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Seattle Seahawks vs Carolina Panthers Match Player Stats (Dec 28, 2025)

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Six minutes of third-quarter football ended it. DeMarcus Lawrence recovered a Chuba Hubbard fumble at the Carolina 21. Julian Love intercepted Bryce Young two possessions later and returned it 26 yards deep into Carolina territory. By the time the Seahawks scored twice off those back-to-back turnovers, Seattle led 17-3 and Carolina had converted exactly one third down all afternoon.

The Seattle Seahawks beat the Carolina Panthers 27-10 at Bank of America Stadium on December 28, 2025, their sixth consecutive win and most dominant defensive showing in weeks. Zach Charbonnet ran 18 times for 110 yards and two touchdowns. Bryce Young finished with 54 passing yards and was held to 40 net yards through the air. Carolina’s top three wide receivers — Tetairoa McMillan, Jalen Coker, and Xavier Legette — combined for four catches and 24 yards on seven targets.

Below is the complete breakdown of the Seahawks vs Panthers player stats, scoring summary, and full box score from NFL Week 17 of the 2025 season.



Game Information

DateDecember 28, 2025
VenueBank of America Stadium, Charlotte, N.C.
Attendance73,163
Weather43°F, 94% humidity, 2 mph wind
Vegas LineSeattle -7.0
Over/Under42.5 (Under)
Coin TossSeattle won, deferred
Time of Game2:54

Final Score

TeamQ1Q2Q3Q4Final
Seattle Seahawks (13-3)30141027
Carolina Panthers (8-8)030710

Scoring Summary

QtrTimePlaySEACAR
Q13:23Jason Myers 48-yd FG — 9 plays, 40 yds, 5:0430
Q23:46Ryan Fitzgerald 35-yd FG — 4 plays, 9 yds, 1:3333
Q38:45Zach Charbonnet 2-yd rush, Myers PAT — 6 plays, 21 yds, 3:16103
Q35:32AJ Barner 17-yd pass from Darnold, Myers PAT — 4 plays, 29 yds, 2:09173
Q413:41Bryce Young 10-yd rush, Fitzgerald PAT — 13 plays, 69 yds, 6:511710
Q45:33Jason Myers 30-yd FG — 14 plays, 55 yds, 8:082010
Q42:31Zach Charbonnet 1-yd rush, Myers PAT — 5 plays, 25 yds, 1:092710

Game Recap

First Half: Defense on Both Sides

Neither offense moved the ball freely in the cold, damp conditions that had settled over Charlotte. Seattle put together the most sustained drive of the first quarter, covering 40 yards on nine plays before settling for a Jason Myers 48-yard field goal and a 3-0 lead.

Carolina’s best opportunity of the half came in the second quarter when Nic Scourton strip-sacked Sam Darnold on third-and-five at the Seattle 46. A’Shawn Robinson scooped the ball at the Seattle 40, returned it a few yards, then fumbled himself — forced by Darnold — and Christian Rozeboom recovered at the Seattle 26. The Panthers turned that short field into three points. Dowdle gained nine yards on first down to the Seattle 17, Young was incomplete on second, Hubbard was stuffed for no gain on third-and-one by Leonard Williams and Boye Mafe, and Fitzgerald hit a 35-yard field goal on fourth down. It was 3-3 at halftime.

Third Quarter: Two Turnovers, 14 Points, Game Over

Seattle’s first drive of the second half covered 42 yards before stalling. Darnold’s deep pass toward Jaxon Smith-Njigba in the end zone was intercepted by Michael Jackson and upheld on replay review. Carolina had the ball at their own 20.

On the first play, Hubbard took a handoff up the middle and fumbled. Lawrence recovered at the Carolina 21 — a replay challenge confirmed it was a fumble rather than a player down by contact. Six plays later, Charbonnet scored from two yards out to put Seattle up 10-3.

On the following Carolina possession, Young’s third-down pass intended for McMillan was picked off by Love near midfield and returned 26 yards to the Carolina 29. Four plays later, Darnold hit AJ Barner short right for 17 yards and a touchdown. Seattle led 17-3 with 5:32 left in the third quarter.

“It’s unbelievable. Our defense has been doing that all year,” Darnold said after the game. “They’ve been stepping up in such a huge way. For us it’s just complementary football.”

Young was blunt about his decision: “Bad decision, bad throw.”

