The Seattle Seahawks may have tipped their hand before the NFL Draft even begins.
General manager John Schneider said on April 20 that Seattle, which currently has only four draft picks, will be looking to move back if the right opportunity presents itself. For a team entering the draft with limited capital, it was one of the clearest and most useful takeaways from Schneiderâs pre-draft press conference with head coach Mike Macdonald.
âItâs no secret with us guys,â Schneider said. âWe have four picks, so weâll be looking to move back.â
That does not mean a trade-down is guaranteed. But it does give Seahawks fans a strong clue about how the front office wants to approach the board: create more chances to add talent rather than sit tight and make only a handful of selections.
Why a Trade Back Makes Sense for Seattle
Seattle simply does not have much volume this year, and trading back would be the easiest way to add flexibility. More picks would give Schneider and Macdonald more opportunities to address depth, competition and developmental spots on a roster the team still views as young. Schneider noted during the press conference that Seattle has a young roster with many second-year players already in the mix.
Schneider also gave another hint about how the Seahawks view this class. He said he believes there is a âlack of depthâ in the draft and credited Seattleâs scouts for identifying that early, which helped shape the teamâs thinking.
That comment matters because it adds context to the trade-back idea. If the Seahawks see a tier of similarly valued players rather than a sharp difference from one spot to the next, moving down becomes even more appealing. Instead of forcing a pick at one slot, Seattle could slide back, stay in a similar range of prospects and pick up extra assets in the process.
John Schneider Has Long Valued Draft Flexibility
This is also not a new way of thinking for Schneider.
Over the years, he has built a reputation for being willing to move around the board when the value lines up. He said Monday that the back end of the first round is often âthe pick that everybody wants,â pointing to the value of the fifth-year option attached to first-round selections.
That could work in Seattleâs favor. If another team sees a player it wants to jump for, the Seahawks may have a real opportunity to move back and recover some draft volume.
Schneider also made it clear that the Seahawksâ board is built around their own vision, not around league-wide consensus. That matters here too. A team locked in on one specific player is less likely to talk openly about wanting to trade down. Seattleâs public stance suggests the Seahawks believe there may be multiple players they would feel good about taking if they move back a few spots.
What It Means for the Seahawks Going Into Draft Week
For Seahawks fans, that is the most important takeaway.
This draft may be less about making one splash pick and more about how Schneider maneuvers the board. If he finds the right trade partner, Seattle could turn a limited four-pick setup into a more flexible weekend.
With only four selections right now, Schneiderâs message was simple: if the Seahawks can move back and create more opportunities, that is what they want to do.
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