RENTON, Wash. — Sam Darnold’s four-interception performance last Sunday marked his worst game of what has otherwise been a strong debut season with the Seattle Seahawks. But it also continued an unwanted trend for the Seahawks and their Pro Bowl quarterback.
Despite ranking sixth in scoring at 26.6 points per game, Seattle’s offense has turned the ball over 12 times over the past four weeks. As a team, the Seahawks lead the NFL with 20 giveaways.
«It’s unacceptable,» Darnold said Thursday of their recent turnover spate. «We understand as an offense, we have to be better, I have to be better, protecting the football. We’re doing everything that we can in practice and when the game comes to try to take care of the football a little bit better.»
One of the Seahawks’ 20 turnovers actually came on defense, when safety Coby Bryant fumbled the ball back to the Arizona Cardinals while returning an interception. Fourteen of the other 19 have been attributed to Darnold, who has thrown 10 interceptions to 17 touchdown passes and lost four fumbles.
Los Angeles Rams.
Asked what he noticed after rewatching that performance, Darnold said he needed to do a better job of recognizing the Rams’ shell coverage and moving on in his progressions as opposed to locking onto one or two receivers. He credited Los Angeles for disguising certain defensive looks.
«Just having a better understanding when the ball’s snapped [of] what the coverage is and when a guy is going to come open and when he’s not,» Darnold said. «When I say ‘get stuck on a progression,’ I mean just seeing one side of the field and feeling like there’s a chance that someone’s going to get open over there rather than just moving on and clicking through my progression as I normally do.»
It was the third four-interception game in Darnold’s eight-year career, and his first since 2019 with the New York Jets. After Seattle’s loss to the Rams, wide receiver Cooper Kupp credited Darnold for remaining steady despite the interceptions and leading a late drive that gave the Seahawks a chance at a winning field goal from 61 yards.
Ernest Jones IV ardently defending Darnold on Sunday, saying, «Sam’s been balling,» and that he shouldn’t be defined by one performance because «he’s had us in every f—ing game.»
«We’ve got his back,» Jones said, «and if you’ve got anything to say, quite frankly, f— you.»
Coach Mike Macdonald said a day later that Jones spoke for the entire team. Darnold said Thursday that he appreciated the support.
«When things don’t necessarily go the way that I’ve wanted them to, especially on game day, the reason that it sucks for me is I feel like I’m letting those guys down,» he said, «and I feel like a lot of guys in the locker room feel the same way. That energy and the things that he said, it meant a lot to me for a guy to have my back like that. But I know the guys are just going to fight no matter what the case is, and so I’m going to do everything that I can to put by best foot forward and go execute at a high level.»















