Coby Bryant leaving for big Bears bucks. A Seahawks in-house replacement?

ASFN Admin

Administrator
Administrator
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
May 8, 2002
Posts
1,133,501
Reaction score
59
A player Mike Macdonald loved in the back of his Super Bowl-champion defense won’t be there anymore.

Seahawks safety Coby Bryant agreed Monday to sign a three-year contract worth $40 million with the Chicago Bears when the NFL free-agent market officially opens Wednesday. That was according to multiple reports Monday morning, the first by Jonathan Jones of CBS Sports just as the league’s negotiating period for 2026 free agents began at 9 a.m.

The Seahawks drafted Bryant in the fourth round in 2022. General manager John Schneider often noted, and as recently as two weeks ago at the league’s scouting combine, that Bryant was the Jim Thorpe Award winner as the best cornerback in major college football at the University of Cincinnati.

The Cleveland-area native began his Seattle NFL as a cornerback with then-coach Pete Carroll. Bryant also played nickel, slot cornerback for the Seahawks before moving to safety.

He’s been best there.

Macdonald replaced the fired Carroll in January 2024. The former Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator has loved Bryant’s instincts, sure-tackling and synchronicity playing with Pro Bowl veteran safety in the back of Seattle’s moving, disguising defense the last two seasons.

Bryant excelled this past season, as the Seahawks allowed the fewest points in the league and rode their defense to winning the Super Bowl last month.

You must be registered for see images attach

Macdonald valued bringing back Bryant after his rookie deal ended with Super Bowl 60. It appeared that could happen, with the safety market in free agency shaping up to keep Bryant affordable for Seattle.

The Seahawks have been weighing trying to keep six key free agents from their Super Bowl-championship team this past season while also re-signing NFL offensive player of the year Jaxon Smith-Njigba and three-time Pro Bowl cornerback Devon Witherspoon beyond their rookie deals this summer, for possibly $40 million and $30 million per year, respectively.

Seattle lost Kenneth Walker Monday morning when the Super Bowl MVP running back agreed to sign with the Kansas City Chiefs.

The market seemed to set at $12 million per year at safety this past weekend when the Los Angeles Rams re-signed safety Kam Curl for $36 million over three years. Sunday night, Bryant posted on his Instagram account online a picture of himself next to a photo of Schneider pointing at the camera.

Then Monday morning, the Bears gave Bryant a deal that surpassed Curl’s at an average annual value of $13.33 million — and thus surpassed what the Seahawks were budgeting to keep Bryant.

You must be registered for see images attach

Ty Okada, come on down!​


Macdonald still has for 2026 another safety he really liked for how heady, steady and dedicated he was this past season: Ty Okada. Okada, a former special-teams player from Montana State, excelled in nine starts when Love had a hamstring injury for much of the 2025 regular season.

Last week the Seahawks tendered Okada, 26, as an exclusive-rights free agent. Okada’s contract for 2026 is just $1,145,000, about $12 million cheaper than what the 26-year-old Bryant just got for three years from Chicago.

But it’s difficult to imagine the Seahawks and Macdonald’s top-ranked defense got better Monday.

You must be registered for see images attach


Continue reading...
 
Top