This is a very exciting time to be a Seattle sports fan.
The Mariners feel very relevant this year, and just made three significant trades before the trade deadline to put all their chips on the table to compete for the division in 2025. Long suffering Mariner fans cannot ask for more than that. If they do not reach the playoffs in the Fall, it will not be for lack of effort from their front office, and ownership. I believe they will get there, and adding Josh Nailor with now yesterday’s efforts of landing Eugenio Suarez, and Caleb Ferguson doesn’t just make them playoffs contenders, but title contenders in an American League that is a bit up for grabs.
Even the most pessimistic Mariner fan has to be getting excited these days. I know I am, and I have been a curmudgeon about the M’s for two decades now.
Overshadowed a bit by the splashy move for Suarez yesterday, the Seattle Seahawks made a big move of their own by extending GM John Schneider through 2030, tying him together their bright young head coach Mike Macdonald for the next five years. People can feel however they want to about this decision from Seahawk ownership, but they obviously felt this was vital to do, and I applaud them for it. It shows the players and fans that there is total unity and stability within the power structures of the organization, and the importance of that cannot be underestimated, in my view.
Good NFL teams have stability and harmony between their coaching staff and front office. Bad NFL teams generally do not.
On the whole, I really like the breaking news of the Seattle Seahawks extending their general manager John Schneider long term through 2030. I appreciate that there exists differing views of Schneider amongst the fanbase, and if someone wants to make a snarky remark that the team he assembled hasn’t done much in recent years, they are welcome to it. I hold a different opinion, and it is one that is heavily backed up by ESPN.
On Monday, ESPN published an extensive article that ranked the NFL teams with the best rostered talent under the age of 25. The Houston Texans with star QB CJ Stroud, corner Derek Stingly and pass rusher Will Anderson were ranked number one, but the Seattle Seahawks were ranked number two, just ahead of the Washington Commanders with Jayden Daniels (a team and QB that is a sexy pick in NFC to make a big splash in the playoffs this year).
ESPN noted that Seattle has three blue chip players on rookie contracts in WR Jaxson Smith Njigba, CB Devon Witherspoon, and DT Byron Murphy, all players that play premium positions. By definition, a blue chip player is someone with the talent to be a regular pro bowl player, as well as being All-Pro. Having that quality of talent at premium spots is a huge benefit for Seattle, and the fact that they are young gives reason for longer termed optimism for this team moving forward.
EPSN also singled out rookie QB Jalen Milroe as a player with value and potential, along with the upside talents of pass rusher Derek Hall, rookie safety/linebacker Nick Emmanwori, left tackle Charles Cross, rookie guard Grey Zabel, and running backs Ken Walker and Zach Charbonnet. It is clear they appreciate what John Schneider has been doing in the draft the past few years, even if the common fan is growing a bit impatient with this process.
This, for me, is why I am fully aboard keeping John Schneider around. With final say of the draft finally placed on his shoulders instead of resting for years with Pete Carroll, Schneider is building this thing in the classic Ron Wolf Green Bay Packer way, I believe. For about four years now, since trading away Russell Wilson, Schneider has primarily been taking best players on his draft board instead of chasing needs like they did when they drafted LJ Collier and Rashaad Penny in round one years back.
In result, Seattle has stayed more competitive each year than the Vegas odds makers penciled them being before each season, and while I get it if records of 9-8 and 10-7 don’t impress fans who are pining for the old Legion Of Boom days, I, for one, appreciate watching meaningful NFL football in December instead of watching a team that is completely out of the hunt with four games in the regular season to go. Been there, and did that far too often in the nineties.
This year, I have more excitement about the Seahawks than I have in years. I believe in the new coaching staff under Mike Macdonald. I think the defense has potential this year to be very exciting. I believe that the Klint Kubiak offensive scheme can be an ideal match to the Macdonald defense, in time.
I am not thinking Super Bowl or bust for the Seahawks this year, and I don’t know if I will be thinking that next season, but we will see. If Sam Darnold guides this offense well enough, and Jalen Milroe puts in all the hard work developing behind him, I will take a ton of comfort in John Schneider continuing to draft the way he has been doing lately, though, and there are other methods to building a championship contender that are going in the favor of Seattle moving forward.
In 2026, the Seattle Seahawks will have one of the very best cap space situations in all of professional football for the first time in ages, and it even gets better in 2027. Jody Allen isn’t stupid as an NFL owner, and in my opinion, it was a smart of her to get Schneider locked in long term, and matched with the long length of Macdonald’s contract. Let these two men work together building this team with a cohesive vision. This feels right to me.
I would also say that this signing might be an indication Jody isn’t intending to sell this team anytime soon. If she is, locking Schneider down long term doesn’t feel very incentivizing, especially considering how new owners love to bring in their own regimes. Why do that to John?
Nah, I might have the total wrong read on this, but I kinda feel like this might be signaling that Jody isn’t looking to rush to sell this team in order to fulfill her late brother’s trust. If anything, extending Schneider might actually buy her time to find the right ownership group she wants this team to have, and that ownership group might even include herself.
But that is another bit of writing for another time.
For now, I am just happy about this news. It makes the Seattle Seahawks feel even more stable as an NFL franchise. I like stable.
I can now see a vision of Seattle sports in the near future that have the Mariners and Seahawks being class organizations in their respective professional sports. Two teams that entered their leagues together at the same time in the 1970’s. Rarely have I had this level of optimism with both teams simultaneously, but I do today, and this is awesome.
This last Tuesday was a rough one for me, I won’t lie. The news of Ozzy Osbourne passing away hit me, quite unexpectedly, like a runaway locomotive. People who know me well, know how much of an old school metalhead I am, and how much this guy meant to me. Therefore, I had a hard time holding back emotion when folks reached out to me, and after a few different back and forths, I didn’t really want to talk much with folks.
Ozzy was such a unique soul, and heavy metal is still such a polarizing genre of music that I feel when I am forced to share my views on the music to people who are not fans of it, it puts me in a very defensive position to which I derive very little enjoyment out of, if I am being perfectly honest. I feel the same way when talking about football to people who don’t much like American football, and feel it is too barbaric, and beneath them to understand it.
“You don’t like football.. cool.. please, there is absolutely no need on my end to have a discussion with you about why you don’t like it.”
“Okay, you don’t get the fanfare of Ozzy Osbourne.. cool, cool.. cool.”
Yeah, the passing of Ozzy put me in a spot, but instead of wallowing in mourning, I very much wanted to spend Tuesday evening with my family at Climate Pledge Arena watching some quality Summertime WNBA basketball with the upstart Seattle Storm hosting the inferior Dallas Wings. A quality Storm win was exactly what my soul yearned for that night.
Well, the Storm laid an absolute egg in front of me, woefully losing in a blowout, and as I walked out of the arena, out about $350 dollars, having to reassure a young grade schooler that the Storm have beaten the Wings before, many times over, I had an overwhelming thought in my head that had become my singular beacon of hope in this sea of darkness.
Thank God that the Seattle Seahawks are starting training camp.
For many months now, I think the news cycle has been a continual masterclass shit show in global and national news. This is not a blog that weighs into social issues and politics, but if I ever needed sports and entertainment to provide pleasant distractions, this would definitely be the time, and the place for it.
The Seattle Mariners have proved to be a fun story this year, and more than a pleasant distraction for even for the more skeptical M’s fans. How can one not get wrapped up in the Cal Raleigh magic, and the thought that if this team makes the postseason, they would be poised to make perhaps historic damage?
That said, heart of hearts, I am a pure football fella, and this is a pure football blog devoted to the Seattle Seahawks, the team that I love in almost unnatural and in very irrational ways. So, let’s fucking go with this training camp, preseason games, and the 2025 season. I need it like I need a water fountain in the desert in late July.
I have no idea how 2025 will go for the Seahawks, but I am more excited about them this year than I have been in quite some time. It is not so much an excitement built on the belief that Seattle can be a top contender this year, but a gleeful excitement in seeing how well they can transform into being a quality team with a clear identity that will prove to be a very tough out on Sundays.
It is more than fair to be skeptical about them this year, and I don’t get bent up about any pessimistic national takes. Nobody knows how good (or bad) Sam Darnold will be as the new QB1, and we don’t know how quickly new coordinator Klint Kubiak will positively transform the offensive line, and get this offense moving in the right steadfast direction that head coach Mike Macdonald would like to see it become as a compliment to his defense. If you are skeptical that Seattle doesn’t have enough at receiver after trading away DK Metcalf, I am not going to waste any breath trying to convince you they will be fine. Let’s just see where all this goes.
I have genuine optimism that Macdonald’s defense will be elite this year, and history shows that if an offense can crack near the top ten in rushing yards and it is matched with a top five defense, that is generally good for 10 or 11 wins, regardless of who the quarterback is on the team.
So the mission for the Seattle Seahawks in 2025 is clear as daylight on a mid Summer day. Run the snot out of the ball in a “fuck the pass game” sorta offensive scheme, and play great defense. Sounds like something pleasantly familiar in the Pacific Northwest. I’m ready for it. I need it.
Here are a few things that I am really excited to see this preseason.
General Sam Darnold And Commando Jalen Milroe
I get it that many fans are nervous about how things will go for the Seattle Seahawks at quarterback this year. However, I am not one of them.
I am genuinely more excited about Seattle’s quarterback room than I have been since peak Russell Wilson, and I say this knowing full well that it is a total mystery how well this room will be in 2025. I like the vibe of Darnold, Milroe, and Drew Lock, though. They are young, athletic, and they all appear to be genuinely good dudes who are going to be working hard to push each other, and make a potentially good room a great one.
The guy that I think most fans are nervous about appears to be QB1. That’s fine, I guess. Personally, I don’t get why, and I have heard all the narratives around Darnold about how he handles pressure (or doesn’t). In my opinion, I think a lot of that is overblown, and the people who are the loudest about it are also self professed huge Geno Smith fans, which I have no problem with, but it does paint a picture of how dug in people can be with their prior views.
In the world of social media darlings, content creators on YouTube, and people who get paid handsomely on sports media platforms, it becomes harder to back down off of takes, I believe. I can easily see a reality where Darnold guides Seattle into the playoffs, and there will be people saying that had they stuck with Geno Smith, they would have gone even farther, or done better. I would be willing to lay sizable cheddar on that being a thing.
For me, however, being a Geno Smith fan, I find the decision to not pay Geno and move onto Darnard a very interesting one, and have stated so on this blog multiple times over. What is the gamble really?
Do diehard Geno Smith fans honestly believe that he is going to out duel Patrick Mahomes and the the Kansas City Chiefs for the AFC West division this year, or next?
Even if you are a big time Sam Darnold skeptic, it is not like Seattle has committed anything long term to him, at all, and I think his mostly solid play of 2024 more than warrants a good long look to see if he can be the franchise quarterback here. I am not going to say one way or the other whether Darnold will be a hit, but if he does prove this year that his campaign last season wasn’t a fluke, you would have to feel pretty damn good about that moving forward, wouldn’t you? I know I would.
I would also just simply say that everything Klint Kubiak wants this offense to be fits the things Darnold has shown to do very well. It’s playing under center, mixing run plays with play action, and motion. If you were to dig into the metrics of how well Darnold plays under center, throwing out of play action, you would be pleasantly surprised, and this isn’t just isolated by his one solid year last year with the Vikings.
During the second half of a lost season in Carolina back in 2022, when their coach got fired and their interim coach took over, Darnold was reinserted into the starting lineup over none other than one Baker Mayfield, and they went on a nice stretch of winning football running the piss out of the ball with Darnold during what he does best; play action passing. You might remember the Panthers coming to Seattle and running the snot out of the football against Pete Carroll’s defense and Darnold handily game managing them to victory. I remember it well.
So, yeah, I do have confidence in Darnold this year, and possibly beyond. The style of offense that they will be going after is probably only going to ask him (or any other quarterback) to throw 25 times a game, and out of those 25 passes, the vast bulk will ideally be play action. This is what Brock Purdy does for San Francisco, and this is what Jared Goff does for the Lions. That’s it.
But neither the Lions nor the 49ers have an intriguing ace up their sleeve that Seattle appears to have with Jalen Milroe, and it is this ace that Seattle could play in each and every game that has me most excited. I have said it before, and I will say it again, Jalen Milroe was one of two QBs in last year’s draft that I was interested in them drafting. I liked Jaxson Dart, and I liked Milroe. Of the two, Milroe had me the most excited because of his immense upside as a runner and deep ball passer.
Every time Milroe steps onto the field for the Seattle Seahawks this year, he will potentially be a nightmare inducing runner on third and short, fourth and short, and in goal line situations. It isn’t just his freakish athleticism and speed, either.
His running instincts feel on par with Lamar Jackson, and I can see scenarios, as the season advances, where Kubiak just randomly throws him into games midfield when it isn’t third and short, but first down, just to fuck with defensive coordinators. I can also see scenarios where he badly beats defenses with his arm rather than legs when everyone is sucking up to stop his running prowess.
The single most exciting news that came out of June mini camp was the last two days of practices where Jalen Milroe looked noticeably improved as a passer to all media eyes watching. So much so that, by some reports, he looked like the best player practicing on both of those days.
Jalen Milroe has always had a good deep ball to his game, and he has shown through college an ability to go through progressions from the pocket, but if he successfully improves his footwork mechanics as a passer, and thus improves his short to intermediate accuracy, then I do believe that Darnold’s tenure in Seattle could be a short one even if he play well in this scheme.
Milroe has superstar potential, that is his upside. It is not franchise quarterback upside, it is superstar quarterback upside, and it is not a crazy thought to think he couldn’t develop into a franchise quarterback in the quality of a Lamar Jackson, or a slight notch below, if his accuracy improves and it sounds like he is working his ass of to improve it.
So, yeah. I am excited about Seattle’s QB room. This is top of my list of intrigue.
Young talented offensive linemen emerging with proper NFL coaching, finally
I will push back on any suggestions that Seattle didn’t do enough this offseason to fix their offseason line, even with drafting Grey Zabel in the first round. Zabel was the right player to pick in round one, no question, but I don’t think this was a great free agent class to throw money at guards and center outside of one center who seemed determined to sign elsewhere and one guard with a questionable knee injury who balked at coming to Seattle for a physical before signing with the Vikings.
I am going to take a contrarian view that says Seattle did more than enough to address their offensive line by bringing in veteran offensive line coaches John Benton and Rick Dennison in addition to drafting Zabel. There is talent on Seattle’s offensive line that has not been fully tapped, I strongly believe that. Most of this issue has to do with prior coordinators not committing enough to the run, and not committing enough to specific blocking scheme.
You do not improve an offensive line by throwing big money at marginal veteran talent just because they are out there and you have a need at the position. You improve your offensive line by drafting well and coaching the talent up in ways that fit what they do best. This is what I think Seattle is now set to do this year. They hired really good veteran offensive line coaches, and they are committing to a scheme that will better serve the talent that they drafted the past few years. I am excited to see how it comes together, and I say that knowing that it might take until the midway point in the season where we see it all gelling.
Seattle has offensive tackles perfectly built to run outside zone concepts, and last year, they drafted a guard in Christian Haynes who was one of the best pure zone blocking guards in college football. What did former coordinator Ryan Grubb do? He passed the fuck out of the ball instead of running it, and then he adopted gap scheme concepts to mix in with zone, never really letting his young as original sin offensive linemen to gain confidence and chemistry together.
Those horseshit days of offensive coaching are over with in Seattle. Kubiak may not win personality contests, but he will make damn sure that his offensive line wins with a fuck ton of run blocking down the stretch of the 2025 season. I am all about it. I could print a blue and green t-shirt that reads “run the damn ball” and wear it every Sunday this Fall.
This offensive line may not be tops in the league this year, but they sure as shit won’t be bottom. Bank on it.
A Heavy Metal headbangingly fun ground attack
“Run to the hills. Run for your lives!”
Ah, the sweet sounds of Bruce Dickinson’s voice souring high above Steve Harris’s galloping bass line of the epic 1982 heavy metal classic Run To The Hills by Iron Maiden. This song should firmly be in my brain every time Seattle is on offense this year. Run early, run often, hit some easy play action gimmes, and fucking run it some more, gosh darn dang it all.
