the active roster after Tory Horton was placed on injured reserve, the Seahawks currently have two vacant spots on the 53-man roster.

Kendrick was called upon early in the season while Devon Witherspoon was out injured. He played a combined 99 snaps against the Pittsburgh Steelers and New Orleans Saints, recording two interceptions and five passes defensed. More cornerback injuries led to the former Los Angeles Ram getting 19 snaps against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

In recent weeks, Kendrick has effectively been restricted to special teams, playing just five defensive snaps over the last six games, as well as a healthy scratch status versus the Washington Commanders. Nehemiah Pritchett has gotten some blowout/garbage time run at Kendrick’s expense. Initially an outside corner with the Rams, Kendrick moved to the slot during his brief time in Seattle. There’s just been no room for him to play with Josh Jobe, Devon Witherspoon, and Riq Woolen taking the top three cornerback spots. Woolen’s strong performances in recent weeks (along with the trade deadline surpassing without incident) have solidified his role in this defense.

Of course, the Seahawks could still put Kendrick on the practice squad should he clear waivers. We’ll find out more on Wednesday ahead of their first practice for the Minnesota Vikings game.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ews-seahawks-waive-cornerback-derion-kendrick
 
Pre-Snap Reads 11/26: Criminally unheeded, Leonard Williams having himself another season

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In Today’s Links: thoughts on the Seattle Seahawks’ pass rush, Kenneth Walker IV deserves even more touches, another Seahawks-centric mailbag including memories of Kenny Easley, power rankings, Quandre Diggs is back, reflections on Sunday’s road win versus the Titans, and more! The reset has arrived and our squad prepares for the uneven Minnesota Vikings. Dive into the links and enjoy your day/afternoon, evening. Thank you for being here. Go, ‘Hawks!

#np Dolphin Dance by Ahmad Jamal Trio

Seahawks News

Leonard Williams is the Matt Stafford of defensive players – Seaside Joe
Plus the Seahawks sign Quandre Diggs (soon)

Status Report: Pass rush bounces back but Hawks looking for more – Seattle Sports
A week after its first sackless performance of the season, the Seattle Seahawks’ defense — for the most part — returned to form against the Tennessee Titans.

Bump details how Seahawks RB Walker had his best game vs Titans – Seattle Sports
Head coach Mike Macdonald said last week that running back Kenneth Walker III had earned himself some more opportunities.

Seahawks Mailbag: Kenny Easley Memories, Kenneth Walker III’s Usage & More – Seahawks.com
You had Seahawks questions; we have answers.

Where Seahawks sit in NFL power rankings after rebounding vs. Titans – The Seattle Times
Any doubts that the NFL power-ranking community might have had about the Seahawks seem to have subsided after Sunday’s win over the Titans.

Quandre Diggs indicates he’s returning to Seahawks. Here’s how and why – The News Tribune
Quandre Diggs indicated on social media Tuesday he is returning to the team for which he was a captain and made three Pro Bowls in five Seahawks seasons from 2019-22.

Seahawks run game showing significant improvement at perfect time – si.com
Entering the final stretch of the season, the Seahawks are finally looking like a complete offense.

Video: Bump & Stacy on a Tuesday reflecting on the Titans win and the Seahawks Super Bowl hopes – Seahawks Draft Blog
Usual request — please like the video on YouTube and leave a comment on the page if you can!

Source: Seattle set to sign Quandre Diggs to practice squad – ESPN.com
The Seattle Seahawks are expected to sign veteran safety Quandre Diggs to their practice squad, a source told ESPN on Tuesday.

A Much-Needed Reset for Seattle | Seahawks Aftermath Live – The Hawks Eye w/ Bryce Coutts
The Seahawks got the rebound performance they desperately needed — and tonight on Seahawks Aftermath Live, Bryce Coutts and guest analyst Mookie Alexander break down every angle of Seattle’s 30–24 win over the Tennessee Titans.

NFC West News

After another historic loss, are you confident in the direction of the Arizona Cardinals? – Revenge of the Birds
The Arizona Cardinals are struggling, are you confident in the direction of the team?

The 49ers are peaking in the most important area of football – Niners Nation
The 49ers red zone offense has flipped a page over the past few weeks.

Rams Film Review: Did Matthew Stafford win MVP on primetime? – Turf Show Times
Matthew Stafford strengthens his MVP case with standout Week 12 win for the Rams.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...eonard-williams-having-himself-another-season
 
Derion Kendrick returns to old team after Seahawks exit

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Any thought of former Seattle Seahawks cornerback Derion Kendrick returning to the team as a member of the practice squad was put to rest on Wednesday.

