The Seahawks Are Hunting Edge Rushers, and Mock Drafts Say They're Taking One at 32
The Seattle Seahawks' draft board is crystal clear: they need pass rush. With Boye Mafe gone, defensive line help is priority one, and the latest CBS Sports mock draft has the Hawks addressing it at pick 32 with Cashius Howell. But that headline? It's just the start of what scouts think Mike Macdonald and his front office will do in the trenches.
A Defensive Line in Transition
The Seahawks have been active in their pre-draft process, meeting with South Carolina State corner Jarod Washington at his Pro Day and checking in on New Mexico DE Keyshawn James-Newby. Those conversations matter, but the real intel drop came when word got out that Seattle inquired about Myles Garrett and Kayvon Thibodeaux. Those names tell you everything about what the Hawks are chasing: elite, proven edge talent who can win one-on-one matchups and collapse the pocket.
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👉 Claim Your Free $10 at KalshiThe problem is obvious: Mafe's departure created a massive hole on the edge, and depth is thin. That's why you're seeing mock drafts consistently pairing the Seahawks with edge candidates in that 32 range. Whether it's Howell or someone like Malachi Lawrence, the team is signaling loud and clear that they want to reload that position group fast.
The "Best Player Available" Reality
Not everyone agrees the Hawks will stay locked in on edges at 32. Daniel Jeremiah has publicly stated there's "no way" Seattle picks there if they're being true to best player available. That's the eternal draft tension: do you fill immediate needs, or do you take the most talented option on the board?
Full seven-round mocks are painting different pictures too. ESPN's version sent Keldric Faulk to the Hawks at 32, while other scouts are floating names like Jonah Coleman, Nicholas Singleton, and Noah Whittington as potential running back upgrades. The versatility angle matters here. Defensive end, running back depth, even a chess piece like Uar Bernard at safety. The Seahawks are keeping their options open.
What's Next
Zion Young is locked in for a pre-draft visit to Lumen Field, which signals real interest. The offseason workout program dates are already set. Dani-Dennis Sutton, despite his different stylistic fit, is getting looks. The Seahawks are doing their homework, talking to everyone, and keeping the board fluid heading into the draft.
Pick 32 is coming. The question is whether it's an edge rusher, a back, or a "best player available" decision that catches everyone off guard.
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