I could give two flying fucks if whether Ken Walker has the big breakout year fans have been pining for out of him. It would be awesome if he did, and he finally lives up to his superstar potential, but Seattle feels especially loaded up at running back this year, and that is what landing Damien Martinez late in the draft does to my thoughts and feels. I think Martinez is legit RB1 potential in the league, and most definitely Zach Charbonnet is that already. I am also very high on Kenny McIntosh and feel like this zone blocking scheme is really going to fit his style well.
Seattle is going to keep all four of these talented backs. I expect them all to play, and play well. If K9 finally puts together a full healthy season, awesome, but if not, I don’t have a lot of worries here. Just an overwhelming dose of optimism for this unit that will also feature rookie fullback Robbie Outz who played with Milroe at Alabama, and would know immediately how to play with his unique skillset. Keep that in mind as you watch these preseason games unfold.
I need that Run The Damn Ball t-shirt printed. I might need several of them for every other day of the week this Fall.
Mike Macdonald’s Seal Team Six Defense
You fair weathers want to know what the difference is between Pete Carroll’s legendary Legion Of Boom defense, and the one that Mike Macdonald has designs on building here is?
Pete put together a very simple scheme but he collected smart, talented badass men to pull it off who were a fascinating combination of bigger, stronger, and faster at different spots. Offenses knew what to expect, but they still had to face it, and it was like a legion of jacked up berserkers coming at them with every snap of the ball. It was truly terrifying with terrifyingly bad intentioned players, but it had a shelf life. The league changed its rules that prohibited much of its style, and its star players eventually started to breakdown physically from all the years of ultra violence that it played with.
Mike Macdonald doesn’t ask his players to play with the same reckless abandon. He wants them to be physical, but he insists upon them to be schematically very smart and versatile. He wants every player to know what every other player does on every play so that they can also fill those roles if called upon with a given play to do so. His defense is all about disguise and confusion for quarterbacks. He wants his guys to play fast, and forceful, and smart, and completely connected together. He doesn’t want marines, or viking berserker warriors, he wants his players to be elite special forces on the football field. He wants delta force guys, navy seals.
This style of defense takes time to mold. It took him two years to mold it in Baltimore before it became the best unit in the league without a bunch of big named players.
We got a good glimpse of this defense turning the corner during the second half of the season last year. I am excited to see it fully take hold this season.
There is a lot of national buzz and expectation that we finally see the return of a great NFL defense in Seattle, Washington this year, even with those who are reluctant to buy into Darnold, and Kubiak, and the state of the offensive line. I guess that the old adage of defense winning championships isn’t what it used to be.
It will be fun watching Seattle remind the world that without a great defense, offensive stats are for losers, and fantasy football owners. Ask Joe Burrow his thoughts and feels about having a good defense. Joe knows.
Of all the things that I am most ready and excited for in 2025, it is this defense in Seattle to come in an ruin Sundays for quarterbacks and receivers. That’s heavy metal.
In closing..
It is preseason. Fans in 32 markets across America are excited and optimistic.
There will inevitably be disappointment when the regular comes along and concludes. There will be teams that were in the playoffs last year that will not make it back this year. There will be teams nobody is taking seriously right now that will surprise. There will be at least one serious contender who will fall disappointingly flat, probably due to injuries, and maybe even age.
The AFC is, by far, the harder conference to play through than the NFC is. It is not a given that Pete Carroll and Geno Smith will fair well together in Vegas. The team is not devoid of talent, but that is going to be a tough division that they will be in, and it’s inside a tough conference. This is why I don’t totally understand the Raider fanfare and hype is seemingly this big this year, but if it does work out for them, it would be pretty cool. I would enjoy seeing them do well.
Seattle, on the other hand, gets much less fanfare, and I actually kinda like that. There is not a lot of flash with these Seahawks right now. There is no big chiseled x receiver, there is no quarterback who is going to provide juicy soundbites and be active online, there is no big named pass rusher, or superstar middle linebacker.
Still, there is talent, and more importantly, there seems to be a connectedness with the players unlike anything we have seen here in a long time. Everyone showed up to mini camp, and I cannot remember the last time that ever happened here in Seattle, even at the height of Carroll, or Mike Holmgren.
I think these guys really dig Macdonald, they believe, and they want to put in the work. This is why I think this is the real year one for Macdonald here. Last year, it wasn’t his preferred offensive coordinator, and there were guys here that proved to be more Carroll holdovers that fellas buying in. They are gone, and what remains are solely Macdonald dudes.
The Macdonald commandos and seal team sixes. That is what we are about it see unfold.
Who knows if whether Jalen Milroe will ever blossom into a quality NFL quarterback in Seattle, but let me throw out three names for you to mull over.
Lamar Jackson, Michael Vick, and Randall Cunningham.
Over the decades, these are quarterbacks who I have especially loved to watch play football. They are rare air stuff at the position who have threatened defenses on every single down with their legs and arm, in elite ways, that few could ever do.
Independent of the Seattle Seahawks, Lamar Jackson is my favorite football player to watch. I have told people that I would be willing to offer Baltimore five first round picks for him, if I were the Seattle GM, and that is not hyperbole.
I believe that, pound for pound, he is the most physically gifted football player on the planet given the position his plays. His legs negate a defense’s ability to function in man coverage, and he has developed the pocket talent to beat your defense whenever they are in zone. He can still dial up twenty yards on the ground at any point in the game while surveying from the pocket, even against zone when eyes are on him.
Best of all, Lamar enhances your offense’s ability to run the football independent of your offensive line, and running backs. He does this not only as a runner himself, but as a guy defenders have got to account for against read options, zone read, and any other situation where you have got to decide as a second level defender to choose targeting him or the running back with a potential hand off.
If that last sentence is a lot to chew on, let me make that more succinct. He makes your linebackers and DBs more tentative on run plays, and therefore, makes it easier for any running back to run the football. Look at what 30 year old Derrick Henry was able to do as a player last year as soon as he went to Baltimore. He could have easily been made league MVP with the rejuvenated he had paired with Lamar.
Now, let’s talk about former Alabama quarterback Jalen Milroe finding his way to Seattle during the NFL draft. There is a lot of meat on this bone to chew on for Seahawk fans who cannot help but daydream about what Milroe could become for their favorite team down the road.
It would be highly presumptive to assume that Jalen Milroe is going to be the second coming of Lamar Jackson a few years down the road for the Seahawks. It would be equally presumptive to make an assertion that Sam Darnold is set to be the Matt Flynn to his Russell Wilson, and Milroe is going to light training camp on fire and steal the QB1 job out from under Darnold’s nose this Summer; that is highly unlikely that will happen, and I cannot stress that enough.
That said, Jalen Milroe has out of this world physical talents as a quarterback. Pound for pound, he might be the most physically gifted athlete in this entire 2025 draft class. He’s big at 6-2, 217 pounds, and jacked up with muscles. He runs at an elite 4.4 speed, and some believe he might be the best instinctual running quarterback to ever come out of college (I can see that). He has a cannon arm that effortlessly launches beautiful deep passes downfield with pretty good accuracy, actually.
He also has a ton of work to do in order to develop as a functional passing quarterback. Whenever his mechanics would get sloppy in college, it would lead to some horrendously inaccurate throws. He has got to learn to properly marry up his feet to his arm with consistently in order to deliver reliable short to mid range passer. This will be his first step towards becoming a dependable starting quarterback in the league, and it isn’t impossible for him to clean this up, but it could take time.
This is why he fell all the way to pick 92 for the Seattle Seahawks.
He has tape that will absolutely excite you as a talent evaluator both as a runner and passer when his feet are set right, but he also has tape that will turn you off. His ceiling is through the roof in terms of what he can be as an overall QB1, if he develops properly, but his floor suggests he’s coming into the league as guy who can do some truly special things on the ground with his legs, but it is going to be an adventure with him as a passer if he is forced to start right away.
The clay that he has is really good stuff but the mold is not ready to bake in the oven yet.
Due to this, I cannot say, with any sort of certainty, whether the Seattle Seahawks just drafted an exciting quarterback of the future, or an exciting career backup who will come into games for a hand full of plays, and offer a spark with his legs a la Taysom Hill, or Cordell Stewart. Time will tell, but I can say that I am incredibly excited to find out.
Either way, his traits will bring immediate value to Seattle’s transforming offense, and that matters. Milroe gives Klint Kubiak something few other coordinators in this league have; a young developmental quarterback who will see the field now in certain packages, and will work to develop his game for starting down the road.
Gun to my head, if I had to choose whether Milroe develops as a starter for the Seahawks or stays a career backup, I honestly would not bet against his development, eventually. I don’t say this as a hopeful Seattle Seahawk fan, either.
For as much as we can get excited about his physical potential as a player, it is the inner intangibles that Milroe possesses that make me leery to ever bet against him. For as impressive of a physical talent as he is on a football field, it is what rests inside the young man that makes me think “yup, go ahead and take a shot on that guy.”
It has now come out that through the draft process, NFL front offices absolutely fell in love with Milroe, the person. Teams loved the way he conducted himself in interviews answering hard questions about what happened to him in Alabama during the final stretch of games that saw his mechanics erode. He gave straightforward responses, assuring GMs and coaches that he was very aware that he will need time to develop.
This is why, in the final days leading up to the draft, there was a positive growing buzz around Jalen Milroe. Teams fell in love with the quality of the person over the rawness of the player. Who knows if Vegas was waiting in the weeds after Seattle’s pick at 92 with two late third round picks, but one would think that Pete Carroll, especially, would had a fondness for him as a developmental player behind Geno Smith.
I will also admit that when I saw that Seahawks had brought him into the VMAC a couple weeks before the draft, I got nervous. I didn’t want to see Seattle draft a quarterback high this year after they signed Darnold in free agency. I was good with taking a mid round flyer on someone, but I wanted to see an early and often selection of offensive linemen like most fans probably wanted.
When it got to Seattle’s pick at 18, I got really nervous when Grey Zabel was still on the board, but so was Milroe, and Jaxson Dart. That is why I exploded with excitement when the pick was made, and Zabel’s name was called, but I gotta be honest, in early day two, when Seattle moved up from 52 to 35, I thought it was going to be for Milroe, and it was stressing me the fuck out. I didn’t want him there, either.
When the pick finally happens at 92, later in round three, I was more than fine with it all. My heart sank a bit for Darnold, but I was fine with the selection. The third round felt like ideal value for Jalen Milroe, a passer with unbelievable natural talents, but who will need a lot of developing.
As the dust has settled on this pick, and the overall draft for Seattle, I have gone from liking the Jalen Milroe selection a lot to being head over heels in love with it. It is, by far, my most favorite selection the team made, and I needed that Zabel pick, and I loved the value Seattle found later on in the draft with receiver Tory Horton, and running back Damien Martinez.
Let me quickly break down the two fundamental areas of Milroe’s game that have made me come to love this pick as much as I do, and why I think it all matters greatly for Seattle.
Jalen Milroe the running quarterback
There is hype around Milroe that suggests he is perhaps the greatest pure running back to ever come out of college. Personally, as a Lamar fan, I am hesitant to put my stamp of approval on that take, but I can see why some people say it.
If you look at his tape, it is not just the blinding speed he has as a runner in the open field that impresses. It is that coupled with his instincts inside the muddiness of a pocket, when the pressure breaks down, and he can squirrel between the creases to find open space past the rushing defensive line, forcing the linebackers to come up for the tackle, cutting against them, making them miss, and then hit the jets towards a bunch of DBs who aren’t strong enough tacklers to haul him down with any sort of ease.
This is the stuff that you want to see your starting running back do as an inside runner in a zone blocking scheme. Go look at Milroe’s highlight tape when he keeps the ball and runs. He is just an incredibly gifted, instinctive runner. This is what makes him different.
He is built powerfully to run this way, too. He is a young man carved out of granite. I don’t think it is hyperbole to say that if he came out as a running back, he would have absolutely gone in the first round with the way offensive coordinator’s love to be creative these days. He could be a RB1 with a skillset to launch gorgeous deep balls down field.
But that is not what Jalen Milroe wants to be, and that is not how the Seattle Seahawks see him.. at all.
Jalen Milroe the passing quarterback
His running traits are very obvious, but what he is as a passer, and what he could develop into is where there is real meat on the bone when discussing Jalen Milroe. The best way I could probably describe Milroe, right now, as a thrower of a football, would be Jekyll and Hyde.
When, he’s Jekyll, and he’s in the pocket, keeping his mechanics clean, surveying through his progressions, he can layer gorgeous accurate passes downfield with the best of them. This is why it is a very lazy narrative saying he’s an inaccurate passer. To the contrary, he has shown a good ability to play action out of shotgun, hang tight inside the pocket, and deliver impressive strikes downfield while surveying the field.
When things get clunkier for him, and it leads to Mr Hyde like throws out of him, is when his feet aren’t set, and he still tries to strong arm it downfield, and the pass sails over his open receivers head. When you see that come out of him, that’s when you’re like “whoa, that was pretty bad.”
The problem with him right now, in terms of fitting this new scheme, is that it appears as though his mechanics stay cleaner inside the pocket than when he rolls out, and has a to throw an accurate dart on the move. It looks as though he hasn’t figured out how to tie his feet to his arm yet when he has to throw this way, and that is a big reason why Sam Darnold has a have big leg up on him in this offense right now.
To become a QB1 in a Klint Kubiak system, you have got to do two things fundamentally really well. You have got to play a lot of football directly under center, which Jalen Milroe did not do a lot of in college, and you have got to throw accurately on the move.
Therefore, these are probably the two biggest areas that he will need to clean up a lot before he can truly compete for the QB1 spot. These are the two things that Darnold does really, really well based on how things finally took off for him last year playing for the Vikings.
There is also a third hurdle that Milroe will need to overcome in his development for him to step into the QB1 role, and play with good productivity as an NFL quarterback. He is going to have to learn how to anticipate his throws better.
What do I mean by that?
Kubiak runs a system that is built on timing. It requires receivers who will precisely run patterns to be open at right times in certain areas of the zone coverages, and it is up to the quarterback to properly anticipate when those receivers will break into those open windows (even if they are small windows), and then throw an accurate ball there.
Brock Purdy proved to be a natural at this despite not having a strong arm or great athleticism. There is some stuff with Milroe’s college tape that suggests it will take him time to get there.
It is not that he doesn’t read the field and go through progressions. He has shown that he can do that. It is that there were times on tape where a receiver is breaking open in an area of the field based on the way a defense is playing against the routes, and Milroe doesn’t appear to be anticipating that. That showed up more in 2024 when he was playing in DeBoer’s scheme, which asked more out of him as a passer than what Nick Saban was asking him to do in 2023.
Now, if I am being honest with you, I would say that learning to play under center, fixing your mechanics so that everything with them is second nature, and learning to throw within a timing offense with proper anticipation are all three pretty big hurdles for a young quarterback coming out of college such as Milroe to overcome. Let’s just be clear on that.
That is not to say that he cannot overcome those hurdles, however, and it appears that he has a very serious mindset to get to work on them right away. He’s a very smart kid, a great academic athlete, and he is very self aware. That is why I would never bet against his development.
I also believe that these are the combined traits within him that made Seattle target him, and it is why it feels as though Mike Macdonald is very excited about the young quarterback that John Schneider was able to acquire for him in round three. I get a genuine vibe that Macdonald believes in this guy, and he was his preferred quarterback prospect all along.
What is it that we can most likely expect from Milroe this year and beyond
Jalen is not going to compete for the starting quarterback gig in Seattle this year, but he also hasn’t been drafted to become Taysom Hill 2.0 for Klint Kubiak, and Mike Macdonald made both of these things very clear in his press conference right after they drafted him. Sam Darnold is the starter, Drew Lock is the likely QB2, and Milroe is a unique QB3 who will see the field with special packages designed solely for him to quarterback out of this season. It sounds as though they would like to get him out on the field six to ten plays a game.
My guess is Macdonald would love to use his own version of the tush push with Milroe in short yardage situations, as he was on the record a few weeks back saying how much he loves that play. I can see packages being used around the goal line, as well, where he can threaten with QB keepers and also choose to throw it.
