Seattle Seahawks

Tre Brown surges in derby for Seahawks CB job. But Devon Witherspoon is re-entering

It’d been a minute.

It’d been almost three full years, in fact.

No wonder Tre Brown was carrying the ball he intercepted in the Seahawks’ second preseason game out of Lumen Field late Saturday night.

It was his first interception since December 2020. His last pick with less than a minute remaining won the Big 12 championship game for Oklahoma, over Iowa State, in his senior year with the Sooners.

“Brock Purdy was the quarterback,” Brown said of the former Cyclones now San Francisco 49ers starter. “It like his 21 to (27), they were driving down the field and I ended up getting the pick, the interception.

“So it’s a surreal feeling to get your hands on the ball again.”

He did that in another scoring situation Saturday, albeit with the stakes much lower. Lower for his team, anyway. Not for him.

Brown is trying to make it all the way back from a torn patellar tendon in his knee. That not only ended his rookie season as Seattle’s second selection in the 2021 draft, it limited him deep into last season.

Saturday night, the Dallas Cowboys were driving in the fourth quarter with Seattle leading a preseason game 17-14. Brown had started at left cornerback. He was still playing because coach Pete Carroll wants to see Brown in his first extended action in two years, plus the Seahawks have injuries from top draft pick Devon Witherspoon deep into their stash of young cornerbacks.

Cowboys third-string quarterback Will Grier scrambled to his right from the Seattle 20-yard line. Grier threw back across the field trying to connect with receiver Simi Fehoko running left across the goal line. Brown waited to the left of Fehoko. He was baiting the quarterback into thinking his receiver was open for a touchdown.

He wasn’t. When Grier threw the pass Brown was already breaking hard at Fehoko. He jumped in front of the receiver and snared the ball out of the air before Fehoko saw him. Brown then ran 20 yards up field to return the interception that kept the Seahawks ahead to stay, 17-14, in their 22-14 win.

Brown had leg cramps from before the previous play. He said he was actually asking out of the game to the Seahawks’ sideline. But no one saw his plea.

So he remained in the game — and changed it.

Brown also made an open-field tackle on a play similar to one he missed the previous week in the preseason opener against Minnesota.

In the Seahawks’ locker room after the Dallas game, Brown was asked what he thought he showed his coaches and team Saturday night.

“I showed that I’m back,” he said.

“I mean, it’s a long road, you know what I’m saying? It’s a marathon. A lot of people want to write you off early, but not realizing a lot of things. I haven’t played football in so long.”

That’s why Brown especially appreciated playing almost the entire game Saturday.

“I needed it. It was a good thing to get back out there and play.” he said. “It’s been a while since I really got just time to, really, just play. That’s something that I needed, myself.”

Seattle Seahawks cornerback Tre Brown (22) reacts to a flag during the first quarter the preseason game against the Dallas Cowboys at Lumen Field, Saturday, Aug. 19, 2023, in Seattle, Wash.
Seattle Seahawks cornerback Tre Brown (22) reacts to a flag during the first quarter the preseason game against the Dallas Cowboys at Lumen Field, Saturday, Aug. 19, 2023, in Seattle, Wash. Brian Hayes bhayes@thenewstribune.com

Michael Jackson’s tough night

Brown had been alternating the last week with Michael Jackson as the cornerback starting opposite 2022 rookie Pro Bowl star Riq Woolen in Seattle’s training camp. Saturday night, the team gave Woolen the night off. He’s just getting back from arthroscopic knee surgery in May.

The Seahawks started Brown at left corner and Jackson on Woolen’s right side. If their performances against Dallas prove any indication, Brown has surged ahead of Jackson in the competition to start with Woolen.

Jackson allowed first-down conversions on two third downs and a fourth down Saturday — in the first quarter.

On the Cowboys’ first possession he allowed a 36-yard completion down the right sideline on a third down. That was because he didn’t turn his head, as he has on such go balls all camp.