The Panthers managed just 72 total yards through three quarters.

Fourth Quarter: Charbonnet Runs It Out

Carolina was not done. Young put together a 13-play, 69-yard drive — the longest of the game by yardage — and finished it himself on a 10-yard scramble to cut the deficit to 17-10 with 13:41 remaining.

Seattle answered with a 14-play, 55-yard possession that ate over eight minutes off the clock before Myers added a 30-yard field goal. When Carolina got the ball back, Boye Mafe and Lawrence hit Young on consecutive sacks to force a punt. Seattle took over at midfield, and Charbonnet ran five straight times for 25 yards, capping it with a one-yard score with 2:31 on the clock.

“Same story every week: We didn’t flinch,” Seattle coach Mike Macdonald said afterward. “A big emphasis this week was, ‘Can we stack plays in all three phases?’ It took us a half to do it but I felt like in the second half, we did a great job.”


Team Stats

StatSEACAR
Total Yards288139
Net Pass Yards12540
Gross Pass Yards14754
Rush Yards16399
Total Plays6652
Yards Per Play4.42.7
First Downs1910
— Rush 1st Downs93
— Pass 1st Downs86
— Penalty 1st Downs10
3rd Down Conv.9/16 (56%)1/11 (9%)
4th Down Conv.0/1 (0%)2/5 (40%)
Total Drives1111
Avg Yards/Drive22.111.4
Avg Points/Drive2.30.8
Red Zone (TDs/Att)3/61/2
Turnovers22
— Fumbles Lost11
— INTs Thrown11
Penalties4–40 yds3–20 yds
Sacks Allowed3 (–22 yds)2 (–14 yds)
Time of Possession34:1825:42

Full Box Score

Passing Stats

PlayerTeamC/AttYdsAvgTDINTSacksLongRate
Sam DarnoldSEA18/271475.4113–221877.2
Bryce YoungCAR14/24542.3012–14845.8

Darnold’s average depth of target was 5.2 yards. Young’s completed air yards finished at -17 for the game — a direct reflection of how far behind the sticks Carolina was throwing on nearly every possession.


Rushing Stats

PlayerTeamAttYdsAvgTDLong
Zach CharbonnetSEA181106.1229
Kenneth Walker IIISEA15513.4016
Sam DarnoldSEA320.703
SEA Total361634.5229
Rico DowdleCAR12594.9011
Bryce YoungCAR9273.0111
Chuba HubbardCAR4123.007
Mitchell EvansCAR111.001
CAR Total26993.8111

Charbonnet generated 81 of his 110 yards before contact, averaging 4.5 yards per attempt before a defender touched him. Macdonald called it the best game of Charbonnet’s career as a Seahawk. Walker added four broken tackles on his 51 yards.


Receiving Stats

PlayerTeamTgtRecYdsAvgTDLong
Jaxon Smith-NjigbaSEA129728.0018
AJ BarnerSEA334314.3117
Zach CharbonnetSEA22126.0010
Rashid ShaheedSEA1188.008
Cooper KuppSEA3166.006
Kenneth Walker IIISEA2263.006
Dareke YoungSEA100—0—
Eric SaubertSEA200—0—
SEA Total26181478.2118
Jalen CokerCAR22168.008
Jimmy Horn Jr.CAR2294.507
Chuba HubbardCAR3362.008
Tommy TrembleCAR1166.006
Mitchell EvansCAR2155.005
Tetairoa McMillanCAR4155.005
Rico DowdleCAR5341.304
Xavier LegetteCAR1133.003
Brycen TremayneCAR100—0—
CAR Total2114543.908

Carolina’s three primary wide receivers — McMillan, Coker, and Legette — were held to a combined four catches and 24 yards on seven targets. Seattle played predominantly man-to-man coverage throughout, and those numbers tell the full story.


