The Seattle Seahawks are one result away from locking up the NFC West and the NFC No. 1 seed, and the stakes couldn’t be cleaner heading into Saturday’s showdown with the San Francisco 49ers.
Seattle is the No. 1 seed with a win or a tie, according to the team’s Week 18 playoff breakdown. If the Seahawks lose, they’re locked into the No. 5 seed and a road wild-card game instead of a first-round bye.
And on the other side? San Francisco is dealing with a major variable up front: Trent Williams’ hamstring.
Key details (fast)
- Game: Seahawks at 49ers, Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026 (8:00 p.m. ET)
- Seattle scenario: Win/tie = No. 1 seed, loss = No. 5 seed
- Trent Williams: dealing with a hamstring injury; status in focus heading into Week 18
NFL Live laid out Seattle’s defensive “musts”
On ESPN’s NFL Live, the breakdown sounded like a playoff game plan meeting.
Marcus Spears said the biggest key for Seattle is keeping Brock Purdy clean, and, more importantly, not letting him “devastate” you by extending plays. Spears pointed to the Seahawks’ team speed and the ability to win up front without getting reckless.
Dan Orlovsky framed it even simpler: this game is about space. San Francisco’s offense is built to create it, while Seattle’s defense has been at its best taking it away and tackling in space.
Then Mina Kimes delivered the injury-centric detail that makes this matchup feel even more volatile: Williams’ potential absence could change everything about how the 49ers have to play. Kimes mentioned how the Seahawks generate a ton of pressure with just their defensive line, and Williams’ absence could make life even more hellacious for the 49ers.
John Lynch’s Trent Williams update added more uncertainty
49ers general manager John Lynch said on a radio show on December 31 that Williams is “making every effort” to suit up against Seattle, while acknowledging it’s a tricky turnaround with a hamstring injury.
Lynch also noted this is the first hamstring injury Williams has dealt with, adding a layer of uncertainty to the timeline because there isn’t a clean “this is how his body responds” history to lean on.
If Williams can’t go — or is limited — the spotlight swings to Austen Pleasants, the 49ers tackle who replaced Williams when he went down and drew praise afterward for how he handled the sudden assignment.
Lynch, speaking on KNBR, also highlighted Pleasants’ approach — calling him the type of player who’s consistently the first in the building — the kind of detail teams share publicly when they’re trying to build confidence in a potential emergency starter.
Pleasants’ path is also part of why this subplot is resonating: he’s spent time bouncing around the league, including multiple practice squad stops, before getting his opportunity in San Francisco.
Why Seattle’s pass rush and tackling could decide the whole thing
Kimes’ point on NFL Live was that Seattle’s defense can create stress without living on all-out blitz calls, using simulated pressures and movement up front.
If the Seahawks can turn quick throws into contested plays — and keep San Francisco from turning screens and play-action into chunk gains — that’s the formula that keeps the No. 1 seed in Seattle’s hands.
Because the pressure isn’t theoretical anymore: win (or tie) and rest, or lose and start the playoffs on the road.
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