On Dallas’ second drive, a third and long, Jackson allowed his receiver to get inside him by three steps on a slant route for an 18-yard gain. Then on fourth and 4, Jackson was running back in loose coverage when rookie receiver Jalen Brooks broke off his route just past the line to gain. That was an easy completion for Dallas backup Cooper Rush.

Rush started because Dak Prescott and most of the Cowboys’ starters are not playing in preseason games.

Seattle Seahawks cornerback Michael Jackson (30) brings down Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Jalen Tolbert (18) during the first quarter of the preseason game at Lumen Field, Saturday, Aug. 19, 2023, in Seattle, Wash.
Seattle Seahawks cornerback Michael Jackson (30) brings down Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Jalen Tolbert (18) during the first quarter of the preseason game at Lumen Field, Saturday, Aug. 19, 2023, in Seattle, Wash. Brian Hayes bhayes@thenewstribune.com

Carroll was asked if Brown may have won the starting cornerback job opposite Woolen with Saturday’s performances by Brown and Jackson.

“No, not at this point. No, I don’t think I can say that about it,” Carroll said.

“He’s a good football player,” the coach said of Brown. “He’s played really well, consistently. We’re really lucky to have him on our side.”

Enter Devon Witherspoon

Brown hasn’t won the job because Witherspoon has yet to fully enter the competition.

The fifth pick in this year’s draft has missed the last 10 days with a hamstring injury. He had one that limited him in offseason practices this spring, too.

Carroll said Witherspoon definitely fits the defense when he’s in there. Is that at left cornerback? Or, at nickel back inside against slot receivers? That’s where Witherspoon was playing with the starting defense this month before his injury.

Carroll said he expects Witherspoon to practice in morning walkthroughs this week, then if that goes well fully in main practices the week of Aug. 28. That’s after Seattle’s final preseason game, Saturday at Green Bay.

“I’m going to be surprised if ‘Spoon isn’t running a lot this week or next week,” Carroll said. “We’re looking at three weeks, the game week, the opener (Sept. 10 against the Los Angeles Rams).”

Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll talks with Seattle Seahawks cornerback Devon Witherspoon (21) during warm-ups before the mock game at Lumen Field, Friday, Aug. 4, 2023, in Seattle, Wash.
Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll talks with Seattle Seahawks cornerback Devon Witherspoon (21) during warm-ups before the mock game at Lumen Field, Friday, Aug. 4, 2023, in Seattle, Wash. Brian Hayes bhayes@thenewstribune.com

That means this competition between Brown, Jackson and Witherspoon to start with Woolen may just be heating up.

Brown edged ahead Saturday. Witherspoon gained, without playing.

“I see Tre as I did before he got hurt,” Carroll said. “Remember, I was fired up about him. He was looking like a starter then. He played really well, done some great stuff. He just had to leave.

“So he’s come back. He’s just shown that he’s a consistent football player. He can cover guys. He’s explosive. He’s tough. I really like the tackle he made tonight.”

Seattle Seahawks cornerback Tre Brown (22) and cornerback Artie Burns (23) run drills during warm-ups before the mock game at Lumen Field, Friday, Aug. 4, 2023, in Seattle, Wash.
Seattle Seahawks cornerback Tre Brown (22) and cornerback Artie Burns (23) run drills during warm-ups before the mock game at Lumen Field, Friday, Aug. 4, 2023, in Seattle, Wash. Brian Hayes bhayes@thenewstribune.com
Gregg Bell
The News Tribune
Gregg Bell is the Seahawks and NFL writer for The News Tribune. He is a two-time Washington state sportswriter of the year, voted by the National Sports Media Association in January 2023 and January 2019. He started covering the NFL in 2002 as the Oakland Raiders beat writer for The Sacramento Bee. The Ohio native began covering the Seahawks in their first Super Bowl season of 2005. In a prior life he graduated from West Point and served as a tactical intelligence officer in the U.S. Army, so he may ask you to drop and give him 10. Support my work with a digital subscription
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