Seahawks @ Cardinals Thursday Night Football
Quick Look
Two teams sharing surprising starts to the season, with the same record. This one smells like a slow, defensive, clock managing, low scoring, ugly game still
somebody’s special teams play or a single busted block or coverage decides everything.
Scoreboard
Seattle
2–1
Loss to the 49ers in Week 1, had a bounce back road win in Pittsburgh week 2, then a blowout over New Orleans.
The Seahawks right now are a run first team that uses play action and tempo to create explosive opportunities down the field.
Arizona
2–1
started 2–0 enduing two tight wins vs. the Saints and Panthers, then had a one possession heartbreaker to the 49ers.
Arizona lives on short fields and small margins early
Why this Will Be a Defensive,
Low Scoring Slug Fest
Both teams line up willing to swap field position and grind downs. Seattle’s defense plays with great gap discipline and create pressure.
Arizona’s front aims to squeeze the pocket and make the QB move.
Offenses on both sides have shown flashes of greatness but are also very inconsistent. That favors punts, fourth down calls, and clutch kicking. Expect long drives that end in field goals, a lot of 2–8 yard runs and screens, and one or two momentum swings that look bigger than they are.
Official Injury Lists
Seattle
Did not participate / out / IR:
OUT: OT Josh Jones (ankle) '
OUT: FB Robbie Ouzts — placed on IR (ankle)
Limited / questionable
TE Elijah Arroyo (groin)
S Nick Emmanwori (ankle)
S Julian Love (hamstring)
LB Boye Mafe (toe)
C Jalen Sundell (ankle/elbow)
DE Leonard Williams (elbow/shoulder)
CB Devon Witherspoon (knee)
Arizona
Did not participate / out / IR
Zay Jones (concussion)
OUT: RB James Conner placed on injured reserve
CB Will Johnson (groin) doubtful
G Evan Brown (ankle)
limited/questionable:
LB Akeem Davis-Gaither (elbow)
limited: CB Darren Hall (ankle)
limited; G Will Hernandez (knee)
limited/questionable; OT Paris Johnson Jr. (knee)
(reports said he’s trending to play).
What the Seahawks vs. Steelers Game
Taught Us
Kenneth Walker III looks like the physical engine. When Seattle commits downhill, defenses have to honor it, that opens play action seams.
Sam Darnold is a rhythm QB in this offense. He’s at his best when the run sets the timing not improvising, but efficient with intermediate reads.
Special teams matter. Seattle found a return TD and a kickoff TD swing opportunity in that game sudden score changes shift clock math and play calling.
Key Players to Watch
Seattle
Sam Darnold
manage the pocket, avoid cheap turnovers
if he’s on rhythm, Seattle eats clock.
Kenneth Walker III
inside/outside runs open up the play action game.
Jaxon Smith-Njigba & Cooper Kupp
they’re Seattle’s offense get them matched up with Cardinals secondaries and test those safeties.
Devon Witherspoon / Julian Love
their availability changes how Seattle plays half field coverage and whether they play single high or heavy bracket.
Arizona
Kyler Murray
still Arizona’s best late game weapon
contains everything when he can extend the play.
Marvin Harrison Jr.
force multiplier if Harrison gets bracketed, the rest of the route tree must beat single high looks.
Trey Benson
with Conner out, Benson’s volume matters
pass catching snaps especially.
Paris Johnson Jr.
his health directly dictates Kyler’s clean pocket time.
Arizona’s Early Season Struggles
OL continuity
recurring knee and knee adjacent issues have shuffled the cardinals protection timing and pushing pocket depth have suffered. That’s why some throws are high/late.
Explosiveness vs. consistency
they can win on the strength of a few plays, but sustained drives have been spottier
lots of short fields and tight finishes. Conner’s injury removes a grinder.
Seahawks
Strengths
Run first + play-action = explosive chunk potential.
Special teams upside that can flip the scoreboard without offensive snaps.
Front seven aggression that forces quicker QB decisions.
Weaknesses
Secondary depth and mid week availability create coverage holes.
Backup/OL swing spots get tested if injuries stack on the line Darnold needs consistent protection.
Game Plans
Seattle game plan (likely)
Force Arizona to respect the run
grind downs, target underneath routes early, then hit play action shots if the box lightens.
Protect the ball and punt when stalled
lean on special teams angles.
Arizona game plan (likely)
Protect Kyler first
quick game rhythm, screens, RB check releases to slow Seattle’s edge pressure.
Work Marvin Harrison early to demand bracket attention
use shorter drives and field position advantages
Marvin Harrison Jr.
Mismatch magnet.
Harrison changes how safeties are used double him or risk a vertical seam.
Even when his stat line isn’t gaudy, he occupies coverage and creates schemed holes for McBride, Zay/Michael Wilson, and the RB checkouts.
Arizona’s passing timing is smoother when Harrison runs clean routes and Kyler gets a stable, consistent target
that's why Harrison’s usage is the offense’s barometer.
Keys to win
Seattle needs to:
Run early and often to open play action.
Win the field position battle .
Force Kyler to win off script,
make him throw into structure, not extend.
Arizona needs to:
Keep Kyler clean
OL health = game plan.
Force Sam Darnold into downfield throws
pressure + bracket Harrison when needed.
Win special teams matchups
Schemes & matchup notes
Seattle play action vs. Arizona gap control
If Seattle can get 4–5 yards per carry, play action turns single safety looks into single coverage matchups downfield.
Arizona counters with inside out pressure and safety rotates into bracket zones.
Arizona quick game vs. Seattle blitz packages:
Screens, RB swing passes and quick outs are Arizona’s counters to Seattle’s edges.
If Seattle sells pressure and Arizona answers with quick rhythm, the clock compresses into a possession game.
Late clock:
Expect more conservative fourth down choices from both sides
each coach will prefer the field goal and clock over gambler tricks once the score is tight.