I can also see that, at various points in a game, they might want to go tight end heavy, have Jalen work out of shotgun with run pass option plays, kinda like a wildcat quarterback, but with an arm that will absolutely torch a defense, if defenders decide to sellout versus the run. Macdonald talked about finding ways to use players that fit their special strengths, and this would be a definite strength of Milroe to catch a defense off guard for a bit.
These would be logical ways to use Milroe now while he develops as a more complete passer.
I will also say this about Jalen. If they can successfully smooth out his mechanics, and get him comfortably working under center in a play action roll out offense, I think they will likely see his short range accuracy improve to the point where they could start considering him for the QB1 gig then and there.
That third thing I mentioned in his game that needs work, the throwing with anticipation thing, yeah, I’m not too sure how much that gets fixed behind the scenes as a backup. It is entirely possible that it does, but it also might have to be a thing that improves over time after he ascends to QB1 status, and he gains more experience.
If their intention is to develop him enough to pass the baton to him as a starter in a few years, his process of development might mainly just be about fixing his mechanics. It wouldn’t be impossible for him to be ready to go with it by 2026, but it could be take longer, and if Darnold is playing well enough, they might not feel the hurry to switch out quarterbacks. This is why it is so murky to predict when an appropriate transition to Milroe would be likely, if it happens.
It is a fun thought thinking about Jalen transforming himself into roll out quarterback in this offense, though. Even if his accuracy still gets away from him, here and there, when rolling out, his genuine threat to run will place a ton of pressure on the back end of any defense, and that would allow things to open up further downfield for his receivers.
Kubiak has to be considering ways for which he can take advantage of his skillset in a manner such as this, and how he can draft up an offense that will stare the shit out of linebackers and DBs with any given play. If Milroe can just cleanup his fundamentals, Kubiak could also be the biggest benefactor as he looks to ascend the coaching ranks.
Think about it. If Kubiak does with Milroe what his old boss Kyle Shanahan didn’t achieve with Trey Lance, take a raw but exceptionably athletic college quarterback and turn him into a functionally good passer, he could be the hottest coaching candidate out there with his choice of where he wants to go to build a program.
As for Macdonald, and what he is likely hoping to see come out of this, I think that is even more clear. He spent years in Baltimore watching Lamar as he coached defense. He knows better than anyone in Seattle outside of Schneider what it means to have a true top level duo threat quarterback. He just watched the Eagles win a Super Bowl over the Chiefs with Jalen Hurts.
Macdonald’s ideal stat line for Milroe might be 15 to 25, 220 yards, 2 TDs, but also 10 carries on the ground for another 100 yards and 2 more TDs. If he gets this type of production out of him, week in and week out, it means his offense is running the snot out of the football with Milroe is being efficient and productive enough while his defense is kicking the pants off of the other team’s offense all game long.
If you want to be a physically dominant team that plays great defense, and runs the ball exceptionally well, having a developed Jalen Milroe at quarterback is probably a very good way of going about it. I mean, even if he doesn’t get quite to Lamar heights, if he’s simply a stronger armed version of Jalen Hurts, that’s still pretty damn good, as we all just witnessed a few months back. Hurts, in fact, might be the better, and more achievable pro comp for Milroe.
So there is a lot of incentive out there for Seattle to develop this guy. It would be a gigantic feather in the cap of John Schneider to have found two different franchise quarterbacks in the third round, cementing his status as an all time great NFL GM. It would be massive for Macdonald to have a guy under center who he fully believes in, and plays the game how he appreciates it, and it would be a huge thing on Kubiak’s resume to see him developed.
But for Jalen Milroe, it would be achieving everything that he thought he could be, and should be. A bad ass QB1 in the National Football League.
Time will tell if this happens for him and the team, but they are going to try. This is why he was drafted, and I would not bet against him to figure it out. The more I sit with this pick, the more confidence I have him Milroe’s character to stay grinding and figure it out for him.
If I were to compare him to a big named athlete, in terms of where he is now, and what he can be, I wouldn’t use Lamar or Hurts. I would comp him to former Mariner ace Randy Johnson.
When Johnson came into Seattle, he had incredible rare stuff with his arm and physical traits, out of the atmosphere upside, but he was raw as could be, and some of his pitches were the most wildly inaccurate stuff as you would ever witness. When he was on the bound in the early 1990’s, it was an adventure. He was Jekyll and Hyde personified.
But he loved baseball, and he was determined to figure it out, and he did.
Jalen Milroe loves football, and he has strong inner belief in himself to improve. You can get excited about that intangible and comparison to Randy.
I really hope it happens for him. He will be an easy guy to root for on Sundays, just you wait. I am here for it.
Temper your expectations of him, though, if you believe Seattle just landed a guy ready to jump into the role of QB1, and is going to grow into Lamar 2.0. That is a gigantic expectation to have for him.
At the same time, if you did not like this selection of him at 92, try to have an open mind. It is okay to daydream some about him, and be excited about these special packages that Seattle is intending for him this year. Those packages, alone, could be well worth this selection, and could be the difference in wins, and getting back to the post season again.
Every year, I walk away from watching the NFL draft feeling pretty good about the Seattle Seahawks. I just want to be clear about that, and you are free to take this article with as much of a grain of salt as you wish with the knowledge of this simple fact.
This is want glass half full people do in life, and I am definitely a glass half full type to the extent that I feel I sometimes offend others when I am not as mad and outraged about something as they are. My survival instincts are such that I gravitate to find assurances in the positives, and not dwell upon negatives to the point of walking into the ocean waters to never return again.
If the zombie apocalypse were to happen tomorrow, and I made it through the first day, my thought might become “at least real estate in Seattle will become cheap again.”
So, I was okay with Seattle taking a running back in the first round of the 2018 NFL draft when they could have had Lamar Jackson as a developmental quarterback behind Russell Wilson. I was also fine in 2019, when they reached for a need at edge rusher in LJ Collier instead of taking one of the many good offensive linemen that were available. I was even okay with them taking wide receiver Dee Eskridge in 2021 over all pro center Creed Humphrey when offensive line was clearly their bigger need than a third wideout was. “In Pete and John I trust” was my happy motto in all of these instances.
But these are examples of draft decisions that GM John Schneider has been a part of that have had Seattle Seahawk fans pulling their hairs out, screaming at their television sets, and wanting to see his ass canned, if not his head handed to them on a silver platter (twitter reactions can be intense). This offseason, the anti Schneider delegation of the Seahawk fanbase has grown to an all time high fever pitch, fueled by a 2024 season that saw a dysfunctional Seattle offense with another piss poor offensive line effort, but make no mistake about it; Seattle’s draft history from 2017 to 2021 has been built up ammo against the lovable movie quoting GM.
We will never know for certain if those picks were more influenced by him or Pete Carroll (who had final say over personnel decisions), but it is interesting that in two draft cycles now with Mike Macdonald as coach, Seattle has emphasized the interiors of their defensive and offensive lines with their first pick. That feels very contrasting to time spent with Pete, and it was very eye opening to see Vegas select a running back at 6th overall Thursday night when they could’ve taken offensive tackle Armand Membou, who was regarded the most physically talented offensive lineman in the entire draft class. Let that sink in if you have been more of a Pete person than a John person as a Seattle Seahawk fan over the years.
Anyhoo, I digress from the topic I intended to write about.
The Seattle Seahawks, and maybe specifically GM John Schneider, needed to absolutely destroy this draft after a season of Mike Macdonald taking over for the very popular Pete Carroll, leading the team to the 10-7 record, but just missing out on the playoffs again. For many fans, it was season full of frustrating mixed results. We saw much better defensive efforts, but that was to be coupled with erratic and dysfunctional offensive football.
This led to offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb (popular with diehard Husky fans serving also as Seahawk fans) getting fired, and fueling controversy over airwaves, and social media. Seahawk fans who were also diehard Husky loyalists were more apt to blame Macdonald for the offense’s dysfunction than heaping the blame on Grubb, even though Grubb was clearly out of his depths of understanding professional defenses he was coaching against.
Then we had both Geno Smith and DK Metcalf asking for trades and finding their ways out of the 206 are code (also upsetting to a lot of fans and their supporters in the media). When your starting quarterback and one of your starting receivers wants out, it could be construed by an average fan that all is not great at the VMAC, especially if that average fan was quite attached to said player(s).
So, yeah, John Schneider really needed to nail this draft. Like, he had to crush this mother out of the park, and then some.
Well, I am here to report to you, as a diehard, glass half ful, Seattle Seahawk fan, that he did that. I mean, John Schneider absolutely murdered this motherfucker.
I am not using hyperbole when stating that I believe this could become Schneider’s greatest draft class ever, even greater than the famed 2012 draft that saw us land Bruce Irvin, Bobby Wagner, and Russell Wilson, and many other starters. I needed a day to let this draft settle down with me, and not be too overly reactive with my positivity, but this is where I sit with it two days later.
If you get two quality starters out of a draft, guys who can easily work themselves into extensions after four seasons, that is a pretty good draft haul, and you did well as a front office. I think there is a very reasonable chance in four years time, we could see four top end starters coming out of this class for the Seahawks that they will choose to extend, if not more. That is potentially a massively good haul, and a franchise redefining one, at that.
Let me stress again this again. We could see four of them, but I think there is also a chance that it could be more.
Here are my breakdowns are each player selected in order, and you can decide for yourselves after this piece if you are ready to get more excited about the future of the Seattle Seahawks franchise tucked away in the never rainy always sunny Pacific Northwest.
North Dakota State Guard Grey Zabel
I am reluctant to put this on his plate, but it is impossible not to compare this kid to hall of fame Seattle Seahawk guard Steve Hutchinson. I do think his upside good be pretty close to that, though. That is not to say that he won’t have any welcome the NFL moments as a rookie, he will, but I view him as an instant plug and play player, most likely at left guard, and I think he has the physical traits and game tape to project as a pro bowl guard for Seattle, if not an annual All Pro player. Guys who have the college tape that he has, and the extreme explosive traits that he has generally make for really good NFL offensive linemen. Seattle was extremely fortunate that he was still available at pick 18. For some fun historical context, Hutchinson was taken 17th overall back in 2001. I haven’t been this excited about a Seattle first rounder in ages.
South Carolina Safety Nick Emmanwori
Emmanwori was a popular prospect with Seahawk fans for picking at 18, and Seattle traded up for him in round two, taking him at pick 35. In his press conference, Schneider commented that when Seattle traded up for him, they felt like they acquired two first round picks with him, and Zabel. He was extremely popular with Seattle defensive coaches through the draft process. It is easy to see why. He has the highest performance scoring out of any college safety coming out of the NFL scouting combine, ever. His athleticism is off the charts, and it is paired with a huge 6-3, 220 pound frame. It is easy to compare him to Kam Chancellor (a self confessed hero of his), but I think he’s different. He’s a much better athlete than Bam Bam was, a bit less of a hammer, but maybe more of an overall playmaker. He plays the run like an extra linebacker, though, and is described as a tight end eraser by draft pundits, which is exciting considering who we play against within the division. This is a very exciting pick.
Miami Tight End Elijah Arroyo
There are reports that a number of NFL teams had Arroyo as a top 25 physical talent in this draft, but they are scared away by his injury history from a few seasons ago. Seattle was not scared, though, and took a big swing at the fences by taking him at 50. His 2024 college game tape is an exciting watch, when he played a healthy season, and was a big time playmaker for Cam Ward and the Canes. He is yet another high profile explosive athlete, but better yet, he has an unusually advanced route tree for a college tight end. On top of his explosive traits, his ability to stretch the field as a big man, he is a very gifted route runner, and in Klint Kubiak’s system, route running is the most import thing for any receiver to show. Seattle could elect to keep Noah Fant around to ease Arroyo into this offense in 2025, but I wouldn’t be totally surprised if Seattle chooses to let him go if they feel Arroyo can step right into being a day one starter. It will be interesting to see how it plays out.
Alabama Quarterback Jalen Milroe
At pick 92 in the third round, the Seattle Seahawks took this highly athletic college quarterback. I have to be careful about how I project Milroe because I don’t want to set expectations up to a higher level than they should be right now for him. Due to the fact that there is so much meat on the bone when it comes to this quarterback and how it impacts Seattle with his selection, I will be writing a separate piece about him in the coming days. There is a lot to digest here, but for now, let me say a few short things about him.
I watched a lot of games of his last year when I thought there was a chance he could be a target for Seattle in this draft. He is a phenomenal athlete on the field as a quarterback. He has incredible wheels and instincts as a runner, and he has a cannon of an arm that launches some very impressive deep passes. He is very unpolished as a traditional passer, however, and he will have a lot to clean up as a developmental quarterback, and therefore, it is pretty unrealistic to expect him to compete with Sam Darnold this year for the QB1 job, and it might take him a few seasons to develop into that situation, if he does. In that, I will also say that if Klint Kubiak is successful at cleaning up a few fundamentals of his game, Jalen Milroe has all the physical talents in the world to become a superstar quarterback in the NFL. That is his ceiling, and it is a very exciting thought to think about as a Seattle Seahawk fan.
Notre Dame Defensive Lineman Rylie Mills
Mills had his fans with the draft pundits, and some folks even had a late second round grade on him. He tore up his knee in the college playoffs, however, and wasn’t able to physically test for teams. Due to this, he fell in the draft to early round five, where John Schneider has an excellent track record of making great value selections over the years (AKA Round Five John Schneider Magic). His college tape is pretty impressive as a power rusher, and run stuffer. According to Mike Macdonald, defensive coordinator Aden Durde was banging the table loudly for him. I suspected that Seattle would target a massive nose tackle type, and Mills isn’t that, but he has the traits to play the big power end role in Seattle’s defense that Roy Robertson Harris provided last year, but he will need time to properly heal. His impact on this team might be further down the round, but he’s a very interesting value pick.
Colorado State Receiver Tory Horton
Personally, I am pretty high on Horton as a receiver, and I was anticipating that he would be Seattle’s pick in the third round. I felt like that would be the area he would go, and that was sort of the projections I saw for him alot online. Needless, to say that I was happy to see Seattle get him later in round five with some more Round Five Schneider Magic Making.
I became a Horton stan after I watched a game of his in college a couple years ago when Colorado was battling Colorado State, and I dialed into because of the Coach Prime Time hype that was happening. Naturally, all the talk was about Prime and his kid at quarterback for the Buffs, but during the battle, my eyes kept going to Horton whenever the Rams were on offense. He seemed like a 12th grader playing against 6th grade kids at times, making impressive catch after impressive catch that led to a Colorado State upset over Prime and Son. It was a fun game to watch, and as it stands for the Seahawks, I think he has the talent to challenge for this third receiver role this year, and he could become WR2 down the road, mark my words on this. In his press conference, John Schneider compared him to Packer great Donald Driver, and I can see it.
Alabama Fullback Robbie Ouzts
I will admit that I had no idea who the bleep this cat was when Seattle took him late in the firth round, but after I saw Seattle listing him as a 6-3, 275 pound fullback instead of the tight end role he played for the Tide, I got excited about the prospects of more John Schneider Round Five Magic brewing in our faces again.
Why am I excited about this? This feels like a very Baltimore Raven thing to do, and anyone who knows my thoughts on the Seattle Seahawks knows how much I am desperate for this team to ultimately emulate the Ravens way. I want it so much so that I want the Seahawks to feel like the NFC version of the Ravens, and this pick makes me feel like they are heading more and more towards that. Exciting stuff to think that a big run blocking college tight end from a top SEC program can convert to a big, powerful, forceful lead blocker for Seattle running backs and provide Sam Darnold a bit of a safety outlet as a receiver. I bloody well love this draft pick for Seattle, and if your are desirous for physical running NFL football to return to the PNW you should bloody well love this pick, as well. Go Hawks!
Kansas Guard Bryce Cabeldue
Again, great value day three pick by John Schneider, but this time in round six. Cabeldue was an athletic tackle in college who scored high PFF grades as a zone blocker. Some viewed him as a third round pick talent, and Seattle got him much later. I think he is a guard in Seattle’s system, but he has flexibility to play tackle in a pinch, and maybe even stick there. This selection, I believe puts Anthony Bradford’s roster spot in jeopardy as it sounds like Seattle’s intention is to have him play guard. We shall see.