Kendrick was claimed off waivers by none other than the Los Angeles Rams, his original team. As it’s a waiver claim, Kendrick goes straight to the active roster. It seems as if he’s a direct replacement for Roger McCreary, whom the Rams acquired via trade from the Tennessee Titans only to place him on injured reserve after a single defensive snap.

The Seahawks let Kendrick go on Tuesday after several weeks seeing minimal playing time on defense and a handful of snaps per week on special teams. Kendrick was a big part of Seattle’s secondary in Weeks 2 and 3 as the defense dealt with Devon Witherspoon’s injury. He recorded interceptions against the Pittsburgh Steelers and New Orleans Saints, and indeed only Ernest Jones IV has more picks on the Seahawks than he does.

The Rams are in a very good cornerback situation with the improved play of Emmanuel Forbes, as well as established players like Cobie Durant and Darious Williams. Ahkello Witherspoon is also set to return from injured reserve. Don’t expect Kendrick to suddenly play a huge role now that he’s back in LA.

…However, maybe a Derion Kendrick #RevengeGame is in the cards for Week 16 when the Rams play the Seahawks in Seattle on Thursday Night Football.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...ick-returns-los-angeles-rams-seattle-seahawks
 
NFL Thanksgiving Day 2025 live discussion: A tripleheader football feast!

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Happy Thanksgiving, Field Gulls!

There are three games to watch on this holiday, two of which are actually good and a third we’re hoping is good because of the return of a superstar quarterback.

The day kicks off on FOX at 10 am PT with the 7-3-1 Green Bay Packers facing the 7-4 Detroit Lions in a key NFC North tilt. Detroit doesn’t want to risk a sweep against the Packers and falling to 1-3 in the division, so this is no doubt more of a biggie for the Lions.

Next up at 1:30 pm PT are the Dallas Cowboys at 5-5-1 looking to finally get above .500 against the 6-5 Kansas City Chiefs, who saved their season last week by beating the Indianapolis Colts. The Cowboys arguably did the same with their 21-0 comeback into a 24-21 win over the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles.

Lastly, NBC has the red-hot 6-5 Baltimore Ravens versus the fading 3-8 Cincinnati Bengals. Joe Burrow is back, but the team around him stinks. More specifically, the defense is atrocious. Baltimore’s defense has played much better as of late, and with Lamar Jackson back the Ravens are riding a five-game winning streak and lead the AFC North. Cincinnati is toast, but Burrow and Lamar have given us some classics. Kickoff is at 5:20 pm PT.

Chat away in the comments and have a great day watching the games and feasting on food!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...085/nfl-thanksgiving-day-2025-live-discussion
 
Seahawks All-22 review: The good and bad from Seattle’s win over the Titans

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I usually don’t believe in the “power” that certain taboos seem to have. The 1–9 Tennessee Titans didn’t look like a team capable of keeping the game within one possession — but that’s exactly what happened. The Seattle Seahawks committed several mistakes that prevented this matchup from being a major improvement compared to the game against the Los Angeles Rams.

Still, as I always say: a win is a win.

All data in this article was taken from PFF.


The Bad​

The defense had sloppy moments​


The unit forced no turnovers against a rookie quarterback and failed to finish countless plays. They allowed 27 rushing yards to non-QBs and another 37 yards on Ward scrambles. The team simply wasn’t prepared for this — even though it’s one of the QB’s main strengths.


Two wide receivers made their season debut for Tennessee, meaning the rookie QB didn’t even have his top weapons, as Calvin Ridley and Elic Ayomanor were injured. It became the third-best game of Chimere Dike’s career, the best game of Gunnar Helm’s (TE) career, and the defense allowed 42 and 26 yards to James Proche and Xavier Restrepo in their first appearances. Those aren’t the numbers of a defense that aims to be dominant.

Good work on the secondary but the pressure…

(@alexcastrofilho.bsky.social) 2025-11-25T18:18:16.760Z

The secondary did its job, but the pass rush failed to accomplish its main task: speeding up the quarterback. The defense looked overconfident that “the play would happen eventually,” and didn’t execute with full intensity to finish plays.


They covered well deep and generated pressure, but consistently let Ward escape, leading to completions and yards after the catch.

