News Seahawks Team Notes

Mel Kiper Jr takes break from Shedeur Sanders meltdown to praise Seahawks draft

NFL: APR 29 2023 Draft

Photo by Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Kiper took a break from his Shedeur Sanders-related meltdown to praise Seattle.

Believe it or not, there were 256 other players selected in the 2025 NFL Draft, including 11 new Seattle Seahawks, but if you watched ESPN’s coverage over the past three days you’d think it was the Shedeur Sanders Show hosted by longtime draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr.

It’s hard to fathom how much Kiper went into hysterics on live television with each pick Sanders wasn’t taken until the Cleveland Browns (with the help of the Seattle Seahawks!) finally grabbed the ex-Colorado quarterback at No. 144 overall in the fifth round. Obviously it was stunning to just about everybody that Sanders fell from possible Round 1 pick to the bottom-half of the draft, but Kiper was on another level of outraged after calling him his QB1.


Mel Kiper with more: "I think it's disgusting. I don't understand what the heck's going on with this... I don't see, outside of [not having] the rocket arm, 4.6 speed, [6'3", 230-pound frame], what is [Shedeur Sanders] lacking? Somebody's gonna have to explain that one to me." https://t.co/EycLLyHFE7 pic.twitter.com/0ogpzokqDj

— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) April 26, 2025

Wild TV here with Mel Kiper, Rece Davis, and Louis Riddick.

Louis Riddick: "Mel, the draft has spoken."

Rece Davis: "Yelling at the NFL about it is not productive!"

Mel Kiper: "The NFL has been clueless for 50 years when it comes to evaluating quarterbacks! Clueless!.." pic.twitter.com/QRkSXINr67

— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) April 26, 2025

Anyway, now that the dust has settled, Kiper has submitted his draft grades. He’s praised the Seahawks by giving them the second-best grade in the NFL. The only team better than Seattle? The Cleveland Browns, who got an A+ to Seattle’s A.

From the ESPN article:

Seattle made one of the biggest roster changes of the offseason, swapping out quarterback Geno Smith for Sam Darnold. But is it actually better because of the decision? I’m not so sure. If Darnold is better than Smith, it’s only by a small amount. Yes, this is a team coming off a 10-7 season, but it has major holes, including at wide receiver, where DK Metcalf and Tyler Lockett are out and Cooper Kupp and Marquez Valdes-Scantling are in.

The good thing? General manager John Schneider had the capital entering this draft to add quality starters and solid depth. With three picks in the first two rounds — Nos. 18, 50 and 52 — he had a chance to come away with multiple starters.

I’m a big fan of how Schneider approached every day of the draft, but especially the first two. Grey Zabel will be an instant starter at guard. Nick Emmanwori is one of the best athletes in this class, and he should help solidify the defensive backfield. The Seahawks traded up to get him, but he’s a great fit and it was a value on my board. Elijah Arroyo is my third-ranked tight end — they got him at No. 50. Quarterback Jalen Milroe isn’t ready to start, but he has unbelievable traits and could help the running game in 2025. I thought he had a chance to go at the top of Round 2. Seattle did a stellar job addressing holes but also looking to the future.

Damien Martinez is a Day 3 player to watch. Last season, he averaged 4.5 yards after contact per rush, which ranked fourth in the FBS. I wouldn’t be surprised if he found a role as a rookie. I’m a fan of the versatile Rylie Mills, who can play in any defense. He had 7.5 sacks when lined up as a defensive tackle last season and is powerful at the point of attack. Wideout Ricky White III and offensive tackle Mason Richman are good players.

Just imagine how much better the Seahawks draft class could’ve been if the pick at No. 92 was not Milroe but Shedeur Sanders! That might have been worth an A++.

Thanks, Mel! I’ll leave it at that.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/4/2...ond-best-nfl-draft-2025-grade-shedeur-sanders
 
What John Schneider, Mike Macdonald said after Seahawks 2025 draft

Seattle Seahawks Introduce Mike Macdonald as Head Coach

Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images

It was an exciting weekend of wheeling and dealing and draft picking for the Seahawks.

The Seattle Seahawks had one of the busier NFL Drafts of any team. They tied with four teams for most picks (11) and made several trades between Friday and Saturday that initially decreased and then increased their pick total from what they started with on Thursday.

As usual, Seahawks general manager John Schneider and second-year head coach Mike Macdonald held a post-draft day press conference. Here are some quotes (with transcript provided by the Seahawks) from that press conference along with accompanying video. It’s a 30-minute session and I’m sure there’s a lot of interest in what both men had to say.


Opening remarks​


John Schneider: Just big thanks to everybody, the personnel staff, the cafeteria staff, all the coaches, support from Jody (Allen) and Bert (Kolde) and Chuck (Arnold). Just the whole weekend. Honestly, just taking it in right now. The free agency stuff is going on right now, but the guys are in there kicking butt. Very grateful, very proud of everybody and how everybody worked together, completing our 16th draft. It’s a blessing. We’re very excited about what we’ve added to this team, the depth and the toughness, the competitors, the reliability. Excited for this growth-minded staff to get their hands on these guys and get ripping.

Mike Macdonald: I didn’t tell John (Schneider) I was going to do this, but I think it’s appropriate from my perspective, as coaches, what we’re coming into, to share our appreciation for John. Our team on the personnel side of the ball, I wish you could be in that room, how we operate. It’s unique to the rest of the league, in my opinion. I think we do it better than anybody else. It’s our style, how we want to operate. Everybody is included. It’s just a special operation. Just really cool to work alongside John and see him do his thing with the rest of the crew.

Schneider: Thanks, buddy. That’s cool. Very nice of you.

Macdonald: These guys, they’re really good at what they do. It was a lot of fun this weekend. (I just) can’t wait to practice next week, rookie camp, see these guys in here, get to work.

On the decision to have Grey Zabel call seventh-round pick Mason Richman​


John Schneider: Yeah, we flew him (Grey Zabel) in. Came with his folks. Mike (Macdonald) brought him in, introduced him to everybody. We were talking. Said hi to him. We’re picking in, like, two minutes. I’m exaggerating, it was like 10 or 15 minutes. We basically were there. I was like, ‘Well, kind of cool.’ The Rams did it last year with Jared Verse. Somebody was like, ‘Hey, he should announce it.’