Miami Running Back Damien Martinez
For as exciting as the Milroe pick is, I think this might be the pick that really puts this draft class over the top. I was shocked to see Martinez available in the seventh round. Martinez feels like the type of back that a team drafts in round four, and elevates quickly as a productive starter for them. He is a powerfully built one cut inside runner who was coached up really well in college to be patient with his blockers, see the holes, and explode through them. This point of patience is critical for a zone blocking attack that is all about the offensive line reaching levels and creating lanes. The zone system requires running backs who are patient to wait for lanes to materialize, and if I am being honest about Ken Walker, that has been a blemish of his as a starting running back for the Seahawks. Martinez is an interesting grab for Seattle.
Iowa Tackle Mason Richman
I haven’t the faintest clue about Richman, and I won’t pretend that I do. A little more digging around on the internet shows that he was a four year starter at left tackle for the Hawkeyes, and had a pass blocking grade 79.6 by PFF last year, which is encouraging. Mel Kiper noted in his A draft grade for Seattle that he really liked this pick, and that is also pretty damn cool.
UNLV Wide Receiver Ricky White
Like Martinez, I was genuinely surprised to see Ricky White still available in the seventh round. He was a highly productive college wide out for the Runnin’ Rebels, a smooth route runner, solid pass catcher who can high point passes, and he’s a separation artist. He didn’t run a fast 40 yard dash at the combine, and this must have sank his draft stock, but he looks more sudden in games than this 40 time suggests. At any rate, his fall benefits Seattle because he is a complete system fit for what Kubiak needs his receivers to be. This was a great value pickup at the end of the draft.
Closing thoughts and feels
As I mentioned above, a good draft class is when you have landed a couple starters who can be long terms pieces to your team’s roster. Guys who can be good enough starters that you look to keep them around into a second contract.
Seattle had three outstanding drafts in a row from 2010 to 2012 that helped define the height of the Legion of Boom era. I think Seattle has had two really good drafts in a row between 2022 and 2023 that has helped them survive the Russell Wilson trade, and build towards a promising future. I believe the 2024 draft is trending well with the big time potential of Byron Murphy, the promising way Tyrice Knight played at linebacker, how AJ Barner played at tight end, and I still believe in Christian Haynes as a serviceable right guard in the future, and I believe Sataoa Laumea belongs as a guard in the NFL, as well.
This draft, however, feels potentially super duper special, and allow me to explain why I see it this way. I will try to make this as succinct as possible.
I believe that Grey Zabel and Nick Emmanwori have the rare athletic traits and game tape at their respective positions on the offensive line, and at safety to be regular pro bowl players, and possibly All Pro players, as well. On top of that, I can see both of them being tone setters on both sides of the ball. I can see Zabel being that nasty play through the whistle ring leader of Seattle’s running attack, and I can see Emmanwori evolving into that spirited back end defender that offensive coordinators have got to account for. The idea of Emmanwori and Devon Witherspoon working together in coverage and as secondary run defenders and blitzers is an exciting concept in my mind.
Elijah Arroyo could be vintage Vernon Davis in this offense. Provided he stays healthy enough, he could easily become a true mismatch receiving tight end who can stretch the field, run all routes, create huge YAC production in space, and generally be a regular pain in the ass for defensive coordinators to think about. Seattle gave up a rare big bodied receiver when they traded DK Metcalf, but they gained one at the tight end position with Arroyo. He has definite pro bowl potential down the road.
Again, I will write more extensively about my thoughts on Jalen Milroe (I have many). For now, I will simply say that if Klint Kubiak can coach some bad tendencies out of him, and clean up his short area accuracy issues, get him to comfortably function in a proper pro style offense, he could become an exciting QB1 down the road. In the meantime, he has a natural skillset that is so rare in this league that I would have to imagine Kubiak and Macdonald have plans for that in packages this year, and that have me wanting to go see more games live. It honestly does.
As for the rest, I think there is a strong chance Seattle found its starting fullback in Robbie Ouzts, and there is a very reasonable chance, in my mind, that Tory Horton can grow into the WR2 role, in time. It would not shock me if Seattle develops eventual starters in Mills, Martinez, and Cabeldue, as well, and I think Ricky White will surprise a lot of Seahawk fans this preseason (he’s a good system fit).
So, as I see it, Schneider has landed at least three likely high end starters who will be fixtures here for the next decade of Seahawk football, and it is somewhat possible that he has landed a fourth one who will be a star quality franchise quarterback. There is probably another starter in Ouzts if he takes to the fullback stop which they seem excited about for him.
There could be three to four other starters coming out of this haul. Not all of these guys will play into second contracts if they develop into starters, but some of them might.
If all of this happens, this will be, without any doubt, John Schneider’s career defining draft class, outdoing the famous Seattle Seahawk draft of 2012. It will put him into the Hall of Fame as a general manager, no doubt, especially if Macdonald and Kubiak develop Milroe into a quality starting quarterback in this league.
All big ifs, I am sure, but that is what we are looking at here. This is the reasonable potential of this draft class. This is what I can comfortably conclude with my glass half full perspective.
And if you want a glass half empty take from me because that is just the way you roll, sure, Elijah Arroyo might never stay healthy enough to be a reliable starting tight end, Milroe might never becomes more than a Taysom Hill gadget player, and it might prove that Seattle should have taken another offensive lineman at 35 instead of a playmaking safety. All of this could also prove true.
Just let me know if you need some encouragement when the zombies eventually show up in your front yard.
Kids across the PNW are likely not going to rush to the Seahawks team store to have their parents purchase for them a Grey Zabel jersey. Nor are they likely going to pretend to be him on the playgrounds during a tag football game.
The average fan won’t watch an explosive run play on their television set, and think to themselves “man, Grey Zabel really took it to that linebacker.”
If Sam Darnold hits Jaxson Smith Njigba for a long touchdown pass, your eyes will not be on Zabel pass blocking, I guarantee it. You won’t be watching him at all.
But Grey Zabel might be the most important draft pick that the Seattle Seahawks have made in years, and a pick most universally loved for Seahawk fans, in general. They had to take him.
For years, Seattle Seahawk fans have been tortured by watching bad offensive line play, and I won’t bore you by going over the rankings of Seattle’s offensive line over the past decade of football, it’s not good. Ever since Seattle traded pro bowl center Max Unger and a first round pick to New Orleans for tight end Jimmy Graham, the interior of their offensive line has been cursed, and matters had not been helped that the team seemed to be resistant to the notion of spending high draft capital on guards, or a center. They would draft running backs high, edge rushers, receivers, left tackles, defensive tackles, and defensive backs, as well, but never guard or center.
Late the second round, they once went after a center in Ethan Pocic, but he didn’t pan out enough to stick around. In recent years, they would try their hands at taking guards in the third round. It is a fine strategy to wait later in the draft on the very unsexy position of offensive guard if it works out, and they become good enough to be mainstays, but it has not worked out.. at all.
This year it was imperative that Seattle stopped its long pattern of avoiding the position in the early portion of the draft, and just bloody well commit to it. Grey Zabel was the best offensive guard available at pick 18, a perfect fit to their outside zone system, and they took him over some pretty good receivers, and defensive backs. Thank God they did that.
After Zabel was taken, other really good offensive linemen started coming off of boards. There is a very strong chance that had Seattle elected to go receiver, or pass rusher, or anything else other than offensive line, we would be watching day two of the draft tonight, and Seattle possibly being left with scraps by the time pick 50 came about.
Thankfully, John Schneider didn’t get cute with this pick. He stayed and picked the one offensive linemen that most experts believed best fit what they needed at guard to play the style of offensive football that they wish to play. In short, Zabel’s talent perfectly fits Seattle’s biggest need.
Seahawk fans needed Schneider to make this pick, and he did. We needed this Red Ryder bee bee gun Christmas present. I would love to see Schneider take one more offensive lineman on tonight, preferably in round two.
But outstanding job sticking and picking Zabel at 18. Seriously, bravo. I didn’t think Zabel would be available, but he was, and they bloody well gobbled him up.
So, what did Seattle get with this Grey Zabel kid from North Dakota State?
They got a long athletic, powerful offensive lineman who was the star offensive lineman during Senior Bowl week. A couple weeks later, he was one of the most explosive testers at the NFL scouting combine. In short, he is a highly powerful, athletic, quick player, who can charge to the second level of a defense on run plays and lay lumber linebackers, and defensive backs in a thorough manner.
He’s also a very nimble, and talented pass blocker. Imagine that.
This guy is a finisher, though, through and through, and John Schneider talked about that. He does not let up on his opponent. You can trust Grey Zabel to not give up on a play. He is great at pulling and combo blocking. He’s sticky as a pass protector. He can play tackle, guard, and center.
He’s a solid personality, and a natural leader. He can be the alpha that this offensive line desperately needs to have inside.
He can be a regular pro bowler for the next decade of Seahawk football. How freaking awesome does that sound to your ears?
This is the type of offensive lineman that you spend a first round pick on, especially if you are going to run a zone blocking system that requires an athletic offensive line. This is the prospect that you absolutely want, and Seattle got him.
I have not been this happy about a Seattle draft pick since I don’t even remember how long. I loved the Byron Murphy selection last year at defensive tackle, but this one feels significantly more exciting, and it is probably just based on fulfilling a more desperate need.
If you go look at highlights of Zabel in college, you will get excited about how special he is as a blocker on the move. At 6-6, 305 pounds, he looks different, feels different in all the right ways you want to stand out as a football player playing guard.
Yeah, I am really excited about this pick. In my mock draft, I wanted to mock him to Seattle, but I wasn’t convinced he would make it to them, and I also sorta didn’t want to jinx it. He was the guy I really wanted at pick 18, and it has been a really, really long time since Seattle has taken a guy that I really wanted them to take.
And there are some really interesting names for them to look at in rounds two and three. Here are a few that I really dig.
I would love to see Seattle land Georgia center Jared Wilson. If they took him tonight, I would have similar feeling to them taking Zabel and the pick would make all the sense in the word. Wilson is a superb athlete for this zone blocking scheme, and Seattle could have left guard and center answered for the next decade, if they snagged him. That is a more exciting thought than any other scenario that we can walk away with after this draft is concluded.
I want to see a big nose tackle taken. Alfred Collins from Texas is the guy for me. He’s 6-5 332 pounds, long armed, and plays against the run with a nasty streak. If Seattle can come out of round two with him and Jared Wilson, I think that would be an enormous haul to go along with Grey Zabel, and it would show a clear intent to win the NFC West through the trenches. How freaking amazing does that sound right now?
I think Seattle will draft a receiver, and I would love to see them find a way to add TCU receiver Jack Bech to this offense. His stature and playing style is eerily similar to Cooper Kupp, and I think he would be the perfect receiver to develop behind Kupp. He’s a personality that will easily make you want to root for him, too, and Seattle could use that after moving on from Tyler Lockett.
I would also love to see Seattle grab on of these top tight end prospects still available. LSU tight end Mason Taylor is someone they have looked at in the draft process and would be an exciting addition. Oregon’s Terrance Ferguson is also very appealing to me, and Miami tight end Elijah Arroyo is really interesting. This is a very deep draft at tight end, and there will be other options available to them, as well. Please take one of them.
There is some speculation out there that Seattle might draft a quarterback in rounds two or three, but I remain skeptical. If this is a thing that has legs to it, of the remaining quarterbacks of this draft, the only two I would have any real interest in are Will Howard of Ohio State, and Alabama’s Jalen Milroe.
Howard isn’t a top end athlete, doesn’t have a big arm, but he kinda has that air about him that makes me think he could develop into a Matt Hasselbeck type of starter in the league, and I like Hass. Milroe, however, is a freak athlete, a dynamic runner, and could be used in a Taysom Hill capacity until he learns to be a proper quarterback, which will most likely take a few seasons. I wouldn’t draft either guy until round three, though, but if Seattle were to take a QB higher than that, let it be one of these two. We shall see if drafting a QB is a thing for Seattle this year, but these guys are my preferences.
If I had it all my way, and I can say this because I feel like drafting Zabel has given me some house money, I would have things shake out for Seattle this way in day two; Jared Wilson at 50, Alfred Collins at 52, Jack Bech at 82, and Terrance Ferguson at 92. Then, in day three, I would look at what options are left at quarterback, cornerback, safety, and probably running back, and linebacker.
We shall see how it goes, but for now, let us all bask in the delight of Grey Zabel coming into Seattle, and bringing a big jolt of talent to the interior of this offensive line. This was the pick that needed to happen, and I am very glad that it did.
Mock draft articles are fun things to cook up if you are as big of a fan of NFL draft season such as I am. I don’t know how much my regular readers enjoy them, but I love writing them.
Not every Seahawk fan is a fan of college football, much less the whole draft, and I get that. Some folks only have it in them to wait until preseason games are played before they start getting around to the players that they will come to root for. That’s fine, but I live for this whole draft process, and I watch college football in the Fall with an eye towards which players most likely will transcend well to the next level.
I also believe that the best teams in the league primarily build through the draft, and don’t get caught up in being huge spenders in free agency. Teams like Green Bay, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Kansas City, San Francisco, and the Rams as of late, have been consistently really good drafting teams, and it shows through their consistency. Seattle, for the past decade and a half, has been pretty successful through the draft despite negative narratives thrown at John Schneider, lately. All of these teams have consistently stayed in the mix of playoff contention through the years. Drafting well matters.
Here, in this final article leading to the Draft Night, I present my one mock draft that reflects what I think the Seattle Seahawks most likely will do on all three days. I am not aiming to get a bunch of these picks right, nor am I making projections onto players I want to see as Seahawks (although I like a lot of these guys). I am just trying to prep you up, as a reader, to what I sense might really happen.
But enough of this page filler stuff. Let’s get mock drafting for the Seattle Seahawks.
With the 18th pick of the 2025 NFL Draft, the Seattle Seahawks select Kenneth Grant, Defensive Tackle, Michigan
I reeeeaaaally wanted to mock North Dakota State guard Grey Zabel here, I reeeaaally did, but I have a sneaking suspicion that he will be taken before Seattle’s pick, and if so, I think there is a strong chance that they stay put and just take the best player available. In this scenario, I have it being massive Michigan nose tackle Kenneth Grant, who some believe has Dexter Lawerence like upside. Some fans will view this as an overkill at defensive tackle because the team took Byron Murphy in the first round last year, and they have veterans Leonard Williams and Jarran Reed locked into long term deals, but I think they might see it differently. Williams and Reed are older, and Grant gives Seattle a chance to have a top defensive tackle tandem in the league for the next decade paired with Murphy. I think Mike Macdonald would love that.
With the 50th pick of the 2025 NFL Draft, the Seattle Seahawks select Jared Wilson, Center, Georgia
Wilson is the best center prospect in this draft, and has athletic traits that are perfect for Klint Kubiak’s zone blocking scheme. The team has met with him, and for good reason. He might be the next best offensive line athlete in this draft to fit Kubiak’s system outside of Grey Zabel. Georgia head coach Kirby Smart raves about how quickly Wilson gets to the second level on players in his scheme, which is exactly what Kubiak wants out of his interior offensive line. It wouldn’t surprise me if he is a player they moved up a bit for.
With the 52nd Pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, the Seattle Seahawks select Jack Bech, Wide Receiver, TCU
I believe that Seattle will come out of this draft taking a receiver early-ish. The question is how early. I don’t think they will be looking for a DK replacement. Instead, they will seek out a prototype for the Kubiak offense that will emphasize surgical route running, strong separation skills, sure hands, a physicality to be productive after the catch, and a physical blocker on the outside run plays. Jack Bech checks all of those boxes. With Cooper Kupp’s pension to miss games, it is probably wise to grab his clone and have him ready in the wings.
With the 82nd pick of the 2025 NFL Draft, the Seattle Seahawks select Jackson Slater, Guard, Sacramento State
I believe that one of the reasons why Seattle would be inclined to go non offensive line in the first round is that they believe that they will find value at left guard in day two of the draft, and I can see Slater being one of those guys. He’s a local kid from the area, and that makes for a fun story, but more importantly, he is a complete system fit for Seattle’s zone blocking scheme, as he played in a similar scheme in college. He was also a strong performer at the Senior Bowl and athletically at the scouting combine. Seattle has met with him a couple times, and I suspect that he is firmly on their radar. There is a buzz around this guy that some team who runs a zone blocking scheme is going to take him between rounds two through four ,and he is going to be a solid starter for them for the next decade. Seattle could use solid.
