RENTON, Wash. — The Seattle Seahawks are sitting on the world’s most expensive insurance policy. Just days after resetting the market with a four-year, $168.6 million extension for Jaxon Smith-Njigba, the defending Super Bowl champions face a draft reality that is as thin as a razor’s edge. With only four total picks in the 2026 NFL Draft and a gaping hole at cornerback left by Tariq Woolen’s departure to Philadelphia, the front office is at a crossroads. Selecting at No. 32 overall isn’t a luxury; it’s a leverage play that could define their title defense.
The Kiper Connection vs. Reality
Draft guru Mel Kiper Jr. has already made his pitch: Tennessee cornerback Colton Hood. On paper, it fits. Hood is 6 feet tall, nearly 200 pounds, and plays with the physical edge Mike Macdonald demands. He isn’t just a cover man; he’s a tackler who racked up 50 total tackles and a pick-six last season for the Vols. The stadium shook when Woolen left, and Hood seems like the logical plug-and-play replacement. But logic is a trap when your draft cupboard is nearly bare.
The Seahawks gave up their fourth and fifth-round picks to land Rashid Shaheed, leaving them with a draft class that is fragile. Relying on one rookie at the end of the first round to save a secondary is a gamble John Schneider rarely takes. The 2026 board is flat. The difference between the 32nd pick and the 45th pick is negligible in terms of talent but massive in terms of draft capital. By moving back, Seattle could turn one selection into three, fortifying a roster that lost Kenneth Walker III and Boye Mafe to the open market.
“We aren’t building a roster for April; we are building one for February. If the right deal is there to move back and grab more ‘blue-chip’ depth, you have to look at it. We need guys who can play special teams and rotate on the defensive line, not just a headline name.”
— Mike Macdonald, Seahawks Head Coach
The Strategy: Volume Over Variety
Smart front offices don’t fall in love with mock drafts. They exploit the desperation of teams trying to sneak back into the first round for a fifth-year option on a quarterback or a tackle. If Seattle trades into the early second round, they could still land a corner like Brandon Cisse or a heavy-hitting safety like Dillon Thieneman while picking up an extra third or fourth-rounder. This isn’t about being unconventional. It is about survival in a division that just saw the Rams and 49ers reload with veteran talent.
JSN is the offensive cornerstone. He led the league with 1,793 receiving yards and 119 catches, proving he’s worth every penny of that historic deal. But a star receiver needs a defense that can get off the field. With only four swings at the plate this year, Schneider needs to find a way to get six or seven. The 32nd pick is his best trade bait. Expect the Seahawks to be the most active team on the phones when the clock starts in Pittsburgh.

