Seattle Seahawks Quarterback Sam Darnold Stands Above Loaded 2018 NFL Draft Class
If you traveled back to 2019 and told a bar full of NFL fans that Sam Darnold would be the first quarterback from the loaded 2018 draft class to start a Super Bowl, you would’ve been laughed out of the room.
We’re talking about a class that includes two-time MVP Lamar Jackson and the perennial powerhouse Josh Allen. Yet, here we are in 2026. While Jackson and Allen are watching from home, Darnold is prepping to lead the Seattle Seahawks onto the field for Super Bowl LV.
From “Seeing Ghosts” To Seeing the Super Bowl
Darnold’s journey hasn’t exactly been a straight shot to glory. His early days with the New York Jets were, to put it mildly, a disaster. We all remember the “seeing ghosts” mic’d up moment. It looked like his career was destined for the journeyman backup pile.
After rocky stints in Carolina and a backup year in San Francisco, something clicked. A solid run with Minnesota paved the way for his arrival in Seattle, and suddenly, the guy who was once written off is playing the best football of his life.
In the NFC Championship Game against the Rams, Darnold didn’t just manage the game; he balled out. We’re talking 346 yards and three touchdowns in a high-pressure, back-and-forth shootout. He outdueled a veteran Rams squad and punched his ticket to the biggest stage in sports.
The 2018 Class: A Twist of Fate
The irony here is thick enough to cut with a knife. The 2018 quarterback class was supposed to be legendary, and it is, but not in the order we expected regarding championships.
- Baker Mayfield (No. 1 pick): Has had a resurgence but hasn’t reached the big one.
- Josh Allen (No. 7 pick): An absolute beast who can’t seem to get past the AFC gauntlet.
- Lamar Jackson (No. 32 pick): Two MVPs in his trophy case, but no Lamar Hunt trophy to go with them.
- Sam Darnold (No. 3 pick): The guy who was traded away, benched, and memed is now the one playing for the Lombardi Trophy.
When asked about beating his draft classmates to the punch, Darnold couldn’t help but crack a joke about his 2023 stint as Brock Purdy’s backup in San Francisco. “I actually made it in ’23 as well when I was in San Francisco,” he said. “No, I’m just messing with you. It’s unbelievable, man. Obviously, those are great players.”
It’s Not Just Darnold
Darnold is the first to admit he didn’t do this alone. Seattle has built a monster of a team around him. The defense is stifling, and the offensive weapons are lethal. Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Kenneth Walker III were electric in the title game, making Darnold’s life significantly easier.
“It’s more so the team,” Darnold said. “The hard work that we’ve put in throughout this season… to be able to go against that defense every single day, that got us better as an offense.”
But let’s not strip credit where it’s due. You don’t accidentally throw for 300+ yards in a conference championship. Darnold has evolved. He’s confident, decisive, and for the first time in his career, he looks like the franchise quarterback the Jets thought they were drafting eight years ago.
Now, he heads to Levi’s Stadium to face the New England Patriots. Win or lose, Darnold has already pulled off one of the greatest career turnarounds in modern NFL history. The ghosts are gone. The only thing he’s seeing now is a chance at immortality.