On how the Sam Howell trade developed​


Schneider: It started at the owners meeting, talking with Rob Brzezinski and Kwesi (Adofo-Mensah), just about the situation, what it looked like. We had met with Drew (Lock) down there. There was a possibility to sign Drew back. We like the quarterbacks in the draft, and we thought there was a chance that might happen. There were several teams that were interested. Minnesota was a team that ended up pulling the trigger

On the Seahawks picking nine offensive players to just two defensive players​


Macdonald: Honestly, I realized that at the end, going through the free agency process and gave the defensive guys some grief. No, they’re really excited. Excited about our UDFA class as well. The offensive guys were rocking and rolling today, as they should be. We got some really good players to join the team. All positive. It’s great.

Schneider: No, it was just the way it happened. We had some defensive guys. We talk about the upsets. Things started happening. It was like, ‘Okay, we’re going here, we’re going here, we’re going here.’ The offensive guys ended up standing out on our board.

On the Seahawks drafting six offensive lineman over the past two seasons​


Schneider: Grey (Zabel) was standalone. Bryce (Cabeldue) was this guy that Trent (Kirchner) and Kirk (Parrish) loved. A very much under-the-radar kind of dude. Then we had buy-in with Mason (Richman), with the coaches and the guys that went to the school, the intelligence, the competitor, the toughness. He started or played 2023, I think it was almost the whole season with a hairline fracture in his leg. He wanted to help them and played through it. Pretty rare these days. It used to happen all the time. He played through it. It’s an area of need, but it always is. I can’t emphasize that enough. Every team in the National Football League is looking to help their offensive line. It’s just an ongoing issue. We’ll have these guys in competing. We’ll see where it goes with this new group, with these three guys coming in, the free agents that we signed. We’ll see what it looks like.

On what the plan was for the Seahawks addressing the interior offensive line​


Schneider: Yeah, I think we talked about it last night a little bit, or maybe the night before. The group of offensive linemen, like, once we got past the Super Bowl, through the Combine, speaking with everybody we needed to speak with, there were a couple guys we were very interested in, but we knew we could kind of lean back a little bit just based on picking 18, where are these guys going to go, so... I would say right in there. That was probably going in the plan. We knew we were going to address this.

How far are the Seahawks from meeting Mike Macdonald’s vision of the roster?​


Macdonald: I respect the question. This is us getting together, carving this thing out one move at the same time, one decision at a time, one practice at a time. It’s just how we want to become. We’re on our way. We’re growing. It’s our job to expedite that process. We’re competing for championships this year. That’s what we want to do. I’m really confident that we’re going to have that opportunity. That’s the expectation for us. The last week of the guys being in the building, the spirit, the conversations we’re having, it’s so much fun to come to work every day. I can’t wait to come back and get back to the second week of Phase One (OTAs). That’s the way it should be. That’s the environment we’re trying to create, these guys are excited to come to work every day, keep connecting, getting tougher. Wring out every day, let the results speak for themselves.


Full John Schneider and Mike Macdonald draft press conference video​


Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/4/2...acdonald-said-seattle-seahawks-2025-nfl-draft
 
Report: Seahawks exercise Charles Cross’ fifth-year option in franchise first

Minnesota Vikings v Seattle Seahawks

Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images

The Seahawks will have Cross under contract through the 2026 season.

The first draft pick from the Russell Wilson trade has just become the first Seahawks draft pick to have his fifth-year option picked up.

Just days before the deadline, the Seahawks have exercised starting left tackle Charles Cross’ fifth-year option, which is valued at a fully guaranteed $17,560,000. NFL insider Ian Rapoport had the news on Monday.

The #Seahawks are exercising the 5th year option for standout OT Charles Cross, the former 2022 1st rounder. Locked in through 2026. pic.twitter.com/NyTvPVDfb0

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) April 28, 2025

Since the fifth-year option was introduced for first-round picks back in 2011, this is the first time the Seahawks have picked up a fifth-year option for any of their draftees. They did exercise Noah Fant’s option in 2022, but obviously he was drafted by the Denver Broncos. None of James Carpenter, Bruce Irvin, Germain Ifedi, Rashaad Penny, L.J. Collier, or Jordan Brooks had their options exercise and none of them stayed beyond their respective rookie deals.

Even if you widened the scope beyond fifth-year options for first-round picks, the Seahawks under John Schneider have seldom paid their offensive line draftees outside of their first contracts. Of Schneider’s OL picks, only Justin Britt has ever received a contract extension while on his rookie deal.

The Seattle Seahawks invested in the offensive line early during this year’s NFL Draft with the selection of Grey Zabel, and now they’re keeping Charles Cross under contract through 2026. Nothing is stopping them from still giving him an extension; this just means he’s not going to be an impending free agent at the end of this season.

One way to invest in the offensive line? Keep your good players. These past few days feel refreshingly different on that front.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/4/2...ss-fifth-year-option-franchise-first-nfl-news
 
Seahawks waive 4 players to make room for undrafted free agents

Seattle Seahawks v Los Angeles Rams

Photo by Ric Tapia/Getty Images

The Seattle Seahawks have moved on from four players, including quarterback Jaren Hall.

After several days worth of the Seattle Seahawks adding players to their roster through the draft, the team has moved on from a handful of players to make room for their incoming draft picks and undrafted rookies.

On Tuesday, the Seahawks waived the following players:

  • Quarterback Jaren Hall
  • Center Mike Novitsky
  • Linebacker Michael Dowell
  • Outside linebacker Kenneth Odumegwu

Hall is probably the most notable name given that has reduced the Seahawks’ quarterback roster from five to three. Sam Howell was traded to the Minnesota Vikings on the final day of the NFL Draft, and now the former Vikings draft pick is also off the roster. Sam Darnold, Drew Lock, and third-round rookie Jalen Milroe are the only QBs on the team.

Novitsky, Dowell, and Kenneth Odumegwu all signed reserve/future deals after ending the 2024 regular season on the practice squad.

Exempting draft picks, the Seahawks had 67 players on the active roster. Subtracting these four players and adding the 11 draft choices, Seattle currently has room for 16 undrafted free agents. We should hear something on that front very soon.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/4/2...ve-4-players-jaren-hall-undrafted-free-agents
 
Why Seahawks draft pick Ricky White III reminds John Schneider of a Packers legend

Fresno State v UNLV

Photo by Ian Maule/Getty Images

Ricky White III has Schneider thinking about one of the great Packers receivers of all-time.

