Following Super Bowl Title, Jaxon Smith-Njigba Eyes Continued Success in Seattle
Outside of signing a record-setting contract extension with the Seattle Seahawks in March, plenty has gone right for Jaxon Smith-Njigba in 2026.
A month before Smith-Njigba signed a four-year, $168.8-million deal, with $120 million guaranteed, which makes the 24-year-old the highest paid wide receiver in the NFL, he was a key cog on the Seahawks’ Super Bowl-winning team.
Shortly before Super Bowl 60, Smith-Njigba was named AP NFL Offensive Player of the Year after setting the team record for yards receiving (1,793) and receptions (119) in a season. Following the Seahawks’ first day of minicamp practices on Tuesday, Smith-Njigba said he considers both the personal and team-wide accolades he has benefitted from a "blessing."
"This year has been great," Smith-Njigba said. "It’s brought me a lot of great things, and things to learn and overcome and trophies and parades and stuff like that. So, it’s been a blessing. It’s been an amazing year.
"And, we’re six months into the year, and I’m looking forward to the rest of it."
Plenty of time remains until the Seahawks open the season with a Super Bowl rematch against the New England Patriots on Sept. 9 in Seattle, which will give Smith-Njigba a chance to head home to Texas to train this offseason. But when Smith-Njigba returns to Seattle later this summer, he looks forward to picking up where he and the Seahawks left off.
Smith-Njigba, quarterback Sam Darnold and the rest of Seattle’s offense is in the early stages of learning the system that first-year offense coordinator Brian Fleury is instituting. The offensive scheme is expected to be similar to that of former offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak, who is now coach of the Las Vegas Raiders.
After a handful of meetings and


