Mike Macdonald isn’t losing sleep over the NFC West arms race, and that mindset might be exactly what the 49ers need to hear.
With the Los Angeles Rams making a flurry of big moves - including the blockbuster acquisition of defensive end Myles Garrett and the possibility of star defensive tackle Aaron Donald returning from retirement - it would be easy for the San Francisco 49ers to feel pressure to answer with something dramatic of their own. That kind of heat can push a front office toward a splashy reaction, especially when the division’s balance feels like it’s shifting fast.
But the Seattle Seahawks’ Super Bowl-winning head coach isn’t playing that game.
Speaking to The Athletic’s Vic Tafur at the American Century Championship golf tournament in Lake Tahoe, Macdonald made it clear that Seattle’s focus stays inside its own building.
"Yeah, I don’t care," Macdonald said about the arms race. "Don’t care.
If you start worrying about what everybody else is doing, it’s just mentally taxing. It’s so much easier if you don’t.
“Let’s just worry about the Seahawks and being the best version of ourselves and getting better every day."
That approach is easier to sell when you’re coming off a Super Bowl win, of course. But it still carries a message the 49ers would be smart to consider as they try to keep pace in a division that’s getting more aggressive by the day.
The temptation, especially after the Garrett move, is obvious. San Francisco has already been linked in the minds of many to its own answer, with some suggesting a trade with the Las Vegas Raiders for All-Pro edge Maxx Crosby. On paper, that would be the kind of move that keeps the Niners from falling behind in the NFC West’s escalating talent grab.
Still, Macdonald’s point cuts through the noise: don’t make a move just because everyone else is making one. For John Lynch and the 49ers, that could mean taking a hard look at what’s already on the roster and how much value is there before jumping into a reactionary deal.
In a division where the pressure to keep up is only getting louder, Macdonald’s advice is simple: don’t let the noise make your decisions for you.
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