The Seattle Seahawks wrapped up their 2025 NFL Draft by selecting Mountain West Special Teams Player of the Year Ricky White III in the seventh round. White might have been an outstanding special teams player, recording four blocked punts and a touchdown in 2024, but he was also a two-time First-team All-Mountain West player at wide receiver.

In Saturday’s post-draft media conference, Seahawks general manager John Schneider made a very interesting comparison point with regards to White. Naturally, Schneider went back to his days with the Green Bay Packers for this one.

“Ricky (White III), the special teams part, Jay (Harbaugh) and Fitz (Devin Fitzsimmons) are really excited about him. Josh (Bynes), all those guys. He’s blocked four punts. Personally he kind of reminded me of Donald Driver, they (Green bay) drafted him in the sixth round. He was one of the better special teams players in the league before he completely established himself as our number one receiver. That’s kind of who he reminded me of. He’s tough. He’s kind of got that gangly feel to him, too.”

Schneider’s actually a little inaccurate regarding Driver, although he can be forgiven since he wasn’t on the Packers staff when Driver was drafted.

Coincidentally, Driver was also drafted in the seventh round back in 1999. The former Alcorn State star seldom featured in the offense over his first three seasons with the Packers, but eventually broke through as a four-time Pro Bowl selection with seven 1,000-yard seasons to his name. Driver retired with 743 catches (a Packers record) for 10,137 yards (also a Packers record) and 61 touchdowns on his way to the Packers Hall of Fame.

White is listed at 6’1 and 184 lbs while Driver was 6’0 and 194 lbs, but he was listed at 181 lbs at the time he entered the league. Take a look at this quote from Mike Sherman and what he said about Driver’s special teams value early in his career:

“He’s by far our best player on special teams,” head coach Mike Sherman said near the end of Driver’s third season. “Covering punts. Jamming. He does a hell of a job.”

Yes, Greg Jennings and Jordy Nelson might have been higher profile names on either side of Driver’s career, but Donald was an outstanding player in his own right. If White followed in Driver’s footsteps, this could be one of the most prophetic statements Schneider has ever made.

Anyway, wouldn’t it be cool if Ricky White did something like this to the 49ers?

49ers Week

Throwback to this TD by All-Time Packer great Donald Driver

One of my favorite TD’s in Packer History@Donald_Driver80 #GoPackGo pic.twitter.com/9E9mFDfHO3

— PackersChalkTalk (@DylanAlbre75738) November 20, 2024

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/4/3...s-john-schneider-packers-legend-donald-driver
 
New uniforms are coming to the Seahawks in 2025

Denver Broncos v Seattle Seahawks

Photo by Rio Giancarlo/Getty Images

Prepare yourselves for a “rivalries” uniform for the Seahawks and many other NFL teams this year.

The Seattle Seahawks will be wearing some new threads next season.

No, these are not a permanent change from their standard uniforms or even a deviation from the alternate ‘Action Green’ or 1990s throwbacks. Over the weekend, Nike and the NFL announced a new Rivalries program, which includes new uniforms and fan gear that is geared toward rivalry games. These unis will be rolled out over the next four seasons, with the NFC West and AFC East kicking things off.

From the official press release:

“The NFL is home to some of the biggest football rivalries and today marks a historical moment for the NFL as we share ‘Rivalries’ with the world,” said Renie Anderson, chief revenue officer at the NFL. “Together with Nike, we are harnessing the power of rivalry matchups to bring fan excitement and community pride to the next level. Through specially designed player uniforms and limited-edition fan gear, we will embark on a journey that inspires competitive spirit and reveals the winner in all of us.”

The first wave of participating teams hail from the AFC East (Buffalo Bills, Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots and New York Jets) and NFC West (Arizona Cardinals, Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco 49ers and Seattle Seahawks).

Each participating team will wear a unique Rivalries uniform with designs rooted extensively in local community insights during a single home game against a division rival. The designs have been brought to life by pulling inspiration from the history of each market and the aspects of the community that only that team’s city embodies.

Your guess is as good as mine as far as what the Seahawks’ customized uniforms will look like, but I imagine this program is similar to Major League Baseball’s City Connect series. Here’s what the Seattle Mariners’ uniform looks like.

New York Mets v Seattle Mariners
Photo by Ben VanHouten/Seattle Mariners/Getty Images

The NBA has seemingly 8,000 uniform combinations these days, including City Edition. Take a look at the Portland Trail Blazers’ 2024-25 City Edition.

NBA: Atlanta Hawks at Portland Trail Blazers
Jaime Valdez-Imagn Images

What do you think would be a good Rivalries design for the Seahawks? Do you think they could slip in a SuperSonics tribute somewhere if there are city elements to it? Show off your creativity in the comments section!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/4/3...ies-uniforms-seattle-seahawks-2025-nfl-season
 
The details of Tyler Lockett’s one-year contract with the Tennessee Titans

Seattle Seahawks v Los Angeles Rams

Photo by Harry How/Getty Images

Lockett can earn up to $6 million if all goes well in Tennessee.

The Seattle Seahawks made the expected yet difficult decision to release beloved wide receiver Tyler Lockett after 10 wonderful seasons with the team. On the eve of the NFL Draft, Lockett announced he’d signed with the Tennessee Titans, now quarterbacked by No. 1 overall pick Cam Ward.

Lockett’s cap hit would’ve been north of $30 million had he stayed in Seattle, but now he’s in Nashville on a much, much cheaper deal. How cheap? Well it’s not vet minimum because Lockett is still way too good for that, but it looks like a bargain for the rebuilding Titans:

Tyler Lockett contract details​

  • Cap number: $4,000,000
  • Guaranteed salary: $2,860,000
  • Prorated signing bonus: $630,000
  • Per-game roster bonus: $510,000 (or $30,000 per game)

(Via OverTheCap.com)

Lockett also has an extra $2 million he can earn by hitting undisclosed incentives, bringing his maximum contract value to $6 million.

Subtracting the incentives, Lockett’s $4 million is pretty straight forward. The guaranteed salary plus signing bonus total $3,490,000 in guaranteed money. Only the per-game roster bonus is non-guaranteed.