With the 92nd pick of the 2025 NFL Draft, the Seattle Seahawks select Terrance Ferguson, Tight End, Oregon
Klint Kubiak is known to want to feature tight ends in his offense. Seattle has some talent on the roster in Noah Fant and AJ Barner, but this is a really strong draft for the tight end position, and I find it hard to believe that Seattle won’t be targeting it at some point. They spent some time meeting with Terrance Ferguson at the Senior Bowl, and the Oregon Duck has qualities in terms of size, athleticism, pass catching, YAC creating, and blocking that I think could fit this offense really, really well down the line.
With the 137th pick of the 2025 NFL Draft, the Seattle Seahawks select Chase Lundt, Offensive Tackle, Connecticut
I have Seattle connected to Chase Lundt, who played in the same zone blocking scheme at UConn with Christian Haynes (who I believe will be given the shot to be their starting right guard). Lundt comes in as right tackle insurance for Abe Lucas’s knee with a chance to become a key backup at other spots, or an eventual starter. Good scheme fit.
With the 172nd pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, the Seattle Seahawks select Jack Kiser, Linebacker, Notre Dame
Late in the 5th round, Seattle looks for quality depth at middle linebacker. Kiser is a 5th year senior with tons of playing experience in college and played for a national championship. Smart player with good instincts in coverage but an average athletic profile. Middle linebacker is a position where you can get by on having strong instincts in the league over athletic traits and find yourself a quality starter. I can see Macdonald liking this guy here.
With the 175th pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, the Seattle Seahawks select Tyler Baron, Defensive End, Miami
Seattle stays patient looking for a 5th edge rusher to add to the room, and go with a traits based player late in the 5th round. Baron is long and athletic but needs development as a pass rusher. He showed versatility playing inside/out at Miami, though, and generally does the little things right like playing with good pad level. In this range, he provides good value at a position where there is maybe a slight need.
With the 223rd pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, the Seattle Seahawks select Jalin Conyers, Tight End/Fullback, Texas Tech
I like Seattle seeking out a long term solution at fullback through this draft. Jalin Conyers is a former quarterback who I think has traits to become a Kyle Juszcyk/Taysom Hill type of athlete/weapon in Seattle’s offense. He would be a huge fullback at 6-3, 260 pounds, working to clear holes for the running back, and providing a safety net as an outlet receiver on play action. He’s also a capable runner as a wildcat style quarterback if Kubiak and Macdonald want to explore the tush push play. I like him. I think there’s a strong chance he comes out of this draft a Seattle Seahawk, and the team has met with him.
With the 234th pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, the Seattle Seahawks select Brady Cook, Quarterback, Missouri
I am of the belief that Seattle will target a quarterback in this draft. I just believe it is likely to happen later on. In this mock, I have them waiting until late day three to take Brady Cook who is a high character, highly athletic player brought in to develop over time. If Seattle has interest in Jalen Milroe based on his traits, and character, they should have some interest in Cook who showed better as a passer at the scouting combine that many thought he would. I have a sneaking suspicion that he is a quarterback Schneider likes who he is not letting onto.
Thoughts about this mock and general thoughts about what the Seahawks heading into Draft Weekend
There is a popular belief throughout the league that Grey Zabel is Seattle’s preferred interior offensive lineman, and I buy that. Unfortunately, I suspect that he is also going to be the preferred interior offensive lineman for a team picking ahead of Seattle, and we could see a bit of a run on other offensive linemen go in front of them, as well.
Therefore, I am bracing for them having to pivot towards a different position, and I just get the sense from Mike Macdonald that he will be a head coach who will like always want to draft offensive or defensive linemen high every year, if he could. This is why I believe we could see them stay at pick 18, and take a Kenneth Grant there even though they are pretty loaded up at defensive tackle, if he is available.
Do you know another team in the league who has been pretty loaded at DT? The Super Bowl winning Philadelphia Eagles.
Kenneth Grant has some Dexter Lawerence vibes, and played in Macdonald’s scheme in college. He’s not just a space eater at 6-4 330 pounds, either. He is very athletic for his size, and can be viewed as someone who can develop as a top inside pass rusher.
This selection would free up Byron Murphy to play his more natural three technique position, and Leo Williams could play more defensive end again, which he is fully capable of playing. Jarran Reed would provide valuable rotation reps, and be a key mentor for Grant.
If Seattle doesn’t go offensive line in round one, I see them taking a couple of them on day two. Jared Wilson and Jackson Slater are players who they have met, and have invited to their facilities. They are also ideal system fits for their new blocking scheme. I can easily see both players being taken on Friday with a chance to be day one starters as rookies this Fall.
I am feeling pretty confident receiver will be an early-ish target, and Seattle has met with a number of them expected to be first or second round picks. It would not shock me if one of them is a consideration in round one, if the right player is there. It will be interesting if there is an early run on offensive linemen in round one, and Ohio State’s Emeka Egbuka is there (a local kid who is a huge Seattle Seahawk fan). I almost chose him at 18 in this mock, and I have a feeling his chance of becoming a Seahawk is as good as anyone’s in this draft.
I really like Seattle going after tight end, and there is a lot of good ones in this draft, but I do not see it as a great need like others do. It is somewhat of a need, but they have Noah Fant, AJ Barner, and I believe the team likes them more than fans do. I just like them finding good value at the position, though, and if they can land Terrance Ferguson in the back end of round three, I think that would be a steal.
Outside of taking Jalin Conyers as a potential fullback convert, I see all the other players in this mock as solid depth prospects with Lundt being a guy who fits the zone blocking scheme and has a chance to develop into a starting tackle or guard. Seattle needs to improve depth at linebacker, for certain, and adding another edge makes sense.
I like Seattle taking a quarterback, but I prefer the move to happen on day three where a guy like Cook might have just as strong of a likelihood to develop down the road as a starter as Jalen Milroe does and it doesn’t have to cost a high pick. Cook was a natural leader in college, has athletic traits that typically get John Schneider’s attention, and I believe is an overlooked player in this draft. Let’s see if Schneider has him as a sneaky day three target. I wouldn’t be shocked if we see his name called for Seattle even a bit early than I projected here.
The two positions that I didn’t land out of this mock draft that I wish I had for Seattle is cornerback and safety. I think Seattle wants to draft a corner, but I don’t know how it will transpire for them to do so given their other needs and the quality of depth at other positions.
The team has met with former Seahawk corner Shaquille Griffin in recent days, and I suspect that meeting was to feel him out with the intention of being prepared to sign him after the draft if they do not land one of the corners they love. I think there is a strong chance that he is a player that they will sign next week depending on how this draft goes. I can see them signing a veteran safety, as well, and there are some interesting ones still on the free agent market.
One final thought that I want to leave you with before the draft. I have a strong belief that we could see Seattle involved in some sort of splash trade, and I suspect it could involve a significant starter who is currently on another roster.
Last week, I wrote a piece that explored a potential trade for TJ Watt. Some fans won’t like seeing Seattle trade any sort of significant draft capital for him, but I could see it potentially being a thing. Watt feels like a player that Mike Macdonald would absolutely love to have in his hybrid scheme, and feel comfortable getting a number of productive years out of him even though he is going to be 31 years old; maybe it is not for pick 18, as I pondered last week, but perhaps on day two of the draft, Seattle makes an offer that Pittsburgh likes.
Another popular trade scenario for the Seahawks these days is a big trade back involving a team that will pick early in round two and wants to get back into round one to take a quarterback after they selected a different player inside the top ten. The New York Giants are the trendy team to do this through numerous sources, and could offer up picks 34, 65, and 105 to Seattle, giving the Seahawks six picks in day two of the draft where the real meat of this class is. This could be a dream scenario for John Schneider and there should still be a pretty good guard prospect sitting there for them at pick 34.
Here is a different trade proposal that I want to throw out there for Seahawk fans to chew on in the next few days. With the Derek Carr injury, the New Orleans Saints have suddenly fallen into QB needy category of NFL teams, and are expected to possibly take Jaxson Dart or Shedeur Sanders at 9 overall despite other big needs their roster. Okay, stay with me on this for a minute.
Seattle has their former offensive coordinator here now, and I have written a few weeks back about the idea of them possibly trading for one of their better younger offensive linemen, namely right guard Cesar Ruiz who was a college center at Michigan and could come to Seattle either as a starting guard or center. What if the Saints went a different direction at 9 for a pass rusher, or one of the premium young tight ends, and them offered up to Seattle at 18, their pro bowl starting center Erik McCoy, who played really well for Klint Kubiak last year, and pick 40 for the opportunity to jump in front of the Steelers to grab Jaxson Dart?
If I were John Schneider, I would make that deal in a heartbeat. It would be more than a fun bit of irony that after trading Max Unger and pick 31 to the Saints for Jimmy Graham at decade ago. Also, with three picks then in the second round, and two third round picks, it wouldn’t be out of the question for Seattle to then use those picks to move up for a guard afterwards, and there should be a few really good ones at the top of day two. In this scenario, Ohio State’s Donovan Jackson at the top of round two has a very nice ring to it for Seattle, and he should be an instant plug and play talent as a rookie.
I don’t know how likely this scenario is (probably not very), but if Seattle were to actually land a top end center off of another team’s roster, and then have the means to draft a top quality left guard prospect, then all bets of off of who and what this team could be in 2025 and beyond. Give Sam Darnold proven stability at center, immediate upside at left guard, and I think it is significantly more likely that we see this team take a massive step forward this year.
They took the division winning Rams down to the wire in a tough home loss with a ton of offensive dysfunction last year. If this offense is more properly aligned with Macdonald’s defense in 2025, if Darnold is able to play to comfortably enough in a scheme very similar to what he played with in Minnesota last year with a functional offensive line in front of him, then I think Seattle could be well positioned to be that surprise team that a lot of folks won’t see coming. That’s a really exciting thought to think about.
But as it stands right now, if this trade doesn’t happen, give me Grey Zabel, and if that can’t happen, I will take that big beefy freaky athletic nose tackle from Michigan. I need this draft to be about the trenches, and I suspect that Seattle sees it this way, as well.
Imagine that it is the last game of the season, and the Seattle Seahawks need a victory over a resurgent San Francisco 49er team in order to win the division, and host playoff games. This has been a hard fought game. An old fashioned grinder with both defenses playing well, and both offenses doing just enough.
Late in the fourth, Sam Darnold has just led a methodical five minute drive that ended with Zach Charbonnet plunging into the end zone for the go ahead score. There is two and a half minutes left in the game, however, and the 49ers need their own touchdown to win.
On the first play of their possession, Kyle Shanahan dials up a play that punks Mike Macdonald’s defenders, and 49ers now have the ball close to midfield. Seattle fans are in knots, while 49er fans are going out of their minds in the stands.
Shanahan allows the clock to reach the two minute warning. He feels confidence with his play calling, his core veteran players, and does not want to allow Seattle any chance to possess the ball again in regulation, if his team punches the ball into the end zone. He wants to crush the hearts of Seattle fans once again. There is no coach in the league who enjoys beating Seattle more than this person, and he is an apex predator smelling blood in the water.
On the first play after the two minute warning, he calls a run that the Seattle defense reads brilliantly, and Christian McCaffery is dropped for a short gain. It is now second and nine, and Shanahan has forced his offense into obvious pass plays.
During the two minute timeout, however, Macdonald had grilled his defenders to look out for Shanahan’s trickery again. They are eager to redeem themselves and have a veteran four man front on the field consisting of DeMarcus Lawrence, Jarran Reed, Leo Williams, and TJ Watt, all foaming at the mouth, and ready.
The ball snaps, and there is immediately penetration from all four defenders. The seasoned vets, however, detect a screen pass to McCaffery, and TJ Watt drops the White Bunny for a two yard loss. It is now third and eleven, but it is four down territory with the game on the line, and both fanbases are biting their fingernails. All Brock Purdy needs to do on the next play is to get San Francisco to fourth and manageable, and the victory can still be theirs.
Out of the shotgun, Purdy tries a pump fake that doesn’t work, D Law successfully bull rushes Trent Williams which forces Purdy to roll right because he can’t step up in the pocket, and this is exactly what Kyle Shanahan doesn’t want him to do. TJ Watts then explodes into him for a sack fumble, Devon Witherspoon scoops the ball up and sprints into end zone for a final TD that ices the game away for Seattle.
When the final whistle blows, and the fireworks shoot off, the entire fanbase of Seattle explodes with excitement inside Lumen field, leaving angry 49er fans are left to endure the Seeeeaaaa Haaaaaawks chants as they leave the stadium for their expensive hotel rooms. It will be a long trip back to Northern California for a lot of them, and others will have to tuck their 49er jerseys away in shame, and out of fear of being made fun of at the South Center Mall.
Who, as a Seattle Seahawk fan, would not be down for this scenario to take place next Fall?
This is what a premiere edge rush player can do for your defense. When the game is on the line, and it is do or die, that player is capable of making back to back plays in those most crucial moments that can turn the tide towards victory. That’s why they get paid the big dollars.
I will be honest in saying that when recent news came out about TJ Watt and the Pittsburgh Steelers being a ways off in contract negotiations, thus leading to a speculative belief that the team might consider shopping him, I did not think about Seattle potentially being a suitor. The need for offensive line improvement feels so great in the PNW that it has almost been my entire focus of this offseason. If anything, I have felt like Seattle should be in the market to trade for a proven offensive guard, and I still do.
But the more I allow myself to marinate in this idea of Seattle potentially doing a shocking move for Watt, the more I see the reasoning to do it, if the opportunity is there, and I can even allow myself to think that it isn’t too much of a far fetched notion. It had been reported, after all, that when Las Vegas inquired about Geno Smith, John Schneider pitched to them a propsoal of trading both him, and DK Metcalf for superstar edge rusher Maxx Crosby. Vegas shot the pitch down, but still pursued Geno, and the rest is history.
But it is worth considering that a month ago, Seattle was trying to pry A List edger rusher Crosby out of Vegas for Mike Macdonald’s defense. Could they turn to pursue a different A Lister? It’s an interesting thought, if nothing else.
Personally, I don’t think that the gulf of talent between Crosby and Watt is that far apart. At this stage, Crosby is clearly the more desirable talent because he is three years younger than Watt, but if Watt were suddenly made available, I would have to think Seattle would likely have an immediate interest, even though they paid a handsome amount to bring in DeMarcus Lawrence in free agency. D Law is a fine veteran talent, but he is no TJ Watt. Few in this league are.
If I were to list the best pure edge rushers in this league, my order would probably go Myles Garrett, Nick Bosa, Crosby, and Watt. This is the elite stratosphere he is in even if he is 30 years old and perhaps close to slowing down a bit.
If Seattle were to acquire Watt this offseason, I believe that move pushes them significantly closer to true contender status than any offensive lineman they might draft, or trade for. He is that much of a difference maker. There is not an offensive coach in the league who won’t spend extra time accounting for him in game preparation.
It also is worth keeping in mind that Macdonald likely knows him well, having coached against him in the AFC North. He would have a good idea how to properly deploy him in this particular hybrid defense.
If they truly want to make this thing with Sam Darnold work out, I see very little harm that can come out of spending extra to make a good defense a great one this coming season. If Darnold knows he has a defense that can shut down most offenses, I would assume that would be a gigantic confidence booster. There would be little pressure to force hero throws downfield. Instead, he could feel more comfortable taking what is offered, and play within the parameters of being a quality game manager. If you have to punt and play field position, fine. If you need to settle for the field goal, okay. Be smart, play protective with the ball, eventually the other team’s defense will get tired of tackling, and that is when the bigger plays start to happen.
Great defenses tend to make quarterbacks paired with them more patient players. Bad defenses can really stress them out, and force them to press more.
This is not to say that I advocate trading for Watt in order for Seattle to win games 13 to 10 over the Rams, and such. I am just saying that there is a distinct advantage in knowing and believing that you can win games like that against tougher opponents.
The thing of it, too, is that Seattle is currently sitting on a lot of cash right now, and they will have tons of cap space available to think in 2026, and 2027. They are one of a few handful of teams who could comfortably afford acquiring Watt, and pay him a handsome contract extension, afterwards.