Derick Hall tried improvises a stunt and create a big lane for run

(@alexcastrofilho.bsky.social) 2025-11-25T18:19:27.892Z

There were sloppy moments, but also clear execution errors. In one play, Derick Hall attempted an improvised stunt two gaps inside and opened a lane for the QB to escape.


The offensive line remains inconsistent​


The OL continues to be unstable across the board. They committed 5 penalties (4 accepted). Ken Walker finished with over 100 scrimmage yards, but his first half was rough: 5 carries for 12 yards (10 of those on the first run) and one reception for 5 yards. He improved in the second half with 6 carries for 59 yards and two catches — one for 29 yards and one for –4.

Great communication here for pick up the stunt

(@alexcastrofilho.bsky.social) 2025-11-25T18:19:38.856Z

There was a great snap against a stunt — arguably their best in communication and execution this season. Zach Charbonnet initially read the #33, but when he didn’t blitz, he shifted to the opposite side. The DTs executed the stunt, but Anthony Bradford, Grey Zabel, and Olu Oluwatimi identified it well. The movement drew enough attention to free a late blitz in the B-gap, but Zabel made solid first contact, though his technique came dangerously close to a holding penalty.


The run game also had a highlight: Olu slowed down the DT, Abe Lucas blocked the backside, Charles Cross sealed the edge, and the guards climbed well to the second level — something the team has struggled with. Result: a beautiful run by Walker.


But too often, the OL simply fails to impose itself physically. Bradford doesn’t open the gap, Zabel gets driven back, and Walker is forced to cut straight into an unblocked defender due to Arroyo missing his assignment.


Another play was complete chaos: Olu whiffs and gets hit with a swim move, Lucas and Bradford trip over each other, and AJ Barner loses his angle — resulting in a tackle for loss.


Sam Darnold did not show the recovery expected​


Darnold finished 16/26 for 244 yards, 2 TDs, and led the offense without turnovers for only the third time this season. However, he made several risky decisions that nearly resulted in turnovers and struggled with ball placement.


In one play, he takes a hit — he clearly saw the pressure — yet still forced a dangerous throw that nearly became an interception.


His accuracy dipped under pressure. On another snap, he steps up in the pocket but still misses a throw to Barner that should have been more precise.


Even when clean, he sometimes made poor decisions: a sideline throw that needed to be far more outside, and was only saved from interception thanks to Walker.


Another example: he escapes the pocket with room to run but instead attempts a very difficult throw against his body. The ball is deflected and nearly intercepted.


In a third-and-goal, both the play call and execution were questionable. Darnold locks onto JSN on a route that doesn’t even break into the endzone. He never looks at the opposite side, where Barner cleared space for Kupp — a much more promising option.


There were good moments: a TD pass under pressure after a Cross mistake, with perfect timing to JSN. The route was so good that JSN had almost the entire end zone to work with, but both QB and WR were completely in sync.

Sam Darnold adjusting his rollout to complete a great throw.

(@alexcastrofilho.bsky.social) 2025-11-25T18:25:35.882Z

His best throw came after a mistake from Nick Kallerup forced him to shorten the rollout. Darnold adjusted his footwork, gained time stepping up, and connected with JSN deep.


The Good​

Klint Kubiak is opening up the playbook​


Seattle recorded 353 total yards, punted only twice, and had no offensive turnovers — just the third time this season. Good numbers, but…

They finished 2-of-7 on third downs and nearly threw multiple interceptions. The offense looks lethal when JSN is the target, but becomes painfully bureaucratic when the ball goes elsewhere.


Kubiak has been creative and is opening the toolbox, but the offense still hasn’t regained its most dominant form. When JSN wasn’t the target, the passing offense produced fewer than 80 yards on 15 attempts.

The team also struggles when building a lead: either they stall or turn the ball over. This allowed the Titans back into the game — and a better team might have flipped it.

Red-zone performance has been concerning for two straight weeks. One drive illustrates the issue perfectly: run for loss, delay of game, bad throw, bad play call. Multiple causes require multiple fixes.

There were good calls as well:

  • Using shifts to manipulate LBs.
  • Frequent insert-C concepts to create extra gaps.
  • Creative variations of previously used designs, such as fake counter + end around with Elijah Arroyo as the lead blocker after the fake;
Using the motion to isolate JSN against the safety

(@alexcastrofilho.bsky.social) 2025-11-25T18:30:09.999Z
  • Motion isolating JSN against a safety — resulting in another long TD.