A return on a reduced deal seemingly wasn’t in the cards for the Seahawks and Lockett, and now Seattle will turn over a new leaf at receiver with Jaxon Smith-Njigba as the top target, veteran Cooper Kupp joining as a free agent, and rookies Tory Horton and Ricky White III added to the roster as Day 3 draft picks.

The Seahawks will see Lockett again soon when Seattle plays the Titans in the regular season.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/5/1...er-lockett-one-year-contract-tennessee-titans
 
Can you guess this Seahawks draft pick in today’s in-5 trivia game?

fg.0.png


Think you can figure out which Seahawks player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out in our new guessing game!

Hey, Seahawks fans! We’re back for another day of the Field Gulls in-5 daily trivia game. Game instructions are at the bottom if you’re new to the game! Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in the Google Form.

Today’s Field Gulls in-5 game​


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous games​


Thursday, May 1, 2025
Wednesday, April 30, 2025
Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Play more SB Nation in-5 trivia games​


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

Field Gulls in-5 instructions​


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Seattle Seahawks player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/5/2/24422312/sb-nation-seahawks-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Watch the 2025 Seahawks rookie class in first minicamp practice

NFL: NFL Draft

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Nothing real exciting happened, but just pretend that Jalen Milroe threw a 75-yard touchdown pass in stride to Ricky White III.

Just a week after the NFL Draft in Green Bay, the Seattle Seahawks’ rookies got to work as part of the early portion of the offseason program.

Friday marked the first of three days of rookie minicamp, which includes all 11 Seahawks draft picks, 17 undrafted free agents, and over 40 rookie tryouts. We’re still in early May, so you’re not getting (by league rule) anything resembling live contact, fully padded practices, running 11-on-11 drills, or anything else that is reasonably close to simulating actual game situations.

That won’t stop you from getting excited just watching the Seahawks rookies get their first snaps at the Virginia Mason Athletic Center in Renton, right?! Because in this part of the offseason, any content is content worth posting, promoting, and overanalyzing.

Rookie minicamp in full force. pic.twitter.com/hyvrnST4z1

— Seattle Seahawks (@Seahawks) May 3, 2025

Would you like to see new left guard Grey Zabel on the field? Sure you do!

The Seahawks’ 2025 draft class hit the field today for rookie minicamp.

Here’s first-round pick Grey Zabel running through drills at left guard. pic.twitter.com/RRQkHXJGig

— Cameron Van Til (@CameronVanTil) May 2, 2025

Former Miami tight end Elijah Arroyo is Seattle’s second-round selection and there will be much anticipation that he’ll provide some spark in the passing game.

Seahawks 2nd round draft pick Elijah Arroyo getting warmed up before rookie minicamp today pic.twitter.com/90ks6SDTxl

— Maura Dooley (@Maura_Dool) May 2, 2025

Then there’s third-round quarterback Jalen Milroe. I remember the last time the Seahawks took a quarterback in the third round. The results were pretty great! Super Bowl great, you could say.

Jalen Milroe behind center . First day Seahawks rookie minicamp.⁦@Seahawks⁩ ⁦@CascadiasportsNpic.twitter.com/c4BbUbucTr

— MazvitaMaraire (@MazvitaMaraire) May 2, 2025

And speaking of quarterbacks... did you know one of the tryouts in camp is former Washington Huskies starter Will Rogers? Yes, that one!

Will Rogers: still in Seattle pic.twitter.com/nmsfTzqWH7

— Mike Vorel (@mikevorel) May 2, 2025

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/5/2...wks-rookie-class-have-first-minicamp-practice
 
Several Seahawks UDFAs among tops in guarantees

Utah v UCLA

Seahawks 2023 second round pick Zach Charbonnet is tackled by Seahawks 2025 UDFA Connor O’Toole | Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images

There has been no shortage of change at the VMAC over the past 16 months, including the way the Seattle front office structures the contracts of undrafted free agents.

Many of the newest members of the Seattle Seahawks are on the field for rookie minicamp this weekend, looking to make an impression and put that first foot in the door towards making the roster out of training camp in August. Unfortunately, many of those in attendance will be unable to make it past cuts at the end of training camp, and will be left without the contracts signed with the team during the offseason.

However, even though the majority of the players at rookie minicamp won’t be on the active roster come September, several of the undrafted free agents the Seahawks signed in the wake of the draft will receive paychecks from the team during the season.

For example, according to multiple reports, undrafted free agent defensive end Connor O’Toole received a $30k signing bonus, along with a $234k base salary guarantee.


Still working to confirm contract details on the Seahawks' UDFAs, but one I can confirm: Utah DE Connor O'Toole got a $30K signing bonus and a $234K base guarantee. That bonus and $264K guarantee are believed to be among the biggest, if not the biggest, Seattle has given a UDFA.

— Brady Henderson (@BradyHenderson) April 30, 2025

And O’Toole is not the only member of the undrafted free agent class to receive significant guarantees, at least according to Aaron Wilson of KPRC2 Houston.


Largest undrafted deals in total guarantees, signing bonus, plus guaranteed portion of salary: #Buccaneers Benjamin Chukwuma $300,000, $55K bonus, $245K of salary guaranteed) #Commanders Tim McKay $275K#Cardinals Val Senn $274K #Cardinals Josh Fryar $269K #Seahawks Connor… pic.twitter.com/ZxIWgG9DvM

— Aaron Wilson (@AaronWilson_NFL) April 28, 2025

In addition to the $264k of guarantees the Seahawks reportedly gave to O’Toole, they also gave significant guarantees to:

  • Nick Kallerup: $259k
  • Federico Maranges: $250k
  • Zy Alexander: $249k

For those who might be concerned that the front office may be burning cap space by giving guarantees to players who might not even make the roster, there’s a simple reason that many of the guarantees across the league fall into the same range.

That simple reason is that the minimum salary for a member of a practice squad in 2025 is $13k per week, or $234k for the entirety of the 2025 season. Thus, when a team gives an undrafted free agent like O’Toole a base salary guarantee of $234k, they are simply guaranteeing the entirety of the practice squad salary for that player for the year.

Since those base salary guarantees are in the player’s contract, should another team claim the player off waivers at roster cuts at the end of training camp, the team placing the waiver claim would then become responsible for those guarantees and the Seahawks would be off the hook.

