Robbie Ouzts gave the Seahawks a reminder this past season that the fullback spot still has a pulse.
Seattle moved fast in its push to become not just a playoff team, but a Super Bowl contender, and a young roster produced plenty of rookie contributions along the way. Health got in the way at times, but there were also a few surprises. Ouzts was one of them.
The rookie fullback was on the field early and often, and Seattle leaned on him as a reliable blocker in the run game. After a developmental first season, he already looks like the kind of player who can keep carving out a role in a league that too often treats fullbacks like an afterthought.
Ouzts entered Alabama as a tight end, but his game quickly pointed toward a more physical identity. He got on the field as a freshman, played 11 games before a lower-body injury interrupted that season, and went on to appear in 51 games for the Tide, starting 16. Even with that experience, the Seahawks still saw a fifth-round value pick at 175th overall, despite Ouzts finishing his college career with only 16 catches for 192 yards and three touchdowns.
What Seattle drafted was a blocker who fit its zone-run approach. Ouzts’ power and efficiency showed up in a hurry, and he handled the NFL learning curve well enough to become a useful piece right away.
He played 12 regular-season games, missing time early after an injury sent him to IR, and his job was clear: help clean up edge pressure, sort out blitz looks, and open lanes for the backs behind him. He was the extra body in the backfield, the one creating the space that can turn an ordinary carry into something bigger.
That kind of role doesn’t get much attention in today’s offense, but it still matters. Kyle Juszczyk’s importance to the 49ers is the obvious example, and Ouzts fills a similar function for Seattle. He lines up as the guided blocker out of the backfield, helping shift the offense’s attention inward and giving runners a better chance to pick up extra yards.
To do that job, he has to hold his ground against defensive linemen and linebackers, then move quickly enough to get where the play needs him. Seattle trusted him with 203 vital snaps in those 12 games, a sign that certain run-heavy packages still have real value for the Seahawks. That matters even more now, with the team trying to keep its run game alive after losing Super Bowl LX MVP/running back Kenneth Walker III.
There is still room for growth across the rookie class, Ouzts included. But he has already shown how useful he can be when Seattle wants extra help in the run game, and that help may be needed even more with rookie Jadarian Price and inexperienced George Holai projected to open the season as the top two running backs.
More reps should only help Ouzts develop. He may also see a boost from new offensive coordinator Brian Fleury, who spent last season as the 49ers’ run-game coordinator. Fleury knows how to use bigger skill-position players like tight ends and fullbacks, and that could make Ouzts an even more important part of Seattle’s offense.
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Seattles work against San Francisco has become a real talking point because the matchup has tilted so sharply in the Seahawks favor, even as both sides know adjustments are coming. Analysts have pointed to Seattles defensive dominance in those games, and it is hard to ignore how much of a problem Macdonalds scheme has already been for one of the NFCs most established offenses. The 49ers will spend the offseason trying to solve that puzzle, but for now the Seahawks have every reason to believe they found something that can travel into the biggest games. [Read more 🡒]
