Jaxon Smith-Njigba and the Seattle Seahawks are at the center of a headline about an awkward trophy engraving and a busy 2026 schedule that includes a Super Bowl rematch with the New England Patriots and a prime-time date with the Kansas City Chiefs. The mix of misprinted hardware, social media reaction and looming season-opening storylines ties together names like Drake Maye, Christian Gonzalez, Mike Vrabel, Patrick Mahomes and Sam Darnold. This piece walks through the trophy gaffe, who actually handles award production, and what fans can expect when the Seahawks hit the field this fall.
Seahawks wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba got a trophy meant to honor his 2025 season and quickly noticed it was wrong. The trophy reads “JAXON SMITH-NJIGBA 2025 DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THEYEAR,” a glaring error that turned an exciting moment into a social media moment. He posted a video showing the trophy and called out the mistake directly, making it clear he and fans saw the humor and the insult.
In the clip Smith-Njigba includes the line “I really want to expose them. It’s getting disrespectful, guys.” He singles out the engraving with short, sharp reactions like “Defense? Come on, bro.” and the odd spacing with “One word? Man.” Those exact lines captured how annoyed he was and how quickly a celebratory object became a tiny controversy.
Smith-Njigba also put a caption under the post that read “Its getting disrespectful at this point. Just keep the award at this point. Leave it in the history books tho.” That caption spelled out the same mix of amusement and frustration that his video did, and it made clear he wanted a fix rather than a fuss. He said they could keep the trophy, but he expects a correct replacement to reflect the honor accurately.
There’s an important distinction about who handles these awards: the Associated Press runs the voting that decides the winners, but the league is the one that produces the physical trophies. That means the misprint was not a voting mistake but a production error made by whoever the NFL contracted to engrave the awards. Someone along the chain missed it before the trophy was handed over.
These kinds of slipups are small in the scope of a season, but they do sting when a player earned a major honor. For Smith-Njigba, a rising star in Seattle, having his name and accolade spelled and labeled correctly matters. It’s both respect for individual achievement and part of the record that will be displayed and photographed for years.
Off the field, the Seahawks have a big date booked: they will open the 2026 NFL season on Wednesday, Sept. 9 in a Super Bowl LX rematch against the New England Patriots. That matchup adds layers beyond team rivalry because it reunites Dallas-area high school standouts, with Smith-Njigba coming from Rockwall and Patriots cornerback Christian Gonzalez from The Colony. Those backstories spice the game for fans who follow player roots as well as pro achievements.
There are subplots that go past hometown angles. Patriots quarterback Drake Maye will want to bounce back after a tough championship game, and the Seahawks will be looking to avoid any Super Bowl hangover. Another question is whether New England head coach Mike Vrabel will be on the sideline, which would alter how that team looks in opening week.
The Seahawks will also appear on Sunday Night Football on Oct. 25 against the Kansas City Chiefs, a matchup that raises instant interest depending on Patrick Mahomes’ health. If Mahomes is fully fit it becomes a measuring stick game for Kansas City after a rare down year, and it tests how the Andy Reid–Mahomes partnership responds to adversity. For Seattle, these prime-time slots are chances to send a message early in the season.
Meanwhile, Sam Darnold has a subplot of his own as he looks to collect wins that boost his resume and momentum. The mix of veteran names and young stars across these matchups gives the season a layered feel before it even starts. Between the trophy gaffe and the on-field storylines, Smith-Njigba and the Seahawks face a season that will be watched closely by fans and critics alike.