In addition, should a player with theses guarantees be released and then sign with the practice squad of another team for the 2025 season, Seattle would be on the hook for the guarantees during the 2025 season, but receive a salary cap credit in 2026.

For an example from 2024, undrafted free agent Jack Westover had a $25k signing bonus and $50k in base salary guarantees for the 2024 season. Westover was waived with an injury settlement at the end of training camp, before joining the practice squad of the New England Patriots in October. In Westover’s case the guarantees were covered by the injury settlement, however, had he not been injured and not received the injury settlement, Seattle would have received the guaranteed salary paid to Westover back on the cap in 2025 after Westover’s 2024 earnings from New England easily exceeded the $50k in guaranteed salary.

In any case, it’s a new cap management era in Seattle, as the aggressive use of base salary guarantees is something that the Seahawks front office has not used as extensively in years past. In addition, this is only the tip of the iceberg and the four largest guarantees given to the 2025 undrafted free agent class. Field Gulls will be here to update readers once the contracts of the entire undrafted free agent class become available.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/5/3...tops-in-guarantees-2025-undrafted-free-agents
 
‘Still hasn’t sunk in yet’ - Grey Zabel on being drafted by Seahawks

2025 NFL Scouting Combine

Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images

The former North Dakota State star answered a host of questions in his introductory press conference.

Seattle Seahawks rookie left guard Grey Zabel is in the middle of rookie minicamp right now, but the first-round draft choice out of North Dakota State had his first press conference at team headquarters in Renton earlier this week. Zabel and Seahawks general manager John Schneider fielded questions from Seahawks media, but Zabel was obviously the star of the show.

Here’s a snippet of some of the notable quotes from the interview (transcript courtesy of Seahawks media), along with the accompanying full video at the bottom of the page.

John Schneider’s opening statement​


Schneider: “Welcome to Grey Zabel Day, this is an awesome day. We’ll celebrate Grey, but first I want to thank everybody we can possible. Whether it’s all of the scouts, the coaches, all the training staff, the medical group, Dave (Pearson) in PR, social media, Stu (Stuart McNabb) and his group, EK (Erik Kennedy) and his group for putting this coming weekend on which we’re having 72 players involved in this minicamp, drafted players, rookie free-agents and then try out players. I’m just very appreciative of everybody’s efforts and everything that went into the whole draft.

“Ted Thompson (former Seahawks Vice President of Football Operations) would say ‘Welcome to Green Bay,’ God rest his soul. Ted Thompson was the gentleman who drafted Steve Hutchinson. I was blessed enough to work for him here the year we drafted Hutch and then in Green Bay for a number of years, but it’s a beautiful day here in Seattle and he would call it a ‘Chamber of Commerce’ day here. Pretty awesome, beautiful, day here and we’re here to celebrate Grey Zabel. On behalf of Jody Allen, Bert (Kolde), Chuck (Arnold), Mike (Macdonald) and his staff, I know your folks are watching, Mark and Tanna (Zabel), and I just want to let your parents know that you’re in great hands with the people in this building and we’re going to everything we can to help you be a successful player and to help us be a world championship team. So with that, congratulations man. Welcome.”

Has it sunk in yet for Zabel that he’s with the Seahawks?​


Zabel: “Still hasn’t sunk in yet, I’ve got to wake up and pinch myself every single morning that I get to play for the Seattle Seahawks. It probably never will sink in.”

Conversations with Steve Hutchinson​


Zabel: “Hutch (Steve Hutchinson) has been awesome throughout this experience. He interviewed me down at the (Reese’s) Senior Bowl and he interviewed me at the (NFL) Combine. He’s been a real mentor this past week and being able to ask him all the questions that a rookie or a new guy has has been unbelievable. I’m super grateful for him.”

On what former college teammate and current Seahawk Jalen Sundell taught him at NDSU​


Zabel: “I think Jalen’s a master of his craft. I was fortunate enough to room with him. He was kind of a big brother to me throughout college. What an awesome deal that I was able to join him here at the Seahawks. He’s taught me a lot of life-lessons and super excited to hopefully learn some more from him here.”

The decision to wear No. 76, the same jersey number as Steve Hutchinson​


Zabel: “Well, that was kind of the equipment staff’s idea, and I had to ask Hutch (Steve Hutchinson) if it was okay to wear it. He was all for it and super excited for it. So, there’s no better number to wear in Seattle history.”

Is Zabel much of a trash talker?​


Zabel: “A little bit. Offensive line, you can’t score, you can’t catch a pass, you can’t do any of that. So, when you block a guy extremely well, sometimes you’ve got to let him know and I think that’s the fun and joy of playing offensive line. But, at the same time, you’ve got to stay humble in your ability.”

Grey Zabel likes Busch Light, but will he be won over by Rainier Beer?​


Zabel: “Just kind of depends. I haven’t tried it yet, I know that’s a huge brand up here in the Pacific Northwest. Hopefully if we have good OTA’s we can maybe try a few.”

Full Video​


Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/5/3...-sunk-in-yet-grey-zabel-drafted-seahawks-news
 
Seahawks Film Breakdown: How will Elijah Arroyo be used in the Seahawks offense?

NCAA Football: Wake Forest at Miami

Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Arroyo is the first tight end drafted by the Seahawks in the first or second round since 2008.

After selecting Grey Zabel in the first round and moving up to get Nick Emmanwori in the second, the Seattle Seahawks still had one more Day 2 pick in the 2025 NFL Draft. The pick was not another offensive lineman or defensive lineman. A trade down was even considered to try to recover something after the trade-up, but that was not what happened either. The pick was TE Elijah Arroyo, from Miami.

What is the impact of the pick? Where will he play? Can he contribute as a rookie?

We will discuss all of this in this article.


Who is Elijah Arroyo?


Elijah Arroyo, TE, RAS pic.twitter.com/hzOIxcMZns

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

Arroyo was born in Orlando, but due to his father’s work he had to move to Mexico when he was six years old. He had the opportunity to play American Football in Mexico, playing as a QB, LB and RB. At age 12, he returned to the United States, where he played as a QB in his freshman year (note that he is left-handed). In his sophomore year, he transitioned to receiver and received a lot of attention.

