With two first-round selections in this draft, the Seahawks had a chance to be aggressive in trying to replace Frank Clark. Instead, they kept to their usual MO — drafting for volume, their “Seahawky” traits and development.
Pete Carroll already liked his roster and even had said rookies would have a tough time making the team. But that didn’t stop John Schneider from making seven trades and 11 selections in what basically amounted to a special-teams draft.
“We know a lot of these guys are going to be special-teams players; they’ve already done it, they’ve proven it,” Schneider said. “Some of them are projections, but the majority of them, we’ve seen them play on teams.”
Mark Rodgers wanted to play hardball with the Seahawks, and 
If the Seahawks were to offer Russell Wilson $105 million guaranteed over three years, it sounds like he might take it.
“Not cool.” — John Schneider on having just four picks as draft month begins.
(UPDATED with Pete Carroll’s comments March 26)
Even though the draft is loaded with pass rushers, teams are still apparently very interested in established veteran rushers — even the guys who received franchise tags.
With