Jamal Adams NFL Future Feels Bleaker Than Seahawks Fans Expected

With a history of injuries and off-field controversies, former Seahawks star Jamal Adams faces an uncertain future in the NFL as retirement looms.

Jamal Adams has already gotten more chances than most players do after the kind of injury-marred stretch that followed him out of Seattle, and the market still doesn’t look eager to open its doors again.

The former Seahawks standout was moved on after the team spent several seasons waiting for him to stay healthy and deliver like the difference-maker they thought they had. From there, he bounced to the Tennessee Titans, got released, and then landed with the Detroit Lions, who let him walk after the 2024 season.

Last year brought another stop with the Las Vegas Raiders, a move that likely looked a lot more natural with Pete Carroll on the sideline. Carroll is gone now after the Raiders went 3-14 in 2025, and Adams is gone too.

A new landing spot feels far less certain.

There is at least one reason to think another team might take a look: Adams showed last season that he could adapt. After spending his first eight seasons at safety, with the production tapering off, he shifted to inside linebacker and, surprisingly, held his own. He was undersized for the spot, which made the fact that he was not a liability all the more notable.

Even so, the obstacles are obvious. Adams is no longer the same player he was at his peak, and his time in Seattle ended with more than just football issues.

In 2023, he got into an unnecessary spat with a reporter from the New York Jets, his first team, and made a terrible disparaging remark about the reporter’s wife. He also chose not to be at Seattle’s Week 15 game after being told he wouldn’t be playing.

He never played another snap for the Seahawks, and a return to the Pacific Northwest does not appear to be in the cards. Mike Macdonald now runs the team, and he has no history with Adams. The safety-turned-linebacker also doesn’t seem to fit the organization’s reset culture.

Adams is still just 30, turning 31 in October, but the wear on his body tells a different story in football terms. He managed to stay healthy for all of last season after not playing a full season since 2018, which makes his durability almost as surprising as his position switch. It also leaves open the possibility that another injury could be waiting around the corner in 2026, if he finds a team at all.

For now, the likeliest path may be the least glamorous one: waiting until the season begins and hoping an injury elsewhere creates a need for veteran depth. That may be his only real opening, with Adams still a free agent a few weeks before training camps start.

And that’s what makes this situation so striking. Adams was once a major force.

His 9.5 sacks in 2020 remain an NFL record for a defensive back, and he earned First- or Second-Team All-Pro honors from 2018 through 2020. But all of that feels a long way off now.

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