Defensive Stats

PlayerTeamTotalSoloAstSacksTFLPDINT
Michael JacksonCAR11830.0021
Christian RozeboomCAR10460.0100
A’Shawn RobinsonCAR9090.0000
Nick ScottCAR7520.0000
DeMarcus LawrenceSEA6331.0100
Julian LoveSEA6510.0011
Ty OkadaSEA6510.0100
Derrick BrownCAR6330.0000
Cam JacksonCAR5140.0000
Ernest JonesSEA5140.0000
Drake ThomasSEA5050.0000
Tre’von MoehrigCAR4311.0200
Nic ScourtonCAR4131.0100
Devon WitherspoonSEA4310.0010
Bam Martin-ScottCAR3030.0000
Nick EmmanworiSEA3210.0000
Leonard WilliamsSEA3030.0000
Princely UmanmielenCAR3120.0000
Boye MafeSEA2111.0100
Jaycee HornCAR2200.0000
Chau Smith-WadeCAR2200.0000
Riq WoolenSEA2200.0000
Uchenna NwosuSEA2110.0110
D.J. WonnumCAR1101.0110
Byron Murphy IISEA1100.0000
Rylie MillsSEA2110.0000

Interceptions

PlayerTeamINTYds ReturnedTD
Julian LoveSEA1260
Michael JacksonCAR100

Fumbles

PlayerTeamFumLostRec
Sam DarnoldSEA211
Kenneth Walker IIISEA101
DeMarcus LawrenceSEA——1
Chuba HubbardCAR110
A’Shawn RobinsonCAR101
Christian RozeboomCAR——1

Lawrence’s recovery of Hubbard’s fumble at the Carolina 21 was the most consequential play in the game — it led directly to Charbonnet’s first touchdown and shifted the momentum for good.


Kicking

PlayerTeamFGPctLongXPPts
Jason MyersSEA2/2100%483/39
Ryan FitzgeraldCAR1/1100%351/14

Punting

PlayerTeamPuntsYdsAvgLongIn-20
Michael DicksonSEA28844.0530
Sam MartinCAR314147.0582

Returns

PlayerTeamKRKR YdsKR AvgPRPR YdsPR Avg
Cam AkersSEA25427.00——
Rashid ShaheedSEA0——11313.0
Trevor EtienneCAR49122.80——
Chuba HubbardCAR12727.00——

PFF Initial Grades

(Subject to review)

Offense — Top Five:

PlayerTeamPosGradeSnaps
AJ BarnerSEATE83.453
Zach CharbonnetSEAHB76.036
Ikem EkwonuCART74.653
Taylor MotonCART73.153
Josh JonesSEAT72.367

Defense — Top Five:

PlayerTeamPosGradeSnaps
Michael JacksonCARCB92.667
Julian LoveSEAS92.253
DeMarcus LawrenceSEAED90.637
Ty OkadaSEAS84.747
D.J. WonnumCARED78.637

Injuries

Seattle: WR Rashid Shaheed (concussion) and WR Cody White (groin) both left in the first half and did not return.

Carolina: TE Ja’Tavion Sanders broke his ankle on the game’s first play and was carted off the field, ending his 2025 season. CB Robert Rochell (concussion) and LB Claudin Cherelus (calf) also exited during the game.


What the Result Meant

Seattle’s 13-3 record was not enough to clinch the NFC West. San Francisco beat Chicago 42-38 the same night to set up a winner-take-all Week 18 showdown between the two teams at Levi’s Stadium.

“We’re going to make sure we take care of business,” Lawrence said. “It’s in our hands. The only thing we have to do is grasp it.”

Carolina, at 8-8, saw the NFC South race stay alive but with little margin for error. Tampa Bay lost 20-17 in Miami the same afternoon. The Panthers needed a Week 18 win at Tampa Bay to claim their first division title since 2015.

“We definitely feel the missed opportunity,” Panthers coach Dave Canales said. “But our focus has to go to the next one pretty quickly.”

The Seahawks’ third quarter told the whole story of this team: a defense that takes the ball away, an offense that cashes in immediately after, and a running back capable of finishing games with his legs. Carolina had no answer for any of it once the turnovers started — and by then, there was nothing left to answer.


Statistics sourced from Pro Football Reference, PFF, and ESPN. PFF grades are initial and subject to review.

Bobby Smith
Bobby Smithhttps://thesportie.com/
Bobby A. Smith is a Senior Sports Analyst with over nine years of professional experience, specializing in forensic analysis of game strategy and player performance. His work provides a definitive lens on a broad spectrum of professional sports, delivering expert commentary on the NFL, NBA, MLB, WNBA, Soccer, Boxing, Cricket, F1, and NASCAR. Unlike surface-level reporting, Bobby’s analysis is known for identifying the critical, game-deciding patterns that raw statistics often obscure. Every article is grounded in rigorous, fact-based research and an unwavering commitment to journalistic integrity.

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