Final Thoughts​


Perhaps the team simply didn’t enter the game with the focus required. If that’s the case, it’s a problem — but a smaller one than a true drop-off in performance. And that matters because the NFC West race is now extremely complicated. Even if Seattle wins out, the Rams only need to lose to Seattle to still take the division.

In other words: the Seahawks must be perfect (particularly against Rams, 49ers, and Colts) and still hope for a Rams stumble.

The defense let the rookie escape the pocket too often. The offense, while lethal when targeting JSN, became inefficient when spreading the ball. The next matchup is against one of the most disguise-heavy defenses in the league — a significant challenge for Darnold.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...eview-good-bad-seattle-vs-titans-nfl-analysis
 
Bears vs. Eagles live discussion: A big one on Black Friday

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For the third year in a row, Prime Video is airing a game on Black Friday aka the day after Thanksgiving. This figures to be an interesting one between the surprising 8-3 Chicago Bears and the reigning Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles, who are also 8-3 but just blew a huge lead and lost to the Dallas Cowboys.

The Bears are enjoying life under new head coach Ben Johnson, who has quickly turned the ship around after an 0-2 start. Somehow, someway, Caleb Williams and company keep winning despite a negative point differential on the season. They’re certainly more watchable than the Eagles, whose offense is busted and almost impossibly boring. Maybe they can be suckered into an exciting game with big playoff implications at the top of the NFC.

I’m not sure who Seattle Seahawks fans should be rooting for to lose, but I lean toward Philadelphia for conference record tiebreaker reasons. Also, Eagles fans are funny when their team loses. Let’s root for chaos.

Enjoy the game starting at noon PT!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...les-live-discussion-a-big-one-on-black-friday
 
Seahawks-Vikings final injury report: Ernest Jones returns, Ty Okada questionable

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The Seattle Seahawks may not have a spotless injury report for Week 13 against the Minnesota Vikings, but they do have a pretty clean one.

Only running back George Holani and rookie defensive lineman Rylie Mills have been ruled out for Sunday’s home matchup. Holani will likely miss multiple weeks with a hamstring injury, whereas Mills is ramping up to even be in game shape after tearing his ACL in his final college game with Notre Dame and therefore hasn’t even suited up for the Seahawks yet. Mills is still on the non-football injury (NFI) list, so he doesn’t even count toward the active roster yet.

Linebacker Ernest Jones IV is back in business after missing last week’s win over the Tennessee Titans with a knee injury. He was a full participant in practice over the past two days, so he should be all systems go to fortify one of the league’s best defenses.

The one questionable player is safety Ty Okada, who did some limited work on Thursday and Friday with an oblique injury. Perhaps Quandre Diggs may not be needed a whole lot in the coming weeks if Okada’s injury is not as serious as it could’ve been. We’re still TBD, of course, on when starter Julian Love will return. Whether or not Diggs is elevated from the practice squad on Saturday, expect D’Anthony Bell to start for Okada if Ty can’t go.

Everyone else on the injury report has no game designation, including Kenneth Walker and Uchenna Nwosu. Hooray!

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Meanwhile, the Vikings won’t have quarterback J.J. McCarthy or rookie left guard Donovan Jackson. Left tackle Christian Darrisaw is among those questionable, so Max Brosmer’s first career start at QB could be without his left tackle or guard.

Final #MINvsSEA injury report

OUT: Donovan Jackson and J.J. McCarthy

QUESTIONABLE: Christian Darrisaw, Jonathan Greenard, Theo Jackson, Josh Metellus and Jalen Redmond pic.twitter.com/HiNF4xpte4

— Minnesota Vikings (@Vikings) November 28, 2025

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...rt-ernest-jones-returns-ty-okada-questionable
 
4 potential NFL Draft prospects to watch for the Seahawks, post-Thanksgiving

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Happy Thanksgiving 12’s! As the Seattle Seahawks continue to make the playoff push in the final six weeks of the season, the college football season is heading towards the final week of the regular season.

With some big games already in the books on Friday, Saturday has some of the biggest games of the year, and we’re gonna take a look at four more prospects I think the Seahawks should be keeping an eye on, come draft season.


Isaiah Sategna, Wide Receiver, Oklahoma

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The Oklahoma Sooners are a home win away against lowly LSU from likely hosting a first round playoff game. About 80% of their success this season is thanks to one of the top defenses in the country, but the offense has been Sategna or bust.

A three year player at Arkansas before transferring to Oklahoma, Sategna has been a revelation for the Sooners, with 56 receptions for 827 yards and six touchdowns. While playing mostly on the outside at Oklahoma, the 5-10 182 lbs wideout has the potential to be an explosive slot receiver at the NFL level.