He was a four-star prospect and was the second highest-ranked TE in Texas, behind only Ja’Tavion Sanders (who is now with the Carolina Panthers). He received offers from UConn, Alabama, Georgia, Michigan, Penn State, Texas, Texas A&M, SMU and USC. The TE chose to play for Miami, a university where he had watched games with his father and grandfather.

Arroyo played his freshman season, was injured the next two years and then returned for a fantastic season in 2024. He had 35 receptions for 590 yards and 7 touchdowns, which earned him Second Team All-ACC honors.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Awesome effort pic.twitter.com/TZVJKTlt9K

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

His mentality of fighting for every snap is something incredible.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Fearless pic.twitter.com/JEehPlh2Mf

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

Not afraid to sacrifice his body in blocking.

Was he the best option?


According to ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler, many teams had Arroyo as a top-20-25 player in the draft. The problem was the injuries the player had (we’ll talk about that later) that made some teams give up on his selection.

Let’s look at John Schneider’s history of drafting TEs:

  • 2010, Anthony McCoy, 6th round;
  • 2013, Luke Willson, 5th round;
  • 2016, Nick Vannett, 3rd round;
  • 2018, Will Dissly, 4th round;
  • 2020, Colby Parkinson, 4th round;
  • 2020, Stephen Sullivan, 7th (he was announced as a WR, returned to TE, which was his position in his final season at LSU, and ended up only having playing time as an EDGE, in Seattle);
  • 2024, AJ Barner, 4th round;

So, in addition to being the highest TE drafted by John, Arroyo is the highest TE drafted by Seattle since John Carlson was drafted in the second round in 2008 at 38th overall. In franchise history, only two other TEs have been drafted higher than Arroyo. One of them is Jerramy Stevens, in the first round of the 2002 Draft at 28th overall. And the other was Christian Fauria, in the second round in the 1995 Draft, pick 39th overall.

No two objects can occupy the same space at the same time


This is the definition of the principle of impenetrability. Watching Arroyo’s tape, it is undeniable that he basically occupies the same role as Noah Fant. An athletic TE, a vertical threat, specialized in the slot and who needs to improve in blocking.

Fant, Arroyo and AJ Barner could be the team’s TE trio. However, Arroyo and Fant are redundant, especially with Fant’s cap hit of $13,410,000. Either Seattle doesn’t see it that way (which would be a mistake, to me) or the team is willing to end Fant’s time as a Seattle Seahawk. I believe that the cut will be inevitable, but it would still be possible to dream of a trade. Fant is a first-round pick and there are always those who like to bet on his pedigree.

A good candidate would be the Jaguars. Currently the group has only: Brenton Strange, Johnny Mundt and Hunter Long. The Dolphins have Jonnu Smith, Julian Hill and Pharaoh Brown. It is worth remembering that Arroyo has a history of injuries, and perhaps that is why Seattle wants to keep Noah Fant.

What are the concerns about the pick?


He suffered an ACL injury in his left knee during his Sophomore season, causing him to miss 8 games. The following year he missed 8 games again while still recovering from the same injury. In 4 years (only 2 of which he actually played) he has less than 50 receptions (46) and 753 yards.

Seattle drafted two other players with injury problems. DE Rylie Mills and WR Tory Horton, both fifth-round picks, are concerns for the start of the season. However, both had visits with the Seahawks during the pre-draft. That way, the Seahawks could test them to get a true sense of the problem, and that is how they chose both of them.

At least as of this writing, no information has been released about Arroyo having visited the team in this process leading up to the Draft. Did the Seahawks invest in a guy they didn’t “test” enough?

How will the Seahawks use Arroyo?


Schneider said some Seahawks coaches see Elijah Arroyo as a potential X receiver. “Full route tree, super explosive. This guy is special.”


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Aligned as an outside receiver wait for CB open the hips and make the cut pic.twitter.com/y9Bv0yAN0x

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

Arroyo definitely looks like a WR/TE hybrid and that’s how they plan to use him. He has enough speed to be a vertical threat. He waits for the vertical threat and when he opens his hips to make the deep, Arroyo makes the cut.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Good speed against slot corner pic.twitter.com/puyt6XaamR

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

Elijah Arroyo lined up in the slot on 51.6% of snaps and in-line on 39.4%. He had 16.9 yards per reception in 2024 and converted the line for a gain on 71.4% of his receptions. Fluid athlete with a long wingspan who is a mismatch in the MOF. Ranked 49th overall by consensus.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Nice vision to to see the safety leaving hiis zone and a lot of yards after the catch pic.twitter.com/2XJIPcEqoQ

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

Arroyo was one of eight TEs in the country to average more than 8 YAC per reception and more than 1.6 yards per route run last season.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Vertical threat pic.twitter.com/jA1bMHlp8U

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

The only NFL players who have posted a faster time than Elijah Arroyo in Miami in 2024, according to NextGenStats:

  • KaVontae Turpin
  • Brian Thomas Jr.
  • Jahmyr Gibbs
  • Saquon Barkley
  • Nico Collins
  • James Cook

Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Nice cut pic.twitter.com/vzKSItBkGv

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

Coming in-line, he has a good change of direction to leave defenders on the ground with his sudden cut.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Reliable catch, big catch radius. Only one drop in college. pic.twitter.com/Epw0CYx7fF

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

He is used in motion to have a free release and can catch the long pass.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Used on screen pic.twitter.com/OEHVh7qE2W

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

His speed allows him to be a weapon on screen for TE, which is not something that is common, but should be in Klint Kubiak’s playbook.

High and low blocking work


Miami used Arroyo in several ways in blocking, even though this is not a strong point of his game.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Blocking for screen pic.twitter.com/5fIBuuqtn2

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

Here we have him as a receiver blocking for the screen. Put him against smaller DBs and his physicality shows.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Good work as zone blocker pic.twitter.com/ZADjq7dkKX

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

In this play we have him going up to the second level after a good block. Excellent blocking work in zone.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Used many times as split-zone blocker pic.twitter.com/PzGHbFqp8h

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

This was one of the ways he was used the most. Split-zone requires a player on the other side of the formation to come and block the DE. Normally, this is the TE’s role. Arroyo is physical and strong, but he needs to improve his technique, so we have good snaps and some very bad snaps from him in this regard.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Initiating the contact with head pic.twitter.com/alGurjYMsC

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

As mentioned, Arroyo’s problem with blocking is not a question of effort, but rather of technique. Here he lowers his head and loses contact.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Not good tech but he is a fighter pic.twitter.com/l4pr9WV7sK

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

Even with these technical issues, he fights until the end of the snap.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Great effort but need a better tech pic.twitter.com/00InJfb0ji

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

He almost misses the target but his leverage and willpower to fight until the end make him win the block.


