Everyone obsesses over Round 1. But championships are built on Days 2 and 3.

The Seattle Seahawks proved that this past season on their way to a Super Bowl title. Now, with only a handful of picks in 2026, they donāt just need star power.
They need reinforcements.
Pro Football Focus dropped a three-round mock draft that gives Seattle a blueprint to quietly reload ā not just reload headlines.
Hereās how it plays out.
š¢ Round 1 (Pick 32): CB Keith Abney II, Arizona State
This one feels practical.
Multiple Seahawks corners are entering free agency, including Tariq Woolen and Josh Jobe. Depth and long-term planning are both concerns.

Abney brings:
- Slot and outside versatility
- Strong 2025 production (85.3 PFF coverage grade)
- Nine pass breakups last season
- Comfort in man and zone
Heās not perfect. Run defense and over-aggression show up on tape. But lining him up opposite Devon Witherspoon long-term? Thatās a clean succession plan.
Seattle could pair him with a veteran bridge corner in 2026 while he develops.
Itās not flashy.
Itās smart.
š” Round 2 (Pick 64): WR Germie Bernard, Alabama
This is where things get interesting.

Seattle doesnāt typically lean heavily on wide receivers in its offensive identity. With Jaxon Smith-Njigba entrenched and Cooper Kupp still around, adding another receiver early would raise eyebrows.
But Bernard offers:
- Physical frame
- Clean route-running
- Alignment versatility
- Red-zone upside
Heās not a burner. Not a pure deep threat. That makes the fit slightly questionable if the goal is replacing Rashid Shaheedās speed element.
Still, if Seattle wants to protect itself against future contract decisions at WR, this is a forward-thinking move.
šµ Round 3 (Pick 96): RB Seth McGowan, Kentucky
Now weāre talking roster logic.

Even if Kenneth Walker returns, the Seahawks need running back depth. Zach Charbonnetās role could shift or diminish.
McGowan profiles as:
- A power runner
- Goal-line finisher
- Tackle-breaker
- Physical tone-setter
Heād be the āhammerā in a thunder-and-lightning pairing.
The concern?
Limited versatility in outside zone concepts. He doesnāt offer Charbonnetās flexibility. And some evaluators may question using a top-100 pick on a power back in this class.
But Seattle doesnāt pick again until Round 6.

If you love your guy, you take him.
The Bigger Picture
This mock isnāt about finding the next Mahomes.
Itās about sustaining a championship core.
- A young corner to future-proof the secondary
- A receiver to insulate against market volatility
- A power back to protect the run game
Thatās how contenders stay contenders.
Seattle doesnāt need a savior.

They need depth, flexibility, and cost-controlled contributors.
And this mock draft gives them exactly that.
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