SEATTLE — The scoreboard read 31-27. The confetti at Lumen Field fell for the Seahawks. But the most powerful moment of the 2026 NFC Championship Game didn’t happen during the clock’s final tick. It happened in the quiet chaos immediately after.
NFL Films cameras caught Seahawks receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba finding Rams veteran Davante Adams in the midfield scrum. Adams, now 33 and fresh off his fifth career NFC Championship loss, stood motionless. Smith-Njigba didn’t celebrate in his face. He leaned in.
“Keep Your Head Up, Bro”
The audio is raw. You hear the crunch of pads and the roar of the 12s in the background, but JSN’s voice cuts through clearly.
“Keep your head up, bro,” Smith-Njigba told Adams, gripping the veteran’s shoulder pad. “Respect runs deep.”
It wasn’t just a pleasantry. Adams joined the Rams in March 2025 specifically for this moment—one last run at a Super Bowl ring that has eluded him for 12 seasons. He left everything on the field Sunday, hauling in a touchdown and 89 yards, but it wasn’t enough to stop Seattle’s second-half surge.
For Smith-Njigba, who torched the Rams secondary for 153 yards and a score, this was a passing of the torch. The young superstar acknowledging the legend who paved the way.
The Agony of the Near-Miss
This loss stings differently for Los Angeles. Matthew Stafford, who recruited Adams to L.A., was visibly shaken post-game.
“He [Adams] deserves the opportunity to put a ring on his finger. I told him I wish I could have been better for him… it’s a tough pill to swallow.” — Matthew Stafford, Rams Quarterback
Adams has now played in five conference title games without a victory. The “curse” that started in Green Bay followed him to the West Coast. You could see the weight of that history in his body language as Smith-Njigba approached him. He didn’t say much back. He just nodded.
What This Means for the Super Bowl
While Adams faces a long offseason of questions about his future, the Seahawks are booking flights to Santa Clara for Super Bowl LX. They will face the New England Patriots on February 8 in a rematch of their 2015 classic.
Smith-Njigba isn’t just a nice guy with a microphone on; he is the most dangerous weapon left in the playoffs. If he carries this level of play—and this level of composure—into the Super Bowl, the Patriots’ defense is in trouble.