Elijah Arroyo, TE, #8

Not a people mover pic.twitter.com/HkV8XEGwPP

— Alexandre Castro (@alexcastrofilho) May 2, 2025

He won’t be your main blocker, but he could be the TE2 like Juwan Johnson did on Kubiak’s Saints.

Final Thoughts


I confess that Arroyo wasn’t on my first list of TE targets. I’ve always looked for blocking ability as a differentiator in prospects. However, the Seahawks seemed to be more interested in someone similar to Juwan Johnson (the team had interest in him in the FA); a guy who isn’t an exceptional blocker, but who can contribute in packages with two TEs. This also shows that the team is satisfied/confident with what AJ Barner can do in terms of blocking.

For this pick to “earn more points” it needs to be finalized by trading Noah Fant. If he stays healthy, I have a lot more confidence in what Arroyo can do in Kubiak’s scheme than the veteran.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/5/4...lijah-arroyo-be-used-seattle-seahawks-offense
 
John Schneider talks about creating a ‘consistent, championship-caliber football team’

NFL: OCT 03 Rams at Seahawks

Photo by Jeff Halstead/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

John Schneider sits down with former team psychologist Michael Gervais for a wide-ranging interview.

Michael Gervais is a well-known sports psychologist who used to work directly with the Seattle Seahawks. He sat down with Seahawks General Manager John Schneider for an hour long interview, touching on a lot of subjects.

I’m guilty of thinking about John’s job strictly in terms of the football roster and coaches. As a general manager, his position is wide ranging involving overseeing everything in the entire organization. He still wants to do things better than they’ve ever been done before. If you thought that was just a Pete Carroll mantra, think again.

“I tell people all the time, nothing has changed…philosophically since Pete [Carroll] and I walked through the door here in 2010. We’re trying to do it better than everybody else every single day.

One thing that we always knew but was never directly talked about - John Schneider wants to win.

“The fans know every day that…we’re going to have a team that’s not going to win 2 or 3 games or something like that. We’re not trying to get a certain draft pick.”

Continuing on from that, Schneider drew upon the idea of tanking, a common practice in the NBA.

“To me, that’s unacceptable.”

Yeah, that’s pretty cut and dry to me. Tanking in the NFL is career suicide, where it seems like coaches and GMs are turned over every few years. If Seattle loses that many games, Schneider loses his job.

John also discussed the decisions made to pay all of their LOB-era players instead of moving on from some of them. He mentioned that it made it tough to fill out the roster because of the need to “rob Peter to pay Paul.”

“We kind of had to fit some other players that didn’t really fit our mold of the tough, gritty, swaggy, smart, reliable football players…we went off course a little bit.”

Those draft classes in the mid and late 2010s are evidence of that statement. Hopefully Schneider has learned from those mistakes…the past few draft classes seem to have the team going in the right direction.

There are plenty more things that Gervais and Schneider talked about in this lengthy interview. If you’ve got the time, it’s worth a listen!

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/5/5...consistent-championship-caliber-football-team
 
The Seahawks picked Grey Zabel, Nick Emmanwori, but what would YOU have done?

2025 NFL Draft - Rounds 2 & 3

Photo by Perry Knotts/Getty Images

Voice your thoughts on three of the most intriguing picks, and if you would make a different choice than John Schneider.

With the new rookies in camp, and the NFL draft only 10 days past, the buzz of Spring football is still strong. Let’s reflect on the Seattle Seahawks rookie class and take the opportunity to play armchair General Manager for a moment. Not the predictive version that John Gilbert runs and announces the winners, but put the entire draft in a vacuum and tell us if you’d have done things differently!

I lay before you three options. This has been a wildly heralded draft, replete with huge upside in the top of the draft and strong possibility of big steals in the late rounds. Therefore, it’s not as easy as “L.J. Collier or Literally Anyone Else”, but we’ve got some options nevertheless.

Grey Zabel OR ?


From John Schneider’s insinuations, this year was a carbon copy of last. Seattle’s always interested in trading down, but nothing came through the lines that warranted pulling the trigger.

Sticking at 18, Jihaad Campbell or one of the top wide receivers (Matthew Golden?) would have been available.

The value of guard and center continues to get pounded in draft coverage. Unquestionably Zabel was the biggest need, but looking at how the rest of the round progressed, do you like the value there or does something else catch your eye?

Trade up for Nick Emmanwori OR keep all four Day 2 picks


We know from Schneider that they had a first round grade on Emmanwori, if not virtually identical to Zabel. To the Seahawks, this was worth it.

But oh, what FOUR picks between 50 and 92 had promised! Are you ok with losing 82 and landing TE Elijah Arroyo at 50?

By then, Emmanwori would have been long gone, but some of the best receivers of the draft were still around even in the 80s.

Day 2 could have looked something like:

  • Arroyo
  • One of the defensive line studs like Shemar Stewart or even Mike Green
  • Center Jared Wilson
  • Jalen Milroe

Robbie Ouzts OR Shedeur Sanders


I’m kidding. Calm down.

Schneider went ballistic in Round 5, trading around a gazillion times. So really, they could have stuck in a couple of places, and almost anyone from the back end of the fourth would have been available. But let’s say for argument sake, they hadn’t moved down so far and ended up with a player who’ll be converted to fullback in the fifth round, and instead we dream of:

Robbie Ouzts OR Marcus Mbow


Ranked the 6th best guard in the entire draft, Mbow was taken with the 18th pick in the fifth round while Mel Kiper was losing his mind on set. Zah Frazier was also available, a cornerback from the same school as Riq Woolen who was a mild surprise to be still available at that point.

Either way, Seattle could have walked out of that round with guaranteed solid competition for the final guard spot or third corner. Instead, days after declaring Brady Russell was officially converting to fullback, they drafted one.

Vote now! Tell us your different selection in the comments.

