The Seattle Seahawks may not be staring at a long wait for Zach Charbonnet after all.
Charbonnet’s season ended late in the year with an injury, and Seattle responded by taking Jadarian Price in the first round of the 2026 NFL Draft to replace Kenneth Walker III and potentially handle the lead role next season. But ESPN insider Jeremy Fowler reported that Charbonnet is moving in the right direction and could be back sooner than expected, even if he won’t be ready for Week 1.
“Also on Seattle’s offense, RB Zach Charbonnet has a late July check-up on his knee. By all indications he’s progressing well," Fowler said on ESPN. "The Seahawks have been impressed with rookie RB Jadarian Price’s open-field vision so far."
The timeline still matters. Players generally need at least nine months to come back from torn ACL injuries, and the more realistic window is 12 months. That would point to a return sometime around the middle of October at the earliest, though the early signs suggest that may not be out of reach.
How Seattle handles the backfield while Charbonnet works back will be part of the equation. Price, George Holani and recently signed Emanuel Wilson could all be asked to help keep things moving in his absence.
Before the injury, Charbonnet had given Seattle a useful complement to Walker. He handled the bruising work, caught passes and filled the short-yardage role, while Walker operated as the speedier early-down runner. The pairing may have limited both backs at times, but Charbonnet still finished with 12 touchdowns and nearly 900 yards from scrimmage.
There’s also the contract angle. Charbonnet is entering the final year of his rookie deal, so there’s plenty of incentive to get back on the field and position himself for a new contract. At the same time, the Seahawks have to protect the player as much as the roster, which means a careful ramp-up makes sense even if he gets cleared.
For Seattle, that’s not a bad problem to have. Charbonnet gives the offense the pass-catching, physical piece it needs to round out the backfield rotation.
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After those reserves are accounted for, the real flexibility shrinks to a much smaller pool for additions or extensions, which is why the Seahawks have to be careful about how they use it. One name to watch is Devon Witherspoon, whose next contract could become a mid- to late-August conversation if Seattle decides to move on an extension before the season gets rolling. [Read more 🡒]