In fact, Vegas betters currently list Seattle as the second best favorite to land him in a deal, just behind the New England Patriots. I also think if I were Pittsburgh, I would probably rather deal him to an NFC team than an AFC one, and potentially have to play against him in the playoffs.
I can add a lot of things up in my mind that would lead me to a place of seeing John Schneider making a strong effort to get TJ Watt here. It is a pretty healthy list, actually.
There is something to be said for making your strength stronger, knowing who you are, and doubling down on it. Seattle hired a defensive guru to build up great defense to win with in Seattle. If Watt is the guy to put this defense over the top, then why wouldn’t you just bring him in, if he is available?
It is also worth noting that the true value of this particular draft is largely thought to be in day two of it. In that, it is also somewhat interesting that a lot of Seattle’s roster needs appear to be players that they can find in day two, namely guards, receiver, tight end, defensive tackle, corner, and so such. With two picks in round two, and two picks in round three, Seattle is positioned to find a couple good interior offensive linemen, and still grab a couple other talented players at other positions.
To give more legitimacy to this wild idea, I recall reading a few months back someone stating that this could be a draft were we see some contending teams at the bottom of round one trading first round picks for proven NFL talent simply because the types of players available in that range of the draft wouldn’t be that more talented than players to be had further into round two. If this is true, then it really shouldn’t that wild to think about Seattle sending pick 18 to Pittsburgh for Watt, especially if Macdonald and Schneider believe that they are really close to being a true contender, and a player such as Watt is likely the difference between building towards contender status, and actually being there.
Some people would likely hate this hypothetical move, for certain. It wouldn’t be a move that addresses the offensive line, and Watt will be 31 years old in the Fall. Seattle would have to pay him a fortune, upwards to $40 million APY based on the deals Garrett and Crosby have recently gotten. His window of elite play might only be three or four more years.
Still, the production you would get out of him, the elite traits, the leadership, the football intelligence, and all that comes with that, I don’t know if Seattle gets that stuff out of someone that they take in this draft. That is why, if they did this trade, I would be out of my skull excited about it.
The bigger question would honestly be whether Pittsburgh would be willing to deal their biggest star player.
Personally, I don’t have a great feel for that, but it does seem like they are generally in a hard spot with Watt in terms of getting him to an agreeable contract extension. The Myles Garrett and the Maxx Crosby contracts have completely reset the pass rusher market to the point where the top ones are now making quarterback money, and the Steelers just traded for DK Metcalf and have paid him an absurd amount per year, resetting the receiver market.
Does Pittsburgh want to pay Watt $40 million APY for the next four years? Would Watt be willing to take less than Crosby and Garrett when he is clearly in their class of pass rushers?
These are the questions that this whole trade scenario hinges on, and the answers right now feel mirky, if not cryptic with the out sign photo of him that Watt posted recently on social media. It is probably an obvious sign that he is not happy with how negotiations are going with his present team, at the very least.
I think it is possible that the Steelers are sticker shocked right now, and are reluctant to pay Watt top dollars when he is now approaching the wrong side of thirty. They probably don’t want to trade away their marquee player, but they also may not want to dive into a four year $160 million deal with him, either.
They do have a couple decent young edge rushers behind Watt, as well, and they also have a supreme track record of identifying edge rushers in the draft and finding great value with them in days two and three. If one team could move off of an older superstar edge rusher and replace him in the third round, in my mind, the Steelers would be on my short list to do it.
They also have an Eye of Jupiter sized need of drafting a quarterback this year, and now that Derek Carr will be lost for the 2025 season in New Orleans, there is even greater competition in front of them to take a quarterback in the first round. All signs are that NOLA will take either Jaxson Dart or Shedeur Sanders at 9 overall. The Raiders could bugger up things further by taking one of these guys at 6 overall. That could set up an unexpected chain reaction which a lot of quarterbacks go higher than expected a week ago.
There is also buzz that teams picking at the top of round two could try to jump ahead of Pittsburgh in round one for a quarterback. This is the problem they face not having Aaron Rodgers on their roster as a draft hedge.
So, there is, at the very least, a growing bit of space in my mind that if Seattle were to dangle pick 18 at them, and say, Boye Mafe, that could be enough to get Pittsburgh to bite. From a Steelers perspective, they get a first round pick and a young pass rusher with enough talent to mitigate the loss of Watt. It could be especially appealing, if they feel they can then package picks 18 and 21 to move up for a quarterback they love, if they really believe in one of those guys.
In terms of what Seattle could do in the draft to still properly address their offensive line, it is interesting that the OL players they have brought in for team visits are all most day two projections. It has made me feel, for a while, that Seattle is looking to go a different direction at pick 18. Well, what if that direction ultimately ends up being a stunning trade for a big name established veteran such as Watt?
It is a fun thought. There is only a small handful of older non-quarterback players in this league that I would feel great about shipping off a first round pick for, but Watt is definitely one of them.
Ultimately, I don’t know if this trade happens. It probably does not, but it is interesting that Seattle is sitting on about $30 million in available cap space for 2025. That does make it feel like they are perhaps searching for an opportunity to make a splash trade for a big name veteran player at some capacity.
Most would assume that it is for a veteran offensive lineman, but what if it is for an impact player at another position? What if it is for a superstar edge rusher to put this defense over the top?
There are many reasons why I have supported the Seahawks moving on from Geno Smith, and DK Metcalf, and I have liked both players a lot during their time in Seattle. For me, I was not shocked by either move. In fact, I applauded both trades.
Through the course of last season, doubt began to grow steadily in my mind as to whether DK was a Mike Macdonald guy, and maybe whether Geno was, as well. The fact that both fellas requested trades out of here confirmed it. If you are a Macdonald guy, you will want to be here (see Ernest Jones). If you are not, then you will probably be fine to move on.
It’s all good, though. When new regimes come in, there is typically a feel out phase for the coaches, and the players.
When the legendary Mike Holmgren took over the team in 1999, superstar receiver Joey Galloway decided to hold out for half a season, and after the season concluded, he was dealt to Dallas for two first round picks. The Walrus wasn’t playing.
So, nothing needs to be controversial about this reality of DK, and Geno wanting out and moving on. It just is. For younger Seahawk fans who had a decade and a half of Pete Carroll football, I can understand this being a shock to their system. I just see it differently.
If you are well into your middle age years, such as I, and you have followed NFL football most of your life, you see cycles with the team you closely follow. Every major coaching cycle that I have witnessed with the Seattle Seahawks since 1983, when Chuck Knox replaced Jack Patera, there have been major shakeups of the roster, especially at quarterback.
Knox replaced franchise quarterback Jim Zorn with a little known backup by the name of Dave Krieg midway through his first season here, and Krieg never looked back. Years later, Tom Flores replaced Krieg with what eventually would become Rick Mirer. Dennis Erickson was quick to move off of Mirer and cycled through John Friesz, Warren Moon, and eventually landed on Jon Kitna. Mike Holmgren eventually replaced Kitna with Matt Hasselbeck and Trent Dilfer. Pete Carroll then replaced Hasselbeck with what eventually became Russell Wilson. Such is the cycle of new coach and quarterback life.
So it should be no shock to any long term Seahawk fan in year two of Mike Macdonald, Geno Smith has been replaced by Sam Darnold. Not if you are a geezer, such as I am.
People can say that it was John Schneider who was the one for moved off of Geno Smith, but I would have to imagine that if Mike Macdonald was that much of huge believer in him, he would have implored John not to trade him. I’m going to guess the Macdonald didn’t fight too hard against this move. Not if he saw an alternative on the horizon that he thought he could get similar results out of, and is significantly younger.
Why Seattle moved on from Geno when Macdonald seemed to embrace him is a bit cloudy, I will admit. Seattle’s proposal to him for an extension wasn’t that different than what he ended up agreeing to with Vegas, after all.
If I were to guess why this trade happened, I would say that it was maybe a bit more player driven than the team looking to get rid of him, but it is interesting that the team didn’t fight too hard to make him happy with whatever concession he needed to stick around. I suspect that if we really examined the root of his relationship with the Seahawks, it might appear to be a much more of a mutual parting of ways than how this story has been drawn up in the media.
As for DK, I think things are more clear. He’s a highly talented, and ultra competitive player who has probably felt miss-used in Seattle over the years, and because Mike Macdonald was shifting to an offense that would be running more, he likely wasn’t interested in hanging around for that. Fine. Best of luck in Pittsburgh.
We can talk offensive line improvements all day long, and I will not grow tired of it, but at the end of the day, I want players here who want to be Seattle Seahawks, period, and in that, want to be Mike Macdonald guys. I don’t need Pete Carroll players who hold grudges over the front office, and most of all, I don’t want to overpay to keep talent that just doesn’t truly want to be here.
Last season was a hard watch for me as a Seahawk fan with both DK and Geno, individually, at times. I thought both players showed a lack of poise that cost Seattle games, and demonstrated tantrums during games that made me feel like they were losing their grips as leaders.
The image of DK Metcalf ripping the headset off of an assistant coach and yelling at Ryan Grubb with it was as ugly of a thing to watch as anything I have seen from a Seahawk, and I saw some ugly shit in the Kingdome in the 1990’s. It is an imagine that will forever be burned into my mind. I root for the Pittsburgh Steelers signing cranky old Aaron Rodgers just so DK can create a new shit show moment on his current team that will surpass the ugliness of this one here.
In terms of Geno, man, I hate to say it, but things didn’t feel that much better, in certain moments. There was a lot of bad sideline body language that filtered out through him in tough losses, and there was meltdowns, as well.
I was in the stands last December, close to the Seahawk bench, when in the closing moments of the loss to the Vikings, Geno Smith decided to get into a yelling contest with an angry fan. Having witnessed Sam Darnold ball out against a good Mike Macdonald defense, and pull off a gutsy win with that throw at the end of the game, and then witness Geno’s meltdown afterwards stayed in my mind, and fueled my thoughts.
Time will tell if Sam will be as good as Geno in Seattle, or better. One thing that I feel very certain about Sam is that after a rough loss at home, you won’t see him verbally going after a frustrated Seahawk fan in the stands.
As I see things now, I believe Sam Darnold has a pretty good chance to prove himself a bonafide Mike Macdonald guy. I sense he has a personality that will likely mesh well with the coach. He just needs to lead this team to wins on a consistent basis, and the rest can fall into place for him.
I also sense that Sam probably really wants to see this thing work out for him here long term. After his years of taking lumps in bad organizations, kicking around a couple other ones, he probably just wants to win any which way he can, and if that means being a high end game manager for a defensive minded head coach way up in dreary, isolated Seattle, Washington, then he’s probably going to be down for it.
He might even be happy enough to self depreciatingly joke about throwing the ball 25 times a game, especially if this team is eventually in annual championship contention. I sense Sam is this sorta fellow.
Despite the fact that he was raised an LA kid, he doesn’t strike me as a bright lights fella like Russ was, and DK sorta is. I think he has a personality much closer to Matt Hasselbeck and Dave Krieg, and for Seattle, I think that can be a really good thing.
In terms of other current Seahawks, I think cornerback Devon Witherspoon is a clear Mike Macdonald guy, and has a chance this year to further step up into a leadership role, not only on defense, but for the entire team. Of all the guys who have come out of recent draft classes, he might be the one most thrusted forward in terms of being a core Macdonald fella. You can tell the gifted defender and coach are tightly bonded.
There are many other dudes on defense that I sense circling strongly around the young head coach, as well. Defensive tackles Leonard Big Cat Williams, and Jarran Reed feel like strong Macdonald guys. Linebacker Ernest Jones also feels like a core Macondald dude, and I think safeties Coby Bryant and Julian Love are probably right there with him.
My guess is that defensive end DeMarcus Lawerence will probably establish himself as one, as well. Macdonald seems genuinely very excited to add him to his defense, and D Law was very eager to come up here to play for him, and defensive coordinator Aden Durde (who coached him in Dallas).
The offense, however, is mirkier in terms of who the Macdonald fellas are. I might be pretty high on the potential of Sam Darnold, but he still needs to prove it. I might think that Jaxson Smith Njigba could become a new leader, and a core Macdonald fella, but that is projection, as well. Ditto for Ken Walker, Zach Charbonnet, and AJ Barner.
Cooper Kupp should become an immediate leader, but it is mirky how long termed his stay will be here, given his age, and injury history. This is why I believe Seattle will most certainly look to draft a receiver within a few weeks, and maybe much higher than people are anticipating.
In terms of the offensive line, I don’t know who the leader is, and this feels a very glaring issue. I think Charles Cross is a good left tackle, but I don’t sense he’s an alpha dog like Duane Brown was. Abe Lucas is a bit of a junk yard dog at right tackle, but injuries have held him back to becoming the alpha up front that he would likely naturally be. The situations at guard and center are even mirkier, as we all know.
This is why it is imperative that Seattle makes moves during the draft (or by trade) that bring in talented alpha dogs to the offensive line, at least two of them. I think it is equally important that they look at players who play other positions on offense who can come in here with strong alpha personalities, as well, and galvanize themselves as core Mike Macdonald guys.
I have said this name a lot in recent pieces, but North Dakota State guard/center prospect Grey Zabel feels like the perfect draft pick for Seattle, given their obvious needs. He plays with an aggressive, athletic, fiery zone blocking style, and has a personality the reeks of leadership. Ohio State guard Donovan Jackson does, as well, and so does Georgia guard Tate Ratledge. Being able to land any one of these guys in the first or second round of the draft would be a huge get for Seattle, in my view.
I want to single out an offensive guard prospect who could be a sneaky target for Seattle that probably not enough people are talking about due to where he played ball. Sacramento guard Jackson Slater is a small school grinder who spent all of his time in college playing in a system that is very similar to what Klint Kubiak will be coaching here. He was a stand out player at the Senior Bowl, and he was a great athletic tester at the NFL Combine. On top of that, he grew up in the Seattle area. He might be much higher on Seattle’s draft board than people realize, and if they opt to go different directions than offensive line in their first couple picks of the draft, he might be a player that they feel very comfortable targeting a bit later.
In terms of other local angles and offensive line, it is worth noting that Oregon tackle Josh Conerly Junior is another Seattle kid who is thought to be a good player for a zone blocking scheme, and is generally thought to be a high to mid second round pick talent. With some maneuvering in the draft, it wouldn’t shock me, especially if Seattle takes a player at 18 who isn’t an offensive lineman, that perhaps they try to move up in the second round for Conerly to play left guard, and then look to draft Slater a bit later on. What a boost of talented young local kid infusion that would be to the interior of their offensive line if they were to land both players, and Conerly would have the potential to move to tackle should they need an eventual replacement for often injured Abe Lucas.
I want to throw one more local kid angle at you in this coming draft that I think it is important to strongly consider. Ohio State receiver Emeka Egbuka has been connected to Seattle in recent weeks, and I think there are compelling reasons why.
First and foremost, he is a gifted athlete with strong route running abilities, separation abilities, and he has sure hands that perfectly suite the Kubiak system. In fact, he might have more upside to him than even JSN, even though he is constantly compared to him given where both players played college ball, and what roles they played there.
The second thing is that Egbuka is regarded as a natural leader, and was a guy other fellas followed at the high profile program of Ohio State. This is a big personality comp to throw at him, but it appears like he may have Doug Baldwin vibes, and believe me when I say it that this offense, as it currently exists, could probably use a bit of Angry Doug in the locker room.
The third thing about Egbuka that I think is really worth weighing heavily on is that he grew up in the greater Seattle area a huge Seattle Seahawks fan. It would be extremely meaningful for him to be drafted by the team he heavily rooted for as a kid, and for him to have a chance to come home and establish himself as a new leader of it moving forward.
After dealing with years of unhappy Russ, years of unhappy DK (and perhaps an unhappy Geno), wouldn’t it be refreshing for John Schneider if he just took Egbuka at 18 and figured out guard on day two? I find it very tempting.
There is another pass catching scenario that I think they would have to strongly consider, maybe not at pick 18, but perhaps after a trade back in round one, or a trade up in round two. I think LSU tight end Mason Taylor is going to be a really good NFL football player for a long time in this league, and would fit the Klint Kubiak offense, brilliantly. I believe this so much that I actually got pretty excited when news broke yesterday that he has a scheduled pre-draft visit with the Seahawks at the VMAC.
