Feb 8, 2026; Santa Clara, CA, USA; Seattle Seahawks head coach Mike MacDonald and running back Kenneth Walker III (9) celebrate with the Vince Lombardi trophy after defeating the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LX at Levi's Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Seattle’s Kenneth Walker III runs to Super Bowl glory, MVP honors

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — When the Seattle Seahawks won their first Super Bowl title 12 years ago, a 43-8 thrashing of the Peyton Manning-led Denver Broncos, the Most Valuable Player award could have landed in a number of different players’ hands. Little-known linebacker Malcolm Smith was the winner, his pick-6 and fumble recovery standing out in Seattle’s complete defensive effort that night.

When the Seahawks’ lead stood at 12-0 entering the fourth quarter of Super Bowl LX on Sunday, the MVP discussion may have been down to another defensive selection, or perhaps Seattle kicker Jason Myers. But one offensive player was the consistent throughline from the Seahawks’ first quarter through the fourth, the steady engine of an offense that eventually found another gear.

Running back Kenneth Walker III finished the game with 135 rushing yards on 27 attempts and took home Super Bowl LX MVP honors after his team’s 29-13 triumph over the New England Patriots. He is the first running back to win the award since Denver’s Terrell Davis at Super Bowl XXXII in January 1998.

The soft-spoken 25-year-old let his legs do the talking until it was time to accept the award on stage at Levi’s Stadium.

“First and foremost, I want to thank God for this blessing to be here,” Walker said. “Also I want to talk to my brothers. This don’t happen without them. We went through a lot of adversity this season but we came together and we stuck together, and this is what we got.”

As NBC presenter Maria Taylor was about to move on to quarterback Sam Darnold, Walker cut back in.

“Hey, shoutout to the 12s!” he added, referring to Seattle’s fan base.

A native of Tennessee, Walker played two seasons at Wake Forest before transferring to Michigan State in 2021 and lighting up the college football world with 1,636 yards and 18 touchdowns on the ground. Despite winning the Doak Walker Award for the nation’s top running back, he finished a mere sixth in Heisman Trophy voting and went to Seattle early in the second round of the 2022 NFL Draft.

Because he dropped out of the first round that year, his rookie contract was four years without a fifth-year option. Walker enters the offseason as a free agent and was mostly mum on his future during Super Bowl week.

Walker’s workload increased when backfield mate Zach Charbonnet went down with a torn ACL in the divisional round against San Francisco. After finishing the regular season with 1,027 yards and five touchdowns rushing, Walker ran for 116 yards and three scores against the 49ers and another 62 yards and a touchdown against the Rams in the NFC Championship Game.

He didn’t add to the TD total Sunday, but time and again he brought the Seahawks into scoring position. Walker took the first play of the game 10 yards around left end. His 30-yard run propelled Seattle to its second of five field goals, and he added two catches for 26 yards, including a 20-yarder.

Walker is only the third player in Super Bowl history with two carries of 25-plus yards in a game, according to ESPN Stats and Information. He joined Washington’s Timmy Smith in Super Bowl XXII (three) and the Raiders’ Marcus Allen in Super Bowl XVIII (two).

He nearly had a third run of more than 25 yards late in the fourth quarter, when he broke free up the middle for what would have been a 49-yard touchdown. But center Jalen Sundell was called for holding and the play was nullified.

–Field Level Media

Seahawks RB Kenneth Walker III in line for ‘more opportunities’

Kenneth Walker III is 18th in the NFL in carries and narrowly within the top 20 in rushing yards (606), but the Seattle Seahawks are closer to turning him loose.

Walker played 51% of the offensive snaps in a 21-19 loss to the Rams on Sunday with Zach Charbonnet working in behind him. But he’s about to get the ball a lot more.

“I think you really felt Ken,” Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald said. “And just, even in the pass game, too, on check-downs, finding him late in the play. Just shows you that he’s such an explosive player with the ball in his hands.

“And he knows there’s things that he needs to clean up in his game, too. And he’s done a great job doing that. And we’ll continue to do that. But I think Ken’s showing that he deserves more opportunities.”

Those opportunities are picking up at the right time for projected production.

Walker faces the 26th-ranked Titans’ run defense on Sunday and three of the bottom 11 against the run in Seattle’s next three games. The Seahawks play the Vikings (22nd, 127 rushing yards per game) and Falcons (28th, 138.5 rushing yards per game) after a visit to Nashville this weekend.

Walker had 19 touches (three receptions) in the loss at Los Angeles but Macdonald’s review pointed to a takeaway about resetting the pecking order in the backfield.

Walker leads the Seahawks with 136 carries for 606 yards. He has four touchdowns to Charbonnet’s six (105 carries for 350 yards).

–Field Level Media

Nov 19, 2023; Inglewood, California, USA; Seattle Seahawks quarterback Geno Smith (7) controls the ball in the third quarter against the Los Angeles Rams at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Robert Hanashiro-USA TODAY Sports

QB Smith questionable, RB Walker doubtful for Seahawks

The Seattle Seahawks on Wednesday listed quarterback Geno Smith (elbow) as questionable and running back Kenneth Walker III (oblique) as doubtful for Thursday night’s game against the visiting San Francisco 49ers.

Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said Monday, however, that Smith will “make it back” for the primetime game on Thanksgiving. Smith is dealing with a contusion on the tendon at the base of his right triceps closer to his elbow.

Carroll also did not expect Walker to be ready on a short week. Rookie running back Zach Charbonnet replaced Walker last week and is expected to get the lion’s share of the carries. Kenny McIntosh and fourth-year running back DeeJay Dallas are also expected to see action.

“Kenny’s not going to make it. We left it as doubtful because you never know … but he wasn’t able to do anything during the week,” Carroll said.

However, safety Jamal Adams will play after missing Week 11, and fellow defensive backs Riq Woolen, Tre Brown and Coby Bryant are also available to play.

Wideout Dareke Young (abdomen) is listed as doubtful and offensive tackle Abraham Lucas (knee) is questionable.

Rookie safety Jerrick Reed II suffered an ACL injury last week against the Los Angeles Rams and will require surgery.

–Field Level Media