He helped them win a Super Bowl⌠now he wants to face them in Week 1.
Coby Bryant isnât just moving onâheâs coming back for a statement.

Coby Bryant didnât just leave Seattle.
He left with unfinished businessâand a target already locked in.
In one of the most unexpected moves of the offseason, Bryant walked away from the Seahawksâthe very team he helped turn into championsâand signed a three-year, $40 million deal with the Chicago Bears. It shocked fans. It caught Seattle off guard. And now, itâs setting up what could be one of the most emotionalâand explosiveâmatchups of the 2026 season.
Because Bryant already knows exactly what he wants next.

Week 1. Seattle. Prime time.
âWe play Seattle this year⌠so they better be ready for me,â Bryant said, without hesitation.
That wasnât nostalgia talking.
That was a challenge.
The NFL schedule hasnât even been released yet, but Bryant is already campaigning for the ultimate storyline: returning to Seattle on opening nightâwhen the Seahawks raise their Super Bowl banner.
The stakes? Massive.
The spotlight? Global.
The emotions? Unavoidable.
âI wouldnât mind starting the season off out there⌠the whole world will be watching,â Bryant added. âIt has to be.â
And honestly? He might be right.
Because few matchups could carry this much built-in drama.
Bryant wasnât just another player in Seattleâhe was part of a defensive identity. A unit that grew together, battled together, and ultimately lifted a Lombardi Trophy together under head coach Mike Macdonald.
That bond? Still fresh.
Which makes what comes next even more intense.
But to understand why this moment matters, you have to go back to where Bryantâs transformation really began.
It wasnât smooth.
It wasnât planned.
And at first, he hated it.
Originally drafted as a cornerback in 2022, Bryant saw his role shrink after Seattle brought in top-tier talent. Then came the move that changed everythingâhe was shifted to safety.
âI was pretty pissed,â Bryant admitted.
It wasnât what he wanted. It wasnât what he envisioned.
But it turned out to be exactly what he needed.
Because once the transition clicked, Bryant didnât just adaptâhe exploded.
Over the next two seasons, he became a defensive force, starting 26 games and racking up 139 tackles, seven interceptions, and multiple game-changing plays. More importantly, he became a leader inside a locker room that would go on to win it all.

The position change didnât just save his career.
It elevated it.
Now, heâs bringing that version of himself to Chicagoâarmed with confidence, experience, and something else:
Motivation.
Because leaving Seattle wasnât easy.
âIt was the toughest part⌠leaving those guys,â Bryant said, reflecting on his former teammates.
That brotherhood? Still there.
But when the whistle blows, it wonât matter.
Because if Bryant gets his wish, he wonât just be returning to Seattle.
Heâll be walking into a stadium filled with memories⌠and trying to spoil the celebration.
And thatâs what makes this story so dangerous.
This isnât just a revenge game.
Itâs a collision between past loyalty and present ambition.
Between a champion and the team he helped build.

And if the NFL gives him that Week 1 stage?
Donât expect a quiet reunion.
Expect a statement.
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