
Seattle Seahawks visit has no date
The Seattle Seahawks, a National Football League team based in Seattle, won Super Bowl LX on February 8, 2026, at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California.
Seattle beat the New England Patriots 29-13, and running back Kenneth Walker III won Super Bowl LX Most Valuable Player after rushing for 135 yards on 27 carries. As of June 19, 2026, no public White House visit date had been announced by the Seahawks or the White House.
Seattle Seahawks invite remains unconfirmed
Seattle had no confirmed White House invitation in the public record after winning Super Bowl LX, according to reports following the championship game.
Coach Mike Macdonald said at the Scouting Combine that the Seahawks had not received an invitation and would address the issue if one arrived from the White House.
Seattle Seahawks offseason window closed
Seattle’s offseason program ended before any White House visit was announced, which shortened the usual window for a full-team trip before training camp. Pro Football Talk reported on June 14, 2026, that players had scattered until training camp, and the natural visit window had closed for the Seahawks.
The timing matters because a team visit works best when players and staff are already together for offseason meetings, practices, and media obligations.
Seattle Seahawks speculation had no proof
Seattle did not publicly confirm that the team declined a White House invitation after Super Bowl LX. Early speculation focused on whether the Seahawks would go, but reports said nothing had been offered or decided. Macdonald later said the team still had not received an invitation.
The public record showed no confirmed invite, no confirmed refusal, and no announced visit for the Seahawks after their championship.
Seattle Seahawks roster changed after win
Seattle’s championship group changed after Super Bowl LX, which would affect the exact makeup of any later White House event. Kenneth Walker III, the Super Bowl LX Most Valuable Player, became a Kansas City Chiefs running back after agreeing to a deal with Kansas City in March 2026.
Klint Kubiak also left Seattle after the championship run. The Raiders named him head coach on February 9, 2026.
Seattle Seahawks visited in 2014
Seattle last visited the White House on May 21, 2014, after winning Super Bowl XLVIII to close the 2013 NFL season. The White House visit came about 3 months after that Super Bowl win, giving the team a clear offseason date before summer football work.
By June 19, 2026, Seattle’s latest championship had passed that 2014 timing marker without a public White House date or team announcement.
Seattle Seahawks have a fall opening
Seattle has one clear Washington-area date on its 2026 schedule if a later White House visit becomes possible. The Seahawks play the Washington Commanders on Sunday, September 27, 2026, at Northwest Stadium in Landover, Maryland. The Commanders’ list kickoff at 1 p.m. ET.
That schedule would place Seattle near Washington, D.C., during the regular season, but any visit would still require an invitation, team acceptance, and player availability.
Seattle Seahawks timing has precedent
A White House visit months after a title is not unusual by itself, because recent champions have visited after the season ends. Seattle visited on May 21, 2014, after winning Super Bowl XLVIII in February. Philadelphia visited on April 28, 2025, after winning Super Bowl LIX.
The difference in 2026 is the lack of a public invitation, public acceptance, or scheduled event for Seattle by mid-June, after offseason work ended.
Seattle Seahawks fit a wider pattern
Seattle’s uncertainty fits a wider sports pattern in which White House championship events can depend on attendance, timing, and team decisions. The Eagles’ 2018 event was canceled after many players were expected to miss it. In 2026, the U.S. women’s hockey team declined a State of the Union invitation after winning gold.
Those examples show why attendance questions can become part of a championship visit story, even when the title result is already settled.
Eagles visit showed attendance limits
The Philadelphia Eagles visited the White House on April 28, 2025, after beating the Kansas City Chiefs 40-22 in Super Bowl LIX. Owner Jeffrey Lurie, general manager Howie Roseman, coach Nick Sirianni, and several players attended. Quarterback Jalen Hurts missed the event, with scheduling conflicts cited publicly.
The Eagles still held the ceremony with a partial roster, which makes attendance a practical issue for any future Seahawks event if an invitation arrives.
Jalen Hurts absence drew attention
Jalen Hurts became part of the White House comparison because the Eagles quarterback did not attend the April 2025 event. Reports said Hurts gave no clear answer at a TIME magazine gala when asked whether he planned to attend. A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith were also listed among absent players.
That example shows how one player’s attendance can become a separate news angle after a championship, even when the team visit still happens.
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Seattle Seahawks outcome is unsettled
Seattle has not announced a White House visit, an accepted invitation, or a rejected invitation as of June 19, 2026. A later trip around the September 27 road game against Washington remains possible only if the White House extends an invitation and the team accepts.
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Do you think championship teams should continue the White House visit tradition, or should each team decide based only on player interest and scheduling? Share your thoughts in the comments below!
This slideshow was made with AI assistance and human editing.
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