Seattle, Washington — The Seattle Seahawks may not be finished building their defensive front before the 2026 NFL season officially arrives.
After losing Boye Mafe earlier this offseason, Seattle moved quickly by signing veteran edge rusher Dante Fowler Jr. to stabilize the pass rush.
However, one new name has suddenly entered the conversation, and it could make the Seahawks even more dangerous defensively.
That name is Kayvon Thibodeaux, the former first round pick currently facing an uncertain future with the New York Giants.

Thibodeaux has become a popular trade speculation target because New York now appears crowded at edge rusher entering the new season.
The Giants already feature Brian Burns and Abdul Carter, while also adding another highly talented pass rushing option through the draft.
That situation has raised one obvious question around the league.
Could Thibodeaux become the odd man out before the Giants ever reach Week 1?
For Seattle, the idea is extremely intriguing because Mike Macdonald’s defense is built around pressure, speed, and relentless front seven rotation.
Last season, Thibodeaux played 494 defensive snaps while producing 32 total pressures, three sacks, 23 hurries, six quarterback hits, and 20 solo tackles.
His overall PFF defensive grade landed at 66.0, showing solid production even during a season that did not fully match his biggest expectations.
Still, the real appeal comes from what Thibodeaux has already shown he can become when everything clicks.
In 2023, he recorded 11.5 sacks and looked like one of football’s most explosive young edge defenders.
That version of Thibodeaux is exactly why Seattle would be tempted to explore the situation if New York becomes willing to negotiate.
Jeremy Brener of Seahawks on SI recently argued that Seattle should strongly consider giving Thibodeaux a fresh start in Macdonald’s system.
The logic is simple.
Seattle needs to keep pace in an NFC West that suddenly became even more dangerous after the Rams made their own blockbuster defensive move.
Los Angeles recently added Myles Garrett, creating pressure on Seattle to respond with another meaningful move for its own defensive front.
Thibodeaux would not need to arrive as the only answer.
Instead, he could become another explosive piece in a Seahawks rotation already designed to wear down opposing quarterbacks across four quarters.
That is what makes the potential price especially interesting.
Brener suggested Seattle might only need to sacrifice a Day 2 pick, and the Seahawks already have extra draft capital available next year.
For a young pass rusher with proven upside, that would be a gamble many aggressive contenders would seriously consider.
Brent Sobleski of Bleacher Report also recently named Thibodeaux as a player the Giants should consider moving before the 2026 season begins.
His argument centered on value.
If New York waits too long, Thibodeaux’s role could shrink, his contract situation could become more complicated, and his trade value could decline.
Seattle would be betting that opportunity, defensive coaching, and a better scheme fit could unlock his best football again.
Macdonald has already earned respect for building creative pressure looks that do not rely on one superstar doing everything alone.
Adding Thibodeaux would give the Seahawks another athletic edge defender capable of attacking quarterbacks from different alignments and packages.
It would also send a clear message to the rest of the NFC.
Seattle is not satisfied with simply replacing lost production.
The Seahawks want to upgrade, reload, and make life miserable for every offense standing between them and another deep postseason run.
No trade talks have been confirmed publicly at this stage, and there is no indication that New York is actively shopping Thibodeaux right now.
Still, the speculation is not going away.
If the Giants decide their pass rush room has become too crowded, Seattle may be one of the teams positioned to make the most logical offer.
For the Seahawks, the question is no longer whether Thibodeaux is talented enough.
The question is whether Seattle wants to strike before another contender realizes the same opportunity is sitting there.






