Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson on Thursday insisted he never asked the organization for a trade while acknowledging “unfortunate frustrations” with how the season ended.
In his first public comments since causing a stir in February, Wilson asserted that “I’ve always wanted to play here for my full career.”
Two days after the Super Bowl, Wilson did two interviews in which he aired his frustrations with getting hit too much and made allusions to being on the trade market. His comments set off months of speculation about whether the Seahawks would trade him and to where.
“I did not request a trade,” Wilson said Thursday. “The reality is, I think calls were getting thrown around and this and that, and I think that’s just the reality, but at the end of the day the real reality is that I’m here, and I’m here to win, and I’m here to win it all.
“There was a lot of people, there was a whole thing saying I requested a trade, and that’s just not true,” Wilson said. “I didn’t request a trade. Everything kind of started from there. Obviously, tons of teams were calling and I think that the reality was I didn’t want to go anywhere else, I wanted to play in Seattle. But if I had to go somewhere, these are the teams I would go to or consider. At the end of the day I have a no-trade clause, right?”
Wilson has been sacked 394 times in his career in the regular season, including 47 times last season, third most in the league.
“I’m frustrated (about) getting hit too much. I’m frustrated with that part of it. At the end of the day, you want to win,” Wilson said in one of those February interviews.
Then, Wilson was cryptic as to whether he would return to Seattle.
“I’m not sure if I’m available or not. That’s a Seahawks question,” Wilson said in a separate interview. “The reality of professional sports is things happen, things change. I’m not sure how long I will play in Seattle. I think hopefully it will be forever. But things change, obviously, along the way.”
Wilson has three years remaining on the $140 million extension he signed in April 2019.
–Field Level Media