ESPN’s Kevin Clark thinks Seattle has earned a place on a pretty exclusive list.
Talking on NFL Live, Clark said the Seahawks belong among “most disrespected Super Bowl champions of my lifetime,” and he didn’t frame it as the usual underdog complaint that gets tossed around after a title run.
“Normally, I would laugh at a ‘Nobody believes in us, I have a chip on my shoulder gimmick’ from a Super Bowl champion,” Clark said. “In this case, it is incredibly valid.
The Seahawks are on the shortlist for most disrespected Super Bowl champions of my lifetime. I think the Eli [Manning] Giants are on that list, twice.
I think the Von Miller/Peyton Manning Broncos are on that list.
“But it feels like the day after the Super Bowl, we started a new conversation about everybody but the Seahawks.”
Clark’s point wasn’t just about geography, either. Seattle isn’t some tiny market hiding out in the corner of the sports map, and the idea that it is doesn’t really hold up. By the end of the decade, it could be one of the few cities with an NFL, NBA, WNBA, NHL, and MLS team.
The bigger divide, though, is between the 2013 champions and the 2025 version of the Seahawks. Back then, Seattle came into the season as one of the clear contenders after a strong 2012 campaign. The roster had impact talent at quarterback, running back and in the secondary, plus the Percy Harvin trade gave the team another splashy offseason headline while Harvin was still considered a high-level NFL player.
Once the Seahawks won it all, the conversation turned to dynasty talk. People saw an all-time great defense, a rising quarterback, a punishing ground game, no cap headaches, and a roster packed with personalities that naturally drew attention, from Marshawn Lynch to Richard Sherman.
That’s not the same kind of team Seattle has now. The 2025 Seahawks had missed the playoffs in three of the previous four seasons, and their 10-7 record looked a lot like the other recent versions of the team when you stacked up the wins and losses. Even fans who were optimistic about a playoff berth probably weren’t predicting a Super Bowl run before Week 1, and the betting markets reflected that with win totals that pointed more toward a non-playoff team than a title contender.
Clark also pointed to the lack of flash as part of the reason Seattle hasn’t grabbed the league’s imagination the same way. This group doesn’t have the brashness and drama of the Legion of Boom era, and Sam Darnold doesn’t carry the kind of star power that changes the national conversation the way Russell Wilson once did for Seattle or Patrick Mahomes does for the league’s elite.
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