Mason has deep NFL genes with his dad Jason Taylor being a long time NFL defensive end, and he has a high football IQ as a player. He’s a gifted receiver, and he’s a willing blocker. He feels like a grinder, and a tough guy, and if Macdonald wants this team to become the most physical team in the NFC West, having a talent tight end like this dude is a good step forward towards being that.
There is no local angle to Mason playing here, and his dad was a high profile athlete from Miami, and his aunt is a high profile sports media personality living in LA, but given the fact that his father played defense, I suspect he would appreciate seeing his son play for a coach like Macdonald in Seattle. I would be comfortably be willing to wager that Mason Taylor and his skillset, and pedigree would fit in really well with the Seattle Seahawks, and what they want to be. I believe this so much as that I wouldn’t be upset if he becomes their pick at 18.
I also can’t help but think that, if they somehow maneuvered around enough to come out of this draft with both Emeka Egbuka and Mason Taylor, that these two moves, alone, would provide a titanic franchise altering scenario for the Seattle Seahawks towards the positive; so much so that it would feel championship worthy.
I don’t know if championships can be made on a philosophy of picking best available player at a need position high, but I do think that taking best player available regardless of position is a philosophy the championship teams often embrace. Therefore, it is not completely set in stone for me that Seattle must take an offensive lineman at pick 18 just for the sake of it, especially in a draft where it appears to be deep enough with guard prospects for them to grab a couple good ones a bit later on.
As for quarterback in this draft, while I am not a fan of Seattle spending a high pick on one (I don’t think there is one in this draft worth it), I am warm to the idea of Brock Huard’s that taking a mid round flyer on Alabama quarterback Jalen Milroe, if the opportunity is there for it. He is by far and away the biggest project QB in this draft, but his athletic upside is absolutely through the roof, and the immediate skillset that he would provide as a running QB is fun to envision for this offense. He is also a very high character personality who could be a great locker room presence.
Mike Macdonald has recently expressed his approval of the tush push play continuing in the league. What if one of the things that is fueling his fandom of the play is because he has a vision of Seattle taking Milroe in the third round specifically to be a developmental quarterback who would see plenty of attack in year one as Seattle’s tush push specialist player on third and shorts and fourth and shorts?
What if behind closed doors, he and Klint Kubiak are envisioning a scenario where they have Sam Darnold and Milroe on the field together much like Mike Holmgren used Matt Hasselbeck and Senecca Wallace in certain packages?
Holmgren and Macdonald talk a lot at the VMAC together when Holmgren makes appearances there. It would not shock me if Holmgren has shared with Macdonald thoughts on how they could be creative like this on offense, if Macdonald was ever picking his mind on the subject.
The more I peal back these hypothetical Milroe to Seattle layers, the more I can see it being a thing. The fact that Brock Huard, who is quite tapped into the organization, brings Milroe up on his radio show as a player he would have interest in at QB in the middle rounds, and the fact that Macdonald seems to love the idea of the league keeping with the tush push, the more I can convince myself that Jalen Milroe is screaming Seattle Seahawk in a few weeks.
I suppose I should also acknowledge a likelihood that the first player Seattle takes in this draft isn’t an offensive player at all. In truth, I think it’s fairly likely, even though I have already stressed that most of the Macdonald guys on this team already play on the defensive side.
Why do I think this? Because I tend to sense that cornerback is a bigger need for the Seahawks than fans want to realize right now, and this draft is uniquely rich at defensive tackle, and there are a few fascinating safety prospects who could be options for Seattle at pick 18, as well.
I would say that if there is a scenario where Michigan cornerback Will Johnson falls to pick 18, then I think Seattle should grab him, even with other players I have mentioned still being available. There is a strong chance that this won’t happen because he is such a naturally gifted, well rounded player, but he was injured enough last year that with shoulder and toe injuries that it kept him from performing at the NFL combine back in February, and perhaps those injuries force a fall in round one.
If Seattle were to take advantage of that, he would join the team as pure outside defender who is great in coverage, good against the run, and would very likely be a built in Mike Macdonald player with Macdonald’s ties to Michigan. Given the inconsistencies of Riq Woolen and Johnson’s deep understanding of this particular scheme, it would be a no brain decision drafting him.
Outside of the draft, I think it is also worth talking about potential trade scenarios for the Seahawks, especially when it does come to the offensive line. I’ve got a fun one for you.
Let’s suppose in a hypothetical world, Seattle’s first pick is Emeka Egbuka, and he is the player available that the organization feels strongest about making a Seattle Seahawk. Now lets say at pick 50, there is a really good cornerback they like that they believe can be a long term partner with Devon Witherspoon, and they take him there. Then let’s further say that at pick 52, there is a nose tackle that they feel can be the stalwart anchor for the next decade of Mike Macdonald football in Seattle, and they scooped him up. Fans would be in an absolute uproar over Seattle punting on offensive line if this scenario played out this way, no question about it.
Now, let’s say that at pick 82, instead of taking Jackson Slater or another guard prospect to mix in with Anthony Bradford, Christian Haynes, and Sataoa Laumea, John Schneider works out a trade with New Orleans for veteran guard Cesar Ruiz, a former Michigan Wolverine center who is essentially a John Harbaugh guy, and by that degree of separation, a Mike Macdonald fella. He would also be a Klint Kubiak player having played for the OC for a year in NOLA, and he would know the Seattle offensive line coaches very well.
Would this move settle your anxieties some with the offensive line, especially if Seattle walked away with Jackson Slater at pick 92? I know it would settle mine down quite a bit.
Then we would be looking at a scenario where Seattle has infused its offensive line with a proven NFL player who is young enough to be a fixture here for a good long while. It wouldn’t be out of the realm of possibility, in this scenario, that Kubiak would choose to make him his starting center given his history at the position in college, and his familiarity with this scheme.
How likely is this a thing that could play out for Seattle? I’m not sure. I suppose you could ask why NOLA would be willing to part with him, but it is worth noting that they are strapped with a bad salary cap situation, and Seattle does have a much better one to fit him in. In fact, Seattle is presently sitting on a healthy amount of current cap space that screams for a trade scenario such as this one.
It is also worth noting that two of the biggest positions needs for the Saints seem to be corner, and edge rusher. Could Seattle sweeten the deal by adding Riq Woolen who they might not view as a good long term fit here with Macdonald? Could it be a package of Boye Mafe and a pick for Ruiz when they know they have Derick Hall emerging into a bigger primary edge rushing role?
This is a fingers crossed scenario that I would love to see Seattle pull off. Use the draft capital that your acquired in the recent trades to help flip for a proven, quality veteran guard or center who Kubiak knows, and trusts, and feels good about building around.
Is this a pipe dream fantasy? Quite possibly, but allow me to have it.
At the end of the day, this is the offseason to get right about Mike Macdonald guys. Draft these guys, trade for these guys, sign these guys. Let 2025 be the true start of the Macdonald era sans Pete Carroll holdovers who won’t fully buy into what Macdonald’s vision is.
I am embracing this uncertainty of Sam Darnold and Cooper Kupp, and the speculative nature of their impact here. I am fine with the question marks, and the unfinished vibes of the offensive line. I’m excited to see what the draft brings, how trades might happen, and what they could add after the draft.
I have chosen to let go of Geno Smith and I wish him well in Vegas. I have very easily let go of DK Metcalf, as well.
So, a wee bit of a bomb was dropped last week when NFL draft insider Tony Pauline wrote an article that mentioned Louisville quarterback Tyler Shough was gaining first round buzz, and the teams showing the most interest in him have been the Pittsburgh Steelers, and the Seattle Seahawks. Alrighty, then.
I will be the first to admit that the news left me with a bunch of conflicted thoughts.
I really liked what Shough had shown at the NFL scouting combine, and how he seemed to come across at the Senior Bowl in practices. He’s a likable personality. He’s tall, athletic, and mature. He has clear tools, and an arm talent that feels very translatable to the NFL. He has intangibles that make him an interesting match for Mike Macdonald, and he feels less of a project than many of the other quarterbacks in this draft, including Jaxson Dart, and Cam Ward. For Seattle, however, I just don’t know if I would like him taken any earlier than round three, and if he goes higher than that, let him be someone else’s prize.
It is funny how fluid the NFL offseason can be. Back in late February/early March, if some NFL insider had told me that Seattle was eyeing taking a quarterback early in this coming draft, I would have been excited about the notion. Having the college football playoffs and the national championship still fresh enough in my mind, I found myself becoming a big time Will Howard fan, and I have liked Jaxson Dart a lot, as well. Seeing Louisville QB Tyler Shough throw at the scouting combine had really turned my eye, as well.
Back then, Seattle still had 34 year old Geno Smith on their roster, and for me, 2025 felt like a good year to take a stab at one of these quarterbacks in the first, or second if they felt really strongly about one of them. The idea made sense. Sign Geno to a short extension to offer him more money up front, and take one of these guys to groom behind him for a couple years, essentially creating a Green Bay Packer Jordan Love scenario.
Two weeks later, this whole notion evaporated after Seattle traded Geno to Las Vegas for a third round pick, and pivoted towards signing Sam Darnold in free agency. With 27 year old Sam Darnold coming in on a three year contract, my entire view of the Seahawk QB situation had suddenly shifted. Seattle got seven years younger at the position in a lateral move that could prove to be an upgrade, given the new Klint Kubiak system, and the potential of Sam being a better fit for it.
For me, this move to Sam Darnold greatly diminishes the need for Seattle to draft QB of the future this year, and I still like a number of quarterbacks in this draft even if none of them appear to be top end prospects. I like Howard, Dart, and Shough quite a lot, actually. I also think Texas QB Quinn Ewers has a little something interesting about him, and could potentially be a good system fit here. I think Notre Dame’s Riley Leonard could honestly be a really interesting draft and slow develop prospect for Seattle if sat patient, and took him in rounds three, four, or five, and same thing with Syracuse QB Kyle McCord.
If Seattle were to draft any one of these guys in rounds three through five, I would be fine with it. These are the rounds that they should properly go in, I feel. The reality is that quarterbacks, in general, tend to get elevated higher up draft boards given the league’s constant need for them, and because of that, many of these guys will probably get drafted much higher in a few weeks time. I just don’t want to see Seattle join the needy lot of teams that will be looking to gobble them up earlier than necessary.
Seattle has seemingly committed to seeing if Sam Darnold can be a long term solution here, I feel like they can, and should be more patient than perhaps a large handful of other teams zeroing in on these prospects. Given the needs that still exist on the offensive line, perhaps the lack of depth at cornerback (and maybe safety), the injury concerns of Cooper Kupp, the lack of a long term solution at tight end, I just don’t want to see Seattle draft a QB any earlier than round three, and I prefer to see them wait it out until day three of the draft, if they can.
It would be cool to see them draft a guy at some point, and I get that lure of wanting to see a talented QB on a rookie contract slow cooking into potentially being an eventual starter. I also see the logic salary cap logic of taking a QB this year in the draft, as well, with Sam Howell being in the last year of his rookie contract, and therefore having a developmental QB2 on a rookie contract for the next four years.
I also appreciate that the inner workings of Darnold’s contract really makes it seem more like a two year “prove it” sorta deal with team friendly outs for Seattle. To me, it makes the deal all the more better for the team, and in a sense, the player, as well.
If Darnold struggles to match his breakout performance of 2024, Seattle has the ability to move on from him quickly over the next season, or two. If he plays really well in their Klint Kubiak scheme, he will be in position during the 2027 offseason to negotiate a bigger long term contract to stick around. Within the framework of his contract with Seattle, the Seahawks have protected themselves, and Sam Darnold has waged a good bet on himself working out here. Every Seahawk fan should like that.
Essentially, in two years time, Seattle will know if Sam Darnold is, or is not their long term franchise quarterback. This is why I am absolutely not down for Seattle burning their first round pick on a quarterback such as Tyler Shough, or even Jaxson Dart later this April. If they are both available at pick 18, let them become the prizes of other teams afterwards.
I think there are most likely going to be strong options for them in the first round to improve their offensive line (finally), or further strengthen their defensive line. I could also get down with Seattle taking a crack at a defensive back, or a tight end if one of Tyler Warren, Colston Loveland, or Mason Taylor is sitting there.
Many fans would hate this, but I could even be convinced that taking a receiver in round one makes sense, if my arm is twisted enough, and local kid Emeka Egbuka is there, who grew up in Tacoma being a huge Seahawks fan. Egkuka is a lot like Jaxon Smith Njigba, but I can be convinced that it isn’t a bad thing for Seattle to nab him up, and groom him behind veteran Cooper Kupp. Inject a guy like him onto this roster, and suddenly the narrative that Darnold won’t have as good of a receiving corp to throw to as he did in Minnie shrinks dramatically.
I likely wouldn’t love seeing Seattle take a receiver, tight end, or DB at 18 overall if a good offensive line prospect was available, but if the guy is really special, I could wrap my head around it. I would just have a much harder time wrapping my head around a quarterback, if that proved the case.
If that pick does become quarterback Tyler Shough, as NFL draft insider Tony Pauline has recently sorta suggested, it would be a tough pill for me to swallow. It would leave me with the feeling like Seattle would have way overcorrected at quarterback to an unnecessary degree, and I like Shough for reasons already mentioned. In round three, I would enjoy seeing Seattle taking a swing at him, if he was still there, but not round one, or even really, round two, and here is why.
Shough has a lot of college experience starting because he has been injured so many times that he has bounced around different programs looking for fresh starts. To a degree, it has been a blessing to him because he has played in numerous systems, has grown as a passer, and a person, and has created a pretty good floor as a quarterback draft prospect for himself. He will, however, turn 26 years old in the Fall, and is therefore, just about two years younger than Darnold, and that, matched with his injury history, makes him less appealing to me as a prospect.
He would be the perfect player to land with Pittsburgh with a chance to start right away, and get his clock going as a rookie. I think Cleveland would also be a great spot for him with a chance for the team to move off of the horrendous Deshaun Watson situation. The Jets certainly make similar sense with Justin Fields not being a certainty to succeed. Tennessee would be a very obvious landing spot with a chance for him to openly compete with Will Levis.
I could even argue that going to the Rams, where they probably have Stafford going year to year now, would make sense. Ditto with the Giants and Russell Wilson being on a one year deal, or even to the Raiders with Geno Smith.
For Shough, I think either a situation where he can immediately start as a rookie, or develop behind an older QB1 who probably only has a couple of years left makes a bunch of sense. If Seattle still had Geno Smith here, I could get behind taking Shough earlier, or any other of these quarterbacks getting hyped up a bit.
Shough going to Seattle at 18, though, after signing Darnold? Man, I wouldn’t get that.
If Seattle were to take Shough with their first round pick, they would almost certainly feel the pressure to move off of Darnold without seeing the experiment with him through. Due to his age, the clock for getting Shough in the driver’s seat as QB1 for Seattle would probably be pressured to be sped up, as he will be 30 years old by the time he would be negotiating his second contract.
And if they did decide to move off of Darnold early in favor of developing a 26 year old quarterback that they invested a first round pick on, and Shough struggles and or gets injured (as he often did in college).. Jeeze Louise.. when what does Seattle have potentially have at quarterback?
It would potentially be a bloody mess that would see the whole front office fired, and maybe the coaching staff, as well. Personally, I would like to avoid that scenario from happening because that sounds way too much like the New York Jets over the past 15 years.
Now, if he ends up playing like Josh Allen all of that is moot, but how likely is that going to be?
My guess is not that likely, and his ceiling will probably be, well.. Sam Darnold-esque with maybe a greater likelihood of getting injured a fair amount more. That doesn’t sound like someone I want to see Seattle spend a first round pick on when they already have Darnold on the roster for the next three years, or longer, if all goes well.
Now, if he is sitting at pick 82 or 92, and Seattle wanted to add him, then I would be way more warm to it. That would be much more palatable.
If he lasted that long, then it would signal that the league recognized his injury concerns and had questions about his true ceiling. Seattle could take advantage of an older college quarterback still being available who might have a decent floor, and enough ability to push Darnold early.
