Mike Macdonald
Getty
The Seahawks revealed more good news in NFL free agency.
The Seattle Seahawks are reuniting with a familiar face, giving the team’s wide receiver group a boost. Seattle already revealed a major move by re-signing Rashid Shaheed amid plenty of interest in NFL free agency.
Things also appear to be trending in the right direction with Jake Bobo, who the team tendered allowing the front office to match any offer. Now, the Seahawks have re-signed Cody White.
The 6-foot-3, 227-pound wide receiver is recovering from a season-ending groin injury. White is aiming to be part of the Seahawks’ Super Bowl run this time around.
“Any opportunity that I’m able to get, especially coming off injury is truly a blessing,” White told Seahawks.com’s Ari Horton during a March 18, 2026, interview. “I am so excited to be back in Seattle and then being back close to 100 percent, getting back ready for OTAs. It’s going to be exciting.
“I bounced around from a bunch of different teams, not knowing if I’d be able to stick or not and finally finding a home in Seattle. It’s been amazing for me. …Going back for another Super Bowl. That’s the only thing, the only mission, the only goal.”
Here’s what you need to know about the latest Seahawks news.
Seahawks WR Cody White Missed the NFL Playoffs With a Season-Ending Injury
White’s injury appeared to linger longer than expected and ultimately prompted the wideout to miss the postseason. The wideout only played in 10 games in 2025. Back in December, Mike Macdonald provided an update on White’s health.
“It’s just a matter of if we are going to get there. … As a coach, of course, we want him back yesterday,” Macdonald explained on December 28, per The Olympian’s Gregg Bell. “That’s just not the way it works.
“So the more time you spend worrying about it, you’re going to drive yourself crazy. He’s working really hard. Our trainers are doing a great job. It’s just the nature of the beast, you know.”
Seahawks HC Mike Macdonald on Cody White: ‘He’s Earned the Right To Be a Special Teams Stalwart’
While White is a wide receiver, the playmaker’s biggest contribution to the Seahawks has been on special teams. Macdonald uses White’s story as an example of resilience as the receiver has bounced around the NFL before carving out a role in Seattle.
The Seahawks coach previously described White as a “special teams stalwart.”
“We saw it in the Rams game last year (2024). There’s definitely a record of this throughout the offseasons, and he’s another guy that’s earned his opportunity,” Macdonald said of White during a September 2025 press conference, per Seahawks.com’s John Boyle. “It’s a great lesson for young guys how important special teams are to the equation.
“At the end of the day, you can’t dress everybody, and he’s earned that right to be a special teams stalwart for us and when asked upon on offense, he’s produced.”
Spotrac estimates that the Seahawks still have nearly $40 million in remaining cap space, the seventh most in the NFL. It remains to be seen if Seattle will make any more major moves this offseason as the team’s main goal has been to keep the core together.