Join the comments by scrolling below! You can sign up for a commenting account here and we have full-time moderators to enforce the Community Guidelines.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/5/5...ks-armchair-gm-john-schneider-grey-zabel-fans
 
Steelers trade George Pickens two months after acquiring DK Metcalf

Pittsburgh Steelers v Seattle Seahawks

Photo by Jane Gershovich/Getty Images

So much for a Metcalf/Pickens duo in Pittsburgh.

The Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver duo of George Pickens and former Seattle Seahawks star DK Metcalf lasted all of two months.

With a year left on his rookie deal, Pickens has been dealt to the Dallas Cowboys in a good ol’ fashioned game of draft pick exchanges.

⚠️ TRADE ALERT ⚠️

We’ve agreed to terms to acquire WR George Pickens and a 2027 6th-round pick from the Steelers in exchange for a 2026 3rd-round pick and a 2027 5th-round pick.

: https://t.co/6bwTbmwTSW | @blockchain pic.twitter.com/m3C0JcyzxX

— Dallas Cowboys (@dallascowboys) May 7, 2025

Any major contract extension is now Dallas’ problem, much in the way the Seahawks sent Metcalf to a team willing to pay him north of $30 million/year. The Cowboys were probably on the search for a WR2 for a good while to complement CeeDee Lamb and the Steelers seemingly had enough of Pickens.

This is relevant to the Seahawks in the sense that they do play Pittsburgh this season. I don’t think it’s some secret that there was, shall we say, high potential for a Metcalf/Pickens duo to be a little bit internally contentious, but now that’s not a problem. Pickens is known for tremendous contested catch abilities, the one thing Metcalf has rarely been great at, but also he occasionally has issues with effort, disasterclasses like the season finale against the Cincinnati Bengals, and he’s had his fair share of 15-yard penalties, fines, and clashes with other players and his own coaching staff.

The Steelers’ quarterback depth chart consists of Ohio State rookie Will Howard, Mason Rudolph, and Skylar Thompson. No doubt the NFL world is waiting anxiously to see if Aaron Rodgers will go to Pittsburgh. As for that wide receiver group outside of Metcalf? Yeah...

  • Robert Woods
  • Calvin Austin
  • Lance McCutcheon
  • Roman Wilson
  • Scotty Miller
  • Ben Skowronek
  • Roc Taylor
  • Ke’Shawn WIlliams
  • Brandon Johnson

You’ve got a mixture of aging veterans and a who’s who of “who’s he?” on that depth chart.

Good luck in Pittsburgh, DK.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/5/7...-pickens-cowboys-dk-metcalf-seahawks-nfl-news
 
Report: Seahawks in talks with Shaq Griffin for potential reunion

San Francisco 49ers v Seattle Seahawks

Photo by Stephen Brashear/Getty Images

Having skipped the position in the draft, a draft pick of their own may come back to save the day.

The Seattle Seahawks made some nifty draft picks at the end of April, but a cornerback was not one of them.

Looking to bolster both the depth chart at minimum, Seattle is back in conversation with a former draft pick of their own, Shaquill Griffin.

The two sides had been in discussion before the draft, and now that the Seahawks have emerged without another CB, Griffin is a strong candidate to make a deal before camp breaks.


#Seahawks are in discussions with free-agent corner Shaquill Griffin on a potential reunion, sources told @BradyHenderson and me.

Seattle is looking for veteran corner help and has Griffin - who made a Pro Bowl as a Seahawk in 2019 - high on its list. No deal reached as of now. pic.twitter.com/TaiUDmlb2Z

— Jeremy Fowler (@JFowlerESPN) May 7, 2025

Griffin played his most successful football by far in Seattle, before getting a bigger payday with the Jacksonville Jaguars where things never went as well as the price tag.

Not a big interception guy at all, Griffin played all 17 games for the Minnesota Vikings last season and recorded two INT, despite being listed as a starter in only three games. His passer rating allowed was terrible in Jacksonville, but post-Jacksonville he has actually been better than all of his Seattle years in the past two seasons.

The top of the Seahawks’ cornerback room consists of Devon Witherspoon, Riq Woolen, and Josh Jobe. Nehemiah Pritchett and Shemar Jean-Charles are among the reserves looking to stay on the roster if not get on the field during the regular season.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/5/7...-seahawks-corner-shaquill-griffin-free-agency
 
Let’s chat: What’s your favorite kickoff time for Seahawks football?

Lumen Field

Photo by Kirby Lee/Getty Images

How early or late do you like your Seahawks football?

We’re t-minus six days until the release of the 2025 Seattle Seahawks regular season schedule. While we know which opponents the Seahawks will be facing, the dates and the order in which they’ll occur is TBD. You might not think it matters that much, but I sure wish the Seahawks could’ve played the New York Giants last season after they made major tweaks to their defense.

The typical NFL regular season timeslots are 10 am PT, 1 pm (1:05 or 1:25 depending on which network has the doubleheader), and 5:15-5:20 pm for primetime. Occasionally you’ll get a 6:30 am PT kickoff for an international game in Europe. Today’s discussion is all about your preferred time to watch the Seahawks play. This is by no means a cut-and-dry answer for many of you. Keeping in mind we have fans from all around the world, a 10 am kickoff may benefit our European-based 12s who can at least still watch the team in daylight hours. There are also work- or other life-related reasons for preferring one timeslot over another.

Once upon a time I loved the Seahawks in primetime. They’ve not been winning many of those lately and it also means I’m working pretty close to midnight handling news write-ups, Winners and Losers, etc. So while the benefit of a standalone Seahawks national TV game is that I get to watch NFL RedZone all day, it does come with drawbacks.

Unironically, I love 10 am kickoffs. The Seahawks not only have drastically improved their W-L record from the Pete Carroll era through year one of Mike Macdonald, but I just love waking up to football on a Sunday morning out on the west coast. I have enough time to write and edit at Field Gulls and watch Sunday Night Football uninterrupted. And if the Seahawks lose then I still have the rest of the day to do other things and not go to bed all pissed off.

That one game in Germany, though? Yeah, I need to be in a time zone east of the Pacific in order for that to be tolerable again.

Comment away! Tell us your favorite Seahawks kickoff times.

Join the comments by scrolling below! You can sign up for a commenting account here and we have full-time moderators to enforce the Community Guidelines.

Source: https://www.fieldgulls.com/2025/5/8...f-time-seattle-seahawks-football-nfl-schedule
 
Back
Top