The Seattle Seahawks Super Bowl ring ceremony delivered exactly what fans hoped for — raw emotion, heavy hardware, and unforgettable moments. Star wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba gave everyone the perfect snapshot when the team handed out its championship rings on June 12, 2026.
In the photo shared by the Seahawks, Smith-Njigba leans in with a massive grin, sunglasses still on, white shirt open just enough to show the gold chains and the ink on his chest. He’s mid-handshake with a team executive, both men clearly enjoying the night. The room glows blue. Glasses sit on white tablecloths. Laughter fills the air. This is what winning looks like up close.
The Rings That Match the Moment
These aren’t ordinary rings. Jason of Beverly Hills designed the largest Super Bowl rings in Seahawks history. Each one weighs about a third of a pound. They carry roughly 20 carats of diamonds and sapphires. A hidden mechanism pops open to reveal “WORLD CHAMPIONS” and a small piece of game-used football from the title run.
Every ring carries the player’s name and number. Team mantras like “M.O.B.” sit alongside nods to the franchise’s 50th season and its two Lombardi Trophies. Seahawks president Chuck Arnold called them a permanent time capsule of the championship journey.
Players slipped them on for the first time after wrapping up the final day of minicamp. The weight on their fingers matched the weight of what they accomplished together.
All smiles. pic.twitter.com/g2muwy0Bfc
— Seattle Seahawks (@Seahawks) June 12, 2026
Why This Night Hit Different for Jaxon Smith-Njigba
Smith-Njigba has grown into one of the faces of this franchise. Drafted in 2023, he helped power the offense that delivered Seattle its latest title. On this night he didn’t just receive jewelry. He celebrated the payoff of years of work — the early mornings, the extra reps, the belief that this group could reach the top.
You could see it in his face. That smile wasn’t for the cameras. It was the kind that comes when everything you’ve grinded for suddenly feels real. Teammates nearby laughed and clapped. Families watched. The entire organization soaked in a victory that still feels fresh even four months after the confetti fell in Santa Clara.
The Bigger Picture for the Defending Champs
The Seahawks beat the New England Patriots 29-13 in Super Bowl LX on February 8, 2026, at Levi’s Stadium. That win gave the franchise its second Lombardi Trophy and sent fans into the streets for a massive parade.
Now, with rings in hand, the focus shifts. The same players who just celebrated will soon turn their attention to training camp and the 2026 season. Nights like this one serve as fuel. They remind everyone — from the stars to the practice squad — exactly why the grind matters.
Smith-Njigba’s joy in that photo tells the story better than any speech. This team won together. They celebrated together. And they’re already building toward what comes next with the same energy that carried them to the top.