If he develops strongly, and quickly, Seattle would have flexibility to move away from Darnold. If Darnold plays well enough to not really make of a competition between the two, then Seattle has a decent and affordable backup option on their roster for the next four seasons. Either scenario would be win/win for Seattle, and Seattle will have bolstered their roster by taking players at other positions earlier.
Honestly, this might be the reason Seattle is taking a good long look at Shough. They might not be considering him in the first round, but should he last into round three, he might become an interesting option once offensive line, and a few other positions are addressed. Having him behind Darnold becomes additional security at the most important position at a more palatable cost.
But first round quarterback for Seattle this year?
Nah, I am not feeling that.
Not in an offseason when the biggest need on this team clearly has been improving the offensive line, and Seattle has done extremely little in free agency to add talent to it. I can accept this reality of lack of veteran infusion to the offensive line if Seattle sees numerous players in this draft that they are prepared to add early, starting in round one. Ideally, I would want to see an offensive lineman taken in round one, and another one taken in round two.
North Dakota State guard/center Grey Zabel is the guy I am all in on due to his physical profile and fit for their zone blocking system, but there are others who I equally could get behind at pick 18. I wouldn’t hate it if they selected Ohio State guard Donavan Jackson. I also wouldn’t be mad if it was Oregon tackle/guard Josh Conerly Junior, either (other local Seattle kid, FYI).
Honestly, I wouldn’t hate it if their first three picks of the draft (picks 18, 50, and 52) were all offensive linemen, given the needs of improvement to this area being that extreme. It likely won’t happen, but I wouldn’t be upset if it did.
So, while it is fun to think about seeing Seattle drafting a quarterback high because it would infuse fans with something daydream about, especially those skeptical about Darnold, I don’t think this is the draft to do it. I don’t think any of these quarterbacks are sure things be quality NFL starters.
I think it is all fingers crossed projection with Cam Ward, Shedeur Sanders, Dart, Howard, and Shough will become quality NFL QBs. If any of these guys were in last year’s draft where six quarterbacks were drafted in the first twelve picks of the draft, they all would have likely been second or third round picks, at best. Let other teams needier at quarterback take swings on them.
Go get Grey Zabel, or someone else close enough to his talent level on the offensive line. Commit to saying what you want to be; a tough physical team that nobody wants to play. Do not pass over a player who will provide you this opportunity up front for a quarterback prospect who may not ever be able to beat out Sam Darnold at QB1 spot further down the line. Don’t do this.
Ride this through with Darnold over the next two years, and see what you have with him first. If it doesn’t work out, then consider taking a quarterback high. You might be better positioned for it in a future draft with a stronger quarterback class than this one.
Trust me on this. This is not the draft to take a quarterback high. At all. Not for the Seattle Seahawks, anyways.
With two weeks of NFL free agency now in the books, I bet there are Twelves scratching their heads over the state of the Seattle Seahawk offensive line, leaving bloody scabs of frustration for concerned loved ones to see. I will be the first to admit that I’m surprised by the lack of movement at guard and center, given the needs.
The NFL offseason is fleeting. A week and a half ago, the Seattle Seahawks were free agency darlings in the eyes of SI journalist Albert Breer for the way they moved off of Geno Smith for Sam Darnold and essentially a third round pick. Fast forward to now, we have various analysts now calling them big time losers of the offseason because they signed Darnold and haven’t made big free agent moves to upgrade the offensive line for him.
“What is the plan in Seattle?”
“It seems like the Seahawks have no plan.”
Indeed. From an outsider perspective, it’s a fair take. For those close to the team, however, there is a nuanced perspective national media folks won’t spend time discussing. Nuance does not great headlines.
I don’t believe that the Seattle front office is the clueless mess that skeptics would have it. First of all, I didn’t think this year’s free agent crop of offensive lineman was that great. The only player I was really hoping for was former Altanta center Drew Dalman who quickly signed a massive contract with Chicago. Secondly, I think it is worth reminding frustrated fans that the draft appears to be promising for interior offensive linemen.
At the Senior Bowl, it was noted by many how intently GM John Schneider was studying offensive line drills. He was watching these guys like a hawk (intended pun). This should have been a big tell for what Seattle’s plan would be to address the offensive line this offseason.
With now two weeks into free agency and no real move to be made on the offensive line outside of adding a swing tackle, I am beginning to let go of expectations of what I thought this team would do, and I am embracing their process. There are talented players in this draft class who are going to fill needs on Seattle’s offensive line, and I am ready for them to come in.
When reality smacks you across the face, it is time to let go of expectations that you have held onto, and just accept what is. This ability to let go is beneficial for survival, and has been passed down to us through generations of strife.
When our forefathers were picking berries down by a riverbank, and a gigantic saber cat jumped out of the brush, grabbed one of their children, and ran off with it for an easy snack, our forefathers didn’t just stop producing more kids. Instead, they just got smarter about where to bring them around.
So, while I would have imagined that Seattle would have made former Viking center Garrett Bradbury their new center here, following Sam Darnold to the 206, I had to quickly pivot off of that. Likewise, when I also would have thought that Teven Jenkins possibly would have been signed last week to become the new starting left guard.
Neither of these moves happened. Bradbury was never brought in, and it is worth noting that Seahawk center Olu Oluwatimi has a similar 2004 PFF grade to his. Jenkins did visit, but left Seattle without a contract, and quickly signed elsewhere. It is obvious that Seattle was not as high on these players as many Seahawk fans had been, and I think the answer to this is now obvious.
Bradbury never lived up to the hype of his first round status in Minnesota, and Jenkins has a problematic injury history, and a questionable desire to play through pain. As desperate as we can be wanting to see Seattle make free agents moves to improve the offensive line, I don’t think we should hold it against them that they punted on either of these guys.
Seattle obviously sees prospects in this draft that they could land, and develop as long term answers rather than make spendy moves on free agents whose previous teams felt ready to move on from. Alternatively, it is also very possible that their new offensive coaches honestly like the potential of young players recently drafted, and they want to further develop them as starters.
Believe it or not, Anthony Bradford was actually one of the better zone run blocking guards in football last year, per Pro Football Focus. The problem was that with former coordinator Ryan Grubb, Seattle did not run the ball nearly enough, and he was not consistent enough as a pass blocker. If the new offensive line coaches can further unlock the potential of Bradford, he has the size and athletic profile to be a dominating run blocking guard in this league.
Additionally, last year’s third round pick Christian Haynes was one of the best pure zone blocking guards in all of college football in 2023, but he was little used by Grubb, and once Bradford was lost for the season after eleven games, he was leap frogged by six round pick Sataoa Laumea, who coaches could like, as well. There is a perception around the team that Grubb mishandled the development of Haynes, and this could be true. The interesting thing about Haynes is that he has a body type that could make for an intriguing candidate at center, if Seattle takes a guard early in the draft, and views Bradford as a starter at guard, as well.
But why am I bringing up all this zone blocking jargon, you ask? Well, Seattle is adopting a scheme that is largely reliant on zone blocking, and with that offensive linemen who are really good at getting to second level defenders, and creating elaborate running lanes for running backs are requirements to making the scheme go.
What does this mean most likely for Seattle and the offensive line moving forward this year?
They added Josh Jones as a veteran swing tackle, and I suspect that they will make one more modest veteran move on the offensive line prior to the draft that is now a month away. Like Jones, it will likely not be a move that gets many Twelves hopeful, but I suspect that the real big splash for the offensive line will happen in this draft, likely in round one or round two.
It is recently been estimated that there are 16 interior offensive line prospects in this draft that will be viewed as NFL starters. That’s a healthy number.
Some of them are college tackles who will convert to guards in the pros, and some might even convert to center. Dennison and Benton have long proven track records as NFL offensive line coaches who have converted college tackles into production interior offensive linemen.
It is very safe to say that in a month’s time, at least one of these 16 mastodons is going to be a Seattle Seahawk. It is possible that with Bradford and Haynes on this roster, that player will be our new starting center. It is also possible that the coaches will look to convert Haynes to center to make way for a talented rookie to play guard, as he has a good body type for the position.
Does this feel risky? Yes. Absolutely it does, but almost every move that Seattle has done this offseason has been a big calculated risk.
It was risky moving on from Geno Smith in favor of Sam Darnold, who even though I believe might prove to be an upgrade, there is no guarantee of that panning out.
Likewise, even though Cooper Kupp is likely a better scheme fit for Seattle than DK Metcalf likely would have been, there is no guarantee he stays healthy enough, and therefore it is a huge risk for Seattle to trade off DK only to pivot to Kupp. Because of this, I fully expect Seattle to draft a receiver at some point within the first two days of the draft.
I think there is even a modest risk that Seattle has signed 31 year old DeMarcus Lawrence to a big three year contract. He’s older, coming off of a significant injury last year. While I am hopeful that Mike Macdonald will make good use out of him, there is no guarantee that his body won’t start to further break down given his violent style of play.
What I like about all of these moves is that the Seattle front office has realized that annually treading water at 9 or 10 wins a season is not likely going to bring them any closer to another Super Bowl ring, and they are now finally willing to take some educated risks. If Sam Darnold does prove to be a good system fit here, as I think he will, then Seattle has effectively solved its longer termed quarterback question, and if not, then they can look to the draft in a future year. If the totality of Cooper Kupp and a promising rookie receiver is a greater sum than DK Metcalf for this scheme at receiver, then Seattle will have made a brilliant move to trade him rather than overspend to keep his unhappy butt on the roster.
Likewise, if Seattle does indeed draft North Dakota State offensive lineman Grey Zabel, and he converts to a pro bowl center for Seattle for the next ten years, then it would be a brilliant stroke from the front office to not settle on a mediocre veteran center like Garrett Bradbury just because of his familiarity with Sam Darnold. Raise your hand, if you are a Seahawk fan who would love to see the center position finally secured by a quality player for the next decade of Seahawk football.
This is the biggest thing to consider now as a Seahawks fan. Wouldn’t it be more prudent to invest in young talent in a good draft for interior offensive linemen than overspend for mid level players in the free agency? My answer to this is very much a resounding yes.
You made the switch from Ryan Grubb to Klint Kubiak because you recognized that the Kubiak system would be better for your team. Kubiak brought with him top notch NFL offensive line coaches who master at coaching a zone blocking scheme, and you have a couple year guards on the roster who have shown to be good zone blockers. This draft is loaded with college players who were good in zone blocking schemes.
It appears that John Schneider is prepared to trust these coaches to get the most out of young players. It is not the safest thing to do. It does not make me feel as comfortable as I want to be as a Seahawks fan. It is, however, probably the smartest thing to do given the mediocrity of the free agent market for guard and center, and the promising nature of this draft class.
This draft is not thought to be strong at quarterback, and Seattle quickly pivoted to Sam Darnold when they felt they would not reach a deal with Geno Smith. This draft is also not thought to be greatly rich at receiver, either, and that is why I think we have seen moves to add Kupp, Marquise Valdez Scantling, and now River Cracraft.
This is a promising draft for guards and it has some players who could convert to center. This is a great draft for defensive tackle, running back, and tight end.
This is a good draft for Seattle to get meat and potato players on both sides of the ball. If you want to play stout defense, and run the ball, control clock, play connected as a team, then I think Seattle is well positioned with five picks in the top 92 to add to the line of scrimmage, and around out the roster for this team to better play the style of ball that Macdonald would have it.
Seattle could even theoretically draft a special player at 18 in this draft who doesn’t play on the offensive line, and still find solutions for their line in the second and third rounds. It would make me incredibly nervous if they did this, but there are a couple tight ends who will be drafted in the top frame of this draft who are talented enough that if one fell into the lap of Seattle at 18, it might be too difficult to resist the urge of selecting. If Seattle took one of these guys, I would be pretty on board with that, and then I would keep my fingers crossed that they could grab a couple good offensive linemen in round two.
What I suspect is most likely, though, is that John Schneider does the very conventional thing and takes the best offensive lineman on their board at 18, or a little bit later in the first round after a bit of a trade back, and then he takes another offensive lineman on day two. History supports this likelihood.
In 2022, after they traded Russell Wilson, Seattle was very thin at offensive tackle. While some wanted them to take a swing on a quarterback in the weak quarterback draft class, they conventionally took the best left tackle on their board in Charles Cross, and then they took right tackle Abe Lucas in early round three. Cross was not widely viewed as a top ten draft prospect but they stayed safe, and took him at 10 overall, anyways. This proved to be a pretty decent payoff, and they found decent value with Lucas later on.
It feels very logical that John Schneider should look to replicate this with the interior of Seattle’s offensive line this April. I can see a very vivid scenario where Ole Miss QB Jaxson Dart is sitting at pick 18, and Seattle choses an offensive line over a quarterback who will have a lot of Twelves clamoring for him like they did with Malik Willis four years ago when Seattle took Cross, instead.
Grey Zabel is going to be a guy who is going to be talked about a lot for Seattle in the coming weeks. He is a tall, strong, athletic zone blocker who plays with a lot of attitude and toughness, and is reportedly a very strong leader. He took a series of reps at the Senior Bowl at center, and snapped the ball well. Some think he has the profile to be a solid guard in this league, but could ultimately be a top tier starting center down the line. I think there is an extreme possibility that Seattle would draft him at 18, but I also think it is very possible that he is taken before Seattle’s pick.
If this proves the case, and Zabel won’t be available to them, that could compel Seattle to trade down a bit and still take a guard, and then double dip at guard again on day two, and then consider moving Christian Haynes to center. It wouldn’t get a lot of Seahawk fans excited, but with the high number of offensive tackles in this draft that could convert well to guard, plus guys who were quality guards in college last year like Ohio State’s Donovan Jackson, Georgia’s Tate Ratledge, and Alabama’s Tyler Booker, a Haynes move to center suddenly becomes more interesting in an open competition with Olu Oluwatimi, if Seattle grabs a couple of these fellas.
There are a couple other convert to center candidates in this draft, as well, that Seattle could consider. Purdue offensive lineman Marcus Mbow has a similar projection to convert to center as Zabel, based on his physical traits that suit the position. Some think that West Virginia’s Wyatt Milum could be suited for the spot, as well.
Outside of these two other guys, though, this draft is considered very thin at center in terms of who were actually playing the spot in college last year. Georgia center Jared Wilson is the only player who is thought to have strong starter potential in this draft. That is why guys like Zabel and probably Mbow are going to be elevated based on projection.
This is why Zabel is going to continue being a very talked about player for Seattle at 18. Based on the current needs of the team, he might be a top player on their board at this point. Their ideal scenario might be being able to take him at 18, and then keeping their fingers crossed that one of Jackson, Booker, Ratledge, or Oregon’s Josh Conley Jr falls in their lap in round two.
If they are fortunate to land Zabel and there is a run on top guard prospects to the point where none of them land to them in round two, then that is where they might go different directions much like they did in free agency, and they trust their coaches to further develop Haynes and Bradford as guards. Is this ideal? Probably not, but objectively speaking, it is a fall back that could work out, or at least work better for them in the 2025 season.
It is already noted that Bradford and Haynes have both shown good abilities as run blockers in a zone scheme. The truth of the matter for Seattle is that with Kubiak replacing Ryan Grubb, Seattle is venturing back to their 2012-2014 DNA of predominantly being a running team with play action passing being a complimentary feature. If they add Zabel inside, that could be enough to further uncork the potential of Ken Walker and Zach Charbonnet and it further mitigate the limited pass blocking traits of a guy like Bradford, and who knows, perhaps Benton and Dennison are able to develop Bradford further as a pass blocker. This is possible.
In their ideal world, I feel like this coaching staff would probably love to see Sam Darnold throw on average about 25 times a game, and the bulk of that on play action passes where he has shown to be very good at it. This is the strength of their new quarterback, and he might be perfectly fine staying in this game managerial lane while guiding Seattle to wins. At this point in his career, he is probably just looking for stability, and a chance to win as a starter however which ways those wins come. If this is the case, that is not a terrible thing, at all, for Seattle, or for him.
I suspect that this is their plan. They want a good young enough game managerial situation at quarterback. They want to win with defense, play good special teams, and close out the circle by running the football, killing clock, and making explosive plays off of play action.
Ironically, I think they really do want to get back to Pete Carroll football in many, many ways.