A deep threat or a slant, turned home run type of receiver, Sategna is a very interesting day two option in the draft for Seattle. Even with Tory Horton and the likely extension for Rasheed Shaheed, there’s always room for a guy like Sategna.

Dillon Thieneman, Safety, Oregon

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If not for Caleb Downs, who will be a top seven pick in the upcoming draft, Thieneman is the next best safety in this class. Another talented player, another transfer, Dillon was a very good player on a bad Purdue team, before transferring to Oregon and becoming a great player. The 6-0 205 lbs safety has evolved into one of the most versatile pieces on the defensive chess board in college football.

A tackling machine with over 200 tackles in two years at Purdue, the numbers aren’t the same this year for Oregon, but that doesn’t tell the story. With the ability to play both safety spots and in multiple looks, teams have just stayed away, giving him the “Earl Thomas” treatment.

With Coby Bryant a pending free agent, and Julian Love health being a question this year, it makes sense for Seattle to look at the safety spot again, especially with how Mike Macdonald’s scheme shows their value to this team. A future with Thieneman and Nick Emmanwori is an exciting duo, and I’d be fine with Thieneman as the pick in the late first round.

Jaishawn Barham, Linebacker, Michigan

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Another powerful and talented linebacker out of Michigan, I wonder if this is the year Macdonald takes a Wolverine for his defense.

Barham is a two year starter at Michigan who has 10 tackles for a loss and four sacks so far this season. Injuries have limited his playing time and ability this season, but all the tools are there for Barham to become an outside linebacker and edge rusher combo at the next level.

We’ll see what he can do against the defending national champion Ohio State.

T.J. Parker, Edge, Clemson

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While I strongly believe that Seattle will be aggressive in the trade market for an edge rusher, in the event they don’t, I expect to see an edge draft selection in the first three rounds.

If Seattle wants to take a big swing, T.J. Parker may be worth the risk. Before the season started, Parker was a potential #1 overall pick and Clemson was the betting favorite to win the national championship. Fast-forward to Thanksgiving, and Clemson may be moving on from Dabo Swinney and Parker has become an afterthought.

After 11 sacks and 19.5 TFL’s in 2024, Parker has disappeared, with only two sacks and 6.5 TFL’s in 11 games in an ugly 2025 season for Clemson. With everything turning toxic and rotten at Clemson, you have to wonder how much that plays into the brutal season by Parker.

The talent and 2024 tape shows a first round guy, but 2025 looks like a player who may be lucky to make it in the NFL. If he falls deep enough into day two, I wonder if John Schneider and Macdonald would be willing to take a risk and see if they can bring back that 2024 version of Parker that was so special.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...tential-nfl-draft-prospects-to-watch-seahawks
 
Seahawks elevate Quandre Diggs, place George Holani on injured reserve

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The Seattle Seahawks did some more roster shuffling ahead of Sunday’s game against the Minnesota Vikings.

As expected, veteran safety Quandre Diggs has been elevated from the practice squad to the active roster. While safety Ty Okada is only questionable with an oblique injury, the lack of depth at the position means Diggs is likely to get his first snaps with the Seahawks since the 2023 season.

Running back/kick returner Velus Jones Jr is the other game day elevation, and presumably it’s for special teams purposes since the Seahawks placed George Holani on injured reserve. The third-string running back is one of Seattle’s kick return specialists, and his hamstring injury is serious enough to keep him out until at least Week 17 at the Carolina Panthers. With Dareke Young and Tory Horton also on IR, all three of Seattle’s opening day returners are currently out injured. Rashid Shaheed will likely remain the primary kick and punt returner, but Jones may be the other kickoff guy in Holani’s absence.

Lastly, Holani’s IR move opened up a roster spot for veteran running back Myles Gaskin, the Lynnwood native who starred at the University of Washington. Gaskin was signed to the active roster, leaving an open practice squad spot entering next week. Cam Akers is another running back option for the Seahawks, although Gaskin may be more likely to get carries given he’s spent more time with the team this year.

In summary:

  • Signed to active roster: RB Myles Gaskin
  • Elevated to game day roster from practice squad: S Quandre Diggs, RB/KR Velus Jones Jr
  • Placed on injured reserve (minimum four weeks): RB George Holani

Game day inactives will be announced at about 11:35 am PT on Sunday.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/seattle-...dre-diggs-place-george-holani-injured-reserve
 
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