The Seattle Seahawks gave fans exactly what they wanted on June 12, 2026 — a raw, joyful look at players finally getting their hands on the hardware that makes it all real.
The team posted a video simply captioned “currently.” In it, wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba and teammates move through the room in sharp button-downs and suit pants, holding up fingers heavy with brand-new Super Bowl LX rings. Smith-Njigba leads the clip, raising his left hand high so the massive piece of jewelry catches every bit of light. The smile never leaves his face.
Teammates high-five, point at each other’s rings, and lean in close to inspect the details. One player even pulls his ring off to examine it like he still can’t believe it’s his. The energy feels exactly like what you’d expect the morning after the parade — except this time it’s private, just the guys and the people who built the season together.
The Rings Are the Largest in Super Bowl History
These aren’t ordinary championship rings.
The Seahawks worked with designer Jason of Beverly Hills to create what the organization is calling the largest and most technologically advanced Super Bowl ring ever made. Key details include:
- Dozens of diamonds and sapphires layered into tributes to the 2025 championship season
- A design that lets the top pop off and convert into a pendant
- A hidden compartment that reveals “WORLD CHAMPIONS” when opened
- Special nods to the 12th Man and the team’s “M.O.B.” mantra
Players who already owned rings from previous teams, including linebacker Ernest Jones IV, still couldn’t stop comparing. The new Seahawks version simply dwarfs everything else.
A Private Moment After the Public Parade
The ring ceremony took place Thursday night, June 11, inside a decorated ballroom. Blue curtains framed the stage. Tables held flowers and the black boxes that carried each player’s new prize.
Four months earlier the team had marched through downtown Seattle in front of hundreds of thousands of screaming fans after winning Super Bowl LX. This night was different — smaller, more intimate, but no less meaningful.
currently pic.twitter.com/byvRk1fjuf
— Seattle Seahawks (@Seahawks) June 12, 2026
You can see it in the video. These guys aren’t just showing off jewelry. They’re sharing the payoff for every brutal practice, every injury, every fourth-quarter stand that got them here.
The Road That Led to These Rings
The 2025 Seahawks finished 14-3, the best record in franchise history during the regular season. They beat the Los Angeles Rams 31-27 in the NFC Championship, then dominated the New England Patriots 29-13 in Super Bowl LX at Levi’s Stadium.
Running back Kenneth Walker III earned Super Bowl MVP honors. Quarterback Sam Darnold steered the offense through the playoffs. The defense and special teams made the decisive plays when they mattered most. Jaxon Smith-Njigba emerged as one of the young leaders who helped turn potential into a Lombardi Trophy.
Now the rings make it official.
Why This Video Matters to Fans
Official team accounts usually post polished highlight reels. This one feels different. It’s the players still in the moment, still hyped, still passing the rings around like kids with a new toy.
That’s the part that hits hardest. The Super Bowl parade was for the city. The ring ceremony was for the locker room. And the video the Seahawks dropped the next morning let the rest of us in on the feeling.
Smith-Njigba’s grin as he holds his hand up says everything you need to know about what this group accomplished and how much it still means to them.
