NFL schedule release winners, losers: Seahawks set up nicely, not high-profile rookies

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After days – maybe weeks? – of anticipation, the 2026 NFL regular-season schedule finally emerged fully formed Thursday, May 14, the remaining gaps filled in after the league revealed so many of its showcase matchups throughout the early part of the week while other leaks sprang elsewhere.

And now teams and fans alike know – where are those prime-time battle royales? Is the bye week too early? When is our division rival coming to town?

It’s a lot to sift through – and we’ll do so live over the course of the evening – but let’s anoint the winners and brand the losers of this year’s schedule release:

WINNERS

Seattle Seahawks


The reigning Super Bowl champions host the regular-season kickoff Sept. 9 – a Wednesday due to Labor Day’s Sept. 7 placement on the calendar – against the New England Patriots, the team they whacked in Super Bowl 60 in February. But the early game, along with a Thursday night date at Denver in Week 6, plus a Week 11 bye means the ‘Hawks will enjoy quite a few organic breaks throughout the fall – a nice little advantage for a team seeking to qualify for back-to-back Super Sundays for the second time in franchise history. And the fact that the Seahawks are traveling substantially fewer miles than the division rival Los Angeles Rams and San Francisco 49ers, who meet in Australia to start the season, doesn’t hurt, either.

NFL’s international footprint​


The league's quest for world domination continues – to the point that international matchups are an increasingly commonplace aspect of the schedule. This year, the NFL will stage games in four continents, seven countries and eight stadiums outside of America – with regular-season debuts occurring in Melbourne, Rio de Janeiro and Paris.

It doesn’t seem like we’re very far from all 32 teams playing internationally once per season – which would mean one game abroad almost weekly as the league tries to further slake the foreign appetite for its most valuable inventory while also (likely) staving off any urge to expand outside the U.S. … and the logistical nightmare that would entail. For now.

Arizona Cardinals?​


Some NFL players and coaches love the glare of the prime-time spotlight. Others love nothing more than suiting up every Sunday afternoon. Hopefully Cards rookie coach Mike LaFleur falls into the latter category, his rebuilding – and seemingly unimposing squad – is the only one in the NFC that will enter the season without being slotted into a single prime-time slot. Hopefully for the Cardinals, being parked on Sunday afternoons every week will mean steady circadian rhythms as they rebuild their operation in the shadow of their far more imposing big brothers in the NFC West.

LOSERS

Jeremiyah Love​


Arguably the best player emerging from an unremarkable 2026 NFL Draft – and already the best-paid running back in NFL history in terms of the $53 million in guarantees, a record at his position, emanating from his rookie contract – you’ll apparently be forced to move to Arizona if you want to see anything aside from Love-ly highlights this season given the Cards’ absence from exclusive broadcast windows.

Fernando Mendoza​


Want to see the No. 1 pick of this year’s draft in action? Might need to move to Las Vegas … whenever Kirk Cousins is relegated to the bench. But like Love’s Cardinals, Mendoza’s Las Vegas Raiders were not awarded a single prime-time slot this season – one of four AFC squads so relegated along with the New York Jets, Miami Dolphins and Tennessee Titans.

Adam Schefter​


How much time did it take you – or your army of assistants – to schedule all of those retweets of each team’s social media unveiling of its schedule? Good job, Schefty? Sorry? Stop bombarding us?

NFL Network​


For the first time since the broadcasting arm formerly operated under the league’s umbrella was officially acquired and subsequently absorbed by ESPN on April 1, the Worldwide Leader leveraged NFLN’s air to simulcast its two-hour SportsCenter schedule release show – which was also shown on the ESPN mothership. In the past, NFL Network’s “NFL GameDay Morning” crew – including anchor Rich Eisen, Hall of Famer Kurt Warner and others – had done a three-hour broadcast to celebrate the schedule reveal. While Thursday night’s approach makes sense from a streamlining perspective in terms of production costs on shows that would basically share highly duplicative information, it’s probably an even savvier move this year given NFL Network is currently dark on Comcast following the expiration of its contract with the cable giant on May 1.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 2026 NFL schedule release winners (Seahawks) and losers (Fernando Mendoza)


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