
The Seattle Seahawks’ signing of Dante Fowler Jr. may be more than a low-cost pass-rush addition.
Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer pointed to Fowler’s deal as evidence that Seattle has gained a different kind of free agency advantage: the ability to attract older veterans who still have something to offer and want a legitimate chance to chase a ring. That matters because the Seahawks did not just add Fowler in a vacuum. They lost Boye Mafe to the Cincinnati Bengals in free agency, creating a real opening in Mike Macdonald’s edge rotation.
Fowler is not being paid like a star, and he does not need to be one for the Seahawks. He is being added as a veteran role player on a reported one-year deal worth up to $5 million, according to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero.
That is the point Breer was making. Seattle can now sell veterans on a defined role, a strong defense and a chance to play meaningful football deep into the season.
Albert Breer of Sports Illustrated Says the Seahawks Have a New Free Agency Edge
Breer described Fowler as a “bargain-basement” addition and used the signing as an example of Seattle’s current pull around the league.
“Speaking of available free agents, the Seahawks getting a bargain-basement deal on DE Dante Fowler Jr. is a good example of the edge Seattle has now: being able to attract older vets who can play a role and are motivated to chase a ring,” Breer wrote for Sports Illustrated. “With the loss of Boye Mafe to the Bengals, the Seahawks do have a role open that Fowler could come in and earn.”
That is notable because Fowler, 31, could have waited for another injury or camp opening elsewhere. Instead, Seattle gave him a soft landing spot with a coordinator connection and a path to snaps.
Fowler previously worked with Seahawks defensive coordinator Aden Durde in Atlanta and Dallas, and that familiarity should help him get up to speed quickly. Reuters also noted that Fowler visited Seattle before the draft, while the Seahawks ultimately did not select an edge rusher in the 2026 NFL draft.
Dante Fowler Signing Helped Him Prove His Point
Fowler’s 2025 box-score production with the Dallas Cowboys was modest: 17 games, 11 starts, 15 tackles and 3 sacks. His broader résumé is more useful for understanding why Seattle made the move. Fowler has 58.5 career sacks, 15 forced fumbles and experience across multiple defensive systems since entering the NFL as the No. 3 overall pick in 2015.
There is also a contract contrast that makes the signing more interesting.
Mafe landed a three-year, $60 million deal with the Bengals, including $19 million guaranteed, per Over the Cap. The Seahawks are not replacing Mafe’s upside with Fowler one-for-one, but they are adding a veteran pass rusher for a fraction of that price while keeping financial flexibility.
That is exactly how contenders often try to extend a window. They do not win every bidding war. They let expensive players walk, preserve resources and backfill with veterans who can handle a narrower job.
Fowler fits that profile. He does not need to be an every-down centerpiece in Seattle. He needs to be a rotational rusher who can win some obvious passing-down reps, stay healthy and give Macdonald another experienced option behind the Seahawks’ top edge defenders.
The Seahawks Depth Chart Is Starting to Look Loaded
The Fowler signing also changes how Seattle’s edge depth looks after Mafe’s departure.
Before the move, the Seahawks still had Uchenna Nwosu, Derick Hall and DeMarcus Lawrence as key pieces on the edge. Fowler now gives Seattle another veteran with pass-rush experience, and his familiarity with Durde and Lawrence should make the fit cleaner than a random late-spring signing.
This is where the move looks less like a desperate replacement and more like a roster-strengthening play. Fowler can compete for a role without needing to carry the group. Hall can continue developing. Nwosu gives Seattle a proven pressure threat when healthy. Lawrence brings veteran toughness and scheme experience. Fowler adds insurance, competition and third-down juice.
The Seahawks’ front also has interior talent that can help the edge group. Leonard Williams, Byron Murphy II and Jarran Reed give Seattle enough inside presence that Fowler should not have to create pressure alone. That matters for an older rusher whose best value may come in specific situations rather than a full-time role.
Breer’s broader point is what should get Seahawks fans’ attention. Fowler is not the biggest name left on the market, and his deal will not be remembered as one of the offseason’s splashiest moves. But it is the type of signing good teams make when veterans believe the destination is worth choosing.
For Seattle, that may be the real win. The Seahawks lost Mafe, avoided a massive edge contract and still found a credible veteran who can step into the rotation. If Fowler turns into even a useful situational rusher, the “bargain-basement” label will look less like a discount-bin description and more like smart contender business.
Erik Anderson is an award-winning sports journalist covering the NBA, MLB and NFL for Heavy.com. He also focuses on the trading card market. His work has appeared in nationally-recognized outlets including The New York Times, Associated Press , USA Today, and ESPN. More